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    <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Science &amp; Nature &gt; earthli News 3.7]]>
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  <updated>2026-02-14T22:53:56+01:00</updated>
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  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Dead dinosaurs are one-time-use batteries]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=6041</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=6041"/>
    <updated>2026-02-14T22:53:56+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[This is an excellent movie-length discussion of how inefficient it is to
continue to subsidize fossil fuels, which are disposable fuels. He
discusses "opex" (operational expenditures) vs. "capex" (capital
expenditures). Over the medium- to long-run, an energy infrastructure
with lower "opex" will...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 14. Feb 2026 22:53:56
------------------------------------------------------------------------

This is an excellent movie-length discussion of how inefficient it is to
continue to subsidize fossil fuels, which are disposable fuels. He discusses
"opex" (operational expenditures) vs. "capex" (capital expenditures). Over the
medium- to long-run, an energy infrastructure with lower "opex" will win out.

"We should stop growing corn to feed to cars."

[media]

The author discusses how modern solar panels no longer use hazardous materials,
being composed primarily of materials derived from quartz.

Even the batteries can benefit from the existing nearly closed loop already
established for recycling car batteries. Modern batteries can be used for 15
years, day-in, day-out, before they start to degrade. Fossil fuels can be used
once. Even degraded batteries still contain all of their original materials --
they've just been moved around within the battery to suboptimal positions. These
can be recycled and made into new batteries. This means that, once we have a
certain number of batteries, we no longer need to dig up the materials to build
them.

From the last half-hour, which goes into other topics,

"Launching satellites into space to make rural broadband happen is an admission
of laziness and defeat from both Big Telecom and the government. It's a solution
a billionaire could provide and happily monetize, but it's not necessarily the
best solution, is it?"

00:00 Intro
07:35 Some opening notes
10:14 Cars and all the oil they use
15:38 Photovoltaics and electric cars
18:59 A cost and opportunity comparison
22:33 Solar farms
30:35 A discussion of land use
38:29 A diversion on wind power
41:17 The materials in solar panels
50:52 What about the batteries?
1:02:41 The reasons I made this video
1:10:16 The reason I am who I am
1:16:35 Who the liars are and what we need to do about them.


]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[James Webb telescope gets help]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=6018</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=6018"/>
    <updated>2026-01-31T21:19:03+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "NASA launches new mission to get the most out of the James
Webb Space Telescope" by Stephen Clark
<https://arstechnica.com/space/2026/01/nasas-newest-telescope-will-play-an-outsize-role-in-finding-earth-2-0/>
describes something really neat [1] but the thing that drew my attention
was a more politically oriented comment at the end of the article.

"“It’s been very, very challenging to try and squeeze this big"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 31. Jan 2026 21:19:03
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "NASA launches new mission to get the most out of the James Webb
Space Telescope" by Stephen Clark
<https://arstechnica.com/space/2026/01/nasas-newest-telescope-will-play-an-outsize-role-in-finding-earth-2-0/>
describes something really neat [1] but the thing that drew my attention was a
more politically oriented comment at the end of the article.

"“It’s been very, very challenging to try and squeeze this big amount of
science into this small cost box, but that’s kind of what makes it fun,
right?” Barclay told Ars. “We have to be pretty ruthless in making sure that
we only fund the things we need to fund. We accept risk where we need to accept
the risk, and at times we need to accept that we may need to give up performance
in order to make sure that we hit the schedule and we hit the launch
[schedule].”"

Imagine this statement coming from the mouth of a military contractor. The
incentives are completely different for scientists and military. See the
"article about the over $1T that has flowed into the F-35 program and the
returns on it" <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=6007#F35>.

These vastly unequal incentives and rewards are perfectly encapsulated by one of
my favorite stickers of all time. 25 years after I first bought it -- and 46
years after it was printed -- it still describes all you need to know about the
U.S., or any authoritarian, militaristic country.

[image]

"it will be a great day when our schools get all the money they need and the air
force has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber"

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


[1] The problem is that:
  "When a planet passes in front of its parent star, some of the starlight
   shines through its atmosphere. Webb has the sensitivity to detect the
   filtered starlight and break it apart into its spectral components, telling
   astronomers about the composition of clouds and hazes in the planet’s
   atmosphere."
  
  But Webb can't guarantee that the detected elements really are coming from the
  planet itself, so that's where Pandora comes in. Where viewing time on Webb is
  too precious to have it stare at something for 24 hours, Pandora can focus on
  planetary objects for stretches of time long enough to be able to verify
  sources of spectral components.
  "Pandora will point and stare at 20 preselected exoplanets 10 times during
   its one-year prime mission, collecting 24 hours of visible and infrared
   observations with each visit. This will capture short-term and longer-term
   changes in each star’s behavior. SpaceX launched Pandora into a so-called
   “twilight orbit” that follows the boundary between day and night on
   Earth, allowing the satellite to keep its solar panels illuminated by the Sun
   while performing its observations.

   "“We can send this small telescope out, sit on a star for a really long
   time, and sort of map all the star spots, and really disentangle the star and
   planet signals,” Quintana said in a recent panel discussion at NASA
   Goddard. “It’s filling a really nice gap in helping us to sort of
   calibrate all these stars that James Webb is going to look at, so we can be
   really confident that all of these molecules that we’re detecting in
   planets are real.”"

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Science: There's nothing like proof]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5543</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5543"/>
    <updated>2025-06-01T15:49:52+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "‘Indigenous Knowledge’ Is Inferior To Science" by
Thomas R. Wells
<https://3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2025/05/indigenous-knowledge-is-inferior-to-science.html>
has two main thrusts: the primacy of scientific thinking and the
degeneracy of preferring something for nonscientific reasons. On second
that, those are two sides of the same coin.

[Science is knowledge that deserves to be believed]

The...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 1. Jun 2025 15:49:52
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "‘Indigenous Knowledge’ Is Inferior To Science" by Thomas R.
Wells
<https://3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2025/05/indigenous-knowledge-is-inferior-to-science.html>
has two main thrusts: the primacy of scientific thinking and the degeneracy of
preferring something for nonscientific reasons. On second that, those are two
sides of the same coin.

[Science is knowledge that deserves to be believed]

The following citations illustrate the point as Wells put it,

"[...] knowledge is knowledge. Where it comes from doesn’t matter to its
epistemic status. What matters is whether it deserves to be believed. The
scientific revolution has provided a general approach – systematic inquiry –
together with specialist methodologies appropriate to different domains (such as
mathematical modeling, taxonomy, statistical analysis, and experimental
manipulation and measurement). It is irrelevant that this approach first
appeared in North-Western Europe and that many of the domain specific techniques
were first developed and refined by white men from the ‘west’. What is
relevant is that modern science allows a degree of confidence in factual and
theoretical claims that has never been warranted before, and made this
capability equally available to everyone around the world as the new standard
for objective knowledge, i.e. knowledge that is reliably true no matter from
what perspective you look at it.

"If indigenous peoples have observational data and successful technologies to
contribute to this kind of systematic inquiry into what makes an ecosystem
resilient, or what plants might contain molecules with pain-relieving
properties, or the history of climactic events, then that should be welcomed.
But the test of whether these are an actual contribution must come from whether
they survive scientific scrutiny, not the authenticity of their indigenous
origins."

"Even when we suppose that indigenous knowledge claims might well be worth
believing, we first subject them to systematic scrutiny – i.e. science – to
evaluate their epistemic status. If they pass the test then they will be refined
into a form that could be incorporated within the body of scientific knowledge,
to become available to anyone who might find it interesting or useful."

Believing indigenous medicine has value without proof is denigrating to those
cultures, suggesting that they are incapable of achieving the level of proof
that western society has set for itself.

[image]

[Science absorbs all knowledge]

This immediately reminded me of Timothy Minchin's 10-minute beat poem Storm,
which includes the lyrics,

"And try as I like
A small crack appears in my diplomacy-dike
"By definition", I begin
"Alternative Medicine", I continue
"Has either not been proved to work, or been proved not to work
Do you know what they call 'alternative medicine' that's been proved to work?
Medicine."

""So you don't believe in any natural remedies?"

""On the contrary Storm, actually
Before we came to tea, I took a natural remedy derived from the bark of a willow
tree
A painkiller, virtually side-effect free
It's got a weird name, darling, what was it again?
M-masprin? Basprin? Oh yeah! Asprin!"

[media]

[The West's track record]

The west used to believe in a whole bunch of things that it now "knows" is
mumbo-jumbo, like "bodily humours" or the "four elements." None of those ideas
had any predictive capacity better than luck. So they fell by the wayside
because they just as often caused more harm than good.

For a long time, we had no metric for "cures", so we remained fooled by their
proponents' claims of efficacy but, once we figured it out, we realized that
removing most of the blood from the body wasn't helping you get better.

[Viruses]

Nowadays we believe in invisible -- to the human eye -- creatures that attack
our bodies until more invisible creatures can be rallied to fight them off, like
a microscopic "Helm's Deep"
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Helm%27s_Deep> taking place all over
you. This sounds f&@king batshit, of course! But we also made microscopes so
that we can see them and we made medicines that help our Ents win against those
damned Orcs and it works. We proved that thinking about the world with this
model -- unverifiable though it may be with unaided human senses -- is largely
beneficial.

[Homepathy]

The west also still largely believes that eating tiny balls made of sugar that
have been infused with an essence whose power is inversely proportional to the
amount of the essence remaining after preparation is also super-good and
beneficial. So nobody's perfect.

[Science describes value and cost]

Wells is writing about how to come up with efficacious and valuable knowledge.
We're trying to come up with materials and practices that do more good than
harm. We are interested in estimating their value to society, usually with
respect to other proposed solutions. How else would you determine how much of
your energy and effort to invest in something?

Like, if someone says that you should go for a ten-mile walk to heal your pulled
muscle and someone else says to put heat on it and someone else says to put ice
on it, who do you believe? Do you figure out how to make heat that you can apply
to it when walking ten miles would be even better? Do you waste time trying to
make ice? Do you waste time walking ten miles, when it might make it even worse?

That is what science is for. Science is not woke. Science is not culturally
specific. It can be practiced that way, but then it's not science. Anyone who's
not following the rules is automatically not playing that game -- they are
playing a different game. Usually that game is scamming, i.e., they are trying
to get you to listen to them in order to extract more value from their idea than
it intrinsically has, usually for personal gain.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[How humans learn: System 2 => System 1]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5464</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5464"/>
    <updated>2025-05-27T23:20:08+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[image]The title is clickbait but the content is nonetheless
interesting. It discusses how to move processing from "system 2"
(logical reasoning) to "system 1" (intuition). It's how you get to a
point where you understand a language without thinking about it. Or how
you can just read music, or code, or...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 27. May 2025 23:20:08
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[image]The title is clickbait but the content is nonetheless interesting. It
discusses how to move processing from "system 2" (logical reasoning) to "system
1" (intuition). It's how you get to a point where you understand a language
without thinking about it. Or how you can just read music, or code, or vast
swaths of text on economics or philosophy. Or how your body has learned to move
in any sport or activity.

There is no way around using familiarity and repetition to get to highly
accurate and seemingly effortless intuitive responses. It's not effortless. The
effort is front-loaded.

[media]

At 33:00, there's a good example of a technique for moving people from system 2
to system 1.

"[...] this is kind of a problem we have in complex domains like physics where,
to the physics professor, everything's perfectly clear because their system one
is so fully developed. But, to a student, it's not. So, this is the
expert/novice divide. The professor can't see with the student eyes what that
problem looks like."

At 40:00,

"[...] the thing that I'm really worried about is how AI has this opportunity to
reduce effortful practice.

"I have four kids who are 8, 6, 4 and 0. And I worry about them that, you know,
if they're going to be...will they write an essay, will they write 100 essays?

"If there is a generative AI that can write for them, what forces them to
practice crafting those sentences? And if they don't craft those sentences, what
happens to their brains?

"The argument here is that you get good at your command of the English language.
You get good at being able to speak in front of people, at being able to express
your thoughts in writing by doing it again and again and again and again. 

"And you should suck at the beginning, and you shouldn't let that stop you. And
you should keep going and going and making slight tweaks and improving and
getting feedback and getting going. If they never do that, I really worry what
gets into system one, you know, what is that? Do they have an amazing network of
connected knowledge that they can draw on? Do they have things that are
automated? I fear that they won't.

"How do we force people to have to do that painful, effortful work when there's
a magic machine that will do it for you? That's a big concern.

"What about drawing? You know, if you can just ask it to make a picture of
whatever you like. The bat and the ball was AI, by the way. I can't draw, so....
But again, like, what will happen to people's artistic abilities?

"So this is, I think my biggest concern, is if it prevents us from going through
this painful, effortful process which is the core process of learning. Using
your limited system two resources to engage with things and practice again and
again and again, even when it's hard, even when it doesn't feel good, even when
you're not great at it. That is my big concern."

This was already a problem with people who thought that knowing something in a
web of other knowledge in your own head could be replaced with "just Google it."
You can't develop intuition about things that you don't know. You can't draw
connections between things that you don't know.

At 59:30, a question came in,

"I feel like everybody here might understand [it's a roomful of scientists] when
you don't understand something, it's exciting. A lot of people, when they don't
understand something, it's not exciting. So how do you think we change that?"

🎤 💧

That's a very important thing to remember: intelligence is more like seeing and
hearing. Different people have different levels of ability. I always tell people
that I can spend so much time on reading and writing because it's actually
rewarding and, if I'm honest, it kind of always has been. When I put time into
something, I'm rewarded by getting better at it within a noticeable amount of
time.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Utica's Air Quality is Hazardous?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5319</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=5319"/>
    <updated>2025-01-11T18:20:42+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[This morning, my partner reported that Utica's air quality was really. I
checked the "Real-time Air Quality Index"
<https://waqi.info/#/c/39.263/-98.027/5.3z> and could verify that the
station in Utica was signaling "very unhealthy" conditions.

You can see that Utica stands out alone as very unhealthy.

[image]

Whereas our initial idea was "wow the...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 11. Jan 2025 18:20:42
------------------------------------------------------------------------

This morning, my partner reported that Utica's air quality was really. I checked
the "Real-time Air Quality Index" <https://waqi.info/#/c/39.263/-98.027/5.3z>
and could verify that the station in Utica was signaling "very unhealthy"
conditions.

You can see that Utica stands out alone as very unhealthy.

[image]

Whereas our initial idea was "wow the fires in California have already drifted
that far? Over 5000km? Is that even possible?", you can see that no-one else
between California and Utica is similarly affected. It's not smoke. If you look
at LA, you can see that there isn't even anywhere nearly as bad as Utica was
showing this morning. You'd have to look in the work spots of India to find
similarly bad readings, where I found readings in the 800s in some places.

The details shows that it started happening very suddenly at about 18:00 the
previous evening. Either something happened -- industrial accident? -- or this
is when the sensor stopped working properly.

[image]

Later in the day, it's being reported that its an "iPhone Weather App Glitch: No
Hazardous Air Quality Over CNY"
<https://www.wktv.com/news/top-stories/iphone-weather-app-glitch-no-hazardous-air-quality-over-cny/article_a24de604-d02c-11ef-87b0-c7344694161b.html>.
Whereas they do well to point out that the winds in LA are actually blowing in
the other direction, It's a bit odd that they write that "Official air quality
reports from around Utica and CNY show air quality at a healthy and normal
level." That's simply not true, as the source I've cited above was showing very
unhealthy levels and is now shows levels twice as high as that that are
hazardous.

[image]

It's been quite consistent for about seven hours now. And you can see that the
rest of the US is more or less normal.

[image]

Again, even LA is showing much better air quality than Utica right now. You'd
have to look at the most highly industrial zones in China and India to find
anything as bad or exceeding Utica's reported level right now.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The Enlightened Treatment of Ignaz Semmelweis]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4949</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4949"/>
    <updated>2024-08-11T16:49:48+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[There is an unalterable dynamic in which the establishment rejects all
heresy if it is a challenge to its power. It continues to repeat itself.
In "Midnight Mass"
<https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10574558/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1>, one of the 
characters told a story about "Ignaz Semmelweis"
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignaz_Semmelweis>.

"[image][...] was a Hungarian physician and scientist of German descent,
who was an"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 11. Aug 2024 16:49:48
------------------------------------------------------------------------

There is an unalterable dynamic in which the establishment rejects all heresy if
it is a challenge to its power. It continues to repeat itself. In "Midnight
Mass" <https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10574558/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1>, one of the 
characters told a story about "Ignaz Semmelweis"
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignaz_Semmelweis>.

"[image][...] was a Hungarian physician and scientist of German descent, who was
an early pioneer of antiseptic procedures [...] Semmelweis discovered that the
incidence of infection could be drastically reduced by requiring healthcare
workers in obstetrical clinics to disinfect their hands.

"Despite his research, Semmelweis's observations conflicted with the established
scientific and medical opinions of the time and his ideas were rejected by the
medical community. He could offer no theoretical explanation for his findings of
reduced mortality due to hand-washing, and some doctors were offended at the
suggestion that they should wash their hands and mocked him for it. In 1865, the
increasingly outspoken Semmelweis allegedly suffered a nervous breakdown and was
committed to an asylum by his colleagues. In the asylum, [Semmelweiss] was
beaten by the guards. He died 14 days later from a gangrenous wound on his right
hand that may have been caused by the beating."

What's the lesson here? 🤷‍♂️ The wheel crushes all.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Clever corvids]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4933</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4933"/>
    <updated>2024-02-04T21:41:52+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Stop what you’re doing and learn about how clever corvids are. There
is a lot of footage of them creating grub-digging sticks to quite
exacting specifications. It's quite incredible, but there you are.

[media]

"Anyway, science hippies put a camera on the crow’s tail feathers…"

The crows are capable...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 4. Feb 2024 21:41:52
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Stop what you’re doing and learn about how clever corvids are. There is a lot
of footage of them creating grub-digging sticks to quite exacting
specifications. It's quite incredible, but there you are.

[media]

"Anyway, science hippies put a camera on the crow’s tail feathers…"

The crows are capable of solving multi-step problems. There are several tubes
arrayed around the crow. One of the tubes has food in it, but cannot be reached
with the small stick that the crow is given. There is a slightly longer stick in
one tube, but it's also not long enough to reach the food. It is, however, long
enough to reach an even-longer stick that is able to reach the food. There is no
way to solve the puzzle without using the short stick to get the medium stick
and then using the medium stick to get the long stick and then to finally reach
the food.

"When she's trying to figure out how she got into this escape room/restaurant."

The crow "Pierre" cheats, but he’s "got some pluck." He tries with the short
stick, then flies away to find a longer stick somewhere else, digging out the
food with that instead of messing with all of the tubes. 

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Contrasting reactions to COP28]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4914</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4914"/>
    <updated>2023-12-26T23:30:16+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[First, let's take the less-hopeful, but more-sober article "COP28
climate summit exposes the dead end of fighting climate change under
capitalism" by Brian Dyne
<https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2023/12/15/ertd-d15.html>. It writes,

"The end of COP28 was also applauded by John Kerry, the US special
presidential envoy for climate. Kerry said of the draft resolution,"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 26. Dec 2023 23:30:16
------------------------------------------------------------------------

First, let's take the less-hopeful, but more-sober article "COP28 climate summit
exposes the dead end of fighting climate change under capitalism" by Brian Dyne
<https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2023/12/15/ertd-d15.html>. It writes,

"The end of COP28 was also applauded by John Kerry, the US special presidential
envoy for climate. Kerry said of the draft resolution, “While nobody here will
see their views completely reflected, the fact is that this document sends a
very strong signal to the world.”

"That signal is that capitalist governments can and will do nothing to fight
climate change. Any genuine mobilization would cut across their national
interests and corporate profits. It is significant that while most other heads
of state attended at least part of the conference, US President Joe Biden did
not, ostensibly too busy prosecuting war in Ukraine and genocide in Gaza."

"Current greenhouse gas emissions are putting Earth on track for a 3-degree
Celsius warming, twice as much as the current benchmark presented as a “point
of no return.” In such a scenario, an estimated one billion people would be
forced from their homes a result of sea level rise, on top of the billion now
who are currently under threat from dying as a result of starvation, disease and
thirst."

Yes, but none of those billions of people are us. We have arrogated all of the
things unto us. Maybe our climate will be less-good than it was, but we don't
really care -- because rich people stay indoors, in their apartments in big
cities, or in air-conditioned palaces in the nicest parts of the countryside and
world. Those places will take decades before they degrade. At that point, we can
begin to tackle the climate crisis in earnest because then, you see, it will be
important humans who will be affected.

Until then? It's somebody else's problem. COP28 might as well have sold T-Shirts
that say, "We can't stop it now, so why bother?" It would only mean that we have
to restrict ourselves and it probably wouldn't even work. So why risk it? Why
reduce my personal perceived comfort for an uncertain benefit that doesn't even
accrue only to me? What do I look like, an idiot?

So that's the exceedingly sarcastic picture I've got of attendees of COP28.

Let's see what else we have.

Oh, here's something...

The article "This Year’s Climate Summit Ended on a Hopeful Note" by Bill
McKibben
<https://jacobin.com/2023/12/climate-summit-cop28-transitioning-fossil-fuels-co2-environment-policy/>
is here to set me straight. The author, made sure to title his piece in a way
that lets liberals smugly keep doing what they're doing, safe in the knowledge
that their elected leaders have got a handle on everything. He seems to have
made that his job in the last decade or so. [1]

"The world’s nations have now publicly agreed that they need to transition off
fossil fuels, and that sentence will hang over every discussion from now on —
especially the discussions about any further expansion of fossil fuel energy.
There may be barriers to shutting down operations (what the text of the
agreement obliquely refers to as “national circumstances, pathways, and
approaches.”) But surely, if the language means anything at all, it means no
opening more new oil fields, no more new pipelines, and no more new liquefied
natural gas (LNG) export terminals."

[image]JFC Bill. Talk about setting yourself up for disappointment. "Surely", it
means all of that. No, it surely doesn't. There are going to be five times as
many LNG terminals in Europe in ten years. The "green wave" is horseshit. And
you know where that LNG is going to come from? The U.S., Bill.

Joe Biden has merrily opened up more territory for fossil-fuel exploration than
any president before him. Do you know why? Because it's still wildly profitable.
And because he gives less of a fuck what the world thinks than Netanyahu. YOLO.

McKibben goes on to note that there were two other hopeful moments in
climate-change history. In 1995, the world finally acknowledged that it existed.
Progress! In 2015 -- 20 years later! -- came a pledge to do something about it.
Eight years later, the third hopeful moment was calling for "transitioning away
from fossil fuels in energy systems in a just, orderly, and equitable manner."
Fifty years after having learned about climate change, with the last two years
having seen the highest CO2 emissions of all time, and also being the two
greatest increases of all time. But, sure, Bill; go ahead and be "hopeful".

McKibben ends with,

"[...] today’s agreement is literally meaningless — and potentially
meaningful. The diplomats are done now, so the rest of us are going to have to
supply that meaning."

They're not going to do anything, Bill. There's not a chance in hell of sticking
a landing under 1.5ºC. How can you even suggest that that's realistic? The
system will not allow it. Their greed will not allow it. Their devotion to
piracy will not allow it.

They cannot stand to see anyone have something that they do not have. They
squabble like chimps. There is no possibility for a way forward with these
people in charge, from cultures like this.

The OECD -- led by the U.S. -- will bury the world. I used to think the planet
would be just fine without us, but we're seemingly determined to take down most
other higher-order life on Earth with us.

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


[1] I've written about McKibben over the years. Of late, he's seemed to be more
    of a shill, as documented in the article "The Sane and the Belligerati"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4075> (see the section on
    "Biden's Mandate"), which is all the more of a shame because he wrote the
    excellent book "Falter"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3789> in 2019. A
    documentary I watched in 2019 "Planet of the Humans"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4022> did what I thought
    at the time was a hack job on him. Even in that review, though, I included
    several addenda that kind of granted them a point on the biomass-shilling
    that he'd been doing.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Sometimes being realistic == being pessimistic]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4770</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4770"/>
    <updated>2023-08-27T03:24:59+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "We can’t afford to be climate doomers" by Rebecca Solnit
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/jul/26/we-cant-afford-to-be-climate-doomers>
takes "doomers" to task for failing to maintain optimism in the face of
overwhelming resistance.

"Stanford engineering professor and renewable energy expert Mark Z
Jacobson tweeted the other day, “Given that scientists who study 100%
renewable"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 27. Aug 2023 03:24:59
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "We can’t afford to be climate doomers" by Rebecca Solnit
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/jul/26/we-cant-afford-to-be-climate-doomers>
takes "doomers" to task for failing to maintain optimism in the face of
overwhelming resistance.

"Stanford engineering professor and renewable energy expert Mark Z Jacobson
tweeted the other day, “Given that scientists who study 100% renewable energy
systems are unanimous that it can be done why do we hear daily on twitter and
everywhere else by those who don’t study such systems that it can’t be
done?”"

This means nothing. First of all, all you people spend way too much time arguing
with idiots online. Second of all, the fact that it is technically possible has
been true for decades.

We only have to reduce. We don't even need to invent anything. We won't do it.

We do not have the systems in place to enact anything approaching climate
protection in the most wasteful societies. And it is those societies that will
determine what will happen.

Instead, an opposing religion has taken such strong hold that even the smartest,
most enlightened of the people living in those societies simply can't conceive
of a society mediated by anything other than money, can't conceive of living
with limited resources, believe that "out of sight" is "out of mind", they drive
everywhere in the most wasteful of vehicles, consume, consume, consume, and
can't see anything wrong with it.

They will drag this fucking boat under the water, completely oblivious to their
role in this debacle. We cannot stop them. Everything is working against us. You
would have to eliminate most of western culture -- but, honestly, especially
American culture -- to save the planet.

[image]There is no way to reconcile America as she is with saving the planet.
One of them has to go. And, the way things look, it will be the planet that goes
-- because no-one can stop America. It eats everything. It corrodes otherwise
intelligent people into espousing the most warped opinions.

You can be an Earth-science teacher in a town without drinking water and still
talk about luxuriating in 30-minute showers and washing your hair every day.
People cannot. Fucking. Get. It. Nothing connects on a personal level. One's own
behavior and benefit will always be paramount. They start off thinking
differently, but they all end up the same: defeated by America's poisonous form
of capitalism and dog-eat-dog philosophy (if you can even call it that).

"One day this week, someone told me that she was “angry at people’s refusal
to acknowledge what’s happening to the planet” and when I waved a couple of
surveys at them showing that in 2023 “Nearly seven-in-ten Americans (69%)
favor the U.S. taking steps to become carbon neutral by 2050”"

What a fucking joke. Who did you ask? I haven't met a single person who would
say that unless they thought they would be entered in a contest to win a 13MPG
truck by saying it. If they did say it, they meant "carbon neutral" as long as
it could happen "without sacrificing a single, tiny thing that I have been
brainwashed into thinking is important for my life".

"I don’t know why so many people seem to think it’s their job to spread
discouragement, but it seems to be a muddle about the relationship between facts
and feelings. I keep saying I respect despair as an emotion, but not as an
analysis."

JFC, please talk to actual people in your own country. Get out of your hippie
bubble of planet-saving folks. No-one else in your country cares. They do not
grasp the problem. They all want to travel the world, visit places, buy new
cars, buy giant houses.

They. Do. Not. Understand.

And those that do? They. Do. Not. Care.

They are laser-focused on personal promotion and do not see any reason to
restrict their lifestyles to ones that use less energy.

They don't even understand the question.

They can't follow the discussion. Believe me, I've tried. People can't
understand what I'm saying. They seem to agree with me, but then cite examples
that indicate that they completely missed the point. It's not a matter of will
or determination -- they are not even prepared to understand the situation. We
are so far away from where we need to be at this point.

Go ahead and "fight defeatism", Rebecca. You'll still only be talking to people
who basically already agree with you, people who are capable of understanding
what needs to be done.

But defeatists and deniers aren't the reason we will fail to maintain a livable
climate. It's not even apathy. It's blank incomprehension. It's the Idiocracy.
We are living on Ark B, Rebecca. Most people aren't even as clever about the
climate as the "Golgafrinchan captain of Ark B"
<https://hitchhikers.fandom.com/wiki/Golgafrinchans>.

Look -- really look; watch TV here; look at what people are ingesting -- and you
too will despair. No-one is even prepared to take a shorter shower or turn the
AC above 70ºF for even a minute. Personal comfort is paramount and it isn't
even seen as related to either climate change or the effort required to combat
it. Changing attitudes and lifestyles is not even seen as a component of the
solution -- to say nothing of being the absolute crux of it.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Carbon offsets are, and have always been, bullshit]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4661</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4661"/>
    <updated>2023-01-22T13:57:41+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "Revealed: more than 90% of rainforest carbon offsets by
biggest provider are worthless, analysis shows" by Patrick Greenfield
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/18/revealed-forest-carbon-offsets-biggest-provider-worthless-verra-aoe>
reveals what it says in the title. It's an excellent article proving to
us what many of us already suspected strongly or already "knew": the
carbon-offset system looks like a scam and...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 22. Jan 2023 13:57:41
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "Revealed: more than 90% of rainforest carbon offsets by biggest
provider are worthless, analysis shows" by Patrick Greenfield
<https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/18/revealed-forest-carbon-offsets-biggest-provider-worthless-verra-aoe>
reveals what it says in the title. It's an excellent article proving to us what
many of us already suspected strongly or already "knew": the carbon-offset
system looks like a scam and it is a scam. The company Verra, responsible for
providing about 3/4 of carbon offsets globally, is being accused of having sold
20x more credits than it can actually verify. That is, it is being accused of
having lied about 95% of the carbon credits it sold.

"This is the deal we've had for decades now. They pretend to do things and we
pretend to believe them."

Obviously in a market where it's difficult to prove whether the product being
sold actually does what it says on the tin -- and those that purchase it don't
really care whether it does because it doesn't affect them in the short- or
medium-term.

[Reduction is the only way]

A colleague of mine commented,

"Better to avoid carbon-dioxide emission in the first place than to compensate
or offset them later."

[image]Agree 100%. We don't have to clean up or compensate the carbon that we
never emit. We don't have to produce energy that we don't require. Reduction is
not only the most powerful, but also seemingly the only viable way forward
because our globalized system has shown itself again and again to be incapable
of focusing on the climate crisis -- it is largely concerned with matters more
... remunerative in nature.

I mean, look at the graphic to the left! You spew carbon, but you make it better
by paying someone else not to. But who determines how much they're allowed to
sell? Who audits this system? Who ensures that the same credits aren't sold
multiple times?

How could anyone imagine that this type of system would actually provide the
purported benefit -- controlled and reduced CO<sup>2</sup> output -- within the
confines of the economic and political system we have. It was never anything but
a bad joke that provided the masters of the universe with a cheap way to tell
themselves that they not only have all of the money, but also the moral high
ground.

[Handling Verra]

If we had a functioning system in place, then the solution would be to take
Verra to court, and quickly decide what the truth of the matter is. If they
truly were "leveraging" carbon offsets (i.e., lying about how much they had to
sell), then they should be forced to pay back all of the customers to whom they
sold fraudulent goods. If there isn't enough left to go around (the money might
very well be gone), then their customers will have to take a loss.

Verra's customers, in turn, would then be required to purchase replacement
carbon offsets from elsewhere or, failing that, to inform their customers that
the product they sold them (e.g., a carbon-offset flight) did not actually
include a carbon offset, for which their customers would be entitled to a
rebate.

It sounds relatively straightforward, and it will also never happen. Unless this
report from the Guardian, Die Zeit, and SourceMaterial gets real legs, it will
be forgotten soon enough, much as the Panama Papers had no real repercussions.
We looked, we saw, we nodded, we acknowledged that we weren't really surprised,
we shrugged, and resigned ourselves to living in a world over which we have very
little power to effect large-scale changes.

Verra will almost certainly continue to be a going concern and might even become
more successful -- they did after all come up with a savvy business model that
generated a lot of profit. If the punishment isn't too high, then their EBITA
probably stays quite rosy.

[The whole system is broken]

The masters of our universe are not primarily interested in solving the climate
crisis. They are interested primarily in profit and are willing to tell a few
stories about how they're doing something about slowing climate change, if that
will keep us quiet. If the climate is actually saved as a side-effect of profit,
then that's nice to have, but it's not a requirement.

And we -- the royal we, the hoi polloi, not the individuals on this forum, who
are all enlightened souls 😉 -- for our part, are willing to stay quiet, even
though we are 100% aware that we really shouldn't believe a word they say.

This is the deal we've had for decades now. They pretend to do things and we
pretend to believe them.

Of course, we are still left with a planet that has suffered extra years, if not
decades, under accelerating carbon usage, perhaps partially because so many were
convinced that carbon offsets were a real thing -- or as noted above, allowed
ourselves to be convinced or convinced ourselves -- so that we could continue to
do what we were going to do anyway, but with less of a guilty conscience.

And this isn't just be me being a Cassandra. The article cites Barbara Haya in
the final paragraph,

"One strategy to improve the market is to show what the problems are and really
force the registries to tighten up their rules so that the market could be
trusted. But I’m starting to give up on that. I started studying carbon
offsets 20 years ago studying problems with protocols and programs. Here I am,
20 years later having the same conversation. We need an alternative process. The
offset market is broken."

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Humanity has the memory of a goldfish]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4563</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4563"/>
    <updated>2022-09-19T22:21:28+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[As I was reading the article "Polio declared a disaster emergency in New
York after more poliovirus found" by Beth Mole
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/09/polio-declared-a-disaster-emergency-in-new-york-after-more-poliovirus-found/>,
the following citation caught my eye,

"Rockland County—which is notorious for generally low vaccination
rates after battling a tenacious measles outbreak in 2019—has a polio
vaccination"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 19. Sep 2022 22:21:28
------------------------------------------------------------------------

As I was reading the article "Polio declared a disaster emergency in New York
after more poliovirus found" by Beth Mole
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/09/polio-declared-a-disaster-emergency-in-new-york-after-more-poliovirus-found/>,
the following citation caught my eye,

"Rockland County—which is notorious for generally low vaccination rates after
battling a tenacious measles outbreak in 2019—has a polio vaccination rate of
just 60 percent among children under the age of 2, who are recommended to have
three polio vaccine doses."

People are not vaccinating their children because they see the injections as
dangerous. They do not see them as helpful. They do not remember. They are
incapable of remembering. They decide for themselves whether to vaccinate their
children. They decide not to. They become infected, sooner or later. These are
solved problems. There are vaccines. It could work. But it won't. Not without a
lot better education/indoctrination or at least a little bit of
authoritarianism.

Humanity seems to be incapable of addressing these kinds of problems, in
general. Most people understand and continue to understand that vaccinations are
the much lesser of two evils. Why are vaccinations evil? Injecting a serum into
your body isn't a very comforting thing, really, is it? You really, really have
to trust that it will do more good than harm -- and you're very hopeful that it
does not harm at all. But you don't know. So, at the very least, it's a
psychological strain that we'd rather not have. Still, the upside far outweighs
the downside.

So, we can't keep people's belief in viruses alive over more than one or two
generations. As soon as we've conquered an enemy, people forget that that enemy
ever existed and pretend that it can never come back. Two generations.

And then I hear about the think tanks that consider how to communicate with
people 10,000 years in the future -- e.g., to tell them where we buried our
nuclear waste. This is literally impossible. Just give up. We can't even
communicate ideas about communicable diseases between adjacent generations. What
hope do we have of communicating across hundreds of them?

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Biggest Source of CO<sub>2</sub>]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4540</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4540"/>
    <updated>2022-07-30T01:00:44+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[What's the biggest source of CO<sub>2</sub> in the world? I was with a
friend who argued that it was personal passenger vehicles. I was pretty
sure that industry and agriculture produced the lion's share of
CO<sub>2</sub>, but she was adamant. I thought it sounded like her
source was conveniently...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 30. Jul 2022 01:00:44
------------------------------------------------------------------------

What's the biggest source of CO<sub>2</sub> in the world? I was with a friend
who argued that it was personal passenger vehicles. I was pretty sure that
industry and agriculture produced the lion's share of CO<sub>2</sub>, but she
was adamant. I thought it sounded like her source was conveniently placing the
blame for a warming planet on individuals' inability to conserve when I thought
that our individual contributions, while not inconsequential, were not the place
that we needed to start, necessarily.

When I had a moment, I looked it up and found, lo and behold, she seemed to be
right. The article "Cars, planes, trains: where do CO2 emissions from transport
come from?" <https://ourworldindata.org/co2-emissions-from-transport> shows the
biggest bar for "Road (passenger)". However, the first sentence of this article
states that "Transport accounts for around one-fifth of global CO₂
emissions.", which makes 45% of 20% = 11% of global emissions. So passenger
traffic, while a very high percentage, is not anywhere close to the major
contributor.

The article "Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions Data"
<https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissions/global-greenhouse-gas-emissions-data> has a
sub-head named "Global Emissions by Economic Sector", where we see that
industry, agriculture, and Energy Production account for about 70% of CO₂
emissions. Transportation, according to this diagram, is only 14%, of which the
aforementioned 45% would be only about about 6% of global emissions.

[image]

The figures are from 2015, but I fairly sure that they've not changed
significantly in proportion since then.

We can debate about the relative utility of "energy production" vs. "personal
transport" but personal vehicles do not seem to be the major culprit. Improving
efficiencies in agriculture and industry would seem to be a more efficient use
of our time.

We can also discuss the amount of other pollution -- not just CO₂ -- produced
by these sources, as particulate pollution impacts and destroys many, many lives
as well.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[How long did you even wanna live anyway?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4483</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4483"/>
    <updated>2022-04-18T13:39:55+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I was listening to this video,

[media]

Sabine said that the standard measure of life expectancy "is easy to
misunderstand". So, instead of expecting that people should make an
effort to understand it, we dumb it down instead, making it easier to
understand, but much less accurate. That is, people will get...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 18. Apr 2022 13:39:55
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I was listening to this video,

[media]

Sabine said that the standard measure of life expectancy "is easy to
misunderstand". So, instead of expecting that people should make an effort to
understand it, we dumb it down instead, making it easier to understand, but much
less accurate. That is, people will get a less-accurate impression, but be just
as confident in it. It will become the new reality, as usual.

Hossfelder talks about the Period life expectancy, which is a measure that
assumes that every year going forward will be like the one being measured (2020
in this case). She says that "no-one believes that this will happen", so that
the measure -- though official and standard -- also doesn't impart useful
information, necessarily. However, 2021 was worse than 2020 in the U.S., despite
vaccines. And 2022 is shaping up to be an absolutely horrible year in the U.S.,
as far a COVID-deaths-per-year goes. Maybe the number is more accurate than she
thinks?

Why do we use the number anyway? Because "it's the best number we can come up
with from the existing data". There are other numbers -- e.g. the cohort life
expectancy -- would be more accurate, but would only be useful after people are
already dead. It's a useful number as an input to other formulae, but it's not
predictive.

She also says that "[t]he life expectancy at a given age increases with age." A
rule of thumb for right now is to take your life expectancy at birth and add
about eight years. Using the U.S. actuarial tables, my life expectancy is 68.3 +
8 years, which takes me to 76.3 years, which seems ... low? 

That's for the U.S., though, a country in which I've not lived for almost 20
years. That's why she suggests to look at a Life Period Table instead. That
"table" <https://www.ssa.gov/oact/STATS/table4c6.html> tells me how many years I
have left to live, which, added to my current age, would give me a life
expectancy of 79.75 years instead. I can't find the "Life Period Table" for
Switzerland, but I'm sure it would predict slightly higher.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Switzerland's infection rate]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4437</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4437"/>
    <updated>2022-01-24T22:12:53+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "So entwickeln sich die Corona-Zahlen in der Schweiz"
<https://www.srf.ch/news/schweiz/taeglich-aktualisierte-grafiken-so-entwickeln-sich-die-corona-zahlen-in-der-schweiz-2>
is updated constantly. In the update from Monday, 24.01.2022, the matrix
that shows the infection rate by age group was a particularly brilliant
crimson.

[image]

If I'm reading this chart correctly, 4.5% of 10 to 19-year-olds were
infected...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 24. Jan 2022 22:12:53
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "So entwickeln sich die Corona-Zahlen in der Schweiz"
<https://www.srf.ch/news/schweiz/taeglich-aktualisierte-grafiken-so-entwickeln-sich-die-corona-zahlen-in-der-schweiz-2>
is updated constantly. In the update from Monday, 24.01.2022, the matrix that
shows the infection rate by age group was a particularly brilliant crimson.

[image]

If I'm reading this chart correctly, 4.5% of 10 to 19-year-olds were infected
with COVID in the week from 10.01 to 17.01. That seems like quite a lot.
Switzerland has a 7-day rolling average of about 32,300 cases per day. That
makes about 226,000 per week. The latest "population estimate from 2019"
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switzerland> is about 8,570,000. That's about
2.64% of the population infected per week at this pace. So, wow.

And the positivity rate is a stratospheric, completely out-of-control 41%.

[image]

I've heard news that contact tracing is "starting to fall apart a bit". No
wonder.

On the very positive side, the ICUs are below 80% occupied and holding. The
daily average number of deaths is at 12.7. These numbers are much more
reassuring than other countries, like the U.S. They indicate that, while a lot
of people are being infected at once in Switzerland, the system seems to be able
to handle it.

Long Covid is still a question mark, but this wave, enormous as it is, is
hitting Switzerland fundamentally differently than the others before it.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Clarifying efficacy percentage (vs. effectiveness)]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4401</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4401"/>
    <updated>2022-01-24T21:55:30+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[In a recent article "Links and Notes for December 17th, 2021"
<https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4385>, I noted that
Doctor Mark Hanefeld seems to be underselling vaccine efficacy
(predicted) and effectiveness (measured).

The podcast is linked below,

[media]

At 17:30, Herr Doktor Marc Hanefeld says,

"Nehmen wir mal einfach die Zulassungsstudien"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 24. Jan 2022 21:55:30
------------------------------------------------------------------------

In a recent article "Links and Notes for December 17th, 2021"
<https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4385>, I noted that Doctor
Mark Hanefeld seems to be underselling vaccine efficacy (predicted) and
effectiveness (measured).

The podcast is linked below,

[media]

At 17:30, Herr Doktor Marc Hanefeld says,

"Nehmen wir mal einfach die Zulassungsstudien zu Biontech. Da haben wir eine 95%
Effektivität. Und die Effektivität ist immer im Hinblick auf symptomatische
Ansteckung. Das heisst, man wird angesteckt mit dem Virus und merkt was -- hat
Symptome. Diese hat 95% Effektivität am Anfang. Das heisst 5% -- sprich jeder
zwanzigste -- konnte sich trotzdem anstecken. Würde nicht schwer krank werden
aber kann das Virus weiter geben."

A lot of what he had to say was very, very good. But my ears perked up at this
explanation, because it's wrong -- it drastically undersells the efficacy of the
vaccines (or any vaccine). [1] The 95% protection is relative to people without
the vaccine. It means that of the number of unvaccinated people who became ill
with COVID (in the control group), only 5% as many vaccinated people got it.

The 5% is not applied to the entire vaccinated group, but to the percentage of
unvaccinated people in the control group who became ill. If each group had
10,000 people and about 100 people in the control group became ill, that means
that only 5 vaccinated people of the 1000 because ill. That means that, while
you had a 1% of getting sick without the vaccine, you had a .05% chance of
getting sick if vaccinated.

It was never perfect, but it was incredibly good. Hanefeld's formulation makes
it sound like you have a 5% chance of getting infected when it's actually much
better than that -- even with the waning effectivity of the vaccines against new
variants and over time, the protection number you hear is still calculated in
the same way -- as a percentage of the likelihood that you'll be infected
without it. So a 50% protection means that you still only have a 0.5% chance of
catching it if an unvaccinated person has a 1% of doing so.

On another topic, I was extremely hesitant to say that Hanefeld had formulated
efficacy incorrectly (or sub-optimally) because I don't want to be the kind of
person who, without any formal training but a lot of "reading" starts
disagreeing with experts, thinking that I can run with the big dogs. That's why
I found the Lancet reference in the footnotes, to corroborate my gut reaction.

The problem we have today is that there are far more people who think that
they're smarter than everyone else -- with the corollary being that experts are
kind of dumb, blinkered by their experience, set in their ways, and/or bought
off by corporate interests. They think that they are the only ideologically pure
and incisively clever person on the planet, doing humanity a favor by jumping in
everywhere and fixing things.

This is an attractive plot for a movie, but it's not how reality usually works.
Sure, you're going to get so-called experts who are bought off, who are
hamstrung by pet theories, but those are generally also the experts who are
considered to be damaged goods by other experts. The winnowing process of
science and rationality generally works pretty well, if you can control for ego
and corporate interest. One way to control for those things is to make sure that
the incentives are lined up to guarantee correctness rather than fame. If the
incentives allow for people to get famous or rich while pushing something they
know is incorrect, then you are doomed to fail.

I wrapped that up one day and read, just the next morning, in "CDC surrenders US
population to the spread of Omicron" by Patrick Martin
<https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/12/28/tuiz-d28.html>,

"Even those fully boosted have only 75 percent protection against Omicron. That
means that if 60 million people who have received booster shots come into
contact with a COVID-19 case and are sent back to work without even a day off,
15 million of them would be carrying the infection with them to spread."

That sounds wrong, in the same way that Herr Doktor Martin's formulation sounded
wrong. And the WSWS would ordinarily be doing everything they can to emphasize
the effectiveness of vaccines.

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


[1] The article "What does 95% COVID-19 vaccine efficacy really mean?" by Piero
    Olliar
    <https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(21)00075-X/fulltext>
    agrees, 
  "[...] a 95% vaccine efficacy means that instead of 1000 COVID-19 cases in a
   population of 100 000 without vaccine (from the placebo arm of the
   abovementioned trials, approximately 1% would be ill with COVID-19 and 99%
   would not) we would expect 50 cases (99.95% of the population is
   disease-free, at least for 3 months)."


[1] I feel like I've been hearing about sanctions on Russia for much longer than
    the last six years, but I couldn't find any strong evidence of it in a quick
    search.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Climate-change activism vs. the third world]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3818</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3818"/>
    <updated>2022-01-24T15:05:12+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I recently saw an argument that says that people like Greta Thunberg --
let's use her as a placeholder for any semi-affluent first-worlder --
can argue all she wants for a massive reduction of fossil-fuel usage,
but that she's privileged to be able to do so, as there is zero chance
that her life will...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 24. Jan 2022 15:05:12
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I recently saw an argument that says that people like Greta Thunberg -- let's
use her as a placeholder for any semi-affluent first-worlder -- can argue all
she wants for a massive reduction of fossil-fuel usage, but that she's
privileged to be able to do so, as there is zero chance that her life will be
impacted negatively by it. The argument is that stopping fossil fuels now will
leave the developing world even farther behind because they won't be able to
benefit from the economic growth they need in order to improve their lives.

This is the type of hot take that will be repeated endlessly and that impresses
those who like to be led by the nose, but it's not true. A drastic reduction in
fossil-fuel usage will affect everyone, both initially negatively and eventually
positively. People in the developing world will be impacted more severely in
either case. People in the first world will, but more through an increase in
climate refugees, which will drastically change those societies as well.

Arguing that we should ignore climate change because no-one has an alternative
plan is intellectually lazy. There is an alternative plan, but nobody wants to
do it: stop mindless growth built with fossil fuels everywhere. Just stop
building stuff we don't need. Stop driving an economy based on fabricated
desire.  

Everyone who benefitted massively from the reckless usage so far is obligated to
help everyone else who is severely impacted by either,

  * the climate change that usage engendered or
  * the potential drop in quality of life engendered by stopping the use of
    fossil fuels ("potential" because there is no reason why people should
    suffer other than the greed of the wealthy).

Obviously, it's a giant long shot to think that any of the "winner" countries
will step up and take responsibility, but it's really the only way forward.
Keeping on keeping on while telling Greta to go fuck her bratty, white,
privileged self is a super-bad plan.

The whole plan isn't just to stop using fossil fuels and then sit back and see
what happens. The whole plan -- laid out in countless well-written articles and
books -- is to change how we do things from the ground up. There is no other
way. There is no shortcut. Just because there's almost no way that it's going to
happen doesn't mean it's not the only way out. There is no techno-miracle
lurking around the corner. We are well and truly fucked if we continue on this
path. Even just slowing down a bit won't help. Our system isn't really capable
of doing something like that, anyway.

Pissing on first-world climate-change activists for being more privileged under
the current system is just being spiteful and unproductive. They are mostly
right and they have a plan for everyone. Go piss on the people who are standing
in the way of bringing that plan to fruition.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Community-based Medicine]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4396</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4396"/>
    <updated>2021-12-25T08:56:01+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[A not insignificant part of the community doesn't want the COVID
vaccine. So, they're coming up with their own versions. I heard from one
friend that he's taking dandelion extract. He's convinced it will help
fend off COVID, so that means he thinks he's developed a partial
vaccine, at least. The...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 25. Dec 2021 08:56:01
------------------------------------------------------------------------

A not insignificant part of the community doesn't want the COVID vaccine. So,
they're coming up with their own versions. I heard from one friend that he's
taking dandelion extract. He's convinced it will help fend off COVID, so that
means he thinks he's developed a partial vaccine, at least. The picture below
comes from an anti-vaxx blogger I follow, [1]

[image]

The guy posted it without comment, other than to title it "A safe alternative to
the "vaccine"", so I have no idea whether he's just kidding around or not. If I
were to guess, based on the rest of his content, I would say...no. No, he's
probably serious that when words match, that's SCIENCE.

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


[1] Gotta keep your finger on the pulse, man.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[A modest proposal: What about COVID bribes?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4378</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4378"/>
    <updated>2021-12-05T21:26:19+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[In combatting the pandemic efficiently and successfully, Switzerland is
in a pretty bad place right now. It's not nearly as bad as Austria or
Germany (or a bunch of Eastern Europe, for that matter), but it's not
too far behind.

There aren't too many reasons to believe that things will go any...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 5. Dec 2021 21:26:19
Updated by marco on 5. Dec 2021 22:17:27
------------------------------------------------------------------------

In combatting the pandemic efficiently and successfully, Switzerland is in a
pretty bad place right now. It's not nearly as bad as Austria or Germany (or a
bunch of Eastern Europe, for that matter), but it's not too far behind.

There aren't too many reasons to believe that things will go any better in
Switzerland than it's gone in those countries -- with their overflowing
hospitals and people dying due to emergency-triage policies.

That's the thing about playing musical chairs for real: when you don't get a
chair, you don't just go back to the circle with the other losers and start
clapping to the music. No, in real life, when you don't get a metaphorical
chair, you die.

A lot of us think that that isn't something that should be allowed to happen in
a country that's well-known as one of the most civilized and technologically,
medically, and philosophically advanced in the world.

Switzerland isn't alone in wasting the opportunity it has -- opportunity that a
lot of other countries can't even dream of having, to say nothing of wasting. So
this story and proposal should be applicable elsewhere.

[Solidaritätsmangel (a failure of solidarity)]

We have a problem with people who don't believe that this is the story of what's
happening. There are a lot of people who are either unwilling -- or incapable --
of seeing the connection between their actions and the scenario described above.
They see only their own personal sphere, make decisions based only on their own
personal well-being -- and perhaps the well-being of a few close relatives and
acquaintances.

They don't acknowledge that, simply because they feel that they are unlikely to
be strongly affected by COVID -- whether because they feel they're strong
enough, or young enough, or taking the right witch's brew of self-prescribed
chemicals -- that they still pose a not inconsequential danger to society. If
they get sick, they think only of their own personal survival and recovery, not
of the people to whom they might spread the disease -- people who might be
weaker, or older, or perhaps who don't know about the miraculous cures you can
find online.

Nor do people "believe in" the predictable scaling effects. A single person
getting ill isn't going to be a problem, not when only 1% go to the hospital --
even fewer if they're young. This illness tends to keep people in the hospital
for a while -- tying up a lot of resources and personnel in the process. If
enough people get sick at once -- and they are doing so because even .1% of
millions is a lot of people -- the hospitals fill up.

Now, it's not just the people in the hospital who are in trouble, but a country
full of people who no longer have a working healthcare system at their disposal.
At that point, people without COVID will die because of COVID.

That explanation is already too complex, though. People like a simple,
predictable process, like: go out into the sun without sunscreen? You get
sunburned. Not "you might be sunburned" or "other people might get skin cancer".
A direct, observable, and painful effect that cannot be misunderstood. [1]

There is a not insignificant portion of the Swiss population that is not
availing themselves of a safe, effective, and free medication that would
dramatically decrease both the human and economic cost of the pandemic if enough
people were to take it. These people probably watch a lot more team sports than
I do, but they don't know what it means to play on a team -- to take one for the
team, as the saying goes.

[A failure of vision]

Society is fundamentally broken, but it's all we have right now. The world is
now fully marketized. Margaret Thatcher has won. As she once decreed, a large
minority of the population now believes that "there is no such thing as
society". There are only transactions between unaffiliated individuals, with no
pre-existing trust relationship. People don't matter. Society has given you
nothing and you owe it nothing in return, is their philosophy.

Now, don't get me wrong: in moments of darkness, I, too, wonder whether we
really need to save everyone. There are, after all, more than enough people to
go around. The Gubrist tunnel is still full no matter when you drive through the
damned thing. Maybe fewer people would be better. Maybe these people are onto
something! But who gets to choose who lives and who dies? That's always the
problem. I don't want to make that choice, so I approve of trying to save as
many people as seems feasible. [2]

I don't think that that's their calculus, though. I think that they don't like
being told what to do unless they're also told that it will directly benefit
them. Doing something for the good of society is passé and unlikely to find a
sympathetic ear in a world where everyone is hustling for themselves in an
increasingly gigged/rigged economy. The only way to get ahead is to step on
others. If you're not stepping on anyone, then you're the one being stepped on.

[The task at hand]

Society has something that it wants: it wants to exert its significant
scientific, economic, and medical muscle to beat back the pandemic, to stop
expending so much energy on constantly fighting the same battle over and over
again. It wants to win the war on this crisis so that it can move on to the far
more significant crisis waiting for it: climate change. [3]

That's what a sane and just society wants. It wants to expend its resources
efficiently. It wants to survive. That's the long-term goal.

We're not talking about preserving every feature of existing society, warts and
all, but about getting to a point where we're no longer spending so much time,
resources, energy, and attention on combatting a stupid virus.

How do we get there? Well, society started out by asking people to do the right
thing. That actually worked surprisingly well, at first! The solidarity
expressed in the first couple of months of the pandemic was heartwarming and
hopeful.

A lot of people did a reasonable job of conforming to the bare minimum of living
in a society. They stayed home, they stayed in home office, they wore masks,
they got vaccinated. It wasn't that it didn't involve any effort or suffering --
there was still a lot of that -- but wearing a mask and getting a shot helps a
tremendous amount relative to the personal investment.

As with anything else, though, we got bored with it. It was fun for a while to
pretend that we were more interested in a higher purpose than in our prosaic
concerns. But the way our world is built wouldn't allow that to continue for
very long. The thrust of society pushes toward consumption, toward growth,
toward bigger, better, faster, more. It uses greed and envy to generate needless
economic activity. Over the long term, staying home, reducing consumption, etc.
to protect others was a no-go.

[Settled science]

It's not a question of who's right. At this point, there is very clear and
overwhelming data showing us what the most efficient and efficacious approach to
winning the war against COVID is.

The arguments about the efficacy or safety of the vaccine were legitimate at the
very beginning, but they are very much dead in the water today. It's been a
year. Half the planet is vaccinated. People are not getting ill or dying in
significant numbers from the vaccine. They are doing so as a result of catching
COVID. The scientific community is in agreement.

We should not care what a vocal, untrained, and self-nominated minority has to
say about the facts of the matter. We must, unfortunately, concern ourselves
with them because of the undue influence they have on people.

What must be done is not without effort, but it's also not particularly
difficult. It involves work -- and working together -- but it's not complicated.
We have to be careful to do it without accidentally -- or deliberately --
extending the surveillance or authoritarian state, but I believe we in
Switzerland are capable of enacting measures that will be reduced when they are
no longer necessary.

[Any ideas?]

So: society has a big problem called the COVID pandemic that's costing a lot of
time, energy, resources, and money. It's a sinkhole. There is a solution, but
pretty much everyone has to play along in order for it to work. It's in our best
interests to get better at dealing with pandemics because there are, in all
likelihood, more of these coming.

A lot of people played along without much effort on society's part -- whether
because they respond well to authority or because they trust society or because
they thought about the argument outlined above -- and they came to the obvious
conclusion.

There are still millions of Swiss to be vaccinated. What do we do, as a society?
What are our options?

We could kill them all. If they're dead, they can't spread the virus. Or we
could lock them up, prevent them from partaking in society. If they're not
around others, they can't spread the virus.

Neither of these is really practicable.

Austria is sending people vaccination appointments and fining them heavily if
they fail to comply. I think Germany is doing something similar now. That's the
punishment solution. We all recognize it from child-rearing: clean up your room
or I'll put you through the wall. Or, in an age of reduced corporal punishment:
clean up your room or I'll ground you: no TV, no iPad, no ... whatever.

That will probably work, in that it's more likely to lead to a society that
beats the pandemic than if such a large proportion remains highly susceptible to
the virus. But it might backfire in that it leads to a society at war with a
significant portion of itself. You are leading, but through fear rather than
admiration. It is the world of 1984 envisioned by Orwell, rather than the Brave
New World of Huxley.

[Getting closer...]

As with any other issue, there is a very, very vocal minority among those who
have not been vaccinated. They are hardcore, unlikely to be moved.

There are many, many more who have not vaccinated because they couldn't be
bothered or because they've read some disturbing bit of propaganda that they
immediately believed and that governs their decisions now (e.g. vaccines affect
fertility). But they're not hardcore. They just need to be slipped out of one
valence level and into another. They just need a bit of invested energy to
achieve the transition.

Energy...or money.

Society wants something from these people. Why don't we pay them to do what we
want?

[An immodest proposal [4]]

Because that wouldn't be fair to everyone else, you will immediately say.

That is, of course, a very good point. If you start paying people who didn't
volunteer to help society, you only encourage others to hold out for more money
later. Not only have you established a pattern where you reward the most
recalcitrant, but you also annoy the overwhelming majority who volunteered
without any reward. A bad idea, all around.

But...what if we just paid everyone? That is:

   1. We make a "reward" available to everyone who's already been vaccinated.
      [5]
   2. Anyone who cannot be vaccinated for valid medical reasons qualifies for
      the reward as well.
   3. Then we make the reward available to everyone who schedules a vaccination
      appointment right now.
   4. Finally, we reduce the reward by 5% each week.

The sooner you're vaccinated, the more reward you get. If you're already
vaccinated, you get the maximum reward. That's it. [6]

There's one more question to answer, though.

[How much?]

Society has a giant problem. It has a solution. It has quite a bit of money. But
it also has other problems and other needs as well. It has other priorities.
They must all be balanced and it must determine how much value it places on
solving this problem efficiently and expeditiously.

There are 8M people in Switzerland, give or take. About 5M have been vaccinated
by now (again, give or take).

If the reward were CHF1,000, then that's 5B Swiss francs to dole out so far,
with a cap at 8B when everyone is vaccinated.

That's just a number I plucked out of thin air because I can multiply 5M by
1,000. When I first thought of this, I said CHF200.- to the friend I always
annoy with these ideas. On consideration, I thought it might be a bit low in
Switzerland. Regardless of the actual number, there are two questions that are
likely to arise:

Is it too little?

   This is a country where people have been regularly paying CHF25.- to be
      tested every 3 days rather than getting a free vaccination. A lot of this
   can
      probably be explained by sunken-cost theory, where they've committed to
   their
      anti-vaccination stance and every CH25.- they spend on it solidifies their
      position. If they were to change their minds now, then that money will
   have
      been wasted. The reward has to be high enough to convince them. It doesn't
      have to be crazy-high because a high-enough sum right now has been shown
   to
      be quite convincing. I'm not an expert. Consult some marketing
   professionals
      and psychologists or both. Maybe ask around.

Is it too much?

   Can the Swiss government afford the cost of such a reward program? The answer
      to this question will come from evaluating what the pandemic is costing
      Switzerland right now. Just for comparison, the best estimates for the new
      fighter jets the Swiss military wants is over CHF 6B. 8B to get the
   pandemic
      largely under control in Switzerland doesn't sound exorbitant. It sounds
      eminently reasonable.

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


[1] That said, I do have a light-skinned friend who is not only adamantly
    refusing to be vaccinated but who is also highly skeptical of the chemicals
    in sunscreen. They prefer to be sunburned now and risk skin cancer later
    than to avail themselves of highly tested and widely accepted preventatives.
    There's just no helping some people.


[1] We'll get to this later in the essay, but "feasible" means that, if we're
    willing to spend a ton of money and resources on something that benefits
    only a few people (e.g. the rich), then we should also be willing to do so
    for something that benefits all of society.


[1] Hahahahaha, I'm just kidding. Society wants to get back to shoveling money
    upward, to the already-rich, but I digress. Let's pretend that that's not
    the case. Let's pretend we live in a sane and just society.


[1] Jonathan Swift famously and satirically wrote "A Modest Proposal"
    <https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/handle/1794/872/modest.pdf>
    to solving the problem of Irish hunger by having them eat their children (or
    something like that, I admit I haven't read it in a while). I, on the other
    hand, am quite serious about this idea which, I guess, makes this proposal
    immodest.


[1] For those concerned about wasting money, they can voluntarily renounce their
    reward or publicly donate it to their favorite charity.


[1] There is also the problem of establishing a precedent for the next time we
    have a big, societal problem. Honestly, we just kind of need to get through
    this one and then we can worry about the side-effect of having "spoiled"
    people into thinking that they will be paid to be good, sane, and just
    citizens.


[1] I don't know if this idea came from the ZDF Magazin Royale I watched this
    morning -- "Fahren ohne Fahrschein"
    <https://www.zdf.de/comedy/zdf-magazin-royale/zdf-magazin-royale-vom-3-dezember-2021-100.html>
    -- but the mechanics are similar. The show was about how Germany spends ten
    times as much money criminalizing people for riding public transportation
    without tickets than it would to just pay for the tickets for those who
    can't afford to pay for them.
  
  In that case, those who would be rewarded by such a reversal of policy -- the
  indigent -- are far more sympathetic than those who haven't yet been
  vaccinated. But the principle applies, no? If it costs more to punish the
  asocial than to pay them, then it makes more sense to pay them. Doing anything
  else would be foolish.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[COP26: A good time was had by all]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4358</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4358"/>
    <updated>2021-11-19T21:41:16+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[After much deliberation and in the interest of demonstrating solidarity
among nations, we’ve decided to accept the tiny edit suggested to the
global climate agreement by some of our members and have changed the
wording from ‘save the world’ to ‘fuck you and fuck your fucking
kids and fuck your fucking grand-kids for fucking ever and ever.]COP26
has come and gone and many people, if not most of them, didn't even
notice. It was the 26th meeting of world leaders to discuss which
measures they can all agree to put into place in order to address
climate change.

A few of the other summits are famous by their city names: Kyoto in
1992,...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 19. Nov 2021 21:41:16
Updated by marco on 21. Nov 2021 08:47:43
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[After much deliberation and in the interest of demonstrating solidarity among
nations, we’ve decided to accept the tiny edit suggested to the global climate
agreement by some of our members and have changed the wording from ‘save the
world’ to ‘fuck you and fuck your fucking kids and fuck your fucking
grand-kids for fucking ever and ever.]COP26 has come and gone and many people,
if not most of them, didn't even notice. It was the 26th meeting of world
leaders to discuss which measures they can all agree to put into place in order
to address climate change.

A few of the other summits are famous by their city names: Kyoto in 1992, where
the U.S. -- by far the biggest polluter at the time -- refused to ratify it;
Copenhagen in 2009, where the world's worst per-capita polluter Canada torpedoed
everything so that they wouldn't have to restrict mining tar sands; Paris in
2015, where the U.S. did sign, but only after diluting the agreement by forcing
everything to be purely voluntary. Then Mr. Trump left that agreement entirely,
but Mr. Biden put the U.S. back in it.

That's all he and his administration did, though: the U.S. didn't follow through
on very much of what it had volunteered to do. According to the article "Roaming
Charges: Split Identity Politics" by Jeffrey St. Clair
<https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/11/12/roaming-charges-split-identity-politics/>,

"An investigation by the Washington Post reveals that the gap between what
industrialized countries have pledged, in terms of CO2 emission reductions, and
what they’ve actually done is startlingly wide. The gap ranges from at least
8.5 billion tons of CO2 equivalent to as of underreported emissions.  Because
since pledges often rest on this data, these shortfalls have huge implications
for potential success of the COP26 Glasgow Accords."

Or that, in the last five years, "[...] US crude oil exports increased [750%]
after Obama signed the Paris accords in 2015."

No-one can figure out a solution to stop ravaging the planet that works within
the confines of the market system. Our fearless leaders don't even want to try.
They don't even acknowledge or understand that the system is part of the
problem. That they are part of the problem.

All the while, the clock ticks.

[A whole lot of nothing]

It's unclear why we would expect anything useful to come out of these
conferences. [1] The conference basically has the same attendees as the WEF
(World Economic Forum) and no-one expects them to come up with anything that
doesn't funnel money upward like a conveyor belt. This conference is no
different -- not really. 

The COP26 summit was no more strict in responding to the urgency of the problem
than its predecessors. The article "The major climate pledges made at COP26 so
far" by Noah Garfinkel
<https://www.axios.com/cop26-pledges-list-country-organization-2c10af98-dc6d-4697-9514-2843e24b2e72.html>
explains that nothing they decided in Glasgow is really enforcable.

"The pledges made so far are just that: pledges. They are not mandatory, and no
one will be punished for failing to live up to them."

On the contrary, though, and, if I may: we will all be punished severely if we
fail.

The promises listed in that article are even more half-hearted than the pledges
at Paris -- and none of the countries even came close to coming through on their
pledges. China has accounted for about 50% of the reduction in CO<sub>2</sub>
output in the last decade. It is the biggest current emitter, so that's a good
start. So far, it's all -- if you'll pardon the expression -- hot air.

The article "COP26 climate summit ends in failure" by Patrick Martin
<https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/11/09/clim-n09.html> provides more detail
on what was decided -- and which country, as usual, stood in the way.

"Business Insider declared the event a “historic failure,” while an
editorial in the Financial Times spoke of “More hot air than progress at
COP26,” noting that the US’s decision not “to sign up to a deal to phase
out coal production… struck a severe blow to what was meant to be a flagship
policy of COP.”"

The only voices of sanity were to be found outside of the conference, in the
streets, protesting the hypocrisy and self-aggrandizement on the part of the
co-called leaders of the free world.

"It is hard to argue with Thunberg’s characterization of the summit as
“two-week-long celebration of business as usual and blah, blah, blah.”

"She told the huge crowd, “The leaders are not doing nothing. They are
actively creating loopholes and shaping frameworks to benefit themselves and to
continue profiting from this destructive system. This is an active choice by the
leaders to continue to let the exploitation of people and nature, and the
destruction of present and future living conditions to take place.”"

The article goes on to point the finger of blame on the absolutely bankrupt,
corrupt, and non-representative political system in the U.S. There is no party
worth backing there; they will all nuzzle at corporate teats for more money
until every coastal city in the world drowns and climate refugees threaten their
highly secured strongholds and enclaves.

"House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats will pretend that the
infrastructure bill they just approved and the social spending and climate bill
they just agreed to postpone add up to a huge US commitment to resolve the
climate crisis.

"The truth is just the opposite. Both the Democrats and Republicans are willing
to slash the consumption of American workers in the name of climate change, but
not to cut a penny of the profits of American corporations."

As we will discuss below, the U.S. shares a gigantic part of the historical
blame for CO<sub>2</sub> and, per-capita, is one of the most wasteful countries
today, landing in second place for total production. For it to continue to
pretend that it is doing something useful while doing the exact opposite is a
complete abdication of responsibility. Is there some way to vote the U.S. off
the planet?

Which country do you suppose stood in the way of letting the phrase "phase out
coal" remain in the COP26 Agreement? Instead, we get "phase down coal". See "Why
Our Climate Isn’t Jumping for Joy After COP26" by Vijay Prashad & Zoe
Alexandra
<https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/11/19/why-our-climate-isnt-jumping-for-joy-after-cop26/>
to read about how Switzerland called them out on it,

"During the last hours of the COP26 summit on November 13, Swiss Environment
Minister Simonetta Sommaruga took the microphone and expressed her “profound
disappointment” with the change. “The language we had agreed on coal and
fossil fuel subsidies has been further watered down as a result of an
untransparent process,” she said."

The solution isn't exactly the straightforward one of everyone stopping
coal-use. But countries that can afford to do so, should. The British have
already announced a slew of nuclear-power plants to replace coal. China, too --
about $450B over the next five years. Those aren't perfect, or maybe even great,
solutions, but at least the Chinese were  coherent at COP26:

"Cutting coal tomorrow will condemn billions of people to a life without
electricity (about 1 billion people still have no electricity connection, with
most of them living in the Global South). Second, Zhao said, “We encourage
developed countries to take the lead in stopping using coal [...]"

Satire articles like "Climate Summit Sets Ambitious Goal To Phase Out Fossil
Fuels By Time Earth Runs Out Of Them"
<https://www.theonion.com/climate-summit-sets-ambitious-goal-to-phase-out-fossil-1848031846>
just feel like regular reporting. Cartoons like the following are just facts,
only darkly funny -- because you have to either laugh or cry. And I always
choose to laugh.

[image]

COP26 might as well be Comicon but, instead of booth babes, they have
high-priced escorts. Why do you think Uncle Joe was so sleepy? The jet-lag? Pull
the other one.

[Blame it all on China and Russia (as usual)]

Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin weren't there. That's fine, though, isn't it? Are
they really the best people to negotiate these details? Look at who America
sent: Biden (asleep with jetlag), Pelosi (full of shit), Pallone (utterly lost),
and God knows who else. What did Biden do there? Lend gravitas? Are you sure
about that?

When people say that it's an insult that Russia and China didn't show up, I call
bullshit. The rest of the so-called advanced countries expend 90% of their
energy pissing on China and Russia and then turn around and say "see, look how
evil they are, they don't even come to this important climate conference."
That's not true, though. China and Russia both sent delegations -- just not
their presidents, who would have been useless there anyway.

[Moar circus plz]

It's all a farce anyway, with no hope of bringing about real change. The fate of
our world is in the hands of relatively few people and they are all very
comfortable, thank you very much. They feel no pressure to change anything
because, as far as they're concerned, things are just ducky. Sure, the supply
chain could be a bit faster, but let's not quibble. As the article "Roaming
Charges: Muzak for the Cancer Ward" by Jeffrey St. Clair
<https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/11/19/roaming-charges-33/> put it,

"The leaders of island nations are given a few moments before the cameras to
declaim how many acres of their land mass have been lost to rising seas since
the last summit and the members of the press try earnestly to recall how to
spell the names of their countries before they disappear altogether."

It's not about saving the world for the morons who were stupid enough to let
themselves be in the 99.9%. No, now it's about a self-perpetuating business
called "climate-change mitigation", where players make it look like they're
actually trying to do something useful while raking in a bunch of money. It's
the same as every other damned hustle, really, but with a lot more money on the
table.

Here's St. Clair again,

"Hurray! Progress has been made, if not toward reducing emissions, at least, and
this is, naturally, the most important thing, toward planning the next summit,
sure to be the most important one yet, when the planet’s atmosphere will have
breached the once unthinkable level of 420 ppm. Book your flights now."

[Business before Survival]

So what actually happened? What did they decide? The usual. The powers-that-be
don't like to acknowledge that the things that they do are going to kill us all
because it makes them very, very much richer than everyone else. If they do
acknowledge it, then they absolutely don't want to do anything about it that
involves reducing the disproportionate amount of income and wealth flowing in
their direction. If we could only figure out how to save everyone without
changing that dynamic. If we have to choose, ... well ... we have. Chosen, that
is. We're going to keep everything the way it is. We still have a good 10-20
years left. Smoke 'em if you got 'em.

The article "The Cop26 message? We are trusting big business, not states, to fix
the climate crisis" by Adam Tooze
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/16/cop-26-big-business-climate-crisis-neoliberal>
writes,

"Cop26 delivered no big climate deal. Nor, in truth, was there any reason to
expect one. The drastic measures that might – at a stroke – open a path to
climate stability are not viable in political or diplomatic terms. Like climate
breakdown itself, this is a fact to be reckoned with, a fact not just about
“politicians”, but about the polities of which we are all, like it or not, a
part. The step from the scientific recognition of a climate emergency to
societal agreement on radical action is still too great."

But wait! What's that? In the sky? It's a bird! It's a plane! It's ...
corporations. They,

"[...] can direct trillions towards the energy transition in low-income
countries, if the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank are there to
“derisk” the lending, by absorbing the first loss on projects in Africa,
Latin America and Asia. Even more money will flow if there is a carbon price
that gives clean energy a competitive advantage."

As always, the villain is capitalism. The world can't open its pursestrings
directly, and the enormous businesses that have sucked up most of the world's
capital -- like BlackRock, for example -- will only invest if those same
countries guarantee a minimum rate of return and no loss of principal using
roundabout mechanisms like the IMF and World Bank.

The money "comes" from BlackRock, but it's a no-lose investment, with the same
countries that can't pull their thumbs out of their asses playing lender of last
resort, but in a way that their citizens won't notice. It's a money-laundering
scheme to get more money flowing through and to Blackrock and all of the other
big winners of the last forty years of financial scams.

As Tooze writes,

"BlackRock’s backstop idea is the logic of the 2008 bank bailouts expanded to
the global level – socialise the risks, privatise the profits."

Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.

"Advocates of the Green New Deal have long urged big government-led industrial
policy. The approach of Kerry and his team seems to follow a more low-key,
pragmatic script. As Danny Cullenward and David Victor write in their book,
Making Climate Policy Work, rather than attempting a contentious grand bargain,
the key is to find coalitions of the willing and drive change sector by sector,
raising ambition through repeated rounds of bargaining."

This would possibly be a fine approach, but it's not going to be enough. A
slower approach like this only gives the opposition -- not those who don't
believe climate change is happening, but those who don't care enough about it to
risk their profits -- time to figure out how to game it. It's bailing out the
boat with a thimble. Meanwhile, the hole in the bottom of the boat grows.

The article "The Recognition" by James Howard Kunstler
<https://kunstler.com/clusterfuck-nation/the-recognition/> points out that the
financial system is, to a large degree, debts incurred based on cheap
fossil-fuel energy. That is,

"[...] all of our modern money rests on promises to deliver future volumes of
energy (and products of value made from it) and those promises are without basis
in reality, so the money itself is increasingly worthless. Thus, the cost of
getting that future energy exceeds the promises embedded in the money based on
the energy. How’s that for a paradox? We’re the proverbial snake eating its
own tail and now we’ve bitten off more than we can swallow."

[To each their own, and none for all]

The problem really is that the only approach that anyone seems to be able to
consider is fundamentally libertarian: everyone or every country looks out for
themselves and it will all work out as well as it possibly could. Everyone does
an incremental solution that addresses their immediate problems and no-one does
root-cause analysis and tackles the problem that's causing all of the other
problems. Instead, we just nibble around the edges -- but the monster is growing
more quickly than we can cut it back. It's the proverbial hydra.

In a situation like that -- and with solutions like those proposed -- we're
essentially in a defensive, reactive position. We don't really have a goal for
the world. Instead, we have a goal for ourselves and the world can sort itself
out. Does it matter that these "solutions" generally favor the already-rich,
which is the group primarily responsible for this crisis? Not to them, it
doesn't.

The most precious resource right now is time, and COP26 shows that the world's
leaders are not really worried about wasting that, either. As the article "After
the failure of Cop26, there’s only one last hope for our survival" by George
Monbiot
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/14/cop26-last-hope-survival-climate-civil-disobedience>
writes about the fossil-fuel industry,

"[...] if they can thwart action for long enough, the eventual victory of
low-carbon technologies might scarcely be relevant, as Earth’s systems could
already have been pushed past their critical thresholds, beyond which much of
the planet could become uninhabitable."

And, no, electric cars won't save us. It's pathetic that people cling to that
myth, as if we could just buy our way out of the crisis, when buying stuff is
what got us into it. Electric cars are cleaner than fossil-fuel vehicles
(throughout the lifetime), but they still have massive open questions about
where batteries come from, where they go, and whether we can realistically
produce enough batteries to satisfy our enormous needs.

Instead, we need to reduce our consumption, reduce our energy needs. We need to
live near where we work, so that we don't need cars anymore. We need to
eliminate food deserts.

Monbiot again,

"A genuinely green transport system would involve system change of a different
kind. It would start by reducing the need to travel – as the mayor of Paris,
Anne Hidalgo, is doing with her 15-minute city policy, which seeks to ensure
that people’s needs can be met within a 15-minute walk from homes."

"[...] simply flipping the system from fossil to electric cars preserves
everything that’s wrong with the way we now travel, except the power source."

[Which businesses, exactly?]

Which corporations -- other than financial giants like BlackRock -- are jumping
on the shambolic, lurching zombie of humanity as it wanders to its doom?

To no-one's surprise at all, there's the fossil-fuel industry. However, many of
the existing huge players have shown a willingness to pivot to other predatory
business models that kill the planet more slowly. The primary goal stated above
-- keep the margins high and the money flowing disproportionately to them --
must be satisfied first, but companies like Shell, Exxon, etc. are willing to do
it with renewable energy, whatever. As long as they still get to control
everything, they're on board with not destroying humanity anymore.

Other companies, like the U.S.'s so-called defense industry, not so much. They
see their role as defenders completely unchanged. In fact, they are selling
themselves as defenders of the border even more so than usual. That means more
money for them, more war, more conflict, and more profligate use of fossil fuels
(because it's the only game in town for the military).

The podcast "Border walls and the climate crisis / Nick Buxton"
<https://thisishell.com/interviews/1403-nick-buxton> was very interesting and
some important things to say about this very topic.

Nick summarizes his thesis [2],

"Nick: It's really important to understand that behind this is not just the
national security apparatus that is always looking for threats - there's also a
powerful industry that has made huge amounts of money in the last two decades,
and is now using climate change to argue for more military and border spending.
Quite a few of the big military and border firms have a lot of influence in the
corridors of power, they are lobbying constantly for increased spending on
borders. Many of these same border firms also provide services to the fossil
fuel industry."

At 48:00, Nick poses the same question anyone else sensible is posing: if the
system isn't working, then why don't we change the system?

"Nick: We're really getting to a crunch point. We have a choice ahead of us: are
we going to continue to support an economic system that is perpetuating the
crisis or are we going to look to rebuild a system that can actually tackle some
of the underlying causes of the injustices that we see today and which will
wreak havoc in future. "

At 49:00, he discusses how we already have open borders -- but only for the
elite,

"Nick: On one level: if you're a rich businessman, you can travel across any
border. It doesn't matter what nationality you have, if you have money, you can
travel. So, borders have kind of become a way to structure, ... whose lives are
worth it, and to structure labor markets. It either determines that your life is
expendable, or it determines that your labor is exploitable."

At 1:02:40, he and host Chuck Mertz discuss how the migration engendered by
climate change allows countries to double down on exactly the revolution needed
to address climate change.

"Chuck: To what extent are these security approaches an organized attempt by
wealthy nations to stop the possibility of revolution, even global uprising,
against the market? Is capitalism threatened and its most ardent adherents are
building walls to protect capitalists' way of living? Is border security an
attempt by the G7 to not be held accountable for their role in plundering the
world?

"Nick: Absolutely. We have two choices at this moment in history. Do we really
tackle the causes, which means some really fundamental issues around equity,
around injustice, around who's been affected, around the fact that the
wealthiest countries are the biggest part of the problem right now. Or, do we
just respond to the consequences? And if you respond [only] to the consequences,
you're essentially saying, 'I want the status quo. No matter how dangerous, no
matter how deadly, no matter the human consequences. The status quo, the
political system, the economic system, that benefits a certain minority right
now, matters more. That's the choice that's being made. It's very much about
that. It's saying it's more important to...it's more important to build up arms,
militarized against the consequences rather than tackle the causes. And that's
really the choice that's being taken right now."

At 1:06:30, Nick presents his vision toward which we should be working,

"Nick: An open-borders policy is a long-term solution. I think people should
have the right to move and to migrate and to be supported and to live dignified
lives. And we shouldn't have a system, as I said, which is built around
exploiting, or making people expendable, whoever they are in the world.  That's
my long-term vision. And I think that's a kind of moral vision to head towards.
I think there are steps we can take toward that -- I'm not saying that's the
world we can create overnight -- but that's the vision that I aspire to. And I
think that it's a vision that already exists for quite a few people. Like I
already said, if you have wealth, you effectively live in a no-border world. I
just want that world to be accessible to all. And that's something we have to
fight and struggle and move towards."

[The U.S. Military > Everything Else]

Building on the Nick Buxton interview is the following video. It's a succinct,
3.5-minute illustration of how the U.S. handled itself at COP26.

[media]

The amazing Abby Martin asked,

"Speaker Pelosi, you just presided over a large increase in the Pentagon budget.
This Pentagon budget is already massive. The Pentagon is a larger polluter than
140 countries combined. How can we seriously talk about Net Zero if there is
this bipartisan consensus to constantly expand this large contributor to climate
change, which is exempt from these conferences. Military is exempt from climate
talks."

She didn't really ask a question, but that's OK. I'm kind of shocked they even
let her in. Anyway, it was pretty clear what she meant. She makes a good point:
why isn't a reduction of the military's CO<sub>2</sub> footprint being
considered? Why are many of the countries at COP26 blithely increasing the size
of their militaries?

It is unfortunate that the parties decide to meet and talk about climate change
and, instead of "leaving all options on the table" -- as the U.S. loves to say
as a euphemism to express their willingness to use nuclear weapons -- many
things are off the table before the discussions have even started.

I understand that some things are off the table: slaughtering 20% of each
country's population to reduce consumption is an extreme idea that doesn't even
need to be discussed, for example. But reducing the climate footprint of an
already grotesquely oversized military should definitely be on the table. These
countries take so many things off the table that there is no way of achieving
the goal with what is left on the table.

I acknowledge that there is an argument to be made that the U.S. will need its
military more than ever when the climate crisis intensifies. (It's the argument
that the military and the defense industry itself is making, as described above
by Nick Buxton.) The U.S. will finally need to use its troops to actually defend
its own border against climate refugees rather than rove around the world. In
all likelihood, the U.S. would elect to do both: defend borders and rove around
the world to take advantage of climate-induced desperation (i.e. Shock
Doctrine). This attitude is them giving up before they've even begun. Just admit
it, guys. You don't care to fix the problem. Stop pretending. Lead, follow, or
get out of the way

Commentators on the video were snarky that Nancy Pelosi said something about the
organizers needing to "clean the room" after this question, intimating that she
was trying to avoid fully answering the question. However, she and Frank Pallone
[3] spent three minutes answering the question. Pallone reformulated twice.
Pelosi at least three or four times. There wasn't any more information
forthcoming than they'd given. What else did these commentators want or expect
to hear?

The U.S. delegation, as represented by Pelosi and Pallone, was very clear: the
U.S. military is more important than addressing climate change. You may not like
the answer, but it was pretty clear. There will be no military reduction because
that's not an option. You could see that, for Pallone and Pelosi, the very idea
was nearly inconceivable. The best those two could come up with was, as
wonderfully summarized by Chris Carr in a comment on the video, "We need the
military, which is the world's bigger polluter, to confront the national
security threat of pollution."

[The rich are the problem]

Nancy Pelosi is one of the wealthiest people in the world (she's worth about
$120M at last count). She only knows other rich people. She literally has no
idea. The article "Fresh Hell (12.11.2021)" by Jason Arias
<https://thebaffler.com/latest/fresh-hell-mariah-carey> mentions that,

"Nancy Pelosi recognizes the moral responsibility of the United States to, after
decades of deferrals and non-binding assurances, finally do something about the
climate crisis. That’s why, hours after she secured the passage of President
Biden’s trillion-dollar love letter to freeways, Pelosi hopped on a plane back
to California so that she could officiate the wedding of oil heiress Ivy Love
Getty [...]"

Further, from the same article, we see how things work for the really rich,

"[...] owners of private aircraft are now—thanks to the 2017 Trump tax
cut—able to claim 100 percent bonus depreciation on their jet within the first
year of purchase. Additional expenses, such as fuel, maintenance, and management
costs, are also considered tax-deductible if the aircraft is used for
“business purposes” at least 50 percent of the time. It’s almost as if the
government is paying extremely rich people to do extremely cruel things to the
environment!"

[image]According to the article "Rich People Are Destroying the Planet" by Luke
Savage
<https://jacobinmag.com/2021/11/rich-people-wealthy-household-emissions-fossil-fuels-climate-change/>,


"In the United States, those in the top decile of income account for half of
household emissions, while those in the bottom half account for under 10
percent."

And,

"Taken as a whole, those in the global top 1 percent of income account for 15
percent of emissions, which is more than double the share of those in the bottom
half. The extremely wealthy have only gotten richer over the past thirty years
and, as the data shows, their carbon footprints have gotten much bigger as
well."

Leading to the conclusion that,

"The rich, in effect, need to be made much less rich if we’re going to reduce
global emissions — and, if we want to fight climate change, taxing their
wealth is both a moral and an environmental imperative."

Again, we need to change the system. New taxes won't help. We need to rebalance
things and start again, this time making sure that aberrations like "3 people
own as much as 50% of the country" no longer happen. Taxing income is
inefficient -- it would be much better to prevent such exorbitant inequality,
wealth, and incomes in the first place. If rich people never got that rich, we
wouldn't have to fight to take it back. It would be much easier that way.

[We need China and the U.S. on board]

Unfortunately, the world needs the U.S. to quit its bullshit. Why is the U.S. so
important at COP26? According to the article "How to Save the World From a
Climate Armageddon" by Michael T. Klare
<https://scheerpost.com/2021/10/17/how-to-save-the-world-from-a-climate-armageddon/>,

The temperature is rising if we stay the course, to very destructive and
   disruptive levels. Life on planet Earth will not be the same. Certain things
   that are possible today will no longer be possible. Humanity's horizons will
   have been reduced. [4]

"According to the U.N.’s analysis, even if all 200 signatories were to
   abide by their pledges — and almost none have — global temperatures are
   likely to rise by 2.7 degrees Celsius (nearly 5 degrees Fahrenheit) above
   pre-industrial levels by century’s end."We are actually not even just staying the course. We're going in the wrong
   direction.

"To limit warming to 2 degrees Celsius, by 2030, scientists believe, global
   carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions would have to be reduced by 25% from 2018
   levels; to limit it to 1.5 degrees, by 55%. Yet those emissions — driven by
   strong economic growth in China, India, and other rapidly industrializing
   nations — have actually been on an upward trajectory, rising on average by
   1.8% per year between 2009 and 2019."The U.S. and China both need to quit their bullshit. The U.S. needs to stop
   saber-rattling and match China's environmental goals.

"It all boils down to this: to save human civilization, the U.S. and China
   must dramatically reduce their CO2 emissions, while working together to
   persuade other major carbon-emitting nations, beginning with fast-rising
   India, to follow suit. That would, of course, mean setting aside their
   current antagonisms, however important they may seem to U.S. and Chinese
   leaders today, and instead making climate survival their number one priority
   and policy objective. Otherwise, put simply, all is lost."

Let's find out more about the data underlying Klare's conclusion.

[Who Contributes What?]

If we're finger-pointing about who's "more responsible" for climate change, we
can look at not who's currently most responsible for climate change, but who has
emitted the most CO<sub>2</sub> cumulatively. The article "Who has contributed
most to global CO2 emissions?" by Hannah Ritchie
<https://ourworldindata.org/contributed-most-global-co2> has a great graphic
showing the cumulative CO<sub>2</sub> contribution from various countries and
regions since the beginning of the industrial age. The U.S. is in the lead
overall and very much in the lead per-capita.

[image]

The cumulative number is perhaps a good way of assigning responsibility and
culpability for climate change (e.g. for reparations), but it's not a good way
of determining how to stop it. For that, we need to find out who's contributing
the most to climate change right now. The chart below is from "CO2 Emissions"
<https://www.worldometers.info/co2-emissions/>. It shows that, while China was
the overall greatest emitter in 2020 -- emitting just over twice as much as the
U.S. -- the U.S. still has over twice as much CO<sub>2</sub> emissions per
capita.

[image]

According to "The History of Carbon Dioxide Emissions"
<https://www.wri.org/insights/history-carbon-dioxide-emissions>, China has been
the biggest emitter of CO<sub>2</sub> since 2004. Before that, it was still the
U.S., despite having less than 1/4 of China's population.

Some would say that China should reduce their pollution because they produce the
most of it, but isn't China producing most of the world's stuff and still has
lower per-capita CO<sub>2</sub> emissions than the U.S.? Or some other countries
in Europe for that matter? China's increased usage can be at least partially
explained by the fact that it has become the manufacturing capital of the world.
Europeans and Americans constantly joke about how "everything is made in China"
while simultaneously complaining the China is emitting more greenhouse gases.
There is room to argue that greenhouse gases that a country produces to
manufacture goods for export shouldn't be solely attributed to that country.
Without the external demand, China would manufacture less.

Even given that, China is in 12th place in emissions per-capita, whereas the
U.S. is in 4th place. Canada emits the most CO<sub>2</sub> per capita of any
country in the world, followed by Australia and then Saudi Arabia. Wouldn't it
be better to get those countries to stop wasting so much energy/carbon-footprint
per citizen? Wouldn't that be more fair?
 
Questions of fairness and justice aside, though, the world can't solve climate
change without China reducing its CO<sub>2</sub> output.

We have to pull together and think about the whole world -- because if the whole
world isn't on board with this, it won't work. (Which is why it probably won't
work.) We don't do very well with solidarity, with sacrificing for the common
good, with eschewing something that we think -- or that we'd been told -- will
make our lives because it will make other people's lives worse. Don't buy that
phone because it was made by slave labor. Don't fly so much because people in
other countries will suffer more for the CO<sub>2</sub> your flight produces.

And hell, even if we do that, "it won't matter so much"
<https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/11/19/roaming-charges-33/> because 

"[...] even under the rosiest scenarios of electric cars, more sweaters and
eating vegan, less than 8% of the needed reduction can be achieved through
individual behavior changes."

I understand where that's coming from, but individual behavior changes also
include standing together and forcing industry to change the other 92%. That's
not individual so much, but I think it doesn't make any sense to claim that just
100 corporations emit 70% of the greenhouse gases and then pretend that that has
nothing to do with us. They're not producing it for fun, are they? They're
selling us stuff. We should stop buying it. We should vote for people who make
them stop selling it.

We've tried with market forces and boycotts and, honestly, they're just much
better at that game than we are. Too many of us capitulate to consumerism and
low prices and run right back into their arms. We have to learn how to stand
strong and move the needle in a bigger way -- together.

[Who's in the 1%? Which one?]

If you're in Switzerland, working a white-collar job, you're almost certainly in
the global 1% for income. Do you make more than CHF35,000 per year? Welcome to
the global 1% for income. For wealth, you'd need to have at least CHF5M to be in
the top 1% of Switzerland, but less than CHF1M to be in the top 1% worldwide. I
took my numbers from articles citing the "2018 Global Wealth Report" by Credit
Suisse
<http://publications.credit-suisse.com/tasks/render/file/index.cfm?fileid=77A4E912-A32D-8E84-CC8C21144CEE52E2>,
which no longer seems to be available. The "2021 Global Wealth Report" by Credit
Suisse
<https://www.credit-suisse.com/about-us/en/reports-research/global-wealth-report.html>
is, however, available. And guess what? Switzerland pushed its way to the top in
several categories. 

I take this to mean that, if you live relatively well in the first world, then
you have an obligation to pump the brakes on your lifestyle rather than figuring
out how you can get even richer and consume more or settle into an
early-retirement, crypto-fueled lifestyle.

People who compare themselves only to other Swiss in this country are setting
themselves up for disappointment because it has the highest density of
millionaires and super-rich and so on. The average wealth is over CHF600K now.
The median wealth is CHF124K. It's a lot easier to get into the global 1% than
into the Swiss 1%. Just being able to live and work here is already a massive
privilege.

If the most privileged can't see their way to reducing the way in which their
privilege ruins the planet for everyone else, then we're doomed. I'm not
super-hopeful that we're going to find a fair and just way through this. We'll
probably end up doing too little, too late. [5] It's going to get more
uncomfortable for everyone -- even the privileged. It doesn't really matter
whether they want to believe it.

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


[1] The article "A 700-Word Analysis of the COP-26 Agreement" by Jason Pramas
    <https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/11/19/a-700-word-analysis-of-the-cop-26-agreement/>
    is perhaps the most jaded, publishing the same word 700 times, "Ha ha ha ha
    ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
    ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha [...]".
  
  On a more serious note, the podcast "11/18/21" by Doug Henwood
  <https://shout.lbo-talk.org/lbo/RadioArchive/2021/21_11_18.mp3> includes an
  excellent interview with Tina Gerhardt. She details how this was the most
  privileged, non-inclusive COP26 (many nations could not afford lodging or
  could not get visas or were unable to attend because of COID). It was the
  first the first COP that explicitly mentioned fossil fuels. This is less a
  cause for celebration but for a hearty guffaw at how even more useless all of
  the previous conferences were. They managed to mention coal, but couldn't
  quite get there on methane, and didn't even consider mentioning oil.
  
  Gerhardt's entire report and analysis was excellent and one the most
  informative 20 minutes I spent learning about these conferences.


[1] I'm not sure where in the podcast he said this, but I remember him saying
    it.


[1] Who looks even more out of his depth here than Nancy Pelosi. It's honestly
    shocking the quality of people that the U.S. sent to this conference. It's
    no wonder the whole thing can't really be taken seriously.


[1] Hey, if we're going to play devil's advocate, maybe that's a good thing.
    Back to basics. Unrestricted growth and wealth and possibilities hasn't
    really taught us anything good. We've squandered a surfeit of energy and
    wealth and knowledge on bullshit.


[1] I'm thinking of how Austria is the first country in Europe to impose a
    vaccine mandate for everyone -- but only after their incidence level shot up
    to 1,000 and they had 12,000 cases per day (with a population of 9M). They
    should have done it six months ago, but there was "no political will". So
    they have to wait until everything blows up and the boat's sinking before
    they force people to start bailing water. We are honestly terrible at
    running societies. Just the worst.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[COVID never went away]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4369</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4369"/>
    <updated>2021-11-18T18:18:10+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The DACH region ([D]eutschland, [A]ustria, S[CH]weiz) is looking down
the barrel of its worst COVID wave yet. We are a good 20 months into the
pandemic and nearly a year after the general availability of a highly
effective vaccine. To be fair, most people under 65 were not able to get
the vaccine...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 18. Nov 2021 18:18:10
Updated by marco on 19. Nov 2021 20:21:43
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The DACH region ([D]eutschland, [A]ustria, S[CH]weiz) is looking down the barrel
of its worst COVID wave yet. We are a good 20 months into the pandemic and
nearly a year after the general availability of a highly effective vaccine. To
be fair, most people under 65 were not able to get the vaccine until May or June
(in Switzerland, at least). However, it's been 5 months since then.

[Stuck in the lifeboat]

"That's more than enough time for a civilized and well-educated public to do the
right thing for itself, no?"

It's more than enough time to patch the hole in the bottom of the boat. Instead,
we've got 1/3 of the population claiming that the hole in the bottom of the boat
either doesn't exist -- despite the water rushing in and (A) making a lot of
noise and (B) making everything wet and (C) bringing the gunwales uncomfortably
close to the surface of the water -- or that we don't really need a boat without
holes, or that each person should be able to decide for themselves whether the
hole should be patched, or that their own personal beliefs are more important
than the reality of a gaping hole on a hostile ocean. So, here we are! These are
the people in our lifeboat! There's nothing for it but to soldier on, nurture
sweet dreams of tossing them overboard, but still try to get everybody to shore
intact. It's a terrible burden having principles and morals sometimes.

[How are we doing?]

Germany is hitting new records for number of cases per day several times over
the last week (with 65,371 cases yesterday and an incidence of 336). Switzerland
also has case numbers increasing by exponential leaps and bounds (with 5,594
cases yesterday and an incidence of 319). Austria went from poster-child for
handling the pandemic to completely out-of-control. This screenshot is from a
few days ago, but it's pretty representative. It was at 14.416 cases and an
incidence of 941 yesterday.

[image]

It's not just the DACH region, either. [1] Russia has a tremendous number of
cases, but also very high deaths. Great Britain seems to have settled in at
about 35,000 to 40,000 cases per day. The U.S. is inching upward, but seems to
have settled at about 100,000 cases per day. [2] And so on and so on.

The countries that have it under control -- Spain, Portugal -- are those with
very high vaccination rates. Go figure.

Most of the countries where it's hitting hardest were proudly declaiming that
they'd dropped all COVID measures and had declared their vaccination campaigns
complete at about 60-65% penetration. Most of them did this for nakedly
political reasons -- Germany just had a big election [3] -- as if the virus gave
a shit. The virus does not care. It grinned from ear to ear, affixed a bib
around its neck, grasped a fork in its right hand, a knife in its left, licked
its chops, and dug right in.

[What do we do?]

So far, the disease has not been deadlier than it was in other waves, but
hospitalizations lag cases...and deaths lag hospitalizations. It's really only a
matter of time. People hoping that we're leaping somehow to herd immunity only
have 2-3 more years to wait for that little dream to come true. In the meantime,
all human medical efforts will be directed toward fixing the effects of a
treatable disease for which we have a very effective vaccine. [4] During this
time, precious little else will get done because (A) we're not great at
concentrating on multiple things at once and (B) it will be extremely lucrative
to be addressing the only disease anyone cares about, so the brain drain will be
enormous.

What's a better solution? The same as it ever was: vaccinate (get the booster as
soon as you can! [5]), keep your distance where possible, wear masks indoors
(where it makes sense), keep your contacts down, etc. Nothing has changed in how
we could tackle this. We have completely lost the will to solve big problems.
People are more focused on their own personal rights -- no matter how small --
and believing in fairy tales about the vaccine than in pulling together to beat
this thing. The virus is winning.

Hell, we won't even get the chance to square off against the big boss: climate
change.

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


[1] That's the one I follow because I live there.


[1] The article "Covid cases are surging in Europe. America is in denial about
    what lies in store for it" by Eric Topol
    <https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/12/covid-cases-surging-europe-america-denial>
    has more information.
  "The impact of waning, and the opportunity to restore very high (~95%)
   effectiveness of mRNA vaccines (specifically Pfizer/BioNtech) with booster
   (third) shots has been unequivocally proven from the Israeli data. Yet the
   adoption of boosters, even in the highest-risk groups such as age 60 plus,
   has been very slow.""Throughout the world, the profound pandemic fatigue has led to the
   irresistible notion that the pandemic end is nigh, that masks, distancing,
   and other measures have run their course, essentially that enough is enough.
   It is hard to imagine fighting a foe as formidable as Delta that a
   vaccine-only strategy can be effective.""That brings us to the United States, sitting in the zone of denial for the
   fourth time during the pandemic, thinking that in some way we will be
   “immune” to what is happening in Europe. That somehow the magical
   combination of mRNA vaccines with only 58% of the population fully
   vaccinated, a relatively low proportion of booster shot uptake, a start to
   vaccinating teens and children, and a lot of prior Covid, and little in the
   way of mitigation, will spare us.""We are already seeing signs that the US is destined to succumb to more Covid
   spread, with more than three weeks sitting at a plateau of ~75,000 new cases
   per day, now there’s been a 10% rise in the past week. We are miles from
   any semblance of Covid containment, facing winter and the increased reliance
   of being indoors with inadequate ventilation and air filtration, along with
   the imminent holiday gatherings."
  
  The article "Pentagon dispatching emergency medical teams to Minnesota as
  another winter surge of COVID-19 infections takes hold in the US" by Benjamin
  Mateus <https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/11/19/viru-n19.html> writes,
  "Though Europe is in the midst of the worst wave of infections since the
   beginning of the pandemic, the rise in COVID-19 cases in the US has many
   concerned about what awaits the country, especially with Thanksgiving and
   Christmas holidays around the corner. With all travel restrictions having
   been lifted, population mobility is at an all-time high, and mask usage is
   rapidly declining.

   "The situation is all the more alarming because most countries in Europe have
   vaccinated a far larger share of their populations than the US. Though the US
   is calling for all adults to get the third shot, also known as a booster,
   only 31.5 million, or less than 10 percent, have received them. Additionally,
   a significant number of fully vaccinated people received their last shot more
   than six months ago, meaning their waning immunity places them at increased
   risk of breakthrough infection."


[1] Switzerland has a COVID initiative that has to pass on Sunday, the 28th. If
    it doesn't pass, then it will be more difficult to the federal government to
    react quickly, as they now can with the Pandemiegesetz. However, if they
    actually react as they should now -- i.e.  expeditiously and following
    Germany and Austria's lead -- they might sour enough people into voting
    against it. I.e. "You see! They're abusing their power! OMG!" This is a
    terrible thing because Switzerland really needs to react quickly and
    decisively, but politics might get in the way here, too.


[1] Just because the efficacy fades after six months doesn't make it a bad
    vaccine, all of a sudden. It just means that we need three shots, not two.
    They'd only had the chance to test efficacy for two shots and that's what we
    went with. It bought us six months of protection. Studies have now shown
    that a booster shot shoots that efficacy way up, so three shots seems like
    the sweet spot. Probably another shot will be necessary next year as the
    virus continues to evolve. This is not dissimilar to the flu vaccine.
  
  This is a point entirely missed by diehard anti-vaxxers, who grasp at any
  perceived deficiency to reinforce their view that the vaccine kills everything
  it touches -- and was a giant waste of time in the first place, anyway. For
  example, the article "Onward Into Darkness" by James Howard Kunstler
  <https://kunstler.com/clusterfuck-nation/onward-into-darkness/> writes,
  "Was it reassuring to see Dr. Anthony Fauci declare on MSNBC: “What we’re
   starting to see now is an uptick in hospitalizations among people who have
   been fully vaccinated but not boosted”? And the moral of that story? Get
   more of the same thing that’s not working — and if you don’t volunteer
   to get it, maybe we can find a way to force you."
  
  How much energy does it take to constantly misinterpret everything? This is
  not a stupid man, let me assure you. He's perfectly capable of the most lucid
  and incisive analysis. Perhaps that the problem: he's intelligent enough to be
  able to turn every new bit of information to fit the puzzle he's already
  nearly completed. Why start a new puzzle? Why undo the bits that don't quite
  fit. It looks fine. All he has to do is ignore the fact that most vaccines
  work like this. Almost none of them are "one and done".


[1] See the article "Study shows dramatic decline in effectiveness of all three
    COVID-19 vaccines over time" by Melissa Healy
    <https://www.latimes.com/science/story/2021-11-04/study-shows-dramatic-decline-in-effectiveness-of-covid-19-vaccines>
    for more information.
  "As the Delta variant became the dominant strain of the coronavirus across
   the United States, all three COVID-19 vaccines available to Americans lost
   some of their protective power, with vaccine efficacy among a large group of
   veterans dropping between 35% and 85%, according to a new study.""By the end of September, Moderna’s two-dose COVID-19 vaccine, measured as
   89% effective in March, was only 58% effective.

   "The effectiveness of shots made by Pfizer and BioNTech, which also employed
   two doses, fell from 87% to 45% in the same period.

   "And most strikingly, the protective power of Johnson & Johnson's single-dose
   vaccine plunged from 86% to just 13% over those six months."


]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Why do people think the vaccine kills?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4357</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4357"/>
    <updated>2021-11-10T14:38:55+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I keep finding people who suggest that the vaccine is "potentially
sacrificing millions of citizens like so many experimental fruit flies."
That is one of the more reasonable formulations, as the author of the
article "Medicine Wants to Kill You" by James Howard Kunstler
<https://kunstler.com/clusterfuck-nation/medicine-wants-to-kill-you/>
has included the word "potentially" to hedge his bets...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 10. Nov 2021 14:38:55
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I keep finding people who suggest that the vaccine is "potentially sacrificing
millions of citizens like so many experimental fruit flies." That is one of the
more reasonable formulations, as the author of the article "Medicine Wants to
Kill You" by James Howard Kunstler
<https://kunstler.com/clusterfuck-nation/medicine-wants-to-kill-you/> has
included the word "potentially" to hedge his bets against the fact that many of
us have not (yet!) fallen over with an acute case of death brought on by what
they deem an untested -- or under-tested -- vaccine. [1]

They also seem to believe -- and almost rejoice in -- the apparently waning
efficacy of the vaccine. But now I'm kind of confused. Does it not work at all
or does its protection wane more quickly than we'd hoped? Or is it all three?
That is: It doesn't work, but, even if it does, it doesn't last long and, if it
doesn't kill you first. Maximum conspiracy-theory achievement unlocked.

The citation above is shown in context below,

"Historians of the future, savoring ‘possum goulash around their campfires,
will marvel that modern medicine squandered its authority, its credibility, and
its sacred honor in the Covid Panic of the 2020s, when public health officials
and doctors in clinical practice colluded to force mass vaccinations while
suppressing news of the harms and injuries the vaccines caused — potentially
sacrificing millions of citizens like so many experimental fruit flies."

It's nicely written and would make quite an impact, had it anything to do with
reality. I've been reading Kunstler's column for years, through his good and bad
times. While he's written a couple of non-fiction books that I very much enjoyed
[2] and I continue to enjoy his writing style, he's gone a bit more around the
bend in the last year or so (in my opinion). Lately, like Mark Crispin Miller
[3], he's been dead-on convinced that people are dropping like flies, even
though I only ever hear about it from people like Kunstler and Miller. 

They usually offer either no corroborating information at all or they offer a
literal rabbit-hole of shady-looking and statistically catastrophic pages and
interviews. [4] Many of the link journeys end in dead, private for-pay pages
that are only for "true believers" who are willing to pay for their information
-- unlike the sheep who just gobble up what is publicly available -- information
that is, therefore, simultaneously wrong and manipulated to benefit
authoritarianism.

[But people are dying!]

What is the likelihood that this bit of news -- that millions of people are
dying directly after having been vaccinated, in particular young people -- would
be completely ignored in a media system that has never seen a scandal (real or
imagined) that they wouldn't exploit?

"[...] young vaxxed athletes drop dead of heart failure in shocking numbers on
high school gridirons, soccer fields, cricket pitches, bike trails, and running
tracks around the world [...]"

Even if media organizations were so in the tank for the vaccine, do you really
think no-one would crack and grab the millions of clicks that this kind of story
would generate? They don't all have that much discipline. But I follow a
plethora of sources and no-one -- other than the absolute fringe of
auto-didactic researchers without anything resembling an official source -- has
anything to say about this. It's not being reported because it doesn't exist. I
can't help but notice that these statements are never accompanied by links to
supporting documents or reports.

Kunstler writes of confronting a medical professional -- his own doctor -- whom
he claims to trust,

"My own doctor tried to persuade me to get vaxed-up during a routine physical in
October. I asked him if he was aware of the thousands of deaths and disabling
adverse events reported on the CDC’s VAERS system. He said the numbers were
not true and went on to say that he had “one hundred percent confidence in the
vaccines.” He’s always appeared to be a smart and capable person. A year or
so ago he was enlisted to act as an executive administrator in the health care
org he practices in, and now only sees patients two days a week. Perhaps that
leaves him no time to follow the news. Or maybe he has no inclination to follow
any news except what comes from sources like cable TV channels, which are almost
entirely sponsored by the Pharma industry."

Instead of questioning his own information, he questions his doctor's being "a
smart and capable person". Kunstler has his story and he's sticking to it. I
guess so is the doctor? But the doctor's story is accompanied by billions of
successful vaccinations and hospitals filling up with COVID patients where there
are still too many unvaccinated. [5] Kunstler's story is accompanied by news
sources that he never cites and bodies that he can't produce. And yet, he writes
on his own blog about this sad experience with his doctor -- who is obviously
the deluded party here. I understand the doctor's dilemma: the longer it takes
for the vaccine to start killing us all, the harder it is to lend credence to
Kunstler's version of reality.

Don't get me wrong: I think Kunstler makes a good point about media. It's not
like there's no point to mentioning that "[...] cable TV channels, [...] are
almost entirely sponsored by the Pharma industry.". This is both true and
certainly restricts what and how those channels will be willing to report on.
However, just mentioning that fact does not prove that these channels would
obviously ignore the wholesale slaughter of millions of young Americans. That's
a pretty big leap, but all of the intervening points to be made are elided and
just assumed to be true. The mainstream media is bad, but it can also be trusted
to jump on a story about human misery.

Kunstler goes on,

"The bottom line for me is that he has compromised my faith in his judgment."

It's almost like he can't see the irony that the doctor probably thought the
same thing about him.

[Like, what is a pandemic anyway?]

But this intrepid reporter of the truth keeps on plugging away, questioning even
whether we're having a pandemic at all -- or having one worth worrying about,

"It’s also getting harder to tell how much of a crisis this actually is or
ever really was. There’s no reliable way of knowing how many people really
died as a direct result of Covid, or just tested positive for the virus [...]"

So, his theory is that we detected a new virus and we were all warned about it.
Then, hospitalizations and deaths and illness spiked -- despite heretofore
unthinkable and drastic lockdown, isolation, distancing, and masking measures --
but the deaths and hospitalizations weren't due to that virus, just because
scientists and the media and administrations around the world said that it was.
It's like the theory is: If that many people are in agreement, you almost have
to be suspicious, right? How could this all be explained by a virus? It's only
happened a dozen times before, but not recently, so what are the odds? Use your
brain. [6]

They think that all of this suffering and death just happened on its own for
other reasons, none of which could have been prevented because it's all so
unpredictable. These people would rather have a much riskier world where no-one
can be faulted for just continuing with their lives as they've always done,
instead of sacrificing anything for the common good. It's easier to think,
"what's the point of sacrificing doesn't help anyway? I might as well get mine."

[Let the virus win]

Instead, they advocate a very medieval approach: let the virus rip! And just let
it kill whomever it's going to kill. We have the technology to combat a
pandemic, but we no longer have the morality to do so -- and we don't have
anywhere near the solidarity required.

The following is a not-uncommon sentiment these days,

"It bears repeating that whatever Covid-19 actually is or where it came from,
it’s a disease not a whole lot more deadly in the general population than the
flu in a bad season; that in the natural course of things, it would have
probably only killed mostly the very old and already sick, and that the rest of
the population would have soldiered through it and acquired a sturdy natural
immunity superior to anything the vaxxes might confer (even in theory)."

That is wildly untrue, unless he's also suggesting that we let at least some,
possibly many, of those people go without hospital care, possibly dying or
becoming disabled. That is, if you caught COVID, then we'd have to keep enough
people out of hospitals -- choosing who suffers and dies from it -- to make sure
that those hospitals would retain enough capacity to treat the population
affected non-COVID diseases. Right?

I mean, that's the problem, isn't it? I'm assuming that we all consider it a
problem when a reasonably advanced society is able to afford endless military
hardware and bailouts for its investor class, but to be incapable and unwilling
to face a pandemic against a virus whose basic technology we've understood for
over 150 years and that can be fought by keeping our distance and wearing masks.
High-tech stuff, that. It's even more of a problem when there is an actual
vaccine available but not nearly enough people get it.

But, once again, for the rest of the class, let's reiterate the problem that so
many seem to keep deliberately forgetting. If COVID is like a "bad flu season",
then the hospitals will fill up quickly. In the scenario above, with everyone
getting it at once, the weakest will fill the hospitals immediately, taking a
nice, long time to die -- or do we not help them? Do we really act like animals
and leave the weak to die behind the herd? I'm not making a judgment here [7] --
but that's what he's talking about when he talks about letting it rip.

But we went through all of this logic in March 2020 -- and have now conveniently
forgotten the perfectly valid reasons for restricting behavior in the face of a
pandemic. "Conveniently" because doing so means we no longer have to restrict
ourselves. It's almost always other people -- and their families and friends --
who are getting sick and dying and stuff anyway.

Our medical system is completely inadequate for caring for the
order-of-magnitude higher influx of patients that a policy like that would
engender. So, you'd have to pair it with a policy of "death panels", choosing
who gets treatment and who does not. Knowing our world, we would just take care
of the rich and let the poor die. But isn't being poor kind of like a
co-morbidity?

[Why even listen to people like this?]

The short answer is: because enough other people seem to listen to what they're
preaching that vaccination levels in a lot of countries have stalled at wholly
inadequate levels.

Why am I still following Kunstler and Miller? Because I don't want to be like
them, ignoring everything that doesn't already agree with what they think. I
don't give them as much weight in my worldview, but I do periodically consider
whether they might have a point. They have a point about creeping
authoritarianism in some countries, but they muddle it all with wild and
completely fantastical allegations about spying via apps and discriminating
against the unvaccinated and piles of hidden bodies and weird authoritarian
agendas that don't gibe at all with most countries revoking their measures too
soon.

[The COVID initiative in Switzerland]

Here in Switzerland, our local versions of Kunstler and Miller are putting up
posters against the COVID referendum we are voting on soon. Their posters say
"Impfzwang", which means "vaccine mandate". That is not at all what the
referendum is about. The referendum just wants to continue using the Covid
Certificate to regulate people's access to common, indoor areas where the chance
of spreading COVID is known to be higher. People can still get tested, but they
also have to continue to pay. Nothing changes from today. The measures just
becomes "official" rather than "emergency".

Some call it a "mandate" because you'll need a test or a certificate (recovered
or vaccinated) in order to get inside a restaurant or bar or to go to a concert.
You can sit outside without a certificate, but it's getting colder, so that's
not really a viable option until spring. That's why people feel like they're
being "forced" to get the vaccine: because now it's getting annoying for them
personally not to have the vaccine. As we read above, if you also believe that
the vaccine will kill you, then this initiative is exactly like the state trying
to kill you just because you wanted to eat out in a restaurant.

What's really going on is that the restrictions are finally hitting people where
it hurts. They don't want to get vaccinated, they don't care about solidarity,
they don't believe anything, but now they won't be able to dine out without a
certificate, so they're claiming they're being "forced" to vaccinate. [8]

Nobody’s forcing anyone to get vaccinated; you just can’t sit inside the
Café Spettacolo anymore. That's where the other argument comes in: they claim
that it's "splitting society". But, we've already accept that in other ways,
haven't we? If you don’t have enough money for a CHF5.- coffee, you can’t go
into the café either. Nobody’s splitting society any more than it already has
been. It's just a split along a different line -- and for a much better,
epidemiologically reasonable reason than something arbitrary like whether you
have money. People are comfortable with keeping out the poor, but not the
unvaccinated. I’m the opposite.

Also, the "Überwachungsstaat" (big brother) part of their argument isn’t true
either. The COVID apps (tracker and certificate) are a couple of the few on your
phone that explicitly don't share your private information and data with
everyone. They're open-source; anyone can go look at how they work and many
security researchers have done so and verified that there's nothing shady going
on.

For Christ’s sake, these people complaining about the COVID apps are probably
all in giant WhatsApp groups and on Facebook complaining about it, just bleeding
their data all over the place … then complaining about the two apps that
don’t do anything at all. Sure, you show the restaurant your name before you
go in, but almost everyone pays digitally with cards that identify them anyway. 

The thing to remember is that these are temporary measures. Some states -- like
the country of Denmark and many U.S. states -- have already repealed some
measures, often more hastily than the science called for. How is that
authoritarian creep?

There is no way that restaurants are going to want to continue doing this when
it's no longer epidemiologically necessary. It's possible that they will, but
then we can get up in arms and have it repealed. Right now, it just looks silly
to not use tools that would help us live with the pandemic when the upside is so
much larger than the downside.

I'm all for anti-authority and privacy laws -- but not when there's a legitimate
reason for temporary infringement, like we have now. The pandemic is real. COVID
is real. People who don't need to get hurt or die will get hurt or die. If we
were making all of these laws to combat something like, say, terrorism, which,
statistically speaking, never happens here, then I'm against it.

[We shouldn't have to deal with this]

But we shouldn't even have to talk about the phone apps or the
certificate-checks because we have a vaccine. The problem is all of the people
who don't want the vaccine are the ones who make it necessary to keep these
measures in place to combat COVID. And they hate these measures, too. But the
only alternative solution they offer is to ignore COVID. Just put your fingers
in your ears and pretend it doesn't exist.

The original point was to get a high enough vaccination rate to make it very
unlikely that anyone has it. It’s not rocket science. We’ve gotten herd
immunity for a dozen other diseases with vaccinations. Now, we’re back to
basics and believing in voodoo and hating science because people are convinced
that anyone who knows anything is just a bossy know-it-all and a show-off.

The people who really shouldn't get the vaccine -- immunocompromised, allergic,
what-have-you -- are the ones everyone else is supposed to be protecting. If
everyone who didn’t have a legitimate concern were to get vaccinated, then we
would be able to handle the handful who have a good reason. The problem is that
there are so many people who can catch it so easily that, if you just let them
into a restaurant, untested or unchecked, they would be more likely to infect
even vaccinated people, who are not super-powered, but just less likely to be
infected. Less likely to be infected, but they’ll still have a good chance of
catching it if they spend three hours in the Chäschäller Restaurant in winter
with someone shedding virus right behind them.

That’s why it makes it dangerous to have completely unvaccinated people
around. It makes the vaccinated -- perhaps with waning immunity [9] -- more
susceptible and they are almost certainly not aware of it. We wouldn't have to
really worry about any of that stuff at all if we were like Portugal, with
almost 90% vaccination. Instead, we’re over here at 64% and acting like
that’s good enough, like a child trying to round their D up to an A without
doing the work.

The virus doesn't care how you feel about your performance. You don't get points
for trying.

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


[1] The truth is, in fact, the opposite. This vaccine has been developed and
    tested in the most scrutinized process we've ever had for a vaccine. It's
    been tested more thoroughly than any other vaccine.


[1] The "The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change, andOther
    Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-first Century"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3938> (2005) and its
    sequel "Living in the Long Emergency"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4028> (2020).


[1] Whom I wrote about recently in "Why are people not getting vaccinated?"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4347>


[1] I spent some time investigating some of these in the article "Muddling
    through the misinformation"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4236>. Since I struck out
    on all of those links, I have not followed too many since. I have no reason
    to believe that the quality has improved since April.


[1] Germany, in particular, shows a very strong correlation between percentage
    vaccinated (Impfquote in the chart) and cases per 100,000 (Inzidenz in the
    chart) in the first week of November. Credit for the graphic goes to "Jonas
    aka 🚟wuppertroll🚲"
    <https://twitter.com/wuppertroll/status/1457626663274131456>.
  
  [image]
  
  Note that the incidence scale is logarithmic: a 7% difference in vaccination
  rate (e.g. between Schleswig-Holstein at 72% and Bayern at 65%) translates to
  an incidence that is 5x higher. You could wave this away as a correlation, but
  it holds for all of the Bundesländer and there is a causal theory supporting
  it: that the vaccine seems to actually do what they say it does.


[1] If that was a bit hard to follow, I apologize. I was trying for "scathingly
    sarcastic" with, perhaps, mixed results.


[1] Oh, I absolutely am. I find that line of reasoning reprehensible because
    it's almost always a deliberate and selfish blindness to this unavoidable
    conclusion.


[1] If you really want to hit the youth where it hurts -- and get their
    vaccination numbers into the high 90s -- then something like "Pornoseiten ab
    15.11. nur noch mit digitalem Impfzertifikat nutzbar"
    <https://www.der-postillon.com/2021/11/nachweis.html> (Starting November
    11th, porn sites will only be accessible if you have a digital COVID
    certificate) would work a treat.


[1] See the article "Study shows dramatic decline in effectiveness of all three
    COVID-19 vaccines over time" by Melissa Healy
    <https://www.latimes.com/science/story/2021-11-04/study-shows-dramatic-decline-in-effectiveness-of-covid-19-vaccines>
    for information on an 800,000-person study from the U.S. with a U.S.
    veterans (300,000 unvaccinated, so the control group was almost as big as
    the test group).

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Why are people not getting vaccinated?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4347</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4347"/>
    <updated>2021-11-06T23:24:08+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[People in Switzerland are pretty much done with being vaccinated,
according to the video report "FOKUS: Impfbereitschaft in der Schweiz am
Limit"
<https://www.srf.ch/play/tv/-/video/-?urn=urn:srf:video:1ea4cb6c-36e7-463d-87c1-8ff2a34b4ef8>,
Switzerland has managed to fully vaccinate 63% of the population (64% at
the time of writing) but pretty much everyone who's not gotten
vaccinated yet is...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 6. Nov 2021 23:24:08
------------------------------------------------------------------------

People in Switzerland are pretty much done with being vaccinated, according to
the video report "FOKUS: Impfbereitschaft in der Schweiz am Limit"
<https://www.srf.ch/play/tv/-/video/-?urn=urn:srf:video:1ea4cb6c-36e7-463d-87c1-8ff2a34b4ef8>,
Switzerland has managed to fully vaccinate 63% of the population (64% at the
time of writing) but pretty much everyone who's not gotten vaccinated yet is not
planning to do so.

"Das Impf-Potential in der Schweiz scheint ausgeschöpft, wie die neuste
Sotomo-Studie zeigt. Personen, die jetzt noch eine Impfung ablehnen, haben ihre
Meinung gemacht."

The following screenshot from the video shows that 74% of the unvaccinated would
"definitely not" get vaccinated, while 21% said they were "unlikely" to do so.
4% said they were likely to get vaccinated, while only 1% said they would
definitely do so.

[image]

Why are they not getting vaccinated? According to the screenshot below, for 78%,
it's because they "fear harmful effects" from the vaccine itself or they think
that they are healthy enough to withstand COVID without the vaccine. 68% don't
think that the vaccine works anyway, and 44% are not getting it out of spite:
they don't like being told what to do. [1]

[image]

It's understandable that, if you think that the vaccine doesn't work and it will
harm you, that you don't want to get it. You'd have to really look away from the
enormous pile of evidence to the contrary -- i.e. 63% of Switzerland has it and
we're not all dying in droves -- but that's why this is more of a religious
question than anything else. They just believe in these things. Faith doesn't
need evidence.

Unfortunately, they're completely forgetting that we live in a society and, as
members of an advanced social-welfare state, you have some duties and
obligations to go with your massive privileges; those duties include not only
thinking of yourself when you're fabricating a worldview full of shadowy
perpetrators of doom, but to think of the people who can't afford to indulge in
flights of fancy because the reality of COVID for them is very real. This is
called solidarity.

It doesn't matter if they're pretty sure that COVID won't hurt them personally
-- they have to think of all of the people that their getting COVID will
potentially infect who aren't as strong or amazing -- or young and healthy -- as
them.

To be fair to them, though, can we really fault these people for only thinking
of themselves? Isn't that what our advanced societies hammer home into our
heads, day after day after day, with marketing and advertising and just general
ideology through media? Can you blame them if they completely forget about
duties no-one ever bothered to tell them they have, because those duties might
cause them to restrict their consumption and think of others.

You can't sell unnecessary stuff to modest people who care about others and
their planet. And selling unnecessary stuff is our jam, man! That is literally
how the entire world economy works: everyone buys stuff they don't need so that
other people have jobs creating stuff no-one needs. If too many people jump off
of this carousel, it stops turning.

Just as an example for how people could be misled into thinking that the vaccine
not only doesn't work, but that it actually kills everyone, there's this
"article" [2] as an example: "They will (gladly) kill 117 children to
(theoretically) save ONE child from “death by COVID”" by Mark Crispin Miller
<https://markcrispinmiller.com/2021/11/they-will-gladly-kill-117-children-to-theoretically-save-one-child-from-death-by-covid/>.
It claims to be based on several "studies" [3]. These studies seem to exist, but
the conclusions that they draw are completely at odds with reality.

Just think: If the vaccine kills 117 people for every one that it saves, then
where are the bodies? With over 4 billion people vaccinated by now, where are
the bodies? 

These people are in a cult. They are not unlike the people who continue to
follow a leader who keeps mis-predicting the day of reckoning. They believe the
study, but then hand-wave the fact that people are not dropping like flies. They
think, instead, that the entire world is engaged in a cover-up. That no-one is
talking about this other than them, even the families of the people affected.

They think that literally billions of people are too scared to say that the
vaccination has killed their family and friends. Not only that, but that they
then line up to get the vaccination themselves. People like Miller think that
this is completely plausible -- that he and his sources are the only ones with
their eyes open enough to see what's really going on. Everyone else is just
cowed into saying nothing about the government having deliberately killed 90% of
their families. Just because you don't know any of these people that have died
doesn't mean that it's not happening. Wake up, sheeple.

Look, you can decide not to get the vaccine, fine. But you don't get to believe
in this obvious claptrap. It's just not even on the scale of plausible.

Miller -- a "Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication" at New York
University, who teaches courses on how to interpret propaganda, ironically
enough -- discusses the analysis by completely ignoring selection and
confirmation bias with the following abstract.

"That’s according to a risk-benefit analysis done by risk-benefit expert Dr.
Toby Rogers. His analysis has been viewed by over 22,000 readers. No mistakes
were found. Nothing but praise."

Miller questions everything but this kind of stuff, oddly enough. I get that
he's suspicious of the mainstream media, but there's no reason to then believe
nearly everything that's not mainstream. I sometimes wonder whether his web site
is just him perpetrating a big joke. I continue to follow him because I like to
keep my thumb on the pulse of many segments of thought -- including the ones
that I personally don't believe, but a lot of other people do.

The doctor who wrote the original article summarized,

"[...] to put it simply, the Biden administration plan would kill 5,248 children
via Pfizer mRNA shots in order to save 45 children from dying of coronavirus.
For every one child saved by the shot, another 117 would be killed by the shot."

What are the odds that this is true? Do none of these people ask themselves
that? What are the odds that one or two people on SubStack are the only ones who
see that the Biden administration is not only comfortable with, but actively
promoting, killing children, in the name of ... what? What's the purpose behind
this? Do they even bother coming up with a mens rea?

And what is the likelihood that the Biden administration -- which has very much
stumbled out of the gate on everything else -- is competent enough to kill a
bunch of children without anyone knowing about it? Like, if that was their goal,
what makes these people think that the Biden administration would be competent
enough to actually hide it from everyone except these few geniuses on SubStack,
who see through the subterfuge?

Miller sums his take up with "Not surprising to me." Of course it's not --
because he's so far down the rabbit hole that he hasn't seen daylight in years.
He goes on to cite the popular, libertarian, non-solidarity description of
mortality rates by age cohort:

"[...] people in the 65+ demographic are five times as likely to die from the
inoculation as from COVID-19 under the most favorable assumptions! This
demographic is the most vulnerable to adverse effects from COVID-19. As the age
demographics go below about 35 years old, the chances of death from COVID-19
become very small, and when they go below 18, become negligible."

This is all true, but the conclusion that they draw -- that no-one under 35
needs to be vaccinated -- is completely wrong for battling a pandemic. The
reason we sheltered in place and put up with lockdowns and "remote all the
things!" was because we pulled together as a society to help protect the most
vulnerable parts of the population.

Younger, less vulnerable people should get vaccinated not so that they
themselves won't die -- an eventuality with low likelihood -- but so that they
don't catch COVID and pass it on to more vulnerable populations. Older people
don't have good immune systems and, even with the vaccine, will still be more
likely to catch a disease than much younger people.

But this logic doesn't seem to hold for very long. Even here, in Switzerland,
where solidarity is at least somewhat more popular than in the U.S., people
pulled together for a few months, but then their need to go on vacation overrode
any social instincts they had. People decided that pulling together was all well
and good, but that they should be able to decide when it's over. And they've
done that. So, back to our scheduled programming of egocentricity.

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


[1] I can confirm that these are exactly the arguments I hear from unvaccinated
    friends. They do not believe in the vaccine's efficacy; instead, they think
    that it is harmful. Even if it were to work, they don't think that they need
    it, because they're strong and healthy. That is not how disease works, but
    OK. At least one good friend said right out that, because it's being pushed
    so hard, that he's now much less likely to get it, just out of spite. Take
    about cutting off your nose to spite your face.


[1] I put the word "article" in quotes to indicate that it's not really a piece
    of writing in the same way that Miller always writes "vaccine" in quotes to
    indicate that it's not a preventative for disease, but an injection likely
    to lead to immediate death.


[1] Oops, I did it again.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[What is the way forward for power plants?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4354</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4354"/>
    <updated>2021-11-06T22:18:10+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "Fossil fuels doomed in New York as regulator blocks new gas
power plants" by Tim De Chant
<https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2021/10/fossil-fuels-doomed-in-new-york-as-regulator-blocks-new-gas-power-plants/>
writes,

"New York’s climate law requires polluters to account for two sources
of emissions: from the plants themselves and from the natural gas supply
chain. Once the latter was included—figures which in the"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 6. Nov 2021 22:18:10
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "Fossil fuels doomed in New York as regulator blocks new gas power
plants" by Tim De Chant
<https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2021/10/fossil-fuels-doomed-in-new-york-as-regulator-blocks-new-gas-power-plants/>
writes,

"New York’s climate law requires polluters to account for two sources of
emissions: from the plants themselves and from the natural gas supply chain.
Once the latter was included—figures which in the past were nearly always
ignored when determining a power plant’s pollution—the emissions quickly
exceeded the DEC’s thresholds, the decisions say."

I think that this is a good way of looking at it, and I'm glad that they're
finally forced to consider these pollution vectors. It makes no sense to
consider only the point-of-use without considering how much methane is loosed
during production and transport of natural gas. E.g. fracking produces quite a
bit of methane in all but the most optimal of scenarios, and that's even without
considering what fracking does to the environment where it's employed.

"In that time, scientists and regulators became increasingly aware of the
lifetime carbon footprint of natural gas, particularly along its supply chain.
While natural gas burns cleaner and produces less carbon pollution than other
fossil fuels like coal, leaks from wellhead to turbine tip the scales. Methane,
a major component of natural gas, is a potent greenhouse gas, with one ton
warming the atmosphere 84 times more than one ton of carbon dioxide over 20
years. The potency means that leaks along the supply chain represent a
significant fraction of natural gas users’ carbon pollution."

There is, however, the niggling issue that current energy requirements are for a
grid that is always-on and provides steady energy night and day. That means
that, if the primary source of energy becomes intermittent, then there still
needs to be some form of energy that can be put online on-demand (in a way that
solar and wind cannot).

Current battery storage capacity doesn't even come close -- nor are any
estimates of what we could build with the resources available on the planet and
current technology even remotely feasible for covering humanity's current needs,
despite the claims of techno-evangelists who would try to sell us these
solutions. (I.e. "you have to start somewhere -- why not start by giving me a
ton of money!")

Natural-gas power-plants are one way of doing this that have, to date, been
deemed far less polluting than coal (also not as on-demand as many think) or
diesel generators (very good on-demand features; horribly polluting, though).
[1] However, if the honest evaluation of the CO<sub>2</sub> impact of natural
gas is less rosy than heretofore imagined, that leaves the world without an
on-demand source to fill the gaps left by solar and wind.

This implies that we might have to -- horror of horrors -- seriously consider a
world where the grid works differently and, perhaps, less reliably than it does
now. Or, we would have to consider reducing our energy demands so that the
intermittent and clean energy sources together with realistic -- and non
environmentally impacting or CO<sub>2</sub>-impacting -- storage mechanisms
would be sufficient.

The article continues, detailing how companies will say pretty much anything in
order to make the books balance in their favor, regardless of the actual
environmental impact.

"The DEC also faulted the logic both companies used to suggest that the new
plants would displace emissions elsewhere on the grid. The problem, the agency
said, was that their modeling relied on too many assumptions—particularly
“projected reductions that could occur at other GHG emission sources across
the State” (emphasis in the original). In other words, since neither company
can control the actions of other polluters, they don’t get to count
speculative reductions elsewhere as their own."

This is just fraudulent and they should be lucky to get away with only having
their request denied instead of being fined heavily -- or having their corporate
charter taken away for trying to defraud the government and trying to waste the
common resource that is our environment for their own gain.

In the near term, though, 

"Both Danskammer and NRG were proposing to upgrade some of New York State’s
dirtiest power plants. They’re older, producing many times more NOx emissions
than newer gas-fired power plants."

This may sound noble, but the reasoning is, though, that no-one should be
replacing dirty natural-gas plants with less-dirty natural-gas plants. We have
to find another solution. Unfortunately, no-one really has a scalable one yet.
This is almost certainly for lack of trying because the incentives in our
economy are still very, very strongly biased toward just using fossil fuels.

Hey, maybe when power finally gets more expensive, the economy will finally be
confronted with the reality that it will have to use less of it, which would
satisfy the climate-change-combatting goals we actually should have. We would
have to be careful, though, because using austerity to limit use has,
historically, backfired -- or ended up harming the most vulnerable either first
or exclusively. The wealthy get what they want anyway, more or less by
definition.

On the other, other hand, the currently very dirty fossil-fuel plants are almost
certainly already located in the neighborhoods of the most vulnerable, so the
temporary fix of building less-polluting gas plants would help those people, in
the short term. The supply-chain pollution of delivering natural gas affects
people along the way -- and all of us, generally, in that methane warms the
planet -- but that pollution does not specifically impact the people who live
near the power plant that uses the natural gas.

Question: Couldn't the existing plants be made less polluting without rebuilding
them completely? I would imagine they could, but no-one wants to do it --
because where's the money in that?

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


[1] Nuclear power is not an on-demand power source. I've gone back and forth on
    its viability and place in the energy infrastructure, but the article "Is
    Nuclear Power Our Best Bet Against Climate Change?" by Samuel Miller
    McDonald
    <https://bostonreview.net/science-nature/samuel-miller-mcdonald-nuclear-power-our-best-bet-against-climate-change>
    finally convinced me that nuclear just isn't going to work, for similar
    reasons to natural gas: if you take the CO<sub>2</sub> impact of the entire
    chain leading up to a nuclear power plant -- for example, it uses a
    tremendous amount of cement and uranium mining is notoriously dirty -- then
    nuclear isn't anywhere near the "clean" fuel that supports claim that it is.
    See "Links and Notes for October 15th, 2021"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/app]view_article.php?id=4333> and search for
    "McDonald" to see a selection of citations from that article. In particular,
  "[...] the ecological crises that get worse every day threaten to fracture
   political orders and make those regulatory frameworks—at state, sub-state,
   or intergovernmental levels—incapable of maintaining safe facilities."

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[So...how's that whole climate-change thing going?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4343</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4343"/>
    <updated>2021-11-02T21:58:55+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[image]The article "Biden Wakes Up From The Strangest Dream That He Was
Attending International Climate Conference"
<https://babylonbee.com/news/biden-wakes-up-from-the-strangest-dream-that-he-was-attending-international-climate-conference/>
is a joke, but...is it really? It feels true, doesn't it?

I am an optimistic man and, yet, we must be realistic. These people at
COP26 are nearly literally all of the same people who’ve...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 2. Nov 2021 21:58:55
Updated by marco on 2. Nov 2021 22:13:11
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[image]The article "Biden Wakes Up From The Strangest Dream That He Was
Attending International Climate Conference"
<https://babylonbee.com/news/biden-wakes-up-from-the-strangest-dream-that-he-was-attending-international-climate-conference/>
is a joke, but...is it really? It feels true, doesn't it?

I am an optimistic man and, yet, we must be realistic. These people at COP26 are
nearly literally all of the same people who’ve done nearly nothing since
Kyoto. Remember Kyoto? Nah, no-one does. That was COP3 in 1997. Almost a
quarter-century ago. Back then, it was absolutely necessary that something be
done. Nothing was done.

It's not likely that something will be done this time, although it's long past
midnight on this doomsday clock. The article "These 4 charts explain why the
stakes are so high at the U.N. climate summit" by Lauren Sommer, Connie Hanzhang
Jin, Rina Torchinsky
<https://www.npr.org/2021/10/29/1045344199/cop26-glasgow-climate-summit?t=1635886760249>
does a reasonable job of summing up why something needs to be done. 

Everyone know it's important. But it's such a big job. It would mean changing
how we live in the so-called modern world -- it would mean changing capitalism.
I'm an optimist, but...I don't see capitalism and technology solving this
problem -- its incentives drive us (no pun intended) in the other direction. The
world has already decided that TINA (There Is No Alternative) because socialism
and communism have always failed. Duh.

Well, sometimes, you have to hit rock-bottom before you realize how wrong you
were. We're not there yet. We kind of know what it will look like; there are
plenty of well-sourced books outlining what's in store. Greta is right: "[...]
the climate and the biosphere don’t care about our politics and our empty
words for a single second." Once we've wasted all of our planet's resources and
remaining carbon budget making Bezos or Musk the richest man on the planet,
maybe we'll give socialism a whirl again -- in a less-livable, smaller, and
emptier world.

And here we are, looking down the barrel of a gun and pretending it's not there
because we'd rather make money instead. Or, we'd rather pretend that we're going
to make money while a handful make real money and fool us into thinking that the
gun's not there so that they can make money. I don't know where they think
they're going to spend it in a world of climate chaos and refugees, but I'm sure
they'll think of something. We are all just "Ark B Golgafrinchans"
<https://www.h2g2.com/entry/A2163520>.

Paris? OMG Paris. COP25 that was. Voluntary reductions. The world did about 1%
of the promised reductions combined. They were voluntary, so who cares?
There’s no punishment, right? RIGHT?

Buckle up. We’re all in for a bumpy ride. In other news, Hertz, a company that
was in bankruptcy 10 months ago, has announced that it is buying 100,000 Teslas
with $4.2B that they somehow now have. Both Tesla and Hertz were up about 7% on
the news.

You wanna know what won't affect Tesla's share price? Something silly like this:
"Tesla recalls 11,706 vehicles over Full Self-Driving Beta software bug" by
Jonathan M. Gitlin
<https://arstechnica.com/cars/2021/11/tesla-recalls-11706-vehicles-over-full-self-driving-beta-software-bug/>.
I mean, why should over-promising features for years negatively impact a
business? What are you -- a party pooper? TO THE MOON BABY. [1]

Tesla now has a $1T valuation, more than every other car company on the planet
combined. Talk about hopeful! The market is hopeful! It is putting all of its
money on a future-facing automotive solution! Good for them! Either that, or
people are just trying to get in on whatever’s happening (ignoring the barrel
of a different gun). Either way, moar cars is good for the environment, just you
wait and see!

I can't wait to see what amazing plan they come up with at COP26! I bet that the
more amazing it is, the more positively the markets will react to it! I bet that
the degree to which it is actually a workable plan to address climate change
won't be inversely proportional to the market change. I told you, I'm an
optimist!

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


[1] OKOKOK maybe Tesla's a bit scammy, what with their beta-testing their car
    software on actual, paying customers, but SpaceX is OK, right? There's no
    way that they're peddling snake oil, right? There's that whole Starlink
    thing that they're doing for the good of unconnected mankind. How's that
    going? "Starlink nightmare: Moving service location a few feet delays orders
    until 2023" by Jon Brodkin
    <https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2021/11/starlink-nightmare-moving-service-location-a-few-feet-delays-orders-until-2023/>.
    Sounds good!
  "SpaceX recently pushed out expected shipment times for new Starlink orders
   to late 2022 or early 2023 in parts of the US. Based on user reports, it
   seems that updating one's service address even slightly changes a pre-order's
   delivery date to one of the later delivery dates that apply to new orders.
   Separately, SpaceX last week warned that a chip shortage is impacting "our
   ability to fulfill" orders.

   "There is uncertainty among users about what's going on with address changes
   affecting delivery dates."
  
  You know what's affecting delivery dates? You've been scammed. They don't have
  the chips; they don't have the capacity. They're selling you something they
  can't provide in order to lock up a monopoly, after which they'll be able to
  take as long as they like to try to deliver the thing they originally
  promised. At that point, the subsidies will be truly spectacular.
  
  That's how Tesla got where they are now. Why change a working system?

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Mexico and Peru's COVID lethality]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4339</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4339"/>
    <updated>2021-10-27T07:42:28+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I was browsing the COVID situation on "Corona Zahlen Weltweit"
<https://www.corona-in-zahlen.de/weltweit/> yesterday and sorted by
%-deaths for the first time. I was quite shocked to see that a sizable
country like Mexico had a lethality of 7.6%. Peru is at 9.1%.

[image]

The only countries higher than that are the tiny, island nation of
Vanuatu...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 27. Oct 2021 07:42:28
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I was browsing the COVID situation on "Corona Zahlen Weltweit"
<https://www.corona-in-zahlen.de/weltweit/> yesterday and sorted by %-deaths for
the first time. I was quite shocked to see that a sizable country like Mexico
had a lethality of 7.6%. Peru is at 9.1%.

[image]

The only countries higher than that are the tiny, island nation of Vanuatu (with
only 4 infections total), Yemen, Peru, and Sudan. Yemen and Sudan are well-known
to be in dire straits six ways from Sunday, with multiple humanitarian crises
happening all at once, including war and famine, so, callous as it may sound,
it's no surprise that they would not be able to corral the lethality of
COVID-19.

But what happened in Peru and Mexico? Is their medical infrastructure so much
work than their neighbors? Does Mexico suffer from its proximity to the United
States, which almost certainly provided a constant flow of COVID-19 cases for
the last 20 months? Or do Peru and Mexico just lack too much infrastructure to
handle COVID?

The article "Covid: Why has Peru been so badly hit?"
<https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-53150808> writes that,

"There's also been shortage of oxygen needed to treat Covid patients, and the
entire country has around 1,600 intensive care unit beds - far less than some
neighbouring countries."

and

"Peru's vaccination drive has been slow, with less than 4% of the country fully
vaccinated."

and

"About 70% of the employed population in Peru work in the informal sector, which
is one of the highest rates in Latin America."

and

"More than 40% of households in Peru do not have a refrigerator, according to a
2020 government survey. [...] "They have to go out to stock up frequently and
especially go to the markets,""

and

"Cramped housing makes social distancing harder and allows the virus to spread
more easily."

As for Mexico, it's likely that it suffers from many of the same social issues
as Peru, with informal employment, crowded housing, low vaccination rates, and
people forced to leave their homes for basic staples.

The article "At 8.8 per 100 cases, Mexico leads in Covid fatality rate among
most affected countries"
<https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/coronavirus/mexico-leads-in-covid-fatality-rate/>
shows that Mexico's lethality rate due to COVID was worse 10 months ago and has
dropped to 7.6% from 8.8%.

These numbers should serve as a dire warning for how COVID is likely to continue
tearing through the more impoverished parts of the world (i.e. most of it). It's
unlikely that India is faring as well as it appears to be faring -- the
combination of the Modi government along with the infrastructure deficiencies it
shares with Peru and Mexico indicate that its numbers are quite low so far. The
numbers at "Corona Zahlen Weltweit" are pretty good, but they also don't let you
choose a cut-off point. It would even be good to have a few pre-selected cut-off
points, like

  * June 1st, 2020 (initial lockdowns over in most countries)
  * January 1st, 2021 (vaccinations begin to be available)
  * June 1st, 2021 (a good number of vaccinations available)

Then you could eliminate data from earlier phases that are no longer relevant
going forward. Still, COVID continues to look quite aggressive, especially in
places without the most advanced medical infrastructure and living conditions.
In particular, the rest of the world doesn't have access to antivirals,
vaccines, hospitals, ICUs, respirators, medical staff, sufficiently sanitary and
isolated living conditions, ability to work from home, and so on -- all things
that we take for granted in the handful of countries that have all of these
things. And, looking at Europe, we're squandering these advantages by using them
inefficiently.


]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The vaccine-reluctant]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4319</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4319"/>
    <updated>2021-08-31T08:01:53+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[From a comment on the article, "Vaccine Success, Media Misery: Is Good
News Taboo in the Trump Age?" by Matt Taibbi
<https://taibbi.substack.com/p/vaccine-success-media-misery-is-good-aad>

"I find it interesting that for all the takes on who will and who
won’t take the vaccine- and why- a simple reason is commonly
overlooked: For many people in good health and of a certain age group,"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 31. Aug 2021 08:01:53
------------------------------------------------------------------------

From a comment on the article, "Vaccine Success, Media Misery: Is Good News
Taboo in the Trump Age?" by Matt Taibbi
<https://taibbi.substack.com/p/vaccine-success-media-misery-is-good-aad>

"I find it interesting that for all the takes on who will and who won’t take
the vaccine- and why- a simple reason is commonly overlooked: For many people in
good health and of a certain age group, the virus poses little to no real
threat. Yes, there have been terrible cases reported in surprising victims, but
as far as the data goes, they continue to be anomalies."

This is exactly the kind of reasoning that torpedoes a common effort. That's why
the vaccines will work for those who get them, but they're doomed as far as
preventing COVID from becoming endemic (that ship has largely sailed in western
countries anyway).

The ego rules. Each individual decides for themselves that they don't want the
vaccine because it probably won't happen to them. It ends up happening to enough
people to swamp the hospitals, leading to unnecessary deaths from both COVID and
also from people who can't get treatment for other medical problems.

The ego does not think about that, cannot comprehend this level of abstraction,
does not care. The ego is afraid for itself, so it just make its own little,
short-sighted decisions, not caring that these decisions, multiplied millions of
times, ends up causing a much bigger problem. Chaos theory is hard. Math is
hard.

These people are afraid of the vaccine because it hasn't been approved yet.
They're all waiting around for those of us who took it to die. When that doesn't
happen, they won't bother to question their own behavior. They will be afraid
for themselves next time as well.

While we're on the subject: do these people try to convince their loved ones not
to get the vaccine? Are they good or bad Christians? Do they fight to convert
their loved ones to keep them out of hell? Or do they believe strongly enough
that the vaccine is bad to want to protect themselves, but not to protect their
loved ones? Or do they not care about their loved ones? How do they reconcile
this?

[Infecting Vaccinated People]

People ask how Israel can have such a high incidence when so many people have
already been vaccinated. They hypothesize (without numbers) that this is because
of breakthrough infections and conclude that the vaccines are no longer working
effectively. They conclude that either the vaccines don't work against the delta
variant or they are losing efficacy over time.

But Israel has about 11M people. They claim to be 70% vaccinated. That means
3.3M people are not vaccinated. We can assume that these remaining people (which
constitute a good-sized country) are "clumped" rather than evenly distributed.
That is an advantage for the virus.

They had an incidence of 417 on the day I wrote this, corresponding to 4500
cases. That is very high, but delta is very infectious. At this rate, though, it
will take 2 years to go through the remaining, unvaccinated population. That is
not a realistic herd-immunity strategy.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Drosten's prediction: 100% immune (vaccinated or infected, take your pick)]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4265</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4265"/>
    <updated>2021-05-20T23:05:02+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Virologist Christian Drosten was very good on his weekly podcast, "(88)
Impfmission possible" by Das Coronavirus-Update von NDR Info
<https://podcasts.apple.com/ch/podcast/das-coronavirus-update-von-ndr-info/id1500424869?l=en&i=1000521332131>.
In this episode, he lays down the cold facts: COVID will become endemic
in the west. Get vaccinated or get COVID. There is no choice (C).

An English translation follows the German citation.

At 48:00,

"Christian"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 20. May 2021 23:05:02
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Virologist Christian Drosten was very good on his weekly podcast, "(88)
Impfmission possible" by Das Coronavirus-Update von NDR Info
<https://podcasts.apple.com/ch/podcast/das-coronavirus-update-von-ndr-info/id1500424869?l=en&i=1000521332131>.
In this episode, he lays down the cold facts: COVID will become endemic in the
west. Get vaccinated or get COVID. There is no choice (C).

An English translation follows the German citation.

At 48:00,

"Christian Drosten: Jeder wird immun werden. 100%. Nicht 70% oder 80% sondern
100% in der Bevölkerung werden unweigerlich -- ich würde mal sagen, in einem
Fenster das von jetzt noch so anderthalb Jahre läuft -- immun werden. Und zwar
entweder durch die Impfung oder durch eine natürliche Infektion.

"Denn dieses Virus wird endemisch werden. Das wird nicht weg gehen. Und wer sich
jetzt beispielsweise aktiv dagegen entschiedet sich impfen zu lassen, der wird
sich unweigerlich infizieren. Da kann man nichts dagegen tun.

"Denn, die Massnahmen werden dann irgendwann immer weiter zurückgefahren -- zum
Glück -- und dann zirkuliert das Virus in der Bevölkerung. Es wird zirkulieren
im Rachen von Leuten die geimpft sind, die gar nichts davon merken, dass sie das
Virus tragen. Es wird natürlich zirkulieren im Rachen von Kinder unter zwölf
die  natürlich noch nicht geimpft werden können.

"Das Virus wird unerkannterweise unter eine Decke des Immunschutzes sich weiter
verbreiten und dann trifft es immer auch auf Leute, die nicht immunisiert sind
durch eine Impfung, die voll empfänglich sind und für die gelten die jetzigen
Risikoprofile.

"Da geht's dann auch wieder nach Alter und Grunderkrankung und wer sich dann
natürlich infiziert, wird auch dann, wenn er ein hohes Risiko haben [sic],
möglicherweise auf der Intensivstation landen. Wir werden also auch im
nächsten Winter Leute auf der Intensivstation haben wird schwerem COVID-19
Verlauf.

"Und diese Lücke, diese 30% -- wenn wir an 70% denken; diese 20%, wenn wir an
80% Impfquote denken -- die übrig bleibende 20%, die werden sich infizieren.
Und die Frage ist, natürlich, die werden natürlich auch nach dem Sommer und im
Herbst noch immer wieder die Gelegenheit bekommen das zu überdenken und zu
sagen will ich mich nicht doch lieber impfen lassen statt mich natürlich zu
infizieren. Und die können diese Gelegenheit auch dann noch ergreifen.

"Aber wenn sie sich nicht impfen lassen, werden sie sich natürlich infizieren.
Das hat jetzt nichts mit politischen Debatten oder Impflicht oder irgend einer
Art von auch ethischer Debatte zu tun. Das ist eine freie Entscheidung, die man
letztendlich auch trifft. Nur ich glaube diejenigen die aktiv gegen die Impfung
entscheiden, die müssen wissen, dass sie sich damit auch aktiv für die
natürlich Infektion entscheiden -- ohne jede Wertung."

This is pretty important, so I had "Deepl" <https://deepl.com> translate to
English. [1]

"Christian Drosten: Everyone will become immune. 100%. Not 70% or 80% but 100%
in the population will inevitably -- I would say in a window that runs from now
to in another year and a half -- become immune. And that will be either through
vaccination or through natural infection.

"Because this virus will become endemic. It's not going to go away. And whomever
now, for example, actively decides against getting vaccinated, will inevitably
get infected. There's nothing you can do about it.

"This is because the measures will at some point be reduced more and more --
fortunately -- and then the virus will circulate in the population. It will
circulate in the throats of people who are vaccinated, who don't even realize
that they carry the virus. It will circulate naturally in the throats of
children under twelve who, of course, cannot yet be vaccinated.

"The virus will spread unrecognized under a blanket of immune protection and
then it will always hit people who are not immunized by vaccination, who are
fully susceptible and for whom the current risk profiles apply.

"There it goes again by age and underlying illness and who becomes infected then
naturally, also, if he has a high risk, will possibly land in the intensive care
unit. So we will have people in the ICU next winter as well who have severe
COVID-19 symptoms.

"And that gap, that 30%--if we think about 70%; that 20%, if we think about 80%
vaccination rate--that 20% that's left, they're going to get infected. And the
question is, of course, they will still get the opportunity, of course, after
the summer and in the fall, to reconsider that and to say don't I want to get
vaccinated instead of getting infected naturally? And they can still take that
opportunity then.

"But if they don't get vaccinated, of course they're going to get infected. Now
this has nothing to do with political debates or mandatory vaccination or any
kind of even ethical debate. That is a free decision, which one also makes in
the end. Only I believe those actively against the vaccination decide, which
must know that they decide thereby also actively for the naturally infection --
without any judgment."

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


[1] Because I'm lazy and Deepl did a pretty bang-up job. I only did a little
    light editing.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Is COVID-19 really over in the west?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4205</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4205"/>
    <updated>2021-04-11T22:36:57+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Biden recently informed the nation that things would be back to normal
by July 4th -- as if the virus cares.

"Biden peddles national self-delusion on pandemic anniversary" by
Patrick Martin
<https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/03/12/bide-m12.html>

"The language of collective loss, suffering and sacrifice, however,
ignored the brutal fact that one section of American society,"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 11. Apr 2021 22:36:57
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Biden recently informed the nation that things would be back to normal by July
4th -- as if the virus cares.

"Biden peddles national self-delusion on pandemic anniversary" by Patrick Martin
<https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/03/12/bide-m12.html>

"The language of collective loss, suffering and sacrifice, however, ignored the
brutal fact that one section of American society, the super-rich, has lost
nothing at all from 12 months of the worst pandemic in a century.

"While 527,000 Americans died, the billionaires increased their wealth by $1.4
trillion. While the economy collapsed, millions lost their jobs and hundreds of
thousands of small businesses closed their doors forever, the stock market
reached new record highs, a process that continues to this day."

"Far from Biden’s rosy picture of happy Fourth of July gatherings, the likely
prospect of his campaign to reopen the schools is a new wave of mass infections
and mass death that turns the summer into a more terrible version of the winter
months when the death toll rose above 3,000 a day."

That's honestly what I'm afraid of, as well. I fervently hope they're right and
I'm wrong, but it seems rash, going against the advice of the best scientists --
those who've been right every step of the way.

"Report: CDC May Relax Its Disastrously Strict School Distancing Rules"" by Matt
Welch
<https://reason.com/2021/03/12/report-cdc-may-relax-its-disastrously-strict-school-distancing-rules/>

"[...] (CDC) is considering changing its school distancing guidance of just one
month ago from six feet between each person inside a classroom to three. That
simple adjustment, which would bring the United States in line with most of the
rest of the industrialized world, could mean the difference between remote
learning and in-person instruction for millions of American K-12 students."

No more distancing? Weird. Switzerland still has it. Must be bunk.

It's a bit suspect that Welch is citing FOX News citing an op-ed from the USA
Today, though, as if that were gospel. 

"[...] a damning USA Today op-ed Tuesday accusing the CDC of misinterpreting
their own work to maintain a six-foot rule that "no science supports,""

Obviously, it's the CDC that's misinterpreting the science. No science supports
distancing? Sure, I guess all of those aerosol studies have been debunked. I
suppose you can all sit on top of each other with a respiratory disease and
nothing will happen. Can you imagine if it were contagious? And spread through
the air? Then we might have to distance. But since it doesn't spread, it never
existed.

Then we get to the real point:

"The most union-friendly president in generations got his $200 billion K-12 wish
list. There's no reason left to hold school reopening hostage."

Obviously that money will be put to use over the weekend to make the schools
safe and then the kids can start Monday. That's how things work. If only it were
harder to get things done, right, Welch?

"If sports stadiums are packed and Fourth of July celebrations back to normal
[...]"

Well, if that's the case, then yes, the additional vector of schools shouldn't
be a noticeable problem beyond what a full sports arena will supply for
patients. Israel is 40% vaccinated and their numbers are still rising. The U.S.
has a way to go before it gets to where Israel is (about 3x further down the
line).

"Schools are safe, they got the money, vaccines are spreading, hospitalizations
and deaths are plummeting, spring is here. It's time not only to open the damn
schools full time, but to punish politically anyone standing athwart the
schoolhouse doors yelling "Stop!""

He must be pretty sure or he wouldn't be sticking his neck this far out, right?
It doesn't sound like he's afraid of another wave at all. COVID-19 disappears in
the spring and summer -- everyone knows that. We have a single data point
without causation to prove it through correlation. That numbers are plummeting
is somewhat suspicious, honestly, but if they really are, it's because of the
lockdown, no? Or is the lockdown not helping drive the numbers down? They went
down by themselves? Because ... COVID got bored with us? Or because it's spring?

Also, make sure that anyone who urged caution gets pilloried for expressing a
perfectly supportable opinion. What should we do with you, Mr. Welch, if you
turn out to be dead wrong? Nothing? Right? Because you're not accountable for
anything.

On the other hand, real experts like Herr Doktor Christian Drosten are much more
sober in their analysis.

[media]

I didn't do a transcript this time, but I took notes on the general gist of what
was discussed. See the YouTube page for a meticulous breakdown.

At 30:00, Drosten talks about the inevitability of B.117 taking over Germany.
There are not enough tests to stop the virus. There were never enough tests,
even last year (as incorrectly discussed in many talk shows.) Those were
different tests. Germany is not going to get enough tests to really warrant a
lockdown stop. And it's also not going to have enough vaccine.

At 42:00, he recommended that maybe parents should back off on their own travel
plans, as long as their kids are in school. E.g. don't go to Mallorca. That
would be a way of minimizing contamination. Instead of just taking part in all
of the possible ways to expose yourself, you could limit yourself a bit. That
is, of course, unlikely to happen.

At 47:00, he described the situation as "brenzlig". We need to vaccinate. People
are going to die.

At 56:00 He noted that we have enough data now and the B.117 mutation is
definitely more dangerous. It's not yet clear that it's 60-70% deadlier, but
it's looking that way. So it's more contagious and deadlier and the people are
done with the lockdown and are going to walk face-first into this thing.

At 59:00, Drosten noted that the research coming from England is excellent.
Germany has a lot to learn from them as far as generating such precise and clean
results at such a tempo.

At 1:38:00 He discussed some good news. He thinks that we'll need an update of
the vaccine, but almost certainly only one in the near- to mid-term. After that,
we should be able to stick with a single vaccine for a good long while (that is
his hope, based on the data). At the same time, we'll have to see who should get
an annual or biennial booster -- but certainly not everyone will need one.

[media]

[media]

We -- humans -- are terrible at planning for long-term stuff. We always question
whether the long-term plans are worth it. 

"When Will the Planet Be Too Hot for Humans? Much, Much Sooner Than You
Imagine." by David Wallace-Wells
<https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2017/07/climate-change-earth-too-hot-for-humans.html>

"The present tense of climate change — the destruction we’ve already baked
into our future — is horrifying enough. Most people talk as if Miami and
Bangladesh still have a chance of surviving; most of the scientists I spoke with
assume we’ll lose them within the century, even if we stop burning fossil fuel
in the next decade. Two degrees of warming used to be considered the threshold
of catastrophe: tens of millions of climate refugees unleashed upon an
unprepared world. Now two degrees is our goal, per the Paris climate accords,
and experts give us only slim odds of hitting it."

This article predates his 2019 book "The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After
Warming" <https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3796> (my notes).

So, what should we do about Miami? If it would take years to evacuate Miami in
an orderly fashion, do we have enough evidence to convince people to do it?
Would that be possible? We know Miami is gone in 20 years. Do we invest a ton of
effort and energy trying to save it anyway?

These people are all like children, just yelling in the backseat of the car,
whining that "we're not there yet,"

Just keep yelling at scientists for extrapolating from data and making
recommendations that save lives.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Muddling through the misinformation]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4236</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4236"/>
    <updated>2021-04-11T21:34:00+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "CDC study finds c. 78% of people hospitalized for COVID
were overweight or obese" by Mark Crispin Miller
<https://markcrispinmiller.com/2021/04/cdc-study-finds-c-78-of-people-hospitalized-for-covid-were-overweight-or-obese/>
contains the following text and the link below it.

"A study from the CDC, reported by CNBC, and yet it slipped right down
the memory hole, despite—or because of—the further light it sheds on
the entire"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 11. Apr 2021 21:34:00
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "CDC study finds c. 78% of people hospitalized for COVID were
overweight or obese" by Mark Crispin Miller
<https://markcrispinmiller.com/2021/04/cdc-study-finds-c-78-of-people-hospitalized-for-covid-were-overweight-or-obese/>
contains the following text and the link below it.

"A study from the CDC, reported by CNBC, and yet it slipped right down the
memory hole, despite—or because of—the further light it sheds on the entire
COVID narrative, which has millions of slim, healthy people tightly masked and
terrified of human contact."

The article he linked, "CDC study finds about 78% of people hospitalized for
Covid were overweight or obese" by Berkeley Lovelace Jr.
<https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/08/covid-cdc-study-finds-roughly-78percent-of-people-hospitalized-were-overweight-or-obese.html>,
is nearly deliberately incorrect.

Miller is -- a (former?) professor of media and propaganda studies at NYU --
pushing a narrative that the authorities are exaggerating the pandemic for their
own purposes. It's unclear what those purposes are, but they're assumed to be
nefarious. Destroying the economy and livelihoods is just part of the master
plan to ... we don't know.

At any rate, Miller just uncritically spews stuff like this into his blog (to
which I'd initially subscribed because I saw a good interview with him on Useful
Idiots, where he seemed rational, but now remain subscribed to keep my thumb on
the pulse of this Querdenker foolishness. It's a good way of seeing what sort of
factual basis underlies many of the claims that you hear repeated uncritically
(and without sources)..

Miller recently published a link to an absolutely scammy web site run by a
"doctor"/blogger who wanted you to sign up for his web site before you could
even read a single sentence. This is the kind of scam that these MLMers love --
if they weren't pissing away their money on stuff like this, they'd have houses
full of egg-scramblers that they have to try to sell to other idiots, even
further down the MLM chain than them.

He just published another quick blog "Most governments that banned the AZT
“vaccinations” have resumed them"
<https://markcrispinmiller.com/2021/04/most-governments-that-banned-the-azt-vaccinations-have-resumed-them/>
(he rarely writes more than a sentence or two) indicating that "[t]hat piece
was, sad to say, inaccurate." He didn't apologize for misleading people by not
doing any research whatsoever. He didn't even try. I'd followed his initial link
and, within at most a minute, I was able to ascertain that the guy to which he'd
linked (a Dr. Mercola) was full of shit. Also, AZT is an AIDS treatment, not
AstraZeneca; he can't even bother to get the few words in his title-only blog
right.

But then he's off to the races again with a link to "“This is a new
Holocaust”: Israeli doctor finds that the toll of Pfizer’s COVID-19
“vaccine” is far greater than the official figures indicate"
<https://markcrispinmiller.com/2021/04/this-is-a-new-holocaust-israeli-doctor-finds-that-the-toll-of-pfizers-covid-19-vaccine-is-far-greater-than-the-official-figures-indicate/>,
which links to an article that concludes that ""The data in the table, rather
than indicating the vaccine efficacy, indicate the vaccine's adverse effects,"
the authors conclude."

They're claiming that everyone else in the world has read the data incorrectly.
Instead of being around 90% effective, the vaccines cause "adverse effects" in
around 90% of inoculants. I'm surprised they didn't just claim that it kills 90%
of inoculants instead because, sure, why not?

Anyway, back to the CNBC article. It lists some "key points" at the top,
including that "About 78% of people who have been hospitalized, needed a
ventilator or died from Covid-19 have been overweight or obese" and that "Just
over 42% of the U.S. population was considered obese in 2018, according to the
agency’s most recent statistics." This is either deliberately manipulative (my
bet) or just shoddy research or stupidity (always possible).

The author bothered to find the "Obesity and Overweight"
<https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/obesity-overweight.htm> study from 2018 with
the latest numbers on America, but then misquoted them. The percentage of the
population that is "overweight, including obesity" is 73.6%, which isn't really
that far off from the 78% of people who were strongly affected or killed by
COVID. It's not even really statistically significant, probably. But who's going
to write an article titled "COVID seems to affect fat people the same as skinny
people"?

It took me 30 seconds to find that article from the CDC. It was the top hit
after I searched "what percentage of americans are overweight or obese" in
"DuckDuckGo"
<https://duckduckgo.com/?q=what+percentage+of+americans+are+overweight+or+obese>.

It's horrifying that such a large percentage is obese or overweight, don't get
me wrong, but that's another story. There doesn't seem to be a story about
obesity and COVID, unless you deliberately compare apples to oranges for clicks.

Another link from Miller that he seems to be uncritically forwarding without
having read (succumbing to the allure of clickbait that happens to agree with
what he already thinks) is the "study" "Facemasks in the COVID-19 era: A health
hypothesis" <https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7680614/>. It looks
very authoritative and starts with the following abstract,

"Many countries across the globe utilized medical and non-medical facemasks as
[a] non-pharmaceutical intervention for reducing the transmission and
infectivity of coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19). Although, [sic] scientific
evidence supporting facemasks’ [nice job!] efficacy is lacking, adverse
physiological, psychological and health effects are established. Is [sic] has
been hypothesized that facemasks have compromised safety and efficacy profile
[sic...and what?] and should be avoided from use. [sic] The current article
comprehensively summarizes scientific evidences [sic] with respect to wearing
facemasks in the COVID-19 era, providing prosper [sic] information for public
health and decisions making. [sic]"

This abstract has so many typos and grammatical errors, there's no way this was
peer-reviewed. I can spare myself the job of reading the rest. I'd included it
in my reading list to see what new information they'd brought to light about the
efficacy of facemasks. The abstract is already a minefield of errors, so what's
the point of even reading the study?

The most recent one that Miller breathlessly posted as "proof" that the media
was ignoring how ineffective the vaccines are is "Despite vaccination success,
Hungary sets daily record COVID deaths"
<https://www.euronews.com/2021/03/31/despite-vaccination-success-hungary-sets-daily-record-covid-deaths>,
which writes,

"Hungary is suffering a devastating surge in COVID-19 deaths, despite the fact
it has the highest vaccination rate in the European Union. [...] It set a new
daily death record on Wednesday with 302 fatalities and currently has the
highest weekly death rate per one million inhabitants in the world."

They try to make this sound bad, but Hungary's COVID-19 situation has been very
bad for a number of weeks -- and deaths rise when the hospitals are full. Once
again, a quick check of some readily available resources, like the "Health Data
for Hungary"
<https://covid19.healthdata.org/hungary?view=resource-use&tab=trend&resource=all_resources>,
their hospitals are running at near capacity, exactly the conditions under which
COVID illnesses are most likely to lead to death.

A check of "Fälle, Impfungen, Übersterblichkeit: Corona-Zahlen weltweit"
<https://www.srf.ch/news/international/coronavirus-grafik-faelle-impfungen-uebersterblichkeit-corona-zahlen-weltweit>
shows that Hungary has managed to fully vaccinate 9% of their population -- and
they really only ramped up at the end of March (just a couple of weeks ago).
While it's a tragedy that so many people are dying, it's not because the vaccine
doesn't work. It's because not enough people have gotten it.

The vaccine doesn't magically protect the 91% of the population that hasn't been
vaccinated. Neither can you stretch that 9% to the 70% needed for anything like
herd immunity. Those 9% are protected. Good for them. Having the "highest
vaccination rate in the EU" sounds impressive until you see it's only 9%. That
means that they're the leaders in a very slow-running and pathetic race. The
conclusion that EuroNews and Miller draw from their few atoms of data and a
strong reluctance to fact-check is completely unsupported by the evidence.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Drosten and Osterholm in Einklang]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4237</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4237"/>
    <updated>2021-04-11T21:10:50+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[media]

Drosten's pissed. I've heard "irreführende" about 90 times now. He
thinks there are two options: let it rip and collapse the health system
or go back into lockdown ("der Holzhammer") ... Germany doesn't seem
capable of doing anything in between.

He said "private Kontakte" are definitely where...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 11. Apr 2021 21:10:50
Updated by marco on 11. Apr 2021 21:15:10
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[media]

Drosten's pissed. I've heard "irreführende" about 90 times now. He thinks there
are two options: let it rip and collapse the health system or go back into
lockdown ("der Holzhammer") ... Germany doesn't seem capable of doing anything
in between.

He said "private Kontakte" are definitely where infections are coming from now.
It's no longer true that "wir wissen einfach nicht wovon die Infectionen
kommen..."

At 37:30, he said

"Bei keinem diesen Viren gibt es eine "Dauerwelle". Der Begriff "der Dauerwelle"
behört in in den Friseursalon und nicht in die Infektionsepidemiologie. Wir
kennen diesen Begriff dort überhaupt nicht. [...] 

"Das Virus kommt braucht mehrere Anläufe, um die Kontaktnetzwerke ganz zu
nutzen. Es kommt einmal und infiziert diejenigen, die zu dieser Zeit miteinander
in Netzwerken Kontakte haben. Dann sind die all immun oder tot. Dann wird
dadurch das Virus sich beruhigen, weil keine Infektionsopfer zur Verfügung
stehen.

"Dann durchmischt sich aber die Gesellschaft wieder. Die Angst geht weg; man
geht wieder raus; neue Leute lernen sich kennen; Jobs werden gewechselt; usw.;
... es wir gereist. Dadurch entstehen neue Kontaktnetzwerk und, nach einigen
Monaten, ist dann wieder genügend [...] Futter für das Virus zur Verfügung --
also, neue empfängliche Personen, die noch übrig sind als empfängliche
Personen in der Gesellschaft sind dann wieder neu miteinander in Kontakt.

"Dann kann das Virus wieder durchlaufen. Dann sind Perkolationseffekte oder
andere physikalischen Schwellenwerte wieder überschritten. Dann gibt es die
nächste Welle. Mit einer Dauerwelle hat das alles nichts zu tun. Diese
Argumente sind hier vor allem bei dem Pseudoexperten und Logik Fehlern sind im
Moment sehr frappierend in der Öffentlichkeit."

At 43:00, he discussed how the "Querdenker" are never happy and they're
shockingly unscientific.

"Die Gegenpartei sagt, naja, ihr habt vorausgesagt wir werden ein paar Monaten
so viele Fälle bekommen und jetzt war eure voraussage falsch. Wo aber dann
vollkommen ausgeklammert wird, dass es ja auch eine Interventionsmassnahme
gegeben hat, dass ein Lockdown unterwegs.

"Und es gibt in vielen anderen Motiven beispielsweise diese -- die Virusleugner
-- ah, das Virus ist ja nie isoliert worden ... dann kommt ein Journalist und
präsentiert fünf oder sechs Beispiele wo das Virus tatsächlich isoliert
worden ist. Das führt aber nicht dazu, dass dann anerkannt wird: naja gut da
haben wir uns getäuscht; das Virus ist tatsächlich isoliert worden. 

"[...] Wir wollen mehr, wir wollen wirklich das Isolat selber als Beweis
bekommen und man fragt sich irgendwann, was wollt ihr denn jetzt noch. Soll ich
euch eine Ampule mit Infektiösen Virus per Post nach Hause damit ihr daran
infizieren könnt? Oder wie ist jetzt die Vorstellung des Nachweises eines
Virusisolats?

"[...] Auch das dann reicht ja wieder nicht. Dann ist ein infizierte Hamster
wieder nicht genug. Das ist eben "moving the goalposts"."

At 48:00, he described how it's "damned if you do; damned if you don't" as a
public scientist.

"Zum Beispiel, [einem] unterstellt man der hat ne PCR erfunden, die das Virus
gar nicht zeigt sondern irgendwas anderes und damit verdient er auch noch Geld.

"Und die Tatsache, dass diese Experte darauf öffentlich nicht äussert, weil
das einfach so an den Haaren herbeigezogen ist, dass man gar nicht erst mit
anfangen braucht sich dagegen zu äussern, weil es so objektiv falsch ist, wird
dann aber wieder so rumgedreht, dass die Tatsache, dass dieser Angegriffene sich
nicht äussert ja wohl bestätigen muss, dass diese Vorwürfe stimmen."

At 56:45, he discusses ... the scientific process? Because not enough people are
following it? Plan, predict, collect data, evaluate, report, come up with
measures based on data.

"Solche Bewertungen braucht man zumindest auch im Nachhinein aber eigentlich
braucht man die von Vornherein. [...] was sind eigentlich die Kriterien: ist das
die Zahl der positiven Antigentests? Was wollen wir eigentlich definieren als
Marker der Evaluation? Und dann, als nächste eine Evaluationsplan.

"Also, wann wollen wir eigentlich den Rückblick machen? Das muss man vorher
festlegen. Wan erwarten wir ein Effekt? Man kann nicht sagen, wir gucken mal.
Wenn die Situation sich so ein bisschen umkehrt, denn sagen wir ziehen ein
Schlussstrich und fangen das an zu evaluieren. Das geht schief. Man muss vorher
sagen, wann man evaluieren will. [...] Komme was wolle.

"Ob man das jetzt gut findet oder nicht gut findet. Ob man erwartet, dass es gut
oder schlecht ausgeht, es wird ausgewertet und diese Auswertung wird nicht
übersprungen und die wird nach bestimmten Kriterien gemacht und die Kriterien
muss man vorher festlegen, denn im Nachhinein solche Kriterien zu definieren.
Das ist nie gut.

"Also, man muss sagen: heute können wir eigentlich unsere damalige Auffassung
evaluieren. Damals haben wir gedacht, dass folgende Parameter zum guten oder
schlechtern ändern werden und jetzt schauen wir, wie sich das entwickelt hat.
[...] Und wie gehen wir mit den Ergebnisse um? [...] In welcher Form können
jetzt andere Städte das anwenden?"

Kurz gefasst: Ein Appel an Wissenschaftliche Normen.

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


"Epidemiologist warns that the fourth COVID-19 surge is under way in United
States" by Benjamin Mateus
<https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2021/04/05/usco-a05.html>

"Osterholm was blunt in dismissing the actions of state and federal governments
in relaxing restrictions and reopening schools, particularly in light of the
spread of new variants like B.1.1.7.

"“We are the only country in the world right now experiencing this increasing
number of cases due to this variant and at the same time, opening up, not
closing down," he told host Chris Wallace, who seemed taken aback by the
forthright warning. “The two basically are going to collide, and we are going
to see a substantially increased number of cases.”

"Osterholm continued, “I understand the absolute resistance in this country
even to consider that and you know—it's kind of like trying to drink barbed
wire—but the bottom-line message of the virus is it’s going to do what
it’s going to do, and we are going to have to respond somehow.” He added
that this might involve pulling “back on some of the restrictions that we’ve
loosened up on.”"

"Osterholm, who served as a member of President Biden’s COVID-19 transition
advisory board, has been phased out since his blunt warning in January that the
drop in coronavirus cases was “the eye of the hurricane” and not genuine
progress."

Osterholm and Drosten seem to be in perfect agreement here. Both are crying into
the wilderness, unheeded as the governments they try to counsel go ahead and do
their unscientific thing -- and will afterwards pretend that no-one could have
known what carnage was to follow.

"Throughout the month of March, Osterholm was warning that the American people
“are walking into the mouth of this virus monster as if somehow, we don’t
know it’s here, and it is here.” This is an apt description of an historic
crime, one being committed against the American people by the US ruling class
and its political servants."


]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[COVID-19 updates with Herr Doktor Christian Drosten (de)]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4201</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4201"/>
    <updated>2021-03-08T21:39:07+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Vor einem Jahr habe ich zum ersten mal von Herr Doktor Christian Drosten
erfahren. Heute höre ich nahezu wöchentlich seinen Podcast mit
Moderatorin Korrina Hennig auf Staatssender NDR mit. Er ist beruflich
Virologe und kann sich sehr gut nicht nur über das Thema sondern auch
die mit der Pandemie...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 8. Mar 2021 21:39:07
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Vor einem Jahr habe ich zum ersten mal von Herr Doktor Christian Drosten
erfahren. Heute höre ich nahezu wöchentlich seinen Podcast mit Moderatorin
Korrina Hennig auf Staatssender NDR mit. Er ist beruflich Virologe und kann sich
sehr gut nicht nur über das Thema sondern auch die mit der Pandemie damit
verbundenen gesellschaftlichen und politischen Themen diskutieren und
verständigen lassen.

[media]

Bei 00:46:57 wird die berühmte Astra-Impfstoff-Studie aus Südafrika diskutiert
mit Schwerpunkt auf der Bedeutung für Deutschland. Kurz zusammengefasst: die
Studie wurde nicht optimal durchgeführt und ist so oder so für  Deutschland
nicht zutreffend. Eher die englische Variante als die südafrikanische wir in
Deutschland Überhand nehmen.

"Wenn wir auch auf die Südafrikanisch Mutante gucken können und dann werden
wir sehen, dass wir in Deutschland deutlich niedriger liegen. Das ist nicht so,
dass wir in allernächste Zeit erwarten müssen, dass diese südafrikanische
Mutante bei uns überhand nimmt, sondern hier, bei und, in Deutschland sollte
der Fokus gerichtet sein auf der englische Mutante und da wiederum wissen wir
ja, aus der anderen Studie, dass der keinen Nachteil hat in der Schutzwirkung
durch die Astra Vakzine.

"Was uns hier angeht, haben wir gleich eine ganze Reihe von Gründen, die wir
aufführen könnten, um zu sagen, diese südafrikanische Studie, die soll jetzt
mal schön begutachtet werden und die soll jetzt mal ihren Eingang in die
Literatur finden aber kann uns hier sicherlich nicht beeindrucken für die
Planung unserer Vakzinestrategie in Deutschland.

"Wir sollten unbedingt auf dieser Astra Vakzine bauen in Deutschland. Ich finde
diese ist eine sehr gute Impfstoff. Nach vielen Dingen, die ich sehe. Und ich
finde nicht, dass diese Einschränkungen, die in Südafrika sicherlich sehr wohl
gelten und die sich vielleicht erhärten werden, wenn wir grössere und
qualitativ bessere Studie noch obendrauf setzt. Das ist bei uns von geringerer
Bewandtnis und man muss eben immer Impfprogramme im nationalen Kontext sehen."

Bei 1:03:40 wiederholte er, dass die "Astra Vakzine ist gut [...] nicht auf eine
bessere Impfung warten."

00:49:35 diskutierte er weiter, dass die "T-Zelle Immunrepertoire" der
Astra-Vakzine weisst Verluste auf, sind aber nicht von genügendem Nachteil, um
nicht unbedingt weiter zu fahren.

"Es gibt ein anderen interessanten Datensatz, denn man wohl aus der grösseren
laufenden Untersuchung da zugetan hat zu diesen Manuskript und das sind so erste
Daten zu zellulären Immunität und da kann man was interessantes sagen. Man hat
also das T-Zelle Immunrepertoire durch eine molekulardiagnostische Untersuchung
angeschaut und hat 87 T-Zelle Epitope ausgemacht, die in dieser Bevölkerung
vorkommen und die die T-Zellen gruppieren lassen in klonalen Gruppen. Und man
hat gesehen, dass von diesen 87 T-Cell Epitopen 75 erhalten sind in der [...]
südafrikanischen Fluchtmutante. In kurzen Worten [...] man sieht bei der
Schutzwirkung und bei dem neutralisierenden Antikörperergebnis deutlichen
Verluste auftreten. Halten sich diese Verluste bei der T-Zelle Immunität doch
sehr in grenzen und das ist ja genau das was wir eigentlich immer auch
argumentativ schon so aus dem allgemeinen aus gesagt haben."

58:27 gab er seinen Standpunkt zu den vielen vor kurzem veröffentlichten
Studien. Er meinte, wir sollen uns von denen nicht ablenken lassen und damit das
Vertrauen in guten Vakzinen durch Panik zerstören lassen.

"[...] diese Studien werden schnell gemacht nach kurzer Beobachtungszeit
während wir aber genau wissen, dass gerade bei denjenigen, die die Astra
Vakzine und andere vector wachsen bekommen haben, die Immunität noch nachreift.
Und diese nach gereifte Immunität, die schützt auch nochmal besser. Also diese
ganzen kurzen Botschaften, da kommt ein Preprint und eine Pressemitteilung und
schon steht's in der NYT und von da steht's in grossen deutschen Zeitungen und
zwei Tage später steht's dann in eher kleinere Zeitungen und auf jeder Stufe
kommt es zu einer weiteren Vereinfachung der Information. Das muss man ganz
vorsichtig sein, weil das im Moment das vertrauen der Bevölkerung in dieser
Impfstoffe ja zerstört."

1:34:00 meinte er als Zusammenfassung, dass Deutschland soll ja "Nägel mit
Köpf'" machen und die einfache Sache erledigen: Impfstoff besorgen und
möglichst viele Leute damit impfen. Die Schweiz könnte das auch mal
überlegen. Aber ganz easy, da haben wir doch Zeit.

"[...] wir müssen alles dran setzen jetzt so schnell wie möglich in die Breite
zu impfen. Die Impfstoffe, die wir haben, die sind extrem gut gegenüber dem was
man erwarten konnte. Es gibt immer irgendwo ein Haar in der Supper und manche
schauen da mit dem Vergrösserungsglas drauf. Das sollte man nicht tun. Man
sollte eher überlegen was kann man da beitragen. Also, ganz klar: wenn ich mich
impfen lasse, denn habe ich mit der allergrössten Wahrscheinlichkeit für mich
selber die Angst erst mal weg. Also ich habe keine Angst mehr von einem schweren
Verlauf."

"Ich lasse mich auch impfen, [...] weil ich weiss, dass meine Impfung der gesamt
Bevölkerung hilft. Also die Impfung ist eine altruistische Leistung."

Die Sendung #77 war auch gut aber da gab's von mir keine Notizen. Der Drosten
war nicht da. In Folge #78 war der wieder da und hat sich ein paar mal wieder
beeindruckend genug ausgedrückt, dass ich wieder ein bisschen davon Abschreiben
wollte.

[media]

13:00 Zu den saisonalen Effekt.

"Wir haben einige Stimmen in der Öffentlichkeit, die jetzt schon wieder sagen,
das ganze wird sich in März erledigt haben, weil es ein saisonalen Effekt gibt.
Ich gebe darauf sehr wenig auf solche Einschätzungen. Die sind für mich nicht
wissenschaftlich haltbar. Es gibt viel mehr wissenschaftlich haltbarere
Einschätzungen, die Sagen maximal 20% Reduktion durch eine saisonale Effekt zu
erwarten ist."

1:15:20 wollte er klar stellen, dass wir reden immer von den schlimmsten
Auswirkungen von COVID -- eben, weil die oft genug vorkommen, dass der
Gesamteffekt auf der Gesellschaft katastrophal sein könnte. Aber um klar zu
sein, die meiste Menschen kommen ohne irgendwelche Nachteile davon weg. Für die
überwiegende Mehrheit kommt das Ding und geht wieder, ohne bleibende Spuren zu
hinterlassen.

"Das muss man sich auch immer noch klar machen für die überwältigende
Mehrheit aller sogar immunlogische naiven ein harmloses Virus. Das wird immer
wieder vergessen, dass der normale Verlauf ein milder Verlauf ist. Und das ja
nur ein Teil der infizierten ein schweren Verlauf kriegt aber es sind eben bei
einer durchlaufenden pandemischen Welle so viele davon, dass man das nicht
tolerieren kann."

  

Bei 1:21:00 fragte Korinna, was ist mit den anderen Varianten wovon wir z.Z.
immer wieder hören? Damit meinte sie z.B. die neuere aus Kalifornien, nicht die
Variante B117 aus Grossbritannien, die uns schon seit mehr als einem Quartal
begleitet.

"Das ist mediale Überaufmerksamkeit. Im Moment das muss ich wirklich noch mal
sagen. Das sollte vielleicht auch eine Priorität in einer journalistischen
Recherche sein ist die Frage: wie kommen wir schnell dazu, dass den Impfstoff,
den wir nach Ostern durchaus in grossen Mengen bekommen in Deutschland, dass wir
den geimpft bekommen und hier eine Bevölkerungsimmunität aufbauen.

"Dann nach dem Aufbau einer Bevölkerungsimmunität werden wir immer wieder
Virusvarianten sehen. Und das wird weiterhin die Fachwelt unterhalten und
beschäftigt halten aber die Medien werden darüber nicht mehr berichten
müssen, weil wir dann dieses grosse gesellschaftliche Problem nicht mehr haben

"[...] und wir kommen aus diesem gesellschaftlichen Problem -- das ist ein
gesamtgesellschaftliches Problem -- das geht eben nicht nur, um Individualschutz
sondern es geht auch um den Bevölkerungs- und Wirtschaftsschutz und darüber
wieder zurück reflektiert auf den Individualschutz derjenigen die sich nicht
durch die Impfung individuell schützen können oder es einfach nicht kapieren,
dass sie das besser tun sollten. Das ist da ja alles einbezogen und das ist die
gesamtgesellschaftliche Aufgabe, der sich die Politik durchaus stellt."

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The Science of Free Will and Behavior]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4184</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4184"/>
    <updated>2021-02-19T23:56:34+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The podcast episode "134 | Robert Sapolsky on Why We Behave the Way We
Do" by Sean Carroll <https://wondery.com/shows/sean-carrolls-mindscape/>
was a really interesting introduction/look at the science of free will
as described in far greater detail in his book Behave (which I have not
yet read).

[image]I've included a partial transcript of the parts that I found the
most...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 19. Feb 2021 23:56:34
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The podcast episode "134 | Robert Sapolsky on Why We Behave the Way We Do" by
Sean Carroll <https://wondery.com/shows/sean-carrolls-mindscape/> was a really
interesting introduction/look at the science of free will as described in far
greater detail in his book Behave (which I have not yet read).

[image]I've included a partial transcript of the parts that I found the most
interesting. The following comes from the end of the episode, where they both
did an excellent job of summarizing the preceding discussion's points as well as
pointing out logical conclusions for e.g. legal proceedings. I.e. if environment
and breeding and upbringing account for a large part of your default behavior --
against which you can actively fight, but first you have to notice that there's
something you wish to change -- then to what degree can you really be held
responsible for at least some of your actions?

"Carroll: Something makes me think if more people were aware of how much of our
everyday behavior was not completely rational, rule-based, cognitive...and how
much of it was automatic, visceral, driven by heuristics that we've inherited
from thousands of years ago, it would cast our decisions in a slightly different
light. I think a lot of people stick to their guns about their decisions because
they're convinced that they're rational, even if they're not and, maybe, sowing
a little bit of doubt in that conviction would be a good thing.

"Sapolsky: The psychologist Josh Green at Harvard stated it really well, that,
when people saying I have a right to be doing that, what they're saying is I can
only rationalize why I want to do that, I don't actually have a rational reason.
I can't tell you why I wanna do it, but I wanna do it so much that I'm going to
declare it to be right. That's exactly a circumstance like this. In an even
broader sense, if you accept that we are nothing more or less than our biology
-- incredibly complicated biology -- from one second ago to one million years
ago and interacting with environment, [...] If we are nothing more or less than
our biology, and those are biological influences over which we have no control,
[...] you can never feel justified in thinking that you are entitled to anything
more than anyone else because whatever it is that you have done, which you
believe has earned you praise or entitlement, you had nothing to do with, and if
you really, really believe this stuff, you have no rational grounds for every
hating anyone. Because they didn't have a damned thing to do with whatever they
did, no matter how horrific or hurtful it was, and if you really think those
ways, this could be a very different world, and I would think those ways for
about 3.5 seconds at a time [...] but if you really believe this stuff, those
are the only conclusions you can reach.

"Carroll: Couldn't you just say, 'I really like being a bundle of visceral
heuristics' and just ... go with it? Lean in?

"Sapolsky: Yeah, except then you have to ask: so what are the circumstances that
brought you to the point of liking being a bundle of heuristics? The legal
system deciding if somebody intended to something or not and, if they intended
to, you're in trouble. They legal system never says: where did that intent come
from? [1]

"That came from the combination of these seven gene variants, this thing that
happened during second trimester, these cultural values during childhood or the
day that they got exposed to that toxin when they were 18 and then got hit in
the head.

"Carroll: Well, you know, I do appreciate your uniquely optimistic version of
existential anxiety and dread."

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


[1] I think he's overreaching quite a lot here. The insanity defense is just one
    of many examples of ways in which the law explores intent.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Waiting it out]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4128</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4128"/>
    <updated>2021-01-17T17:45:43+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[People's behavior vis á vis COVID-19 at this point -- ten months after
the onset of the virus -- is like when an action movie's hero is in the
swamp with a straw in his mouth, sucking a barely adequate supply of air
through it, while his pursuers are still somewhere up there, looking for
him. [1]

Were...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 17. Jan 2021 17:45:43
------------------------------------------------------------------------

People's behavior vis á vis COVID-19 at this point -- ten months after the
onset of the virus -- is like when an action movie's hero is in the swamp with a
straw in his mouth, sucking a barely adequate supply of air through it, while
his pursuers are still somewhere up there, looking for him. [1]

Were they still within earshot? Would they hear him if he just came up quickly
for a good, solid breath? Were they completely gone? Was he suffering underwater
for nothing? They're not still around, right? I mean, how could they be? They
might still be here, but not right here, right? Just a quick peek wouldn't hurt,
would it? He'd go right back down after a good breath.

This sounds a lot like the arguments I've heard recently about COVID-19. As if
the virus cares.

Still, the pressure to get out becomes enormous, especially as the psychological
damage mounts. It's the devil's choice between risking death by COVID-19 or
death by a thousand cuts imposed by self-isolation.

That, at least, is the perceived calculus. In reality, it's not death by a
thousand cuts, but inconvenience, for the most part.

No doubt: it's a long time to experience inconvenience. We're not used to not
getting our way pretty much all the time. And, for some, it's not just
inconvenience, but actual acute suffering. But the most vocal advocates of
"opening up" act, first of all, as if they just invented this mantra and, second
of all, as if they aren't the ones riding this thing out in relative luxury,
many of them extreme.

There's another crucial difference: In our action hero's case, he would risk
only his own life by coming up for air. In our case, getting COVID-19 means,
most likely, spreading it to others and helping spread misery to others.
Solidarity is needed.

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


[1] I remembered it incorrectly as Rambo, but "Reed Snorkel"
    <https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ReedSnorkel> taught me that I'd
    probably misremembered Chuck Norris from Missing in Action and also that
    "reality is unrealistic".

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Radio vs. Sound Waves]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4124</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4124"/>
    <updated>2020-12-29T08:07:27+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I played "Kahoot" <https://www.kahoot.com> [1] the other day with the
family. The quizzes are pretty wide-ranging and pretty decent fun,
especially for a mix of ages. One of the quizzes concerned sound and
electromagnetic waves and I tried to explain why one of the answers was
incorrect "in the moment", as it were. Concerned...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 29. Dec 2020 08:07:27
Updated by marco on 1. Jan 2021 08:48:31
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I played "Kahoot" <https://www.kahoot.com> [1] the other day with the family.
The quizzes are pretty wide-ranging and pretty decent fun, especially for a mix
of ages. One of the quizzes concerned sound and electromagnetic waves and I
tried to explain why one of the answers was incorrect "in the moment", as it
were. Concerned that my explanation had engendered rather than answered
questions, I take another crack at it below.

[Radio vs. Sound Waves]

I was thinking again about how you didn’t seem to convinced by my fumbling
attempts to explain the difference between sound and radio waves. The point I
was trying to make is better made by the article "Difference Between Radio Waves
and Sound Waves"
<https://pediaa.com/difference-between-radio-waves-and-sound-waves/>, which
writes,

"[…] radio waves are a type of electromagnetic wave that can travel when there
is no medium, whereas sound waves are a type of mechanical wave that cannot
travel if there is no medium."

In describing how the two do interact, I used the words “encode” and
“decode”. Sound waves are recorded by a microphone, transformed to a digital
or analog signal, transmitted via radio waves, transformed to a digital or
analog signal, and, finally, used to drive a mechanism like a speaker to
reproduce the original sound by “playing” them on a speaker, which is
generally a vibrating surface that generates sound waves in the air near you.
There's a whole lot more detail to the encoding format, process, the
electronics, etc., but that's the basic gist.

[Taking Pictures]

You didn't sound convinced even by that, so I thought of what is, perhaps, a
better analogy.

When you take a picture with your phone, you're doing nearly exactly the same
thing, but with electromagnetic waves in the visible spectrum. These waves are
visible in a particular place; they strike the CCD (charge-coupled device) in
your camera, which records millions of data points, encoded with a picture
format (e.g. JPEG or RAW).

When you send that picture, you don't think of it as "sending the light waves
over radio waves", though, do you? You think of it as sending the picture. But
that picture is just a frozen representation of light waves that once existed in
a certain place and time.

That you then use your phone to encode radio waves to transmit the picture to
someone else (or to store in the cloud) has nothing to do with the original
light waves. You could just as easily have copied the JPEG to a computer, onto a
USB stick and transported it that way.

That's what I meant when I said that sound waves don't have anything to do with
radio waves. The radio wave is not intrinsic to the process of hearing sound
waves; it's just a common transmission mechanism for all sorts of data (digital
or analog, though increasingly digital these days).

[Recording and Playing Sound]

In the olden days, the vibrations of a microphone (a piece of
vibration-sensitive membrane connected to a sensor (generally piezoelectric)
that transforms or encodes the vibration into a voltage with a certain amplitude
and frequency, which drove a needle the inscribed a wax cylinder or vinyl disc.
You could then carry (not transmit) this cylinder to somewhere else, where you
could use a device that, essentially, reverses the recording process to decode
the sound and "play" it. No radio waves in sight.

You can extrapolate the example of the picture to a series of moving pictures
that even includes sound (a video). In that case, you are capturing information
using two detectors (a microphone and a camera/CCD) and the software in the
phone combines these inputs into a single recording, storing it as a file, 30-60
times per second. That file has nothing to do with radio or sound or light
waves.

["Files"]

Even the "file" isn't anything like the metaphorical mental picture we tend to
use for it. The flash storage in which it resides is a block of material that
records trillions of individual "values" in the form of a physical property that
is  in one of two distinct states, each of which can be read by yet another
sensor. This sensor applies a voltage to these distinct regions of the material
and interprets the results as 1s and 0s. Hard drives use magnetism instead of
electrical charge.

A file comprises a region of these physical states that the phone can read and
write and the software can reliably interpret as 1s and 0s. It is read with
these sensors, interpreted by the software to produce signals that play it by
applying further voltages to red, green, and blue emitters in the "screen" that
emulate the original light waves -- doing the same for the original sound waves
using a speaker, as described above -- but those are new light and sound waves.

[A miracle in your hand]

It's actually kind of a miracle that any of this works at all, don't you think?
I've got a 3-year-old used iPhone 6s that can record 4k video at 30FPS (33.3ms
per frame) and store it in a format that can be immediately replayed and shared.
Not only that it works, but that it can do all of this so efficiently, using so
little power relative to the task -- and in the palm of your hand. Amazing,
really.

And don't even get me started about how that phone talks to space all day long
(using radio waves). Check out that the video "All you need to know to
understand 5G" by Sabine Hossenfelder
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBsP-bmDLOo>.

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


[1] For the hell of it, I switched the UI to French to improve the learning
    effect and saw a very odd encoding error.
  
  [image]
  
  All of the accented characters are correct, but the single quote remained
  unencoded, for some strange reason -- because there is never any reason to
  encode it in the first place, really, since it's not a reserved character in
  HTML.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The WHO on Facemasks and Pre-symptomatic Contagion]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4004</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=4004"/>
    <updated>2020-06-11T22:35:56+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[Facemasks]

The article "Here’s what WHO says your mask should have to prevent
COVID-19 spread" by Beth Mole
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2020/06/who-now-recommends-the-public-use-masks-good-masks-in-covid-19-areas/>
details the technical specifications for making your own facemask.

tl;dr: "you're probably doing it wrong, guidance suggests."

The WHO says:

  * "[...] masks should only ever be used as part of a"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 11. Jun 2020 22:35:56
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[Facemasks]

The article "Here’s what WHO says your mask should have to prevent COVID-19
spread" by Beth Mole
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2020/06/who-now-recommends-the-public-use-masks-good-masks-in-covid-19-areas/>
details the technical specifications for making your own facemask.

tl;dr: "you're probably doing it wrong, guidance suggests."

The WHO says:

  * "[...] masks should only ever be used as part of a comprehensive strategy in
    the fight against COVID."
  * "WHO now recommends that healthy members of the public wear homemade or
    commercially-available fabric masks in places where the new coronavirus is
    circulating widely and where physical distancing (staying 6-feet apart,
    etc.) is not possible or is difficult."
  * "[...] a minimum of three layers is required for fabric masks"
  * "[...] these masks are for source control only, not personal
    protection—that is, they can help prevent the person wearing the mask from
    spreading the virus, but they will not necessarily protect the wearer from
    becoming infected."
  * "Masks are not a replacement for physical distancing, hand hygiene, and
    other public health measures,"

Here in Switzerland, there is still no mask requirement almost anywhere in
public. It is strongly recommended to wear them on public transportation, but
the SBB reports that 90% of people aren't wearing them. It is honestly a mystery
to me how Switzerland ended up with the #1 ranking for combating COVID-19. The
numbers speak for themselves, though -- the spread is, for all intents and
purposes, at a standstill.

Once I start commuting again, I will be wearing a mask. I wasn't interested in
being part of the first wave. My interest in being part of the second wave is
similarly low.

[Pre-symptomatic transmission]

The article "WHO butchers asymptomatic COVID comments. Here’s what they meant"
by Beth Mole
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2020/06/who-butchers-asymptomatic-covid-comments-heres-what-they-meant/>
takes the WHO to task for "butchering" their message, but honestly makes quite a
mess of summarizing the WHO message nearly as badly.

Still, more than halfway through the article, she finally sums up the relevant
terminology.

  * Symptomatic case = Someone who is infected and has symptoms at some point.
  * Asymptomatic case = Someone who is infected but never develops symptoms.
  * Pre-symptomatic = The phase of a symptomatic infection when a person may
    test positive for the virus and/or may spread the virus but has not yet
    developed symptoms.
  * Pre-symptomatic transmission = Spread of the virus from a symptomatic case
    during their pre-symptomatic phase.
  * Asymptomatic transmission = Spread of the virus from an infected person with
    no current symptoms. This transmission could be from a pre-symptomatic
    person or a truly asymptomatic case, depending on how the terms are being
    used.

"The WHO has consistently used asymptomatic transmission only when talking about
truly asymptomatic cases."

Where I think I disagree with the author is where she deems the WHO "confusing"
when they have been consistent and others have constantly misinterpreted the
terminology, using their own definitions. That's honestly not the WHO's fault.
It may be their problem, but it's not their fault.

There are a few points of interest:

   1. Many people mean pre-symptomatic when they say asymptomatic. Truly
      asymptomatic people are very rare with COVID-19, although their known
      prevalence may increase as more is known about the disease.
   2. As far as public safety is concerned, there is no need to distinguish
      between pre-symptomatic and asymptomatic transmission: both indicate
      individuals who can infect others without knowing that they have the
      disease. As far as contagion is concerned, it doesn't matter whether they
      exhibit symptoms a week later.
   3. Judging by how well certain countries have this first wave of the pandemic
      under control (Switzerland is a good example), pre-symptomatic
      transmission doesn't seem to be as large a problem as some seem to think.
      E.g. Fauci in the U.S. thinks 25%-45% of cases might be transmitted this
      way. If that were the case, it would be much harder to trace and squash
      COVID-19 to the degree that some countries have.

I'm cautiously optimistic that pre-symptomatic transmission is less of an issue
than some think. It would mean that it's possible to keep COVID-19 under control
by tracing super-spreaders and squashing outbreaks quickly.

The U.S.'s inability to squash its rate has less to do with pre-symptomatic
transmission and more to do with an utter lack of planning, discipline, and
organization. People in the U.S. don't trust anyone or anything and they're not
particularly well-trained at doing anything for the common good, so their
follow-through has been much less effective than in European countries.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[German virologist Christian Drosten]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3982</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3982"/>
    <updated>2020-05-31T17:08:06+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Professor Christian Drosten is a virologist working at the "Charité
University Hospital in Berlin" <https://www.charite.de/en/>. Since the
beginning of March, he's been doing an informative podcast in German
called Coronavirus-Update. I've found him to be highly informative and
factual in a world filled with propaganda,...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 31. May 2020 17:08:06
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Professor Christian Drosten is a virologist working at the "Charité University
Hospital in Berlin" <https://www.charite.de/en/>. Since the beginning of March,
he's been doing an informative podcast in German called Coronavirus-Update. I've
found him to be highly informative and factual in a world filled with
propaganda, conspiracy theory and shoddy science.

The following interview with Drosten was one I found in English, which he also
speaks fluently. I thought the 30 minutes, in particular, were very enlightening
(citations below).

[media]

[Excess Mortality]

At about the 1:05:00 mark, Drosten discusses excess mortality and puts a wooden
stake through the theory that COVID-19 is a slightly more contagious and
therefore only slightly more deadly flu.

"You can look at the excess mortality. In Germany 850,000 people die per year.
There is something like an average mortality per unit of time. You can compare
the average mortality against the mortality for December-March, which is the flu
season. This yields the influenza-related excess mortality. This can be between
8000 and 30,000 per year, in Germany. [presumably depending on whether the
influenza vaccination was properly targeted. --ed.]

"For the countries that have already reported their mortality figures for this
year -- and they are reporting for March/April of this year -- [...] what you
see is an increase of mortality in the population that hasn't been seen before
-- and this is with a lockdown in place.

"This is from countries with an efficient reporting system and with a national
health-care system that enacted an early and efficient lockdown. Belgium,
Netherlands ... even UK. For Sweden, we don't have numbers yet. But for many, we
do have numbers and it's out of any question that, in spite of the lockdown, the
excess fatality rate in this period of time is so much higher than previously
seen that this whole discussion about whether the virus is similar to influenza
in terms of fatality, this is concluded. We don't have to discuss this anymore.

"All we have to do is take care that we don't see the true excess mortality that
this virus could cause, without a lockdown. And I'm afraid we may see such
figures in poorer countries of the global south. I can't predict what the
different age profiles in these countries will cause. Poor African countries
have much fewer old people in their population. They have many more general
immuno-modulatory diseases like warm infections that we don't have, so all of
this may even be beneficial -- and we may not see the horrifying number, but I
can't predict. Nobody can predict."

And, as Angela Richter points out, "There is a lot of underlying immunity [to
influenza] in the population due to vaccination and also due to prior
infection," a factor that doesn't affect COVID-19 in the least, in this, its
first year. Drosten concurred that "It doesn't look like the common cold is
delivering a similar effect, or at least not a strong one."

[Lasting Damage?]

They then discussed a topic that I only rarely hear discussed: what are the
outcomes in between a full recovery and death? Very few people are discussing
the likelihood of prolonged reduced lung capacity or possibly chronic, life-long
malady associated with having had the disease. It's clear that there are those
who get mild symptoms. It's clear that some get hit by a proverbial truck and
will take a long time to recover (e.g. from intubation, from weight loss, from
having lain prone for weeks on a ventilator, etc.).

Richter asks about the reports of "organ damage", for which Drosten has a more
reassuring reply. He talks about how some of the receptors in blood vessels are
the same as those that attach to COVID-19 in the lungs and that makes it
possible for the virus to travel to other organs (Cytokine storms, strokes,
blood clots). It can attack the heart and the kidneys, with "coagulation
sources". The primary attack vector is the lungs, but there are rare cases where
other organs are attacked (but very rare ... 30 cases per country, e.g.
Germany). "In adults, it's not the prime manifestation". These cases are only
just being examined because they're quite rare.

[Learning from other pandemics]

The next podcast is in German and is from Drosten's bi-weekly show.

[media]

The first fifteen minutes is the most interesting for the current crisis. After
that, he discusses the flus of 2009 and 2014 and the inapplicability of the
measures or medicines to COVID-19.

I picked up the following take-aways, which I have translated faithfully but
loosely.

[Meat]

There is no chance that you'll catch the virus from meat. It's stored for a long
time, there are lots of other organisms on meat that attack the virus, and
you're almost certainly going to cook it. The connection to meat is that the
people packing the meat work in very close quarters and in very cold
temperatures, which seems to lead to a higher contagiousness for COVID-19.

[Excess Mortality Redux]

As previously mentioned, there are new studies that show that the excess
mortality for many European countries is clear and, in some places, much, much
higher. In one region in Italy, a new study shows 150 dead in just one quarter,
so it's already at 15x the normal rate. 10 per 1000 usually die in the region.
Maximum 21. In March of 2020, 155 died. At least 85 of these had tested positive
for COVID-19.

There is no reason to believe that this excess mortality is due to a worse
health-care system (it's one of the richer regions in Italy) or that there were
older people there (it wasn't particularly excessive, no more so than other
European countries). This was a region where they were caught by surprise, but
were actually in quite a severe lockdown for most of March.

So there was clear excess mortality even with a lockdown and the lockdown
started only just as the exponential curve was starting. If there had been no
lockdown, the region would have experienced the full brunt of the exponential
curve, which would have pushed excess mortality (and other damage) much, much
higher than 15x normal. This is quite sobering.

[Outbreak in Kano, Nigeria]

Recently, in some countries in the global south, there are reports of, for
example, Kano in Nigeria. It's clear that they have a massive outbreak and it
will most likely proceed there naturally because lockdowns are more difficult to
enforce there. Nigeria's actually doing well, all things considered. But they,
too, have one study where 21 doctors in just one hospital tested positive for
the virus (they actively had it). Even some of the lab personnel had it, even
though they have no contact with patients.

Even anecdotally, a questionnaire of 100 family members and friends of one of
the study authors yielded that nearly every member had had symptoms with loss of
sense of smell and taste for a few days. It's unclear what this will mean for
death in these countries. Can they flatten the curve? Or will they look like New
York City? Or something in between?

[NYC as first-world warning]

What is also unclear for those who don't read/listen to English news is what
happened in New York City. It tore through there like a firestorm. Germans seem
to be largely unaware of what can happen if proper measures are not followed and
the disease really spreads its wings. They believe that they, as a first-world
country, can protect themselves no matter what. Drosten says that this leads to
a much higher rate of denialism in both the population and media, both of which
are highly counterproductive and could lead to more suffering if and when a
second wave appears.

[Swine Flu]

As for the Swine Flu, we underestimated it. About the same number of people died
of it as died of the standard flu. Only 20% of those who died were over 65 years
old, which is very different than the standard flu. There follows a long
discussion of the various flus that continue to circulate and their relative
dangers. There is unfortunately not very much similar between the Swine Flu and
COVID-19, so we learn nothing from it that will help us in the short-term.

[Finding the Red Marble]

The most recent podcast from Friday discusses the importance of not only
contact-tracing, but "controlling the red marble" i.e. stopping so-called
super-spreaders.

[media]

I thought the most important take-aways from this most recent podcast were the
following:

  * Proximity x time = infection rate
  * Being inside is vastly more risky than being outside. One reliable study
    from Japan shows you're 19x as likely to be infected indoors as outdoors.
  * That would indicate that we can take advantage of the summer by moving our
    public lives outside. Cafés could be encouraged to maybe not have the same
    distance requirements outside as inside.
  * Masks should help inside, but not over longer stretches of time
  * Being outside is very low-risk, as long as proximity rules are respected
    (e.g. garden party with a few people or while hiking)
  * A lockdown is an admission that we don't know where the disease might be; we
    use it to minimize number of simultaneous outbreaks
  * Reliable tracing is the only way to avoid using lockdowns
  * Tracing is made more difficult by probabilities. There is a decent chance
    that everything looks OK for a long time until a super-spreader activates a
    new outbreak. The is the "red marble" of which Drosten speaks. In his
    analogy, when you reach into a bag of 100 marbles, you might get the one red
    marble on your first try; or, it might take a dozen tries over months before
    you get the red marble. An outbreak awaits the whole time.
  * The best way forward without full lockdowns is finding, tracing, and
    stifling clusters. This means quarantining anyone who can be associated with
    a positive result without testing first (as we do now).  Instead, we should
    isolate, then test. Guilty until proven innocent works better for reigning
    in super-spreaders.
  * The asymptomatic, potentially infectious phase is shorter than we at first
    thought -- it is sufficient to wait only one week instead of the heretofore
    recommended two to catch all but the most extreme cases. 
  * E.g. If a teacher gets sick, then all students associated with that teacher
    should stay home for a week. Whoever doesn't have the disease after a week
    can go back to school. For those who do, apply recursive tracing. The (new)
    good news is that you don't need to keep people in lockdown for 2 weeks and
    you almost certainly don't have to close the whole institution (unless
    perhaps there are multiple, simultaneous outbreaks).

[Asymptomatic Patients]

In the podcast, Drosten recommends the science-writing of Kai Kupferschmidt, a
German who happens to write in English for the magazine Science. His most
recently articles are in fact quite informative. The article "Study claiming new
coronavirus can be transmitted by people without symptoms was flawed" by Kai
Kupferschmidt
<https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/02/paper-non-symptomatic-patient-transmitting-coronavirus-wrong>
examines the by-now notorious pre-print that led many to believe that
asymptomatic people were shedding viruses.

It turns out that the lady at the center of the study was not asymptomatic, but
just had milder symptoms that were not as obvious to colleagues, who'd all
reported that she "didn't seem sick". When they finally interviewed the woman
herself, she readily reported that she'd felt tired and under-the-weather during
her entire stay in Germany. A rush to publication and sloppiness in language led
to a report that ran around the world and likely still serves as the kernel of
people's belief that COVID-19 can be spread by asymptomatic people.

"The German cluster does reveal another interesting aspect about the new virus,
Drosten says. So far most attention has gone to patients who get seriously ill,
but all four cases in Germany had a very mild infection. That may be true for
many more patients, Drosten says, which may help the virus spread. “There is
increasingly the sense that patients may just experience mild cold symptoms,
while already shedding the virus,” he says. “Those are not symptoms that
lead people to stay at home.”"

[Stopping Clusters and Super-Spreaders]

The article "Why do some COVID-19 patients infect many others, whereas most
don’t spread the virus at all?" by Kai Kupferschmidt
<https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/05/why-do-some-covid-19-patients-infect-many-others-whereas-most-don-t-spread-virus-all>
discusses the k-value (dispersion factor) versus the R-value (reproduction
number). A lower dispersion number means a higher number of people with an R of
zero with a low number of people with a very high R (super-spreaders).

"Sometimes a single person infects dozens of people, whereas other clusters
unfold across several generations of spread, in multiple venues.

"Other infectious diseases also spread in clusters, and with close to 5 million
reported COVID-19 cases worldwide, some big outbreaks were to be expected. But
SARS-CoV-2, like two of its cousins, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), seems especially prone to attacking
groups of tightly connected people while sparing others. It’s an encouraging
finding, scientists say, because it suggests that restricting gatherings where
superspreading is likely to occur will have a major impact on transmission, and
that other restrictions—on outdoor activity, for example—might be eased.
(Emphasis added.)"

It also means that increased mobility between countries -- even those with
unequal R-values -- will be less risky than previously thought.

"If k is really 0.1, then most chains of infection die out by themselves and
SARS-CoV-2 needs to be introduced undetected into a new country at least four
times to have an even chance of establishing itself, Kucharski says."

The article also discusses how the virus seems to be spread -- i.e. trying to
explain why the k-value would be lower.

"Most published large transmission clusters “seem to implicate aerosol
transmission,” Fraser says.

"[...]

"Individual patients’ characteristics play a role as well. Some people shed
far more virus, and for a longer period of time, than others, perhaps because of
differences in their immune system or the distribution of virus receptors in
their body. A 2019 study of healthy people showed some breathe out many more
particles than others when they talk."

The interviewed scientists also emphasize that the outdoors is really our friend
for limiting COVID-19 outbreaks. While the heat of the coming summer is unlikely
to affect the virus itself, the fact that people are more likely to be outside
will limit transmission vectors and help to kill it off -- at least for now.

"The factor scientists are closest to understanding is where COVID-19 clusters
are likely to occur. “Clearly there is a much higher risk in enclosed spaces
than outside,” Althaus says."

This means, though, that white-collar workers (e.g. software developers, like
myself), should stay in home office in order to reduce needless risk incurred by
being inside. Drosten even recommends that schools start holding classes
outside, wherever possible.

"If public health workers knew where clusters are likely to happen, they could
try to prevent them and avoid shutting down broad swaths of society, Kucharski
says. “Shutdowns are an incredibly blunt tool,” he says. “You’re
basically saying: We don’t know enough about where transmission is happening
to be able to target it, so we’re just going to target all of it.”"

"Fraser [...] says: “Understanding these processes is going to improve
infection control, and that’s going to improve all of our lives.”"

[Conclusion]

All of this information is encouraging in that it's showing the way for shaping
a society that knows how to live with a disease like COVID-19 while keeping
mortality low, offering acceptable social activities, and being economically
viable. We still don't have a good answer for foreign vacations or foreign
travel, but at least we might know how to hang out with friends without risking
an outbreak. That should tide us over until the fall and winter, when "being
outside" becomes much more difficult. This is us now...perhaps only for a few
years, perhaps forever.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[China vs. the US: A Global Chronology of Covid-19]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3968</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3968"/>
    <updated>2020-05-02T23:05:53+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "Tomgram: Dilip Hiro, The Coronavirus Chronology From Hell"
by Dilip Hiro
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/176693/tomgram%3A_dilip_hiro%2C_the_coronavirus_chronology_from_hell/>
provides an excellent and impartial review of the four months of history
we have so far. In particular, he contrasts America's inchoate response
with the measured and ostensibly empathetic reaction of China. China
reacted by...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 2. May 2020 23:05:53
Updated by marco on 3. May 2020 10:55:10
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "Tomgram: Dilip Hiro, The Coronavirus Chronology From Hell" by Dilip
Hiro
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/176693/tomgram%3A_dilip_hiro%2C_the_coronavirus_chronology_from_hell/>
provides an excellent and impartial review of the four months of history we have
so far. In particular, he contrasts America's inchoate response with the
measured and ostensibly empathetic reaction of China. China reacted by
increasing production capacity of PPE, masks, and ventilators. [1]

"By mid-March, the Chinese government and the Jack Ma Foundation, part of the
giant corporate conglomerate Alibaba Group, had sent doctors and medical
supplies to Belgium, Cambodia, France, Iran, Iraq, Italy, the Philippines,
Serbia, Spain, and the United States. The foundation announced that it would
ship “20,000 testing kits, 100,000 masks and 1,000 protective suits and face
shields” to every country in Africa and added that Ethiopia’s Prime
Minister, Abiy Ahmed, would “take the lead in managing the logistics and
distribution of these supplies to other African countries.”

"Of the 89 countries that, by March 26th, had received emergency assistance from
China to fight the pandemic, 28 were in Asia, 16 in Europe, 26 in Africa, nine
in the Americas, and 10 in the South Pacific. Such medical supplies mainly
included testing kits, masks, protective suits, thermometer guns, and
ventilators. "

This is easily verified and largely undisputed [2]. What is a bit harder to
understand is the oft-repeated success story of South Korea, which seems to have
stopped Covid-19 in its tracks, presumably by testing.

"By heeding the WHO’s battle cry of “test, test, test,” South Korea had
managed to avoid the kinds of lockdowns implemented by China, many Western
European countries, and some American cities."

According to "World-o-meters"
<https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries>, Korea has tested over
600,000 people, but that's only 1.2% of their population. This puts them far
below the testing penetration of most of Europe. Many countries there are over
3% tested. Is it because South Korea guessed correctly that the disease was only
in one part of their country? Or that they locked down international travel
sooner? What was the exact secret? No-one seems to be going into specifics that
result in plausible explanations. I'm not saying that there isn't an
explanation, just that "they got lucky" seems to be the best explanation so far.

That goes the same for the Sweden worship: I keep hearing that their measures
are more "relaxed", but I don't know what that means. I've already done a small
analysis in my article "I’ve been talking to idiots, part II"
<https://www.earthli.com/news/app]view_article.php?id=3960> of whether Sweden
actually is doing better than similarly sized countries (Spoiler alert: it
doesn't look like it), but what exactly is the difference?

For example, Spain and Italy were on a much stricter lockdown than here in
Switzerland (a country no-one seems to be talking about). Germany was stricter
than Switzerland. France was stricter than Switzerland. [3] I think the UK went
pretty hardcore as well, although I have a good friend living in London who's
getting in a lot of biking these days, so they can at least go outside.

What does that mean? Spain didn't let kids play outside for six weeks. I think
Italy was the same. I'm not sure about France, but probably the same. Germany
closed all playgrounds and children's groups (Kitas).

Kids were never restricted in Switzerland. No-one was. For a little while, the
cops would drive by once a day and try to scare the kids into groups of five,
but they stopped that pretty quickly. No-one was restricted from going outside
in Switzerland. There is no compulsory mask law. Anyone can go outside, even
older people. People are asked to avoid stores if they're older. People are
asked to stay apart and avoid groups larger than five people (there's a fine for
that one, right now).

The restaurants closed here, but not the takeaways. I think I read somewhere
that Sweden left their restaurants open (but with distance measures?).

Switzerland is doing better than most of these countries right now, having
squashed the curve so well that, even with having opened some stores and
services last Monday, they can actually accelerate their plans for opening. It's
typically Swiss: cautious and preferring to promise less and deliver more. [4]

Other than closing the restaurants, I don't know if Switzerland locked down much
harder than Sweden. I don't know if it locked down more or less than South
Korea. I know that Switzerland is looking at the light at the end of the tunnel
and dipping a toe in the pool of starting up more services. Schools will open
again in a little over a week. Full public transportation services will be
restored by June 8th.

It won't "go back to normal"; we're all a lot more cautious now. But Switzerland
protected its businesses and workers and people, preferring to bump its
debt-to-GDP ratio and bridge its population over this first wave.

Fingers crossed.

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


[1] The masks available in Switzerland have all been manufactured in China.


[1] Except in the more virulent anti-China corners of the media landscape, where
    everything is black and white and the country that oppresses Hong Kong
    couldn't possibly be the same country that has helped dozens of countries
    battle Covid-19. The store is similar with Cuba's medical-assistance
    program, which suffers from the same character assassination, despite doing
    a lot of good.


[1] The U.S. seems to be all over the map with strictness, which means that they
    risk "leaking" people from non-strict areas to strict areas, completely
    wiping out the gains and sacrifice there. In fact, the U.S. has seemingly
    wasted the entire month of April by half-assing it: their cases per day are
    still the same as they were at the beginning of the month (25k-35k).
    Yesterday was 36k, one of the highest yet.


[1] Austria seems to have done even better than Switzerland and is on the same
    roadmap right now.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Facemasks (Listening to Experts)]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3952</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3952"/>
    <updated>2020-04-16T22:55:40+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Everybody's talking about 'em: facemasks. Which kind? Where can you buy
them? How do you get your outsized ass to a hospital that needs them?
Should you wear one? Should everybody? Which kind? In which situations?

[The beleaguered CDC]

The lynching party seems to be out in the States for the CDC,...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 16. Apr 2020 22:55:40
Updated by marco on 2. May 2020 08:42:58
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Everybody's talking about 'em: facemasks. Which kind? Where can you buy them?
How do you get your outsized ass to a hospital that needs them? Should you wear
one? Should everybody? Which kind? In which situations?

[The beleaguered CDC]

The lynching party seems to be out in the States for the CDC, which is being
blamed for trying to kill everyone by telling them that they don't need
facemasks. This is the same advice being given the world over by anyone
qualified to have an opinion.

In the States, though, they've focused laser-like on the CDC's perfidy in having
the same opinion for the last ten years and conjured up all sorts of conspiracy
theories for why the CDC would be trying to eliminate the population of the
United States. Apparently, it beats focusing on issues of import -- which is
kind of S.O.P. over there.

[Could people be wrong?]

But it makes sense that they would work, no? Why do doctors and nurses wear
them? It's common sense.

If it's common sense, then how can experts be telling us the opposite? Does that
ever happen? That an expert in the field knows something that the unwashed
masses can't intuit gastrically?

It kind of happens all the time. LeBon first wrote "The Crowd: A Study of the
Popular Mind"
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crowd:_A_Study_of_the_Popular_Mind> in the
century before last -- and not a lot has changed since then. We still believe
all kinds of outlandish shit.

We knock on wood, we carry evil eyes, we pray to Jesus -- hell we just had
Easter, where a bunch of us celebrated a resurrection that a lot of people will
swear on their mother's graves actually happened, just that one time, though. 

Or like that time the whole world drank water and called it medicine or ate
sugar pills infused with the same water and called it medicine. Or the time a
significantly large number of people stopped getting vaccines because they no
longer believed in them. Or when a good part of America became materials and
structural scientists and knew exactly how a building in NYC came down. People
can believe in WMD. A majority of Americans believe they live in a great nation,
better than everywhere else, with the best health care and the best intentions
and the moral high ground.

People can be super-wrong about things that seem right to them. They can believe
in things that have extremely obvious and well-known incontrovertible evidence.
They can believe in that shit even when their lives depend on what they believe
not being true.

Would I be surprised to hear that the scientific consensus is one thing and 99%
of the rest of the world acts differently? Not at all.

But people all over Asia wear them. They can't all be wrong, can they? Yeah,
they could. Easily. They're not really harming themselves, so nobody stops them,
but it's not a given that what they're doing is an overall positive for them. I
bet there are some downsides to wearing a mask all the time. The discomfort, for
one.

[How do you choose a plan of action?]

So I'm just saying "but everybody else is doing it" is not what got us where we
are today as a species. We have the scientific method to thank for that.

Could that have failed us, though? It doesn't hurt to ask, every once in a
while.

So, I'm open to opinions on this, but I'm not going to run out and buy masks
just because most of Asia wears one. I'm going to listen to expert opinion. I'm
going to find some experts and go with their opinion because, while I can make
sound judgments based on evidence, I don't have enough evidence and I don't know
enough. I feel that there's a good chance that a mask will help in some
situations (e.g. close quarters, like mass transit), but that any of the
situations in which I've found myself in the last six weeks wouldn't have been
helped or hindered by a mask. That's my gut feeling.

Is that going to bite me in the ass? Am I missing something? Am I being overly
daring? Not cautious enough? Have I not considered the percentage confidence
that those experts have in their opinions? At what percentage does it become
more useful for me to just wear a mask anyway? 5%? 10%? 20%? 50%?

It's not at all easy to make a choice, so I guess Rush's Freewill takes effect
and I've chosen not to wear a mask by not choosing to wear a mask. I've listened
to the experts.

[How science decides]

Medical science -- pretty much science in general, but especially medical
science -- won't swear to anything until there's solid evidence. That's what
makes it science. The studies to-date have either been ambivalent or have
evinced negative results for efficacy or they've applied to specific and
unrelated situations -- i.e. many studies have been done on lab and hospital
settings, but very few for the general population.

The article "A Failure, But Not Of Prediction" by Scott Alexander
<https://slatestarcodex.com/2020/04/14/a-failure-but-not-of-prediction/> puts it
very nicely:

"Doctors will not admit any treatment could possibly be good until it has a lot
of randomized controlled trials behind it, common sense be damned. This didn’t
come out of nowhere. They’ve been burned lots of times before by thinking they
were applying common sense and getting things really wrong. And after your
mistakes kill a few thousand people you start getting really paranoid and
careful. And there are so many quacks who can spout off some “common sense”
explanation for why their vitamin-infused bleach or colloidal silver should work
that doctors have just become immune to that kind of bullshit. Multiple good
RCTs or it didn’t happen. Given the history I think this is a defensible
choice."

We are basically stuck between believing everything about quack medicine that
sounds good and trying to test things that we don't have ethical tests for. How
do you test the efficacy of face-masks? Who wants to be in the control group?
The article cites a "joke" study that compares some studies to verifying whether
parachutes actually help: you'd have to get a control group that jumped without
parachutes, just to be sure.

[Which experts to you choose?]

Again, from Alexander's article:

"But in terms of giant institutional failures that everyone is angry about, the
face mask thing barely makes the top ten. [...] The role of science journalists
is to primarily to relay, explain, give context to the opinions of experts, not
to try to out-medicine the doctors. So I think this is a good excuse."

I did the same thing: I listen to a daily podcast in German with the top
virologist at the top clinic in Berlin, Germany, probably one of the most
renowned experts in Europe. He said that you don't need a mask when you go
outside. If you stay away from people (as you should), then a mask won't do a
damned thing. He allowed as how you'd probably put your fingers in your face
less (at the very least, your mouth). That probably helps, considering how many
people I see touching their faces on the rare occasions when I go out.

Alexander points out that a salient question (and one to keep in mind for the
future) is: "what was the experts’ percent confidence in their position?"
Experts are required to have an opinion, but how sure are they of it? I often
joke to people when they ask me if I'm sure that, "I'm 100% certain. I might be
wrong, but I'm 100% certain." Certainty isn't the same thing as being right. A
lack of certainty (absolute or otherwise) is also no guarantee for being wrong.

[Some shaky analogies]

Not to harp on Alexander's otherwise good article, but I'm not quite sure about
some of his analogies: I think they feel a bit pat and too convincing. They may
be accurate, but now he's got me being suspicious of everyone -- including him.

For example,

"People were presented with a new idea: a global pandemic might arise and change
everything. They waited for proof. The proof didn’t arise, at least at first.
I remember hearing people say things like “there’s no reason for panic,
there are currently only ten cases in the US”. This should sound like
“there’s no reason to panic, the asteroid heading for Earth is still several
weeks away”."

The odds he cited earlier were that there was a 10% chance of a pandemic, which
is significantly less than the 100% chance of an asteroid strike. Do you see
what he did there? He conflated the possibility of a pandemic with the certainty
of a strike to convince you that your lack of response to the risk of a pandemic
was highly irrational. It might have been lacking but it wasn't the active
denialism that ignoring an asteroid would be.

The asteroid one analogy applies to "a potentially world-changing pandemic
within the next few decades" more than "this specific pandemic". But its hard to
act on something "in the next few decades", though some nations are
better-prepared by having stockpiles and plans of action that they can just use
instead of making shit up as they go along.

The analogy definitely and tragically applies perfectly to climate change,
worries about which have taken a backseat this year.

[The uniqueness of the U.S. situation]

Remember, too, that Alexander is writing from the States, specifically the Bay
Area in California. The stumbling and belated response of the U.S. combined with
the utter lack of preparation on the part of society in general there (no
reserves, stripped hospitals, overextended staff, etc.) as well as having no
policies in place -- they have, instead, an ideology that is actively hostile to
handling pandemics humanistically -- makes Americans considerably more desperate
and looking for a finger to point. His description below is a case in point.

"Gallant wouldn’t have waited for proof. He would have checked prediction
markets and asked top experts for probabilistic judgments. If he heard numbers
like 10 or 20 percent, he would have done a cost-benefit analysis and found that
putting some tough measures into place, like quarantine and social distancing,
would be worthwhile if they had a 10 or 20 percent chance of averting
catastrophe."

This is exactly not what the U.S. did because everyone responsible for running
things or disseminating information -- officially, via the press office of the
executive branch, or via the mainstream media, or via the ad-hoc rumor mill of
social media -- ignored the pandemic until it was overwhelming them. There were
three months of warnings. 

The description above is pretty much how the European governments reacted:
Switzerland closed down early -- it could have been a smidge earlier, but they
were pretty on top of it. Now, several weeks later, we are benefitting from an
obviously squashed curve. Switzerland is making plans for the next month. Things
are going to relax a bit and we'll see where we go from here. Granted, we've
only got 8 million people, but we're organized and methodical and scientific and
united. There is every reason to believe that if there is a lower-impact way of
getting past this pandemic, we will find it.

[The Overton Window has shifted considerably]

Similarly, Alexander mentions later that the experts/media message should "[...]
have looked like 'We’re not sure how this will develop, so you should
definitely stop large gatherings.'". This is exactly what we heard across the
political spectrum in most of Europe. It didn't happen overnight, but definitely
within a week, most if not all countries in the EU region had done this.

However -- and I cannot emphasize this enough -- people are extremely cavalier
about talking about "shutting down the economy for a few weeks" as if that was a
policy thing before the end of February 2020. It went from nearly completely
inconceivable to "why didn't we just do that earlier?" inside of a month.

Hindsight truly is 20/20, but if you'd asked anyone how likely it would be for
the OECD countries to drop their economies by 30-70% (Switzerland claims 30%
reduction while the U.S.  claims 70% reduction), you'd have been put into a
straitjacket.

I conclude from all of this that we have very little hope of handling similar,
future catastrophes better than Europe and Asia already have. The U.S. is a
special case and suffers from so many deficits that it's hard to even pinpoint
which one contributed the most to the basket of extra problems that it's created
for itself.

For example, SARS, MERS, and Ebola all failed to circle the world, despite
pretty dire warnings, failed to materialize (There were predictions of 1M Ebola
victims worldwide with actual 30K in three west-coast African countries.) This
predisposes people and governments to downplay the risk of the next prediction.
This is natural and not necessarily a stupid reaction. Now that we have a new
data point -- that 20% of these pandemics actually materialize and total the
economy -- we will adjust our future behavior. At least some of us will.

[Choosing Experts]

Alexander gets a bit lost in the weeds, I think, when he says that "[Zeynep
Tufecki's] superpower is her ability to treat something as important even before
she has incontrovertible evidence that it has to be." How do we tell the
difference between a non-domain-expert but smart person like Zeynep (who was
actually one of the ones who mis-predicted Ebola) and someone who's just
predicting doom and gloom with other, but insufficient evidence that appeals to
our gut? There are plenty of those out there -- how do we ignore their noise?
And how do we get the media to ignore them?

I don't see the solution as simple as "listen to the right experts" that
Alexander seems to be ending up at. It's what we all do with our information
streams -- I make conscious choices about who I follow and who I don't, who I
trust in a byline, etc. Decades of experience reading about, studying, and
thinking about an area is a huge plus.

People can sound very credible and smart (case in point: Alexander himself ...
or even yours truly, hopefully), but haven't actually done the work and are
mostly working on intuition. We're certainly not always domain experts. Even for
those who seem to be wide and deep in several areas, that's no guarantee of
infallibility. We discern between these people based on evidence.

[Examining SARS-CoV-2]

But now we need to work without evidence because it isn't always available. Or
it's not available yet. That's fair enough -- that's reality. If hard decisions
were easy...they wouldn't be hard.

But we can't have adjusted our future behavior based on information that we
didn't have yet. Though a lot of things went wrong, we can't kick ourselves for
not having already shut down Europe at the end of January.

Once I started researching COVID, I realized that there are facets of it that
make it uniquely difficult to deal with and likely to cause more death than the
flu.

  * It's quite contagious
  * We don't understand the transmission very well
  * We don't have good predictive data
  * We don't know who it affects (children less? Or just milder symptoms?)
  * We don't know about re-infection rates
  * We don't know the asymptomatic carrier rate
  * We don't know the lead time for contagiousness before symptoms appear
  * We know it causes severe respiratory issues
  * We know that they can only be treated with ventilators
  * We know that our medicine will not just let people go
  * We know that people tend to be in ICU for weeks
  * ICU staff is highly trained/expensive/rare

From that, it made sense that we had to self-isolate/quarantine -- reducing the
spread with very prosaic means (the hammer) -- to buy time to figure out a
better plan.

Through a confluence of luck and life choices (and those that I was able to make
because I'm lucky):

  * We have a good amount of supplies at home already
  * We cook all the time and don't go out often
  * We don't live in a city
  * We spend time outside in nature
  * We exercise outside
  * My job can be done just as well from home as from an office (literally
    changed overnight with no reduction in productivity).
  * We have enough books, movies and TV shows to keep us busy for years
  * The Internet service is top-notch

So, yeah, it's a bit easier for me to say "go ahead and shut it all down, just
to be on the safe side" because this all barely affects me directly. [1] The
long-term effects of a starkly reduced economy will, of course, affect us all.

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


[1] It's mostly my summer travel and visitor plans that are up in the air.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[World-o-Meter Coronavirus Tracker]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3944</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3944"/>
    <updated>2020-04-13T11:15:02+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I've settled on using the "Coronavirus"
<https://www.earthli.com/news/www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/>
tracker. It seems to update relatively quickly and reasonably accurately
and is also well-sourced. About a week ago, they finally added two new
columns: total tested and tested/million people, which helps you compare
the case numbers of countries more...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 13. Apr 2020 11:15:02
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I've settled on using the "Coronavirus"
<https://www.earthli.com/news/www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/> tracker. It
seems to update relatively quickly and reasonably accurately and is also
well-sourced. About a week ago, they finally added two new columns: total tested
and tested/million people, which helps you compare the case numbers of countries
more accurately (i.e. if a country has no cases and is testing like mad, then
that's good news; if they have few tests, then you can't really conclude
anything, but it's probably not good news).

For Switzerland, there's also the source data (used by World-o-meter) at "Cases
of Coronavirus in Switzerland" <https://rsalzer.github.io/COVID_19_CH/'>, which
breaks the numbers down by canton, with tons of charts and details.

It's not like we can't have a little fun with the numbers, right?

[image]

[image]

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[COVID Info (Single Source)]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3926</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3926"/>
    <updated>2020-03-25T21:39:21+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The interview "The Tip of the Iceberg: Virologist David Ho (BS '74)
Speaks About COVID-19"
<https://www.caltech.edu/about/news/tip-iceberg-virologist-david-ho-bs-74-speaks-about-covid-19>
includes the following:

[Why different symptoms? Mutated strains?]

No.

"This virus is mutating but it has mutated very little so far. There are
differences but probably they are functionally not important, so"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 25. Mar 2020 21:39:21
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The interview "The Tip of the Iceberg: Virologist David Ho (BS '74) Speaks About
COVID-19"
<https://www.caltech.edu/about/news/tip-iceberg-virologist-david-ho-bs-74-speaks-about-covid-19>
includes the following:

[Why different symptoms? Mutated strains?]

No.

"This virus is mutating but it has mutated very little so far. There are
differences but probably they are functionally not important, so that's not the
explanation for why you see different disease courses among the infected."

[Can you get re-infected?]

No.

"Only one study was formally done and it is not a human study. It's a macaque
study. They infected macaques with this virus, then waited until the monkeys
recovered and tried to re-infect them. They could not. This just came out in the
past few days. That bodes well for human immunity."

[How long are you contagious?]

~3 weeks.

"[...] one individual in China was shown to have persistent virus shedding for
over a month. But typically, we're looking at a three-week period from onset of
symptoms."

[What about a vaccine?]

With luck, September 2020. [1]

"[...] of course, people are working on vaccines. A lot of companies are working
on vaccines and those vaccines are at various stages. A couple are within weeks
of entering human testing and that's quite, quite remarkable. There is one thing
about vaccines, though: Some of the experiments previously done on SARS
suggested that when animals developed antibodies and then were given the virus,
they had greater lung injury due to the presence of the antibodies. The
scientific community would have to resolve that issue quickly and its resolution
would either halt the current approaches or unleash them to move full speed
ahead."

[How long, though?]

Lockdown for 5-6 weeks. Yo-yo-ing between lockdown and partially up-and-running
for 18 months or until a vaccine provides an offensive weapon. [2]

"[...] it's not going to be a few months as our president suggests. It's going
to be much longer than that. I would say 18 months, or 24 months. I think we are
all facing tough challenges ahead."

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


[1] That's my estimation, based on what I read here and in other places.
    Ordinarily, I'm not an optimist on being saved by technology, but this is
    well-trodden territory. We've had the genome sequenced since January (thanks
    to the Chinese). The whole world is working on this one thing. Governments
    are showing a remarkable willingness to suspend stringent approval protocols
    in order to stem the tide and save lives. Pragmatism and humanism are in
    charge in large swaths of the world, so I'm hopeful.


[1] Basically, I haven't seen anything to change my mind about the strategy I
    wrote in the final section of "The Long Weekend (An Optimistic Take)"
    <https://www.earthli.com/news/app]view_article.php?id=3916'>,
  "We can hope for a vaccine, but it won't come quickly enough that we won't
   need an interim plan right now. Keeping the economy on a simmer and basically
   using our medical services to "titrate" the population through the illness to
   immunity is maybe the best chance we have until we think of something better.
   There is no other way that isn't even more disastrous. "

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[COP25 in Madrid]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3875</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3875"/>
    <updated>2019-12-28T22:58:07+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The 25th COP (Conference of the Parties) or "United Nations Climate
Change conference"
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Climate_Change_conference>
has come to an end in Madrid. Other instances of this conference were
COP3 in Kyoto (the first agreement that the U.S. agreed to and which the
Congress completely ignored), COP 15 in Copenhagen (where Canada and...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 28. Dec 2019 22:58:07
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The 25th COP (Conference of the Parties) or "United Nations Climate Change
conference"
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Climate_Change_conference> has
come to an end in Madrid. Other instances of this conference were COP3 in Kyoto
(the first agreement that the U.S. agreed to and which the Congress completely
ignored), COP 15 in Copenhagen (where Canada and the United States worked
together to torpedo any agreement) and, of course, COP21 in Paris, with the
much-touted Paris Accords that Obama signed and that Trump officially left --
and which all other signatories have unofficially ignored.

To absolutely no-one's surprise at all, the "U.N. Climate Talks Collapsed in
Madrid" by David Wallace-Wells
<https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2019/12/cop25-ended-in-failure-whats-the-way-forward.html>.

"The conference was meant to formalize the rules by which the Paris accords
would be implemented, and begin the process by which the commitments made in
those accords could be systematically ratcheted up over time."

The Paris Accords were toothless because they were purely voluntary: countries
could come up with their own targets and didn't have to agree to or propose any
measures for enforcing them. There is no framework within which to enforce or
punish any CO<sub>2</sub>-based crimes. COP 25 was supposed to address that
problem. It utterly failed to.

Somehow the U.S. was still in attendance. It left the Paris Accords, then
blocked anyone from coming to an agreement on closing gaps in those accords.

"As has become a common refrain among climate advocates since the IPCC’s
blockbuster special report on 1.5 degrees last October, the U.N. believes we
have only about a decade to cut global emissions in half to safely avoid
catastrophic warming."

One year later, there is a "lack of ambition and no urgency". The "conference
couldn’t even manage to “accept” the IPCC’s 1.5C report"

Australia's on fire, its air quality is catastrophically bad and it's unraveling
in many other ways. See the linked article for more information. And they
couldn't even "accept" the IPCC's report.

Where I live in Switzerland, it's the first time in 18 years of living in this
area that it hasn't snowed once in October, November or December. Not even
close. I went biking outside today. It's anecdotal, but the hills are green
here. If you go high enough, the mountains are white, but you have to go over
1200 meters to find more than a couple of centimeters of snow on the ground.

Since COP has failed completely, is there anything to be done? Wallace-Wells
writes,

"I’ve heard from a number of economists, in the last few months, who would
like to see the establishment of something like a WTO for climate — an
independent organization, capable of not just rewarding participation but also
punish bad behavior by nations."

Why would that work where COP has failed? The worst offenders (U.S. and China)
accept no outside authority. They couldn't even agree to believe the science.
Wallace-Wells thinks maybe something like the,

"[...] nuclear nonproliferation agreements forged between the U.S. and the
Soviet Union in the late 1980s — the planet’s two superpowers reaching a
kind of consensus about a global existential threat, taking significant (if not
complete) steps to mitigate that risk, and then more or less bullying the rest
of the world to follow suit."

Maybe, but it doesn't sound very likely. No-one with any power seems to be
overly concerned about planning for the medium- and long-term over the extreme
short-term. It's going to get ugly.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[CO<sub>2</sub> output per year continues to increase]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3866</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3866"/>
    <updated>2019-12-15T11:27:07+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "Here’s how much global carbon emission increased this
year" by Scott K. Johnson
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/12/2019-carbon-emissions-look-to-tick-upwards-again/>
includes some sobering, if utterly unsurprising charts.

[Not Even Close]

This first chart is the most sobering one: it shows that we've most
likely [1] slowed our CO<sub>2</sub> production from 2018 to 2019. But
we're still increasing...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 15. Dec 2019 11:27:07
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "Here’s how much global carbon emission increased this year" by
Scott K. Johnson
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/12/2019-carbon-emissions-look-to-tick-upwards-again/>
includes some sobering, if utterly unsurprising charts.

[Not Even Close]

This first chart is the most sobering one: it shows that we've most likely [1]
slowed our CO<sub>2</sub> production from 2018 to 2019. But we're still
increasing. That is, it's a positive development, but not nearly enough. 

[image]

We need to get to zero CO<sub>2</sub> emissions by 2050 (or maybe even 2040) in
order to avoid completely nightmarish scenarios. With the CO<sub>2</sub> we've
already emitted, we've built a future for this planet that will be completely
different from the ecological pocket that birthed us. It will be less
predictable and much more violent and there will be far fewer places that will
be considered habitable (for humans).

So we're ostensibly increasing less (more on that later), but it's no reason to
pat ourselves on the back. We're still accelerating. We've not even topped out,
to say nothing of slowing down.

[Linked to the Economy]

The next chart shows the change in output for different countries/blocs. Europe
has been trending downward since 1980, whereas the U.S. began steadily
increasing then [2], until about 2005, since when it's been trending downward as
well. From 2000--2010, China increased its output massively but has since
plateaued. There was a slight uptick in recent years (matched by the U.S.,
actually). India has been trending upward slightly non-linearly.

[image]

It's unclear what contributed to these figures: if they're self-reported, then
we have to very careful about the numbers as all of these governments are quite
adapt at lying with statistics. (See the second footnote below.)

If the numbers are accurate, then we can see how strongly our economic system
affects CO<sub>2</sub> output: in 1990, at the Asian Economic Crisis, "All
Others" dropped significantly, but recovered quickly. China's big leap coincides
with the U.S. and Europe having moved a lot of manufacturing to China in those
decades. That China has now "topped" out might be a mix of market saturation and
China's increased focus on the environment and decreasing pollution.

[Efficiency]

The final chart shows slight improvements in generating energy without
CO<sub>2</sub> (the CO<sub>2</sub>/Energy went down slightly). Similarly, the
amount of energy for GDP has also gone down, indicating that we're figuring out
how to generate economic activity with less energy. It's unclear which factors
led to this. [3]

[image]

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


[1] Reagan's "Morning in America" kick-started the financialization of the
    economy that hasn't stopped to this day.


[1] I went into this point in the article, but just want to emphasize that,
    while I'm not a conspiracy theorist about this, there is a strong interest
    for all parties to look good relative to one another. That is, they all want
    to grow their economies while not looking like they're the CO<sub>2</sub>
    problem. People being people, this will inevitably lead to fake data or
    massaged data or whatever you want to call it. Somewhere in all of these
    layers, there are people just trying to get theirs who will fudge
    already-fudged numbers ad infinitum.
  
  At the end of the day, you really need to check where data is coming from
  because everyone with a vested interest in the current economy will have
  immense pressure to lie to make things look better than they are because it's
  politically unviable to make changes until the ship has hit the iceberg.
  
  Has China really stopped its increase in CO<sub>2</sub>? Hopefully, but it's
  just as probable that they are hiding data. What about the U.S. and Europe
  "going green"? To what degree does their outsourcing of heavy manufacturing to
  China and India contribute to their reduction in CO<sub>2</sub> output? Hard
  to say, but it seems likely. Germany's "green revolution" is powered by coal,
  FFS.
  
  What is the incentive for any country to allow accurate reporting of their
  CO<sub>2</sub> output? Other than an altruistic desire to ensure the survival
  of the human race? Please excuse me while I guffaw.
  
  Consider the possibility that these terrible numbers -- trending in the wrong
  direction -- are actual a rosy view of the real numbers.


[1] I can't think of any, other than maybe a more digitalized world leading to
    less commuting and travel?

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The Nuclear Option]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3767</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3767"/>
    <updated>2019-07-09T19:13:21+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The other day, I responded to "I've read the actual reports on
Chernobyl. I've worked in the nuclear industry" by TracyMorganFreeman
<https://www.earthli.com/news/np.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/cabet2/til_there_was_a_second_fukushima_nuclear_power/et8xmmg/>
with three comments.

[Nuclear is a Sane Option]

The linked comment jibes with my other reading (outside of Reddit,
heaven forfend) on nuclear power and safety, as well. E.g. there's
"Soonish " <http://smbc-comics.com/soonish/lostchapter/index.html>...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 9. Jul 2019 19:13:21
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The other day, I responded to "I've read the actual reports on Chernobyl. I've
worked in the nuclear industry" by TracyMorganFreeman
<https://www.earthli.com/news/np.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/cabet2/til_there_was_a_second_fukushima_nuclear_power/et8xmmg/>
with three comments.

[Nuclear is a Sane Option]

The linked comment jibes with my other reading (outside of Reddit, heaven
forfend) on nuclear power and safety, as well. E.g. there's "Soonish 
The Lost Chapter, Advanced Nuclear Power"
<http://smbc-comics.com/soonish/lostchapter/index.html>. It's a relatively clean
power source with a worse reputation than it deserves -- on paper.

Unfortunately, the industry that's attached to it is an absolute
public-money-sucking boondoggle full of exploded budgets and shattered
deadlines.

There are real problems to solve in using nuclear power to get to zero emissions
-- making it safer is not one of them.

Even disposal isn't even close to the problem it was with earlier models. It's a
lot less waste that produced by our current fuel sources (which still provide
90% of power). Crucially, none of it goes into the atmosphere.

Yeah, we need to find somewhere to put what we can't burn (and new plants would
be able to burn more than ever), but we could also just pay someone to take it
instead of being surprised that no-one is volunteering to do it for free.

When people who've actually read up on nuclear end up supporting it, one
interpretation is to assume that every one of them is a sub-IQ, easily swayed
sheep with a "hard on" for nuclear, another is that they in the employ of big
nuke ... or maybe once you know more about it, you learn that the well-known
facts about nuclear aren't 100% true.

[Cost Overruns]

I totally hear what you're saying about cost overruns. I mentioned it in another
comment as the #1 problem with nuclear. On the other hand, the Pentagon just
about choked to death laughing about how worked up we're getting about a mere
120% cost overrun of only 5 billion dollars. (I'm using the Olkiluoto-3 example
above.)

I'm thinking the JSF-35 program over the last 30 years has vastly more overruns
than that and it's barely even flying. This is likely due to the same
deep-seated corruption that dooms any large projects like nuclear plants.

Cost overruns -- but especially unconscionable delays -- are the biggest
problem. These are real problems to solve, but are organizational rather than
core issues with nuclear safety. It's entirely possible that we can't solve
them. We've never been very good at that. We don't have much time to learn.

However, something with low emissions and storability needs to jump in to
replace fossil fuels. Or ... we just stop using a lot less power. That would
work, too. Also something we've never been particularly good at.

I think I hear the Pentagon laughing again.

[Storing Energy and Sustaining the Grid]

I, too, am for other solutions, like a drastic reduction in energy use.

I just don't think that's going to happen.

We have massive energy  requirements, growing every year. We have dirty fuel
providing the vast majority of that energy. We have renewables becoming
cost-effective and efficient at collecting power, but we don't have a
replacement for the stored-power feature of fossil fuels.

Without stored power, the grid doesn't work like it works now -- providing
steady power 24 hours a day. Hydroelectric only works in some countries, ditto
for pumping water to elevation.

There are other ideas (storing containers at elevation, then dropping them to
produce power; molten salt, etc.), but nothing ready to take over from fossil
fuels. Nothing that scales.

To sum up, we can:

  * Reduce usage and free ourselves from the tyranny of the grid
  * Switch from fossil fuels to nuclear (high-density stored power)
  * Come up with some other way of storing power -- and fast

We don't have the luxury of a lot of time for coming up with another way of
running our grid. If we take nukes off the table, then when nature forces us to
reduce fossil fuels, life for the advanced societies is going to change
drastically -- but not in a well-planned way.

So, either we use nukes as a stopgap, allowing us to avoid changing energy
requirements or we blow up the climate because we can't stop using fossil fuels
or we drastically change civilization by destabilizing the grid that nearly
everything we know depends on.

Nukes are one way to arrange for a soft landing for our soft selves in the
so-called first world ... because we've proven so terrible at doing anything
else.

I'm not holding out much hope, though.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Evolution takes eons]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3690</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3690"/>
    <updated>2019-01-28T22:05:46+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I am in no way doubting evolution. I am simply admitting that my mind
cannot truly encompass the chasm of time required to build this creature
incrementally.

[media]

h/t to "The Lure of the Spider-Tailed Horned Viper" by Jason Kottke
<https://kottke.org/19/01/the-lure-of-the-spider-tailed-horned-viper>.
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 28. Jan 2019 22:05:46
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I am in no way doubting evolution. I am simply admitting that my mind cannot
truly encompass the chasm of time required to build this creature incrementally.

[media]

h/t to "The Lure of the Spider-Tailed Horned Viper" by Jason Kottke
<https://kottke.org/19/01/the-lure-of-the-spider-tailed-horned-viper>.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Chinese land a rover on the dark side of the moon]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3649</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3649"/>
    <updated>2019-01-08T20:34:41+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "China makes history by landing on the far side of the Moon"
by Eric Berger
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/01/china-makes-history-by-landing-on-the-far-side-of-the-moon/>
has pretty exciting news.

"a Beijing-based control center commanded the spacecraft to begin the
landing procedure at 9:15pm ET Monday (10:15am, Tuesday, local time),
from an altitude of 15km above the lunar surface. During an"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 8. Jan 2019 20:34:41
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "China makes history by landing on the far side of the Moon" by Eric
Berger
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/01/china-makes-history-by-landing-on-the-far-side-of-the-moon/>
has pretty exciting news.

"a Beijing-based control center commanded the spacecraft to begin the landing
procedure at 9:15pm ET Monday (10:15am, Tuesday, local time), from an altitude
of 15km above the lunar surface. During an 11-minute descent, Chang'e-4 slowed
its speed from 1.7 km/s to nearly zero before it landed in the Von Karman Crater
in the South Pole-Aitken Basin."

This is a science mission, but I'm really hoping that they're going there to
check out resources, as well. If we ever want to get serious about space, we
need to get robots mining materials on the Moon to build structures for orbit.
The only things we should be heavy-lifting from Earth are (maybe) humans and any
rare-earth or other minerals that are not available on the Moon.

And, of course, since it's Ars Technica and they have a couple of guys who are
always on the lookout for the next cold war, the article ends by chiding the
Chinese for lack of "openness".

"It is also notable that China's state news service provided no live coverage of
Monday night's landing attempt. Many of the country's launches—and more
difficult efforts in space—are only reported after the fact, when they are
successful. This echoes the Soviet approach during the space race in the 1960s,
when many of their spaceflight activities took place covertly, while NASA had
its successes and failures covered in real time."

This is actually untrue: NASA covered its successes and failures in real time
because it wanted to rub everyone's nose in what it was doing. That was the
whole point of the Space Race as far as America was concerned. You can't brag
about winning if no-one knows you ran, right? And how much space stuff have we
seen since the end of the cold war? The U.S. finally has hegemony and has
seemingly lost all interest in space because it's no fun without competition.
[1] So it's moved to private industry -- because obviously they'll be able to do
it much better than the gubmint.

If we want to call it cultural, let's call it cultural. The US would have had 96
hours of coverage in advance, complete with 8-talking-head-panels to tell us how
this was the final nail in the coffin for the Chinese and the Russians -- no
disrespect, of course. The Chinese did it, prepared a presentation and released
it. I honestly prefer the latter. I wouldn't have taken part in a see-it-live
circus, anyway.

But Berger wasn't done. Not only did the Chinese not broadcast it properly and
according to well-established, Western standards of media presentation, there is
a more sinister note.

"This may reinforce the concern of some lunar scientists and spaceflight
experts, who warn that if we want to see the Moon developed under Western norms
of freedom and openness, then NASA and US businesses had better lead the return
and development of the Moon during the coming decade."

OMG, the Chinese are taking over the Moon. Run. Hide.

This attitude is so tiresome, really. Americans just can't view any issue other
than through the lens of their own patriotism. What could possibly lead anyone
to believe that the US would be doing things any more "free and open" than the
Chinese? Is there any history that leads you to that conclusion? Wasn't/Isn't
Russia a so-called restricted and closed society? Who's been carting American
asses into space since the Space Shuttle program ended? The Russians, that's
who.

This is just bullshit saber-rattling based on a completely fallacious reading of
history from a resident of the United States of Amnesia. It's the same shit that
gets trotted out every time the Empire sees anyone else make any progress at
all.

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


[1] There's also the matter of a couple of space shuttles -- Columbia and
    Challenger -- that blew up -- and suddenly NASA started being much more
    Asian about its news coverage. On top of that, NASA was involved in many
    military missions for which details are still scarce.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Recycling of e-waste at only 20% worldwide]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3473</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3473"/>
    <updated>2017-12-16T12:25:58+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "Just 20 percent of e-waste is being recycled" by Scott K.
Johnson
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2017/12/just-20-percent-of-e-waste-is-being-recycled/>
provides a good overview of the global recycling situation, based on a
recent "report from the United Nations’ International
Telecommunication Union" <http://ewastemonitor.info/>.

As you would expect, amount of recycling and waste produced per region
differs...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 16. Dec 2017 12:25:58
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "Just 20 percent of e-waste is being recycled" by Scott K. Johnson
<https://arstechnica.com/science/2017/12/just-20-percent-of-e-waste-is-being-recycled/>
provides a good overview of the global recycling situation, based on a recent
"report from the United Nations’ International Telecommunication Union"
<http://ewastemonitor.info/>.

As you would expect, amount of recycling and waste produced per region differs
considerably.

"Africa, for example, accounted for only about five percent of the total e-waste
generated—roughly zero of which was recycled. Europe and Russia combined to
generate about 28 percent of the world’s e-waste, but recycled it at a higher
average rate of 35 percent. That’s partly due to recycling rates of around 70
percent in Switzerland, Sweden, and Norway.

"The United States produced 14 percent of e-waste and recycled less than a
quarter of it—just above the global average. China, which has four times the
population of the US, came in at about 16 percent of the world’s e-waste, with
about 18 percent getting recycled."

So the U.S. has about an average recycling rate, but produces 14% of e-waste
with only "4.5%"
<http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?dataset=&i=world+population+vs.+US+population>
of the world's population. China generates 1/4 as much e-waste per-capita.

Switzerland has an enviable 70% documented recycling rate. This doesn't come as
a complete surprise, as any store that sells electronics in Switzerland must
also accept any and all electronic and electrical items for recycling. It's as
easy as dropping it off when you go grocery-shopping.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Choosing an electoral system]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3317</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3317"/>
    <updated>2016-12-04T19:02:10+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Americans have, once again, noticed that the electoral college is odd.
And undemocratic. And odd.

There are much more democratic systems out there. "First past the post"
is not one of them. YouTube and CGP Grey to the rescue.

"The Trouble with the Electoral College" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wC42HgLA4k> and "Re: The Trouble With The" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3wLQz-LgrM>

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 4. Dec 2016 19:02:10
Updated by marco on 5. Dec 2016 07:05:47
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Americans have, once again, noticed that the electoral college is odd. And
undemocratic. And odd.

There are much more democratic systems out there. "First past the post" is not
one of them. YouTube and CGP Grey to the rescue.

"The Trouble with the Electoral College" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wC42HgLA4k> and "Re: The Trouble With The Electoral College – Cities, Metro Areas, Elections and The United States" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3wLQz-LgrM>

   These two videos combine to explain how the electoral college works and how
   it's undemocratic. That is, regardless of whether it happens to have produced
   results that you agree with, it's a ticking time-bomb of unfairness.

"The Problems with First Past the Post Voting Explained" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7tWHJfhiyo>

   This video explains why the U.S. should not be totally boneheaded about it
   and replace the electoral college with a "first past the post" system. This
   system is also undemocratic, regardless of how many more votes your candidate
   won in the popular election this time around. It inevitably leads to a
   two-party system and you've seen how absolutely awesome that's turned out.

"Gerrymandering Explained" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mky11UJb9AY>

   This video discusses the dangers of allowing representatives to choose their
   own electoral boundaries, even in a system that has local representatives.

"Mixed-Member Proportional Representation Explained" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QT0I-sdoSXU>

   This video shows how it's done in a real democracy (e.g. Switzerland).
   Proportional representation is the goal and this system achieves it as
   closely as can be expected.

"Politics in the Animal Kingdom: Single Transferable Vote" by CGP Grey <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8XOZJkozfI>

   Finally, this video shows what a world with instant-runoff,
   single-transferable-vote elections could look like. Instead of voting for a
   single candidate, you rank your choices. This also achieves very democratic
   results. Jill Stein was pulling for this system because it would let the
   States get away from the two-party duopoly.

So what does would I recommend?

   1. Pass a constitutional amendment to replace the electoral college with
      IRV/STV for president.
   2. Or, replace the president with a council of 7 or 11 or whatever sounds
      appropriate (e.g. like Switzerland). Essentially, let us elect the
      cabinet.
   3. In the same constitutional amendment, replace all parliamentary
      (senate/congress) elections with MMPR to encourage third-party candidates
      and get away from the insipid, tedious and elite duopoly we have now.

What's going to happen?

Probably nothing. The U.S. will just keep the electoral-college system and bitch
about it again in four years.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Sean Carroll on Physics and Death]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3103</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=3103"/>
    <updated>2015-01-30T17:01:04+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[This is a video by the always-interesting and funny Sean Carroll on
physics (naturally) and on things that we know about life, death,
entropy and the afterlife. It's a really interesting talk that is very
technically deep while still being more accessible than other, similar
talks.

[media]

Near the...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 30. Jan 2015 17:01:04
------------------------------------------------------------------------

This is a video by the always-interesting and funny Sean Carroll on physics
(naturally) and on things that we know about life, death, entropy and the
afterlife. It's a really interesting talk that is very technically deep while
still being more accessible than other, similar talks.

[media]

Near the beginning, he addresses heaven and the afterlife and the explanations
that non-scientists have embraced.

What to make of the evidence for an afterlife?

Some ill-defined metaphysical substance, not subject to the known laws of
physics, interacts with the atoms of our brains in ways that have thus far
eluded every controlled experiment ever performed in the history of science, 

--or--

People hallucinate when they are nearly dead.

He goes on to present entropic concepts, the heat-death of the universe and
other deep-time themes that you may know from such hard-science authors as Greg
Bear (The City at the End of Time), Gregory Benford (Deep Time) and Greg Egan
(Diaspora).

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Big data ignores lessons learned]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2982</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2982"/>
    <updated>2014-04-01T22:25:10+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "Big data: are we making a big mistake?"
<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/21a6e7d8-b479-11e3-a09a-00144feabdc0.html>
bursts the bubble of the wide-eyed, overconfident and underinformed
techies who think that their giant piles of data will fix everything.
The article contains many interesting examples, some of which are
touched on in the conclusion, cited below:

"Uncanny"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 1. Apr 2014 22:25:10
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "Big data: are we making a big mistake?"
<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/21a6e7d8-b479-11e3-a09a-00144feabdc0.html> bursts the
bubble of the wide-eyed, overconfident and underinformed techies who think that
their giant piles of data will fix everything. The article contains many
interesting examples, some of which are touched on in the conclusion, cited
below:

"Uncanny accuracy is easy to overrate if we simply ignore false positives, [...]
The claim that causation has been “knocked off its pedestal” is fine if we
are making predictions in a stable environment but not if the world is changing
(as with Flu Trends) or if we ourselves hope to change it. The promise that “N
= All”, and therefore that sampling bias does not matter, is simply not true
in most cases that count. As for the idea that “with enough data, the numbers
speak for themselves” – that seems hopelessly naive in data sets where
spurious patterns vastly outnumber genuine discoveries.

"“Big data” has arrived, but big insights have not. The challenge now is to
solve new problems and gain new answers – without making the same old
statistical mistakes on a grander scale than ever."

The upshot is that you think your data is "big" but it is most likely not big
enough. Whereas sampling bias is diminished compared to smaller datasets, the
claims made based on the big data are correspondingly bigger, eradicating the
increased confidence. Selectively filtering results to focus on the expected
result is a pitfall not necessarily of bad statistics, but of bad
scientists/engineers as well.

The article is a good read for those who can get behind the FT paywall or who
haven't used up all of their "free views" for the year.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[On the nature of addiction]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2947</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2947"/>
    <updated>2014-02-09T22:55:06+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Perhaps uncharacteristically, this post will consist mostly of citations
of other articles about the nature of addiction. I have relatively
little contact with addiction, but the truth of what these ex-users
write is evident to anyone of a rational bent who is reasonably informed
about the world.
...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 9. Feb 2014 22:55:06
Updated by marco on 9. Feb 2014 22:55:29
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Perhaps uncharacteristically, this post will consist mostly of citations of
other articles about the nature of addiction. I have relatively little contact
with addiction, but the truth of what these ex-users write is evident to anyone
of a rational bent who is reasonably informed about the world.

The article "Philip Seymour Hoffman is another victim of extremely stupid drug
laws" by Russell Brand
<http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/feb/06/russell-brand-philip-seymour-hoffman-drug-laws>
writes,

"People are going to use drugs; no self-respecting drug addict is even remotely
deterred by prohibition."

This seems non-debatable as the truth of it is borne out by decades, if not
centuries, of empirical evidence. The truism extends to many other crimes,
especially those born of desperation: a punitive judicial system has very little
prohibitive effect.

"What prohibition achieves is an unregulated, criminal-controlled, sprawling,
global mob-economy, where drug users, their families and society at large are
all exposed to the worst conceivable version of this regrettably unavoidable
problem."

Check. Legalization reduces crime. Duh.

"Philip Seymour Hoffman's death is a reminder, though, that addiction is
indiscriminate. That it is sad, irrational and hard to understand. What it also
clearly demonstrates is that we are a culture that does not know how to treat
its addicts. Would Hoffman have died if this disease were not so enmeshed in
stigma? If we weren't invited to believe that people who suffer from addiction
deserve to suffer? Would he have OD'd if drugs were regulated, controlled and
professionally administered? (Emphasis added.)"

The emphasized portion is especially interesting in light of how many of the
same people who think of themselves as good Christians also condemn and fail to
forgive those who succumb to addiction.

The older article, "my life without drugs" by Russell Brand
<http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2013/mar/09/russell-brand-life-without-drugs>
included some more insights into the mind of an addict.

"Recently for the purposes of a documentary on this subject I reviewed some
footage of myself smoking heroin that my friend had shot [...] When I saw the
tape a month or so ago, what is surprising is that my reaction is not one of
gratitude for the positive changes I've experienced but envy at witnessing an
earlier version of myself unencumbered by the burden of abstinence. I sat in a
suite at the Savoy hotel, in privilege, resenting the woeful ratbag I once was,
who, for all his problems, had drugs. That is obviously irrational. (Emphasis
added.)"

I think that this is the main take-away: we pity those with cancer and shower
them with love and affection, upending personal lives and donating scads of
money to trying to cure it or at least ameliorate its effects. But drug users,
who science has long since shown suffer from a disease, get none of this. This,
despite such a large part of the population being users themselves (alcohol and
nicotine are also drugs that just happen to be legal in most countries).

Brand goes on to distinguish between users and addicts. 

"Without these fellowships I would take drugs. Because, even now, the condition
persists. Drugs and alcohol are not my problem, reality is my problem, drugs and
alcohol are my solution. [...] If this seems odd to you it is because you are
not an alcoholic or a drug addict. You are likely one of the 90% of people who
can drink and use drugs safely. (Emphasis added.)"

Those of us who judge drug addicts so harshly are usually just the kind of
people who don't have the kind of horrible lives that must be washed away by
chemically induced euphoria or calm. And even if we do, there are good odds that
we won't get addicted. [1] The admonition and recrimination is similar to the
phenomenon of those in the upper classes telling the poor that they should just
get jobs and stop mooching. Even were the already-rich to make the same mistakes
the poor make, they would not suffer the same punishments. Mme. Antoinette has
yet to be to be improved upon; what's old is new again.

"It is difficult to feel sympathy for these people. It is difficult to regard
some bawdy drunk and see them as sick and powerless. It is difficult to suffer
the selfishness of a drug addict who will lie to you and steal from you and
forgive them and offer them help. Can there be any other disease that renders
its victims so unappealing?"

"Peter Hitchens is a vocal adversary of mine on this matter. He sees this
condition as a matter of choice and the culprits as criminals who should go to
prison. I know how he feels. I bet I have to deal with a lot more drug addicts
than he does, let's face it. I share my brain with one, and I can tell you
firsthand, they are total fucking wankers. Where I differ from Peter is in my
belief that if you regard alcoholics and drug addicts not as bad people but as
sick people then we can help them to get better. (Emphasis added.)"

Peter Hitchens is Christopher Hitchens's brother. He is even more right-wing,
obnoxious and tiresome than even Chris had managed to become before succumbing
to cancer. Where Hitchens argues for ever longer and more inventive punishments,
Brand issues a plea for a rehabilitative system. Science and evidence is on
Brand's side. While a rehabilitative system does not satisfy the cultural need
for revenge, it is the most effective at addressing the core problem: preventing
the most harm for the most people.

And, finally, the article "Strength and compassion: a note to drug abuse concern
trolls, concerning Philip Seymour Hoffman" by Matt Zoller Seitz
<http://www.rogerebert.com/mzs/strong-enough-a-note-to-drug-abuse-concern-trolls-concerning-philip-seymour-hoffman>
also included some good advice for those with an itchy trigger finger vis à vis
telling drug addicts what horrible people they are [2]:

"Addiction is a beast. It's powerful. Sometimes it overwhelms even those who
fight hard against it for decades. [...] When I see people saying, of Hoffman's
death, "What a waste" or "Pity he was so selfish" or "Why would anybody do that
to their children?" or "While we're praising him, let's not forget the man was a
junkie" or other such hateful blather, I wonder if they know what addiction is,
or have chosen, for reasons of anger or preening self-regard, to pretend that
they do not."

It's much more likely that these people are just like most of the unwashed
masses: even were they capable of anything but the most superficial
introspection or rational thought mechanisms, they still wouldn't consider
denying the world their pithy, unconsidered insight for five minutes in order to
use said mechanisms first. Because where's the fun in that? Right when there's
such a grand opportunity for displaying your superiority -- now, thanks to the
Internet -- to the entire world? [3]

"There's a reason why, when you're in any kind of Twelve-Step Program and you
ritually state your name and name your addiction, you use present tense, not
past. [...] This is not a linguistic affectation. All addicts remain, forever,
in some fundamental sense, addicts—but hopefully some of them get to a place
where they're non-practicing."

Hoffman was, apparently, on the wagon for about two decades, before he so
spectacularly capitulated. He jumped off with gusto, with both feet. They found
lots of drugs in the apartment he made his final resting place. Is there anyone
who could reasonably assume that he'd thought of his family at that time and
said to himself: "fuck it, I'm going to kill myself with drugs instead".
Clearly, that smacks of illness.

"We all have destructive habits. If we’re lucky, it’s watching too much TV
when it’s inhibiting our productivity, or looking at porn when we think it’s
a sin, or lying, cheating, overeating. If we’re lucky, our addictions won’t
kill us."

We all have this illness, this need for pattern and consistency. We need to
while away the luxurious lengths of time afforded to us by modern civilization
within the constraints of the social isolation often engendered by same. You can
be even luckier if you become addicted to exercise, I guess. But don't let's
pretend that someone who runs 100 miles a week isn't suffering from an illness
mentally similar to that of a heroin fiend.

"But for an unfortunate group, the need to keep going becomes as pervasive as
the need to eat or sleep. And we call them selfish, as if they would prefer to
be a slave to the thing that’s ruining everything good in their lives."

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


[1] I wonder how accurate that 90% is, though, once all drugs -- legal,
    prescription and illegal -- are factored in.


[1] As if convincing them of that is going to make them do drugs less. It's a
    moot point in Hoffman's case, of course.


[1] In case you were wondering, the irony is not lost on me. In my defense, the
    audience for earthli News can be considered under none but the shoddiest
    metric to be "the entire world".

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Is Fukushima radiation polluting the entire Pacific Ocean?]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2938</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2938"/>
    <updated>2014-01-28T20:15:02+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Take a deep breath. Step back. Does that sound plausible? Is the mighty
power of the atom, harnessed by decades-old technology, likely to be
able to effect such mighty change?

Because the Pacific Ocean is huge. Like, really gigantic. It has 16
times as much surface area as the entire United States...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 28. Jan 2014 20:15:02
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Take a deep breath. Step back. Does that sound plausible? Is the mighty power of
the atom, harnessed by decades-old technology, likely to be able to effect such
mighty change?

Because the Pacific Ocean is huge. Like, really gigantic. It has 16 times as
much surface area as the entire United States of America. Hell, there's a
Pacific Garbage Patch whose estimated size is about the surface area of the US
of A and we can barely even tell it's there.

The article "True facts about Ocean Radiation and the Fukushima Disaster" by Kim
Martini
<http://deepseanews.com/2013/11/true-facts-about-ocean-radiation-and-the-fukushima-disaster/>
examines a few of the more extraordinary claims made about Fukushima in recent
weeks as well as their supposedly corroborating evidence that comes in the form
of superficially convincing false-color diagrams and maps.

[Non-absolution for TEPCO and Japan]

This is in no way to say that the Japanese authorities and TEPCO are not
handling the situation in a poor, if not criminal, manner. Nor is it to provide
support for the nuclear industry as we find it today in its corrupt and highly
subsidized and under-regulated form. Nor do I wish to offer any opinion or
particular hope that we could reap the benefits of nuclear power without the
heretofore unavoidable corruption engendered by any business so reliant on
government largesse.

This is to provide support to the facts and avoid misinformation that only does
damage to a cause that has its heart in the right place but seems incapable of
controlling itself when it comes to disseminating untruthful and deliberately
manipulated propaganda.

[Terms and units]

Before you even start talking about radiation and its effect on humans, you have
to be clear on the units.


  * Becquerel[Bq] or Curie[Ci]: radiation emitted from a radioactive material 
    (1 Ci = 3.7 × 1010 Bq)
  * Gray [Gy] or Rad[rad]: radiation absorbed by another material (1Gy = 100
    rad)
  * Sieverts[Sv]* or “roentgen equivalent in man”[rem]: how badly radiation
    will damage biological tissue (1 Sv = 100 rem)

The exact doses that are considered dangerous to humans differ based on they
type of radiation as well. If you're more of a visual person, then check out
this "Radiation Dose Chart" by Randall Munroe <http://xkcd.com/radiation/>,
which does a decent job of putting the relative numbers in perspective.

[Pretty maps and charts!]

I already wrote about one of these shenanigans in "Radiation is everywhere! (And
we’re all gonna die.)" <http://earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2908>. It
included a link to "Fukushima Emergency"
<http://www.snopes.com/photos/technology/fukushima.asp>, which debunks one of
the fancy we're-all-gonna-die charts that's been making the rounds.

The article by Martini [1] includes several more images, many of which I've seen
posted on social-networking sites. As usual, the hyperbole is based on a grain
of truth: "radiation probably has reached the West Coast but it’s not
dangerous."

  * A site called "EnviroReporter"
    <http://www.enviroreporter.com/investigations/fukushima/a-radioactive-nightmare/>
    posted a graphic that it claimed showed how radiation was spreading across
    the Pacific. What it actually documented was "the estimated maximum wave
    heights of the Japanese Tohuku Tsunami by modelers at NOAA".
  * Another graphic actually does show "an ocean model that [...] predicts where
    radioactive particles will be pushed around by surface ocean currents",
    which sounds promising until you note that there is no legend in sight and
    the false colors are disavowed by the company that put out the chart as not
    being a "representation of the radioactive plume concentration."
  * The bright-red map also shows "the decrease in the radioactive
    concentrations of Cesium-137 isotopes since being emitted from Fukushima"
    (Emphasis added), the upshot of which is that all of the levels indicated
    are not harmful to humans at all.

[image][image][image]

[Seriously, how bad is it? Am I gonna die?]

Instead of thousands or millions times higher radiation, the conclusion is that:

"Even within 300 km of Fukushima, the additional radiation that was introduced
by the Cesium-137 fallout is still well below the background radiation levels
from naturally occurring radioisotopes. By the time those radioactive atoms make
their way to the West Coast it will be even more diluted and therefore not
dangerous at all. (Emphasis added.)"

The emphasis draws attention to the reality that radiation is everywhere, in one
form or another. But it's at such a low dose that we will die of old age long
before it has an effect on us. Therefore, this so-called background radiation is
considered harmless -- because it will utterly fail to kill you quickly enough
to prevent something more dangerous from doing so (like texting while driving,
for example). 

Even 300km away, the radiation levels caused by the meltdown at Fukushima are
well below the level of background radiation. Even should you find yourself
swimming off the coast of Fukushima, you'd be exposed to "less than 0.03% of the
daily radiation an average Japanese resident receives."

In Los Angeles, you're almost 30 times farther away (just over 8600km).
Radiation intensity falls off at "the square of the distance"
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse-square_law>, so the dose in L.A. is
infinitesimal.

You can stay skeptical to keep those with vested interests from blowing sunshine
up your ass, but don't let that instinct lead you astray. Instead, apply a
healthy skepticism for everything you hear on this complex topic instead of just
the stuff that agrees with your predisposed view. Always check your sources and
don't believe every cover-up conspiracy you hear.

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


[1] I do not know who Kim Martini is, but I am encouraged by her inclusion of
    end-notes that include references to the Proceedings of the National Academy
    of Sciences, Environmental Research Letters, the Journal of environmental
    radioactivity as well as references at MIT and the Woods Hole Oceanographic
    Institution. Her short bio at the end of the article states that "Kim is a
    Physical Oceanographer at the Joint Institute for the Study of Atmosphere
    and Ocean at the University of Washington."

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Dara Ó Briain: a comedian...for science]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2910</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2910"/>
    <updated>2014-01-03T22:57:04+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Dara Ó Briain is London-based Irish comedian with a show on BBC2 called
Dara Ó Briain's Science Club. His act is a good deal bawdier on stage
though the focus remains on promulgating a pro-science agenda. In the
segment below, he discusses a show he did with physicist Brian Cox in
which the topic...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 3. Jan 2014 22:57:04
Updated by marco on 21. May 2016 21:45:29
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dara Ó Briain is London-based Irish comedian with a show on BBC2 called Dara Ó
Briain's Science Club. His act is a good deal bawdier on stage though the focus
remains on promulgating a pro-science agenda. In the segment below, he discusses
a show he did with physicist Brian Cox in which the topic of astrology just
happened to arise. 

Some choice tidbits from this segment:

"The astrologers get going on Twitter and write, 'if you were really a
scientist, then you'd be more open-minded.' And I go, 'well lucky for me, I'm a
comedian.' (flashes two fingers)"

"And they all wanted to come onto the show, onto this BBC science show to give
their side of the "argument". And you're going, no, you can't come on. Why? It's
a science show. You can't come onto it because your work clothes are a cape with
stars sewn onto it."

And then he starts on his finale with "[r]acism is way better than astrology..."

[media]

This other segment is more representative -- and better -- in my opinion. The
tag line is "Get in the fookin' sack." Well worth your six minutes if you like
science, the Irish, comedians or any combination of the above.

Again with the tidbits:

"There's this kind of a notion that everyone's opinion is equally valid. My
arse! Bloke who's a professor of dentistry for forty years with some eejit who
removes his teeth with string and a door."

"Jaysus, homepaths get on my nerves, with their 'well, science doesn't know
everything...' Well, science knows it doesn't know everything; otherwise, it'd
stop, wouldn't it? And, just because science doesn't know everything doesn't
mean you can just fill in the gaps with whatever fairy tale most appeals to you.
(Emphasis added.)"

"Herbal medicine...oh, herbal medicine's been around for thousands of years.
Indeed it has. And then we tested it all and the stuff that worked because
"medicine". And the rest of it is just a nice bowl of soup and some potpourri.
[1]"

"You never see the balance thing with really hard science. You never see the guy
on from NASA, talking about the space station. And they go, Mr. NASA guy, you're
building a space station, well that's very interesting. And then they go and
they say for "balance" we must now turn to Barry, who believes the sky is a
carpet painted by God."

"If someone says that they're a nutritionist, be slightly wary. "Dietitian" is
the legally protected term [2]. Dietitian is like dentist and nutritionist is
like "toothiologist"."

[media]

Amazing clip. Tears.

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


[1] This is comedy, not an airtight argument. Standard disclaimers about the
    corporatized and corrupted state of allopathic research and medicine have
    been elided for concision.


[1] At least in Great Britain.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Radiation is everywhere! (And we're all gonna die.)]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2908</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2908"/>
    <updated>2014-01-02T12:47:14+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[A story of Fukushima radiation is making the rounds, reported variously
as "Navy sailors have radiation sickness after Japan rescue" by Laura
Italiano and Kerry Murtha
<http://nypost.com/2013/12/22/70-navy-sailors-left-sickened-by-radiation-after-japan-rescue/>
and "70+ USS Ronald Reagan Crew Members, Half Suffering From Cancer, to
Sue TEPCO For Fukushima Radiation Poisoning" by Brandon Baker
<http://ecowatch.com/2013/12/27/ronald-reagan-cancer-sue-tepco-fukushima-radiation/>
(with a re-post at "AlterNet"
<http://www.alternet.org/environment/70-us-navy-sailors-sue-fukushima-radiation-poisoning>).
Other source cited in...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 2. Jan 2014 12:47:14
Updated by marco on 2. Jan 2014 12:47:36
------------------------------------------------------------------------

A story of Fukushima radiation is making the rounds, reported variously as "Navy
sailors have radiation sickness after Japan rescue" by Laura Italiano and Kerry
Murtha
<http://nypost.com/2013/12/22/70-navy-sailors-left-sickened-by-radiation-after-japan-rescue/>
and "70+ USS Ronald Reagan Crew Members, Half Suffering From Cancer, to Sue
TEPCO For Fukushima Radiation Poisoning" by Brandon Baker
<http://ecowatch.com/2013/12/27/ronald-reagan-cancer-sue-tepco-fukushima-radiation/>
(with a re-post at "AlterNet"
<http://www.alternet.org/environment/70-us-navy-sailors-sue-fukushima-radiation-poisoning>).
Other source cited in the articles are the Washington Times and FOX News,
paragons of journalistic integrity.

The user comments on the article are uniformly horrible and make you despair for
mankind. They are a cornucopia of stupidity. Helen Caldecott is cited heavily in
the comments and historically her statements have ranged from hyperbolic to
outright false.

All of the articles include a quote from a sailor that "[m]y thyroid is so out
of whack that I can lose 60 to 70 pounds in one month and then gain it back the
next." I am not a doctor but I don't think that can be true. It sets off warning
bells, at the very least.

That the mainstream media isn't reporting this story doesn't at all mean that
it's not true. There are plenty of places that usually report stories that are
deliberately ignored -- and they're not reporting this either. That makes me
more than a bit suspicious. Instead, personal and heavily one-sided activist
sites and blogs are cited as sources. If you bother to check those sources, you
find that they all reference each other, all citing the same statistics, which
seem to have no verifiable or reliable source.

Buried at the end of one of the articles cited above is this nugget, though,

"San Diego Judge Janis L. Sammartino dismissed the initial suit in late
November, but Garner and a group of attorneys plan to refile on Jan. 6."

No detail is given as to why the case was dismissed. It's a safe assumption that
the case was thrown out for lack of evidence or validity, rather than because of
a worldwide conspiracy. The case was thrown out of court in November and news
that it will be appealed in January is reported without a hint of restraint. I'm
not passing any judgment on other stories about Fukushima but I'm not buying
this particular one.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Modern nature documentaries]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2906</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2906"/>
    <updated>2013-12-28T10:35:38+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[I was recently sent this link, presumably because I enjoy short nature
documentaries.

[media]

Some thoughts:

  * Do larvae really get bigger the older they get? Isn't a larva a
    limited stage of development? How is it that some are so much larger
    than others? Isn't it more likely to be related to food

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 28. Dec 2013 10:35:38
------------------------------------------------------------------------

I was recently sent this link, presumably because I enjoy short nature
documentaries.

[media]

Some thoughts:

  * Do larvae really get bigger the older they get? Isn't a larva a limited
    stage of development? How is it that some are so much larger than others?
    Isn't it more likely to be related to food intake rather than age? [1]
  * People are weird. If Bear were to eat fluffy baby animals (say chicks)
    rather than slimy ones (larvae in this case), he would be drummed off the
    air.
  * Bear Grylls: Allergic to Bees is a related video. The poster on the video
    shows a face that looks like the elephant man. Oh, YouTube, you temptress.
  * YouTube comments have not gotten any better. Some genius named "lury Sette"
    wrote that "[h]e should be on Wreakless Eating". I can only just barely
    understand what that means.
  * What kind of a name is Bear Grylls? Did he try other spellings first? Like
    "Bare Grills"? Would anyone on YouTube have noticed the misspelling?

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


[1] I honestly don't know the answer here, proposing instead a hypothesis
    alternative to that of Mr. Grylls.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Remaining reserves]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2877</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2877"/>
    <updated>2013-10-20T22:28:39+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The article "NASA’s Plutonium Problem Could End Deep-Space
Exploration" by Dave Mosher
<http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/09/plutonium-238-problem/>
discusses a resource shortage that will be hard to address: plutonium.

Plutonium was produced in much larger quantities during the nuclear-arms
race of the mid to late 20th century. Though the arms race was
morally...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 20. Oct 2013 22:28:39
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The article "NASA’s Plutonium Problem Could End Deep-Space Exploration" by
Dave Mosher <http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/09/plutonium-238-problem/>
discusses a resource shortage that will be hard to address: plutonium.

Plutonium was produced in much larger quantities during the nuclear-arms race of
the mid to late 20th century. Though the arms race was morally reprehensible and
fantastically expensive, a byproduct was that there was more plutonium available
for scientific endeavor. Pound for pound, it is unparalleled as a long-lasting
energy source. As of the end of 2013, the US now has only "enough to last to the
end of this decade", according to the article.

"And it’s not just the U.S. reserves that are in jeopardy. The entire
planet’s stores are nearly depleted. [...] The country’s scientific
stockpile has dwindled to around 36 pounds. To put that in perspective, the
battery that powers NASA’s Curiosity rover, which is currently studying the
surface of Mars, contains roughly 10 pounds of plutonium, and what’s left has
already been spoken for and then some."

This isn't the first time that alarm bells have gone off about resource
scarcity. We take much of our world for granted and tend to assume that there's
always more than enough available of, well, whatever we need to sustain whatever
we'd like to do. Dreams are limited only be capital, not by physical reality.

This reminded me of a couple of diagrams I'd seen before. The two below show
that some of the basic elements that we use in almost all of the items to which
we've become accustomed -- basically all electronic goods -- will run out within
a dozen years to a few decades, at current rates of consumption. 

[image]

[image]

And I'm almost certain that no one has a plan for what happens when we run out
of lead, copper, indium, zinc, tin and silver. Probably a heap of resource wars
will ensue, as the powers of the world jockey for supplies to create the next
iPhone model.

Granted, some of the materials are recovered by recycling, which can be
increased to some degree. Entropy ensures that we won't have a 100% closed
cycle; greed and the skewed way we calculate value will ensure that even more is
wasted than absolutely necessary. 

The numbers are also based on the sources known today. It's possible that we
will find other sources, but the planet is only so big and the sources aren't
guaranteed to be easily extractable or even accessible.

These are interesting numbers to keep in mind the next time you think you need
to upgrade your smart phone for the second time in a year. Or perhaps the next
time you see an airport absolutely full of televisions, all broadcasting inane
content on LCDs whose production consumed precious resources that could have
been used for something perhaps more useful.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The Mantis Shrimp]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2864</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2864"/>
    <updated>2013-07-03T20:50:50+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[image]A little while back, I read about "the mantis shrimp"
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantis_shrimp> in a comic called "Why the
mantis shrimp is my new favorite animal"
<http://theoatmeal.com/comics/mantis_shrimp>. The comic is both amusing
and informative, describing and depicting the shrimp's unbelievable
visual organs (here, citing Wikipedia):

"The midband region of the mantis shrimp's eye"

...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 3. Jul 2013 20:50:50
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[image]A little while back, I read about "the mantis shrimp"
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantis_shrimp> in a comic called "Why the mantis
shrimp is my new favorite animal" <http://theoatmeal.com/comics/mantis_shrimp>.
The comic is both amusing and informative, describing and depicting the shrimp's
unbelievable visual organs (here, citing Wikipedia):

"The midband region of the mantis shrimp's eye is made up of six rows of
specialized ommatidia. Four rows carry 16 differing sorts of photoreceptor
pigments, 12 for colour sensitivity, others for colour filtering. The mantis
shrimp has such good eyes it can perceive both polarized light and multispectral
images."

However, as also noted in the comic and Wikipedia, the mantis shrimp is probably
pound-for-pound the most flat-out psychotic hunter-killer that has ever evolved
on this planet.

"[...] mantis shrimp sport powerful claws that they use to attack and kill prey
by spearing, stunning, or dismemberment. Although it only happens rarely, some
larger species of mantis shrimp are capable of breaking through aquarium glass
with a single strike from this weapon"

It's so utterly overpowered for its ecological niche, one wonders what kind of
predator would even go near such a thing. All sources see fit to mention that
you keeping one in an aquarium is just asking for a bloodbath.

The comic author hypothesizes that the worlds as observed by such a sensorium
must be achingly beautiful. See the screenshot to the right or click through to
"the comic itself" <http://theoatmeal.com/comics/mantis_shrimp>.

I was reminded of the cartoon when Ze Frank recently covered the mantis shrimp
with another in his ongoing "True Facts" short-video series. The footage does
not disappoint; watch until the end to see a 10-inch mantis shrimp chasing an
octopus 20 times its size.

[media]

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[New boson confirmed at around 126GeV]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2671</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2671"/>
    <updated>2012-07-16T22:53:33+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[NB: Don't worry if you don't understand this introductory paragraph;
feel free to blow right through it and see how you fare with the
alternate explanations and analogies below.

The news so far is that the scientists at CERN have announced that they
have consistently been able to generate bosons

...
]]>
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      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 16. Jul 2012 22:53:33
------------------------------------------------------------------------

NB: Don't worry if you don't understand this introductory paragraph; feel free
to blow right through it and see how you fare with the alternate explanations
and analogies below.

The news so far is that the scientists at CERN have announced that they have
consistently been able to generate bosons at around 126GeV with a certainty of 5
sigmas. The Standard Model of physics predicts that this energy level is
sufficient to generate the long--sought-after Higgs boson, which is the only
predicted particle that has not yet been confirmed to have been detected.

That carefully worded description of the discovery is a good deal less
hyperbolic than other headlines or articles you may have read. The media tended
toward the less accurate and more down-to-Earth, spouting "God Particle Found!",
"Higgs Boson Discovered!" or "Scientists Find Particle Responsible for Why We
Weigh so Much!" But what does it mean for you and me? I suppose the most
important question for many will be: why should I care?

[An Audiovisual Presentation]

If you haven't seen it already and you think you've got the scientific chops,
the following video does a lovely job of explaining the discovery.

[media]

If you watched that and drifted off to check Facebook a couple of times before
it finished...but would still like to know more, you'll have to soldier on.

[It's hopeless, so don't even try]

Before we try to answer the question of why you should care (posed above), we'll
have to address the very realistic possibility that many people will, by dint of
their experience or education, simply be wholly and entirely incapable of
understanding what the hell happened and why it's important in any but the most
superficial of ways. [1]

Explaining why this discovery is important may be doomed to failure for reasons
best explained by one of the best explainers of physics who ever strode the
Earth, Richard Feynmann, as cited in "Diving deeper into the metaphorical
molasses" by Ben Zimmer <http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/nll/?p=4072>. In the
video (cued to 06:09) and the transcript (included below), Feynmann tries to
explain magnetism or, rather, he explains why it's hopeless to even make an
attempt at explaining magnetism to his interviewer. It's not arrogant because
it's true.

[media]

"I can't explain that attraction in terms of anything else that's familiar to
you. For example, if we said the magnets attract like as if rubber bands, I
would be cheating you. Because they're not connected by rubber bands. I'd soon
be in trouble. And secondly, if you were curious enough, you'd ask me why rubber
bands tend to pull back together again, and I would end up explaining that in
terms of electrical forces, which are the very things that I'm trying to use the
rubber bands to explain. So I have cheated very badly, you see. So I am not
going to be able to give you an answer to why magnets attract each other except
to tell you that they do. And to tell you that that's one of the elements in the
world - there are electrical forces, magnetic forces, gravitational forces, and
others, and those are some of the parts. If you were a student, I could go
further. I could tell you that the magnetic forces are related to the electrical
forces very intimately, that the relationship between the gravity forces and
electrical forces remains unknown, and so on. But I really can't do a good job,
any job, of explaining magnetic force in terms of something else you're more
familiar with, because I don't understand it in terms of anything else that
you're more familiar with. (Emphasis added.)"

And that, right there, might be the long and the short of it. If you lack too
much understanding -- whether it's a background in physics or the sciences or
just familiarity with thinking about how things work and working from axiom to
logical conclusions -- you may very well have no hope of understanding this
discovery. The explanation of what scientists at CERN just accomplished will
sound like so much magic to you. It will be, to paraphrase the late, great
Arthur C. Clarke, "a sufficiently advanced technology that is [to you]
indistinguishable from magic". You may, however, still be able to understand how
it may affect you. Most people don't understand how their cars or smart-phones
or GPSs work, but they know that they can do more stuff because of them.

[Pressing on nonetheless]

If you fail to understand not only the news of the discovery but also have no
idea of any of the dozens of levels of scientific underpinnings for it, how do
you even stand a chance of ranking the importance of this news vis à vis other
seemingly more pressing news, like Katie Holmes leaving Tom Cruise? In what way
does this news differ from the latest discovery in crystal healing? How the hell
can you tell the difference?

Does it mean that the next generation of smart-phones will be even faster? Are
we getting jet-packs or hover-cars?

None of the above. [2]

[How science works]

Conservation notice: the following section is a pretty pedantic, long-winded and
largely self-congratulatory exercise in describing the scientific method. YMMV.

Well, what sort of magic can we look forward to, then?

None, I'm afraid.

The only conclusion we can reach so far is that CERN has produced promising
results that are almost certain to provide evidence that the best model we have
about how the universe is structured at the lowest level is not wrong.
Therefore, the predictions made based on that model have a higher likelihood of
being, if not correct, then useful.

The latest results from CERN are simply science doing what science does. Science
is about (1) making guesses -- hypotheses -- about the way the world works; and
(2) running experiments to test those hypotheses. If the experimental results
agree with the prediction, it provides evidence that the guess might be correct.
There is almost no way to prove that the guess is correct, although some
theories have a tremendous amount of evidence to support them.

Take the theory of matter -- that matter is composed of atoms -- we have seen
these atoms with electron microscopes, which seems to prove beyond a shadow of a
doubt that atoms exist. Electron microscopes operate on other principles that
contain assumptions about light, wavelength and so on. That the microscope works
as expected -- that any piece of technology works as expected -- provides
support for the various theories on which that technology is based. The
existence of such functioning technology doesn't prove the hypothesis, but it
provides strong evidence for its usefulness -- that other results and theories
can be derived from and based on it.

The LHC (Large Hadron Collider) is an enormous piece of technology based on the
same principles and theories on which much of our consumer electronic culture is
based. Scientists predict that cell-phones will work and then, when we build
them, they function as expected, which while not proving beyond a shadow of a
doubt all of our theories about light and energy, it certainly shows that
enormously useful results can be obtained from predictions based on unproven
theories. Scientists came up with a model of how the universe works at the most
basic level -- the Standard Model -- and they've spent decades searching for the
particles that the theory predicts.

How do you find particles that you can't see? How do you know when you've found
one? How can you trust the particle detector? The LHC accelerates particles in
opposite directions through dozens of miles and then collides them at very close
to the speed of light to excite them into high-energy states that they hope will
result in the particle that they're looking for. Theory predicts the myriad ways
in which these particles can decay into other particles. Theory predicts which
particles are created initially and that the technology in the LHC will contain
and accelerate those particles through the tubes. Theory predicts how the
detector react to particles tearing through them and theory predicts that the
computers will retain this information, crunch the numbers and display the
results.

It's all theory and it sounds like a Rube-Goldbergian contraption but the point
is that scientists made many, many predictions about what they thought would
happen, based on their new theories and using equipment built to specifications
dictated by other theories -- a veritable pyramid of millions, if not billions,
of assumptions about how the world works, all having acquired the sheen of
veracity simply because they have proved to be extraordinarily useful and
reliable predictors of reality -- and all of these experiments came out as
expected, providing a lot of evidence to support these theories, particularly
the Standard Model.

What if they hadn't found the particle they were looking for at the energy-level
at which they expected it? Before the recent discovery, there was already a lot
of talk about throwing out the Standard Model and having to try again. In fact,
some scientists were looking forward to being able to start from scratch because
progress on closing the gaps and removing the hacks from the Standard Model has
been so slow and seemingly hopeless.

Though we don't know for certain (or with 5 sigmas of confidence) that the
particle is the Higgs boson, we may soon. The odds of tossing out the Standard
Model entirely went down significantly already; if the particles that the LHC is
generating match the other expected parameters of the Higgs, those odds will
drop again.

Models with a lot of evidence to support them are more reliable. They are a very
good thing.

[Thank you, science! [3]]

The article "There is something and not nothing" by Roger Ebert
<http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/2012/07/there_is_something_and_not_not.html>
waxes a bit philosophic about scientists and how the scientific method is "the
awesome" and how we should be more than a bit in-awe of those among us who can
hypothesize on such a grandiose and abstracted level. You know, instead of
calling them nerds and pushing them until they cry. Or ignoring them completely
and letting the world burn. But I digress.

"The mind of a theoretical physicist must be a wonderful place. It can consider
things that for me are only words, and will always be words. It can make play
with multiple dimensions. It can contemplate black holes. It can not only
theorize the existence of the Higgs boson, but can devise an experiment to find
it--an experiment that succeeds."

"Here is where we get to the heart of the question. The scientific method has no
interest in belief. What you believe is of interest only from an
autobiographical viewpoint. Scientists (1) regard a phenomenon they would like
to explain, (2) suggest a hypothesis to explain it, and (3) devise an experiment
to test their hypothesis."

It's the Internet, so "there's a cartoon about this"
<http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=2673#comic>:

[image]

[Forget the "God" particle]

Somehow the Higgs boson has earned the epithet "The God Particle". This seems to
be a name promulgated by those who don't understand what's going on at all.

It's the highest-energy particle predicted by the Standard Model. That's the
reason it took so long to find. It's not because it's evidence of a God that has
managed to remain hidden from our heathen eyes until the ruthlessness of science
managed to prize it from God's omnipotent -- and yet still helpless-to-resist --
hands.

The article "Worth the Wait: A timeline of the Standard Model of particle
physics" <http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2012/07/daily-chart-1>
includes the following chart that depicts how long it took to discover the other
particles in the Standard Model:

[image]

Now that you're better-versed in these matters, you may have noticed that they
incorrectly indicated that the Higgs Boson has been discovered. Though it's a
strong possibility that 126GeV spike indicates the presence of the Higgs Boson,
we'll have to wait until CERN gathers more data and publishes results either at
the end of this year or early next year to know for sure (or, to be more precise
-- because we're scientists! -- to know within 5 sigmas).

[What does 5 sigmas mean?]

"Does 5-sigma = discovery?"
<http://physicsbuzz.physicscentral.com/2012/07/does-5-sigma-discovery.html#.T_YYtAdeGuk.facebook>

"When physicists announce that they have a 5-sigma result, that means that
there's a 1 in 3.5 million chance that it was the result of a statistical
fluctuation over the spectrum of experiments they performed. Particle physicists
working on the CMS and ATLAS experiments are looking for "bumps" in their data
that stand out from the background. When these bumps reach the 5-sigma level,
they have very good reason to believe that they've discovered or observed a new
particle."

Alles klar? I hope so. Because it's not going to get any easier than that.

Ok, fine. The CMS and ATLAS are other particle accelerators -- like the LHC at
CERN -- that were also busily smashing particles together. The data from all of
the machines are combined to create a huge pile of data which, hopefully, will
provide enough collisions for the probabilistic noise to subside into the
background and let the desired signal appear. In the form of an anti-climactic
bump on a graph.

[What is the Standard Model?]

The article "Gotcha! The hunt for physics’s most elusive quarry is over"
<http://www.economist.com/node/21558248> describes the model as follows:

"[T]he Standard Model [is] the best explanation to date for how the universe
works—except in the domain of gravity, which is governed by the general theory
of relativity. The model comprises 17 particles. Of these, 12 are fermions such
as quarks (which coalesce into neutrons and protons in atomic nuclei) and
electrons (which whizz around those nuclei). They make up matter. A further four
particles, known as gauge bosons, transmit forces and so allow fermions to
interact: photons convey electromagnetism, which holds electrons in orbit around
atoms; gluons link quarks into protons and neutrons via the strong nuclear
force; W and Z bosons carry the weak nuclear force, which is responsible for
certain types of radioactive decay. And then there is the Higgs."

If you never took chemistry and your understanding of neutrons, protons and
electrons is already shaky -- not to mention the particles of which they
themselves are composed -- the paragraph above means nothing. For you, the
take-away is that there's a theory called the Standard Model that predicts the
building blocks of everything and we've been able to verify the existence of all
of these particles save one: the Higgs boson. Batting 16 for 17 would, in most
fields be considered quite good. For science, it's only a good start.

Though the Higgs was predicted by the Standard Model, there are other theories
-- supersymmetry, extra dimensions, etc. -- that stand ready to account for any
deviations from the properties predicted by it, should any such deviations
appear in the data. "The official Higgs announcement thread"
<http://www.reddit.com/r/askscience/comments/w0qgf/the_official_higgs_announcement_thread/>
includes the following rather cryptic description of some of these.

"If it's really a Higgs, then we need to solve the Hierarchy problem or abandon
the idea of naturalness. The problem is that the Higgs is "unaturally light",
since quantum corrections would "naturally" make the Higgs mass as big as the
Planck scale (1019 GeV compared to the 126) and to make it light we need a an
arbitrary cancellation that is heavily fine-tuned. The best candidates were
supersymmetry and large extra dimensions, but it seems that both are very
unlikely now."

Supersymmetry and extra dimensions -- both associated with most versions of
string theory -- something you may also have heard of if you watch The Big Bang
Theory -- were alternate ways of looking at the problem in an attempt to get
around some of the less elegant ramifications of the Standard Model.

This is all getting into quite heady territory, though. We can just leave it at
scientists getting all itchy when their theories of how the universe works
involve too many "magic numbers" and hand-waving in order to work. It would be
nicer if all explanations and proofs proceeded without any "hacks" or
assumptions about optimal conditions.

[Is it the Higgs boson or isn't it?]

You keep writing that CERN hasn't yet determined that it's the Higgs boson, but
many sources -- including the Economist above -- are equating the discovery of a
particle with the discovery of the Higgs boson.

The short answer is that the LHC has detected many particles at the energy level
predicted by the Standard Model for the Higgs boson. Particles have other
properties than just energy, though, so further data-mining will have to
determine whether the detected particles match more than just the energy level
of the Higgs boson.

A longer answer can be found in the official press release, "CERN experiments
observe particle consistent with long-sought Higgs boson"
<http://press.web.cern.ch/press/PressReleases/Releases2012/PR17.12E.html>:

"The results are preliminary but the 5 sigma signal at around 125 GeV we’re
seeing is dramatic. This is indeed a new particle. We know it must be a boson
and it’s the heaviest boson ever found [...] The implications are very
significant and it is precisely for this reason that we must be extremely
diligent in all of our studies and cross-checks."

That part should be pretty clear. We've definitely found something and it's very
promising, but easy does it with iggs-Hay oson-Bay.

"The results presented today are labelled preliminary. They are based on data
collected in 2011 and 2012, with the 2012 data still under analysis."

Data-mining proceeds apace, but there are petabytes of data to analyze. Cool
your heels, world media. We've waited forty years; we can wait a few months
more. The article "CERN celebrates as Higgs signal reaches significance" by John
Timmer
<http://arstechnica.com/science/2012/07/cern-celebrates-as-higgs-signal-reaches-significance/>
mentions that CERN is pushing onward as fast as it can to get more data:

"CERN has indicated it will extend this year's LHC run by several months in
order to get enough data to know more things about the newly discovered boson.
This is the last chance they'll get before the extended shutdown for upgrades,
and they probably have some sense of what it will take to push key measurements
into statistical significance now."

So why is so hard to figure out if we found a Higgs or not? The particles are
really, really small and exceedingly fleeting. That means the Higgs, when
produced, decays almost immediately into other, more stable particles. These are
the particles picked up by the detector. It's the presence of these particles --
as well as their energy levels, spins, etc. [4] -- from which scientists can
construe that a particle with a certain energy had to have caused it.

A comment on Ars Technica by a scientist working at CERN provides more detail on
the mechanics of the detectors:

"Basically each detector is made of sub-detector: "trackers" that sense
electrically charged particles passing through and "calorimeter" that have
enough material to stop particles (except muons and neutrinos) and measure their
energy deposit. That's the "raw data", [on the] order [of a] few MB per
collision, [a] few PB of data per year. These low-level informations are then
processed to "reconstruct" the path of charged particles (their path in a
magnetic field allows to measure their momentum) and the energies and properties
of deposits in calorimeters.

"For the Higgs decaying in two photons, one would then require two energetic
energy "blobs" in calorimeters with a shape that makes them look like photons
and calculate the invariant mass. Unfortunately there are many other ways to
produce two photons with no Higgs involved so other properties of the collision
need to be used to reach a good sensitivity."

As you can imagine, this is all bloody difficult. The article "CERN celebrates
as Higgs signal reaches significance" by John Timmer
<http://arstechnica.com/science/2012/07/cern-celebrates-as-higgs-signal-reaches-significance/>
talks about this a bit.

"Finding the Higgs was always a matter of probability. We can't detect the
particle directly, but the Standard Model tells us what its decay pathways will
look like, provided we feed the equations a specific mass. So, for example, we
can calculate that a Higgs boson weighing in between 115 and 135GeV (the range
suggested by the Tevatron data) should decay into two photons with some
frequency; two Z bosons with a different frequency, and other combinations of
particles with additional probabilities.

"The challenge comes from the fact that the Standard Model also predicts that
processes that don't involve a Higgs will also produce similar looking patterns
of particles. So, we're left with probabilities. Do we see an excess of these
events that can't be accounted for by non-Higgs decays? How statistically
significance is that excess?"

"Particle physicists have settled on a specific measure of significance called
five sigma (or five standard deviations) before they're willing to accept that
we've spotted a new particle."

So, not only do we have to play Sherlock Holmes with the detected data, it turns
out that it's not only a Higgs boson that can cause the Higgs-like pattern that
theory predicts and that we're looking for.

Imagine a forensic scientist who picks shards of pottery out of the wall and
determines that something had blown up a bunch of pottery in that room. But she
also knows that there were three cops in that room shooting like crazy and it
stands to reason that there are pottery shards in the wall. There seem, however,
to be more pottery shards than expected, which lends credence to her theory that
there was a fourth shooter involved.

Now take the scenario and run it millions -- or billions? trillions? I don't
even know -- of times and see if the data consistently shows the presences of a
fourth shooter. That's how you get to five sigmas of certainty and that's how
you extract a signal from all of the noise.

And next? Imagine if she now had to figure out where the fourth shooter was
standing and what color his pants were. [5]

[Does the Higgs make me fat?]

The last thing that needs to be addressed are the wild claims -- some
accompanied by demonstrations with sand and ping-pong balls -- that this
particle imbues everything with mass. The post, "Lets get this right: The Higgs
Boson does *not* give "us" mass" by Foolie
<http://www.reddit.com/r/Physics/comments/wgqki/lets_get_this_right_the_higgs_boson_does_not_give/>,
takes the wind right out of the sails of that argument:

"99% of the proton mass (and similarly the neutron mass) is coming from the
strong nuclear force and not the Higgs mechanism, and we have one electron per
proton in the universe at 0.0005 GeV, compared to the proton mass of 1GeV. (The
electron does get all of its mass from the Higgs mechanism, it's just not very
much)."

The strong nuclear force is one of the four known fundamental interactions
(electromagnetism, weak nuclear force and gravitation are the others). It's the
one that binds protons to neutrons at the core of atoms. Again, if that doesn't
make any sense to you, then the take-away is that the Higgs mechanism imbues
atoms with almost none of their mass. Your Sunday-morning talk show was
misinformed.

The article "CERN celebrates as Higgs signal reaches significance" by John
Timmer
<http://arstechnica.com/science/2012/07/cern-celebrates-as-higgs-signal-reaches-significance/>
also takes a crack at describing the place that the Higgs occupies in the
Standard Model.

"Physics' Standard Model describes the fundamental particles that make up all
matter, like quarks and electrons, as well as the particles that mediate their
interactions through forces like electromagnetism and the weak force. Back in
the 1960s, theorists extended the model to incorporate what has become known as
the Higgs mechanism, which provides many of the particles with mass."

Again, the particles to which the citation refers are some of the more exotic,
ephemeral of the particles in the Standard Model and not the ones that our
high-school physics courses are talking about. In other words, the Higgs has
nothing to do with your weight. It's the Twinkies.

The official press release, "CERN experiments observe particle consistent with
long-sought Higgs boson"
<http://press.web.cern.ch/press/PressReleases/Releases2012/PR17.12E.html>, also
alludes to the effect that the Higgs boson is theorized to have on the mass of
other particles.

"The next step will be to determine the precise nature of the particle [...] Are
its properties as expected for the long-sought Higgs boson [...] Or is it
something more exotic? The Standard Model describes the fundamental particles
from which we, and every visible thing in the universe, are made, and the forces
acting between them. All the matter that we can see, however, appears to be no
more than about 4% of the total. A more exotic version of the Higgs particle
could be a bridge to understanding the 96% of the universe that remains
obscure."

You see, discovery of the Higgs, while huge for scientists, is not so huge that
they're going to sit on their laurels. Instead, in the official press release,
they're already looking beyond what is a fantastic result, but a predicted one
[6] to see if they can figure out what's up with all the dark matter? 

What's dark matter? That's a discussion for another article. Or Wikipedia is
just a few clicks away if your interest in the dark arts of physics has been
piqued.

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


[1] To be fair, it is entirely possible that this group includes your humble
    narrator who, due to aforementioned ignorance, is (almost) entirely unaware
    that he doesn't understand anything better than the people to whom he daily
    feels superior.


The post "Higgs Boson Confirmed at 5-sigma Standard Deviations at 125 GeV"
   <http://www.reddit.com/r/science/comments/w0tty/higgs_boson_confirmed_at_5sigma_standard/>
   put it like this:

"The discovery itself doesn't change our understanding [...]. It had already
   been predicted in theory and so the only thing that is changed by this
   "discovery" is that the theory has more evidence behind it, and is much more
   "confirmed". As for cool star-trek-style science that the Higgs will allow us
   to do...well, it's all sensationalism, really. Knowing about the higgs is
   like knowing about quarks and gluons; any practical application (as in,
   commercial uses) of the knowledge won't manifest until decades later, if
   ever."


[1] That's just a little nod to the excellent segment hosted by "Kate O'Donnell"
    <http://thisishell.net/tag/kate-odonnell/> on the "This is Hell!"
    <http://thisishell.net/> radio show on Saturday mornings.


[1] According to a "comment by a researcher at CERN"
    <http://www.reddit.com/r/science/comments/w0tty/higgs_boson_confirmed_at_5sigma_standard/>,
    "[t]o actually claim it is the SM [Standard Model] Higgs, we need to confirm
    that it has spin 0, the right coupling ratios, etc."


[1] Ok, that bit about the pants was pushing the metaphor a bit too far. I got
    carried away.


[1] This attitude is epitomized in popular culture by Sheldon Cooper of The Big
    Bang Theory, a theoretical physicist character notorious for his disdain for
    the laic toils of the experimental physicist who is, after all, simply
    proving what the theoretical physicist already knew to be true.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Nuclear Roundup]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2517</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2517"/>
    <updated>2011-03-27T21:33:23+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The "Fukushima I Nuclear Accidents"
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_I_nuclear_accidents> page is
quite good and the "Reactor status summary" somewhere in the middle of
the page is updated often.

[image]

In addition to the reactor status information, there is a "crowdsourced
map of microsievert values from 215 Geiger counters across Japan"
<http://japan.failedrobot.com/>. These are...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 27. Mar 2011 21:33:23
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The "Fukushima I Nuclear Accidents"
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_I_nuclear_accidents> page is quite good
and the "Reactor status summary" somewhere in the middle of the page is updated
often.

[image]

In addition to the reactor status information, there is a "crowdsourced map of
microsievert values from 215 Geiger counters across Japan"
<http://japan.failedrobot.com/>. These are (ostensibly) real-life readings, but
it's hard to know whether to believe it or not. They certainly look legitimate,
but it's the Internet, so take it with a grain of salt.

[image]

Rounding out the images is a the following chart, which illustrates the relative
sizes of various radiation doses, including the current output of Fukushima
(illustrated in green in the bottom left-hand corner of the upper right-hand
box). It includes a couple of measurements that show 365 times the background
radiation at a few places 50km from Fukushima, but also notes that other
locations nearer to the plant showed barely any elevation. Again, it's just
information; don't forget your Mark Twain. [1]

[image]

And then there's the article "Going Critical" by George Monbiot
<http://www.monbiot.com/2011/03/21/going-critical/> with a quite pragmatic look
at the energy situation, posing a lot of thought-provoking questions. [2] He,
too, referenced the XKCD graphic above:

"For a clearer view, look at the graphic published by xkcd.com(2). It shows that
the average total dose from the Three-Mile Island disaster for someone living
within 10 miles of the plant was one 625th of the maximum yearly amount
permitted for US radiation workers. This, in turn, is half of the lowest
one-year dose clearly linked to an increased cancer risk, which, in its turn, is
one 80th of an invariably fatal exposure. I’m not proposing complacency here.
I am proposing perspective. (emphasis added.)"

He goes on to discuss alternatives to both nuclear and fossil fuels, noting that
there are a lot of questions that remain largely unanswered by the more strident
proponents. For example, intermittent energy sources like solar and wind are not
well-suited to the instant- and always-on grid to which we've become accustomed
(about getting rid of that lifestyle, more below). The one truly scalable
battery for such needs is converting power to potential energy by pumping water
into mountains and getting hydroelectric out of it on demand.

"As the proportion of renewable electricity on the grid rises, more pumped
storage will be needed to keep the lights on. That means reservoirs on
mountains: they aren’t popular either.

"[...]

"And how do we drive our textile mills, brick kilns, blast furnaces and electric
railways? Rooftop solar panels? The moment you consider the demands of the whole
economy is the moment at which you fall out of love with local energy
production."

This line of argument presupposes a national or international energy grid;
perhaps we can also rid ourselves of such a thing and go to local power. Even if
we could get everyone to reduce, the energy demands of nearly 7 Billion people
cannot be met efficiently without global pooling of resources. If every
community goes it alone, the world will quickly devolve into a
post-industrial-revolution-level nightmare of pollution and destruction. While
things are not nearly perfect -- or even good -- today, things are still far
better than they were when power was deregulated, highly localized and,
necessarily, privatized. As Monbiot mentions, "[t]he damming and weiring of
British rivers for watermills was small-scale, renewable, picturesque and
devastating [...] wiping out sturgeon, lampreys and shad as well as most
seatrout and salmon"

So we can't localize power anymore -- not unless we can really see our way to
going back to a stone-age existence [3] -- and low-impact, alternative energies
are either not quite ready (missing battery-reservoirs) or never will be able to
take over current demand without becoming just as dirty as the solutions we have
now. If nuclear is to be abandoned at the same time, countries will go running
back to fossil fuels, where there will be immensely powerful corporations
welcoming them with open arms and soothing words. 

But back to Monbiot:

"On every measure (climate change, mining impact, local pollution, industrial
injury and death, even radioactive discharges) coal is 100 times worse than
nuclear power(10,11). Thanks to the expansion of shale gas production, the
impacts of natural gas are catching up fast(12)."

Given that as an alternative, we should be very careful about allowing ourselves
to be scared into abandoning nuclear power. The crisis at Fukushima has not yet
been resolved, but it has also not yet turned into the Chernobyl that was
predicted by some of the hotter heads. That disaster may still come, but it does
us no good to ignore the possibility that nuclear may still be the cleanest fuel
choice we have, despite all of its faults. 

There are no easy answers.

Perhaps we should instead focus our energies on getting nuclear power out of the
hands of "the liars who run the nuclear industry" and into the hands of another
organization. Sure, the government may also end up screwing everything up, but
it hasn't yet proved that it will. [4] In fact, it's government regulation
that's kept the nuclear industry in check enough that, so far, "[a]tomic energy
has just been subjected to one of the harshest of possible tests, and the impact
on people and the planet has been small". Perhaps we should just get the private
industry out of the equation entirely -- it's not like they're willing to do
anything without subsidies anyway. We're already paying for nuclear with our
taxes, we might as well be running it.

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


[1] The one about there being three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and
    statistics.


[1] George Monbiot is the author of the excellent book, Heat, which examines
    ways in which we can escape further climate change by either changing how we
    get our energy or by changing how much energy our lifestyles need. There are
    far more efficient ways of doing things, which would help a lot; the only
    luxury for which he could not find a solution was private air travel.


[1] Or Bronze-age or whatever. And that's not to say that we won't go there
    involuntarily, but I can't see a voluntary transition for any country for
    which it would make a difference to climate change.


[1] Except of course for evangelical libertarians, for whom the inability of
    government to do anything well or efficiently is a article of faith that
    cannot be belied by any amount of proof.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Atomic Updates from Cringely & Palast]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2501</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2501"/>
    <updated>2011-03-14T22:39:39+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Two articles drifted down my news-pipe today that caught my eye: "Is
anything nuclear ever really super safe small and simple?" by Robert
Cringely
<http://www.cringely.com/2011/03/is-anything-nuclear-ever-really-super-safe-small-and-simple/>
and "The no-BS info on Japan's disastrous nuclear operators" by Greg
Palast
<http://www.gregpalast.com/no-bs-info-on-japan-nuclearobama-invites-tokyo-electric-to-build-us-nukes-with-taxpayer-funds/>
(Tokyo Electric to Build US Nuclear Plants: The no-BS info on Japan's
disastrous nuclear operators).

We'll start with Palast, who was formerly employed as a "lead
investigator in several government nuclear plant"...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 14. Mar 2011 22:39:39
Updated by marco on 14. Mar 2011 22:40:10
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Two articles drifted down my news-pipe today that caught my eye: "Is anything
nuclear ever really super safe small and simple?" by Robert Cringely
<http://www.cringely.com/2011/03/is-anything-nuclear-ever-really-super-safe-small-and-simple/>
and "The no-BS info on Japan's disastrous nuclear operators" by Greg Palast
<http://www.gregpalast.com/no-bs-info-on-japan-nuclearobama-invites-tokyo-electric-to-build-us-nukes-with-taxpayer-funds/>
(Tokyo Electric to Build US Nuclear Plants: The no-BS info on Japan's disastrous
nuclear operators).

We'll start with Palast, who was formerly employed as a "lead investigator in
several government nuclear plant fraud and racketeering investigations". He's
also the guy who proved that Bush & Co. stole the election in 2000 and who's
been working in England almost exclusively because no one will hire him in the
States. In England, he works for BBC Newsnight, which is not too shabby and
lends credence to his reporting. The reason he needs said credence is that he
shoots early and often and is exceedingly hyperbolic. He's often right as well,
but he doesn't make every effort to dot his i's and cross his t's and mixes
correlation with causation and just loves circumstantial evidence.

That said, I like the guy; I've read some of his books, I follow his newsfeed
and I like his interviews (like a recent one on the radio program, "This Is
Hell!" <http://thisishell.net>). But the blog post linked above doesn't actually
prove what it purports to prove: that corruption led to shoddy construction and
poor generator maintenance in Japan. It seems like Palast was employed
exclusively in the States when he was inspecting nuclear plants, but he applies
his conclusions to "[t]he industry". 

He goes on to claim that the fact that the "Emergency Diesel Generators [...]
didn't work in an emergency is like a fire department telling us they couldn't
save a building because "it was on fire."" While a cute comment -- Palast's
specialty -- it's not strictly true, as the post linked yesterday described such
plants as having multiple fallback scenarios, of which the first line of diesel
generators is only one. Is it possible that the generators didn't run because
they weren't maintained properly? Of course it is. Is it possible that they
didn't work because of the earthquake/tsunami? Also a plausible explanation.
Does Palast offer anything other than an assertion that corruption and idiocy
were to blame? No. At this early stage, there's no point in speculation except
to draw attention. The correlations throughout the article are not evidence in
any way. For example, look at how Palast tries to cast aspersions on Toshiba:

"One of the reactors dancing with death at Fukushima Station 1 was built by
Toshiba.  Toshiba was also an architect of the emergency diesel system. [...]
[America's new reactor] will be made substantially in Japan by the company that
bought the US brand name, Westinghouse — Toshiba. [...] I once had a Toshiba
computer. [...]"

Though I want to acknowledge Palast's ideas -- because he really has been right
about so much in the past -- these are nothing but the ravings of a madman. If
Glenn Beck or Alex Jones had written this, I'd have thrown it out immediately.
Palast spends the rest of the article actually talking about crookedness and
faked compliance tests in the industry, but in the States, again simply assuming
that what goes on there must also go on in Japan. He may be right, but he hasn't
really made a case yet. He says he's working on an investigation, though, so
time will tell.

I've heard from other sources that Japan's nuclear industry is as corrupt and
apt to cut corners as any other large corporate beast, but we're trying to deal
here with the proof that Palast provides (if any). What I've heard is also
conjecture from sources that have a healthy dose of cynicism about big business,
but not much more. I count myself among these people, but I'm trying to keep my
big yap closed until I know more -- or at least enough to feel confident enough
to think I know what's going on. The problem with a lot of the coverage I've
read is that this level of prudence doesn't seem to be shared and there are a
lot of grainy pictures of smoky cooling towers, haz-mat suits and headlines with
the word "MELTDOWN" in them -- and followed by question marks to keep the
lawyers at bay.

The other article is by Robert Cringely, who I was surprised to find also had
experience in the nuclear industry because I've known him only as a tech pundit
for the last 20 years or so. He'd already posted once about the reactors to note
that it appeared that the delays on Japan's part were all-out efforts to avoid
having to actually kill their reactors and never be able to start them again. 

It's a very pragmatic concern that shows a lot of cool-headed judgment actually.
If you have to let 1000 people possibly die of radiation poisoning in order to
retain 20% of your country's power network, would you do it? Or do you take the
course that not one person may die as a direct result of either action or
inaction...but that 1000s will die as a result of a 20% loss of electrical
capacity, but that no one will ever be able to blame on you? There's also the
matter of the cost of rebuilding this lost energy-production capacity. How many
will suffer because these dozens of billions will be spent on replacing power
plants instead of hospitals? And all to replace atomic power plants that had to
be shut down so hard that they will never run again? Did you do enough to save
the plants and the wasted cost? It's not like the company running the plant is
the only one to benefit if it's not destroyed: the people and businesses getting
their power from that plant also benefit.

A pragmatist would have weighed all of these concerns before pulling the kill
switch on those plants; only a sentimentalist with no responsibilities could say
-- immediately -- that a handful of human lives is worth more than a whole
country. These questions are not as easy to answer as the media and other
armchair analysts make them out to be.

But let's get back to Cringely's second article, which deals with comparisons to
Chernobyl, of which there have been so many -- and why not, they're both about
nukular plants, right? But I digress. Cringely contacted an old compatriot who'd
actually worked on containing Chernobyl:

"These Japanese reactors are old and fairly well understood while Chernobyl was
brand new. These Japanese reactors had already been in service for 16 years when
Chernobyl melted down. In comparative terms there is no comparison — Chernobyl
was vastly worse."

I wasn't aware that these plants were so old, actually. Cringely goes on:

"These Japanese nuclear accidents come down to the simple fact that nobody back
in the 1960s designed nuclear plants to run for 40 years then go through an 8.9
earthquake."

Given their age and relative resilience in the face of catastrophe, it's hard to
countenance shouts of corruption and incompetence within days of the accidents.
As mentioned above, it may turn out that incompetence and corruption did make
the problem worse, but why assume that when the plants withstood an earthquake 5
times stronger than their designs foresaw? It's like the guy who complained
about the iPad 2's battery life because it exceeded its specifications by less
than the iPad 1 did.

Cringely, unlike Palast, is quite bullish on the Toshiba technology, called 4S
(Super Safe Small and Simple), which are factory-produced and small. There have
been regulatory issues so far but those will probably be swept aside in an
effort to replace lost capacity. Of course, that will just give
conspiracy-mongers more material from which to theorize that the nuclear power
companies actually caused the earthquake and subsequent tsunami, only so they
could sell their next-generation power plants.

Who's right? I don't know. Cringely sounds more reasonable than Palast and has
at least a few citations rather a mix-and-match of hyperbole and allegations.
The point is, if you're making gross generalizations about Japanese culture or
business practice, you're probably wrong. Unless you're an expert, which you're
probably not.

So, I don't know either, but I know that I'm going to wait until the dust has
settled a bit and we know how much and which damage was actually caused before
joining in any finger-pointing.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Calm Down; The Japanese Are Not Trying to Kill You]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2500</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2500"/>
    <updated>2011-03-13T23:48:46+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Seriously, calm down. Stop babbling about how the Japanese are a closed
society that would rather immolate our whole planet, taking us all down
with them as they refuse to admit any mistakes made in an effort to
avoid losing face.

It's all bullshit, just like all such blanket statements about...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 13. Mar 2011 23:48:46
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Seriously, calm down. Stop babbling about how the Japanese are a closed society
that would rather immolate our whole planet, taking us all down with them as
they refuse to admit any mistakes made in an effort to avoid losing face.

It's all bullshit, just like all such blanket statements about millions of
people are.

I'm going to put this right here: "Why I am not worried about Japan’s nuclear
reactors" by Dr Josef Oehmen
<http://morgsatlarge.wordpress.com/2011/03/13/why-i-am-not-worried-about-japans-nuclear-reactors/>.

Read it. It explains pretty well why a small explosion on top of a cooling tower
in no way implies that radioactive rain will be melting faces in LA tomorrow.

First, the earthquake was "5 times more powerful than the worst earthquake the
nuclear power plant was built for". The control rods were introduced and the
reactor was shut down. The next step was to get rid of the remaining latent
heat. However, the "tsunami took out all multiple sets of backup Diesel
generators", which were transporting that heat away. The engineers had to fall
back a few "Depths of Defense" lines and ended up preparing for a meltdown
because they could not get sufficient power with which to disperse all of the
latent heat. However, this had also been planned for and the "the core catcher
and third containment" were built to manage and contain such a meltdown with no
radiation leakage. Those parts were not damaged by the earthquake in any way
that would have prevented them from doing that job.

Even if there were to be a full meltdown, there would not have been another
Chernobyl:

"It is worth mentioning at this point that the nuclear fuel in a reactor can
*never* cause a nuclear explosion the type of a nuclear bomb. Building a nuclear
bomb is actually quite difficult (ask Iran). In Chernobyl, the explosion was
caused by excessive pressure buildup, hydrogen explosion and rupture of all
containments, propelling molten core material into the environment (a “dirty
bomb”)."

But before we get ahead of ourselves, the engineers were still managing the
heat, hoping to be able to get a cooling solution in place before they had to
accept a full meltdown. So they "started venting steam from time to time to
control the pressure"; that means that huge clouds of white "smoke" (steam and
radioactive nitrogen with a short half-life that decayed and was rendered inert
within seconds) appeared and the world media went into OMG "radiation
leakage"!!! overdrive.

However, periodic venting was not enough and the control rods had just about
boiled away enough water that they became exposed to air.

"But Plan A had failed – cooling systems down or additional clean water
unavailable – so Plan B came into effect. This is what it looks like happened:

"In order to prevent a core meltdown, the operators started to use sea water to
cool the core. I am not quite sure if they flooded our pressure cooker with it
(the second containment), or if they flooded the third containment, immersing
the pressure cooker."

The article ends with a wonderful bullet list of how science will save us all
(that last was written with no sarcastic intent whatsoever). Of course, you can
also believe that nuclear scientists the world over are trying to radiate you
just like climate scientists are trying to make you give up your carbon
lifestyle. 

Those of you who cling to your conspiracy theories like a security blanket as
you cower on the bed wondering whether the boogie-man will come from the closet
or from under the bed will continue to do so no matter what you read. However,
it seems that the Japanese power plants performed above and beyond the call of
duty (or, in this case, above and beyond their design parameters). Thank you,
science.

Further reading:

  * "Battle to stabilise earthquake reactors"
    <http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/RS_Battle_to_stabilise_earthquake_reactors_1203111.html>
  * "Efforts to manage Fukushima Daiichi 3"
    <http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/RS_Venting_at_Fukushima_Daiichi_3_1303111.html>
  * "Media updates on nuclear power stations in Japan"
    <http://ansnuclearcafe.org/2011/03/11/media-updates-on-nuclear-power-stations-in-japan/>
  * "Discussion Thread – Japanese nuclear reactors and the 11 March 2011
    earthquake"
    <http://bravenewclimate.com/2011/03/12/japan-nuclear-earthquake/>

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Bad Day at the Beach]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2410</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2410"/>
    <updated>2010-06-20T13:02:57+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The Gulf of Mexico fills with oil. This disaster is short-term
insoluble, even for highly-advanced, 21st-century, western nations.
Medium- to long-term, there is likely to be a solution. There always is.
The cleanup process will be long and painstaking, but it will be
out-of-sight for most people....
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 20. Jun 2010 13:02:57
Updated by marco on 20. Jun 2010 13:07:40
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Gulf of Mexico fills with oil. This disaster is short-term insoluble, even
for highly-advanced, 21st-century, western nations. Medium- to long-term, there
is likely to be a solution. There always is. The cleanup process will be long
and painstaking, but it will be out-of-sight for most people. Once the problem
is solved and years have passed, the shortness of human memory will serve to
help us forget what happened -- and to be surprised the next time it happens.

[Pelican in Oil][Tortoise in Oil][Bird in Dire Straits]

Petroleum is intrinsic to almost all facets of a westerner's life. It's the base
from which plastics are made, which are essential to our electronic gadgets, our
household goods, almost all packaging and countless other goods. It's used as a
base for fertilizers, without which our hapless agricultural system [1] would
grind to a halt; the same system uses a tremendous amount of petroleum to
harvest this food. It's also the primary fuel for the transportation system that
shuttles cattle, feed and other goods all over the country. Jet fuel needs
highly-refined petroleum; the food system as we know it today -- far-flung and
still tightly integrated enough to deliver perishables from the other side of
the globe -- would collapse without it. And our high-flying lives with it. And
then there are our cars, our personal transportation without which so many
Americans could never get to their jobs or their stores or pretty much anything.

[Boycott Petroleum]

The sentiment above is completely understandable when contrasted with the
heart-wrenching photos of animals floundering in our mess. To say nothing of the
humans that are suffering loss of livelihood and home. It is, however, not
enough. We can't boycott petroleum until we have either (A) another fuel source
that is as portable and powerful as refined petroleum or (B) we change our lives
significantly to not need so much portable energy. 

Choice (A) is a pipe-dream for now. Fusion is the only possible way out -- and
it's always 20 years away and it will never be portable (at least not in the
short- to medium-term).  

That leaves choice (B). We stop depending on food shipped all over the world; we
stop pretending that petroleum is cheap; we stop wrapping everything in plastic;
we stop disdaining healthy tapwater for individual-sized portions of water
wrapped in plastic; we cure ourselves of our deep, deep illness that will
continue to kill the planet and produce photos like those above.

So, yeah, hop on a bike if you can; but nothing is solved until we make much
deeper changes to our expectations, our lifestyles and, most of all, our ethics.

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


[1] [Food/Subsidy Pyramid]The same system that is so heavily tilted toward
    foodstuffs that require lots and lots of petroleum input. The  graphic to
    the left (click to enlarge) illustrates the basic problem by showing where
    federal subsidies flow into the food pyramid.
  
  Until this legislative capture by the reigning food industries comes to an
  end, there is very little hope to be had.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[CO2: Getting to 0%]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2346</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2346"/>
    <updated>2010-03-17T22:33:21+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Bill Gates is the world's most generous philanthropist and has made
curing malaria and combating viruses of all kinds his new goal in life
(see "Mosquitoes, Malaria and Education" by Bill Gates
<http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/bill_gates_unplugged.html> for the
video). However, he's changed his focus to climate change because,
though preventing disease is a huge concern...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 17. Mar 2010 22:33:21
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bill Gates is the world's most generous philanthropist and has made curing
malaria and combating viruses of all kinds his new goal in life (see
"Mosquitoes, Malaria and Education" by Bill Gates
<http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/bill_gates_unplugged.html> for the video).
However, he's changed his focus to climate change because, though preventing
disease is a huge concern for the third world, rampaging climate change will
make many more things far worse for the world's poor. As he put it in his talk,
"Innovating to zero!" by Bill Gates <http://www.ted.com/talks/bill_gates.html>:

"But energy and climate are extremely important to these people, in fact, more
important than to anyone else on the planet. The climate getting worse, means
that many years their crops won't grow. There will be too much rain, not enough
rain. Things will change in ways that their fragile environment simply can't
support. And that leads to starvation. It leads to uncertainty. It leads to
unrest. So, the climate changes will be terrible for them."

[media]

Bill provides a good overview of the effort needed to address climate change as
well as pragmatically explaining what it means to do so and what, exactly, such
efforts entail. The equation he presents is CO2 = P x S x E x C. P stands for
popoulation, which he sees headed to about 9 Billion people from our current 6.8
Billion. He expects that estimate to come down by about 10 or 15 percent "if we
do a really great job on new vaccines, health care, reproductive health
services". This does not mean that Bill plans on peddling vaccines that will
kill the world's poor -- as has been seriously suggested is his intent on less
reliable news sources -- but that populations with access to "reproductive
health services" and especially societies in which women play a bigger role and
have more to say about social life -- those tend to have lower birthrates.

Suggesting that population should be cut even more drastically or by means that
are less evolutionary is currently still a no-no [1]. Gates has faith that
technology will get us all the energy we need with zero emissions, so the
question of how many members of the human race should the planet be expected to
house can be safely tabled for another day.

The S stands for services and is somewhat less controversial, as long as he
leads by saying that "it's a great thing for this number to go up" so as not to
perturb any capitalists and only suggests that members of the first world
"probably could cut back and use less", but doesn't require it. It's the
no-sacrifice plan: Keep breeding and using energy as much as you like, 'cause
we're going to figure out how to get it without further screwing up the planet.
You're welcome.

The E is efficiency, in which an increase is not necessarily a good thing. That
is, increasing efficiency doesn't usually mean that less energy is used overall:
Rather, it means that the more efficient service just got cheaper and gets used
even more than ever, raising the total energy usage. Again, this is not a
problem if you put all your money on the final letter in the equation.

Finally, we have C, which is the amount of CO2 put out for each unit of energy
used. This is the one that Gates thinks will go to zero and save us all. It's
kind of the one that has to go to zero because we're not going to enact any
population controls (à la China). We're also not going to enforce service
reductions because once you've given people something, you can't take it away --
and once people see other people getting something, they're all going to want it
too (and justifiably so). Even if you're not going to enforce cuts in lifestyle
(services), you could still enforce efficiency standards to make that lifestyle
less energy-intensive, but, as mentioned above, an increase in efficiency is
likely to be negated by an increase in usage of that service (because it got
cheaper).

So, we're left with hoping that there is some magical fuel source out there that
uses no CO2 and is cheap and safe and increases male potency. As Gates puts it,
we need energy miracles. Gates goes through the usual suspects -- fossil fuels,
nuclear and renewables -- and points out the weaknesses of each: Fossil fuels
are CO2-intensive, nuclear power is complex and expensive and renewables suffer
from an energy density & storage problem.

Gates is backing the Terrapower horse:

"The idea of Terrapower is that, instead of burning a part of uranium, the one
percent, which is the U235, we decided, let's burn the 99 percent, the U238. It
is kind of a crazy idea. In fact, people had talked about it for a long time,
but they could never simulate properly whether it would work or not, and so it's
through the advent of modern supercomputers that now you can simulate and see
that, yes, with the right material's approach, this looks like it would work."

This sounds quite interesting, as burning a pile of U238 is a much more
controllable reaction and coincidentally also burns up most of the waste left
over from traditional fission reactors. The pile would basically smolder in the
ground for 60 years until it had burned its way through all the fuel. Energy is
harvested in the traditional way, with steam generated by the heat of the
burning pile driving turbines.

Sure, there's a lot of work to do, but there are at least a couple of decades in
which to do it. Of course, the last Copenhagen conference didn't go very well
and pretty much no country hewed to its required reductions under the Kyoto
agreement (5% reduction from 1990 levels by 2012) and the latest financial
meltdown has not been met by any real regulatory reform in any country with a
big hand in financial markets. And, hey, it only took the U.S. nearly two years
to come up with some regulatory reform that will likely die on the floor of the
Senate. And it only took over a year to get a gutted corpse of a health care
bill to almost be passed -- and then only because nearly the whole budget for it
will be promised to America's most important citizens: Corporations. So here's
hoping that Bill and Terrapower can save us from ourselves: Because our
governments sure as hell aren't politically capable of doing it. [2]

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


[1] Except for the fringe, eugenics crowd -- Hi, guys! -- which is comprised
    chiefly of people that don't realize that a truly useful and egalitarian
    eugenics policy would quickly remove them and theirs from the gene pool.


[1] And, to be honest, we're not exactly holding their feet to the fire, are we?
    We're too busy jeering ACORN and drooling salaciously at sex scandals and
    screaming "I GOT MINE JACK!" at the tops of our lungs to really be worried
    about massive climate changes that we're happy to let ourselves be
    brainwashed into thinking are just a socialist plot because anything else
    would require us to actually curtail our ridiculously over-the-top
    lifestyles and get some f&$@ing perspective, man.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Quantum Computing]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2344</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2344"/>
    <updated>2010-03-07T12:03:21+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[If you've been looking for an introduction to Quantum Computing and how
it surpasses our current binary computing, the article "A tale of two
qubits: how quantum computers work" by Joseph B. Altepeter
<http://arstechnica.com/science/guides/2010/01/a-tale-of-two-qubits-how-quantum-computers-work.ars/>
is a great place to start. The language is about as accessible as it's
going to get and there are helpful diagrams...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 7. Mar 2010 12:03:21
------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you've been looking for an introduction to Quantum Computing and how it
surpasses our current binary computing, the article "A tale of two qubits: how
quantum computers work" by Joseph B. Altepeter
<http://arstechnica.com/science/guides/2010/01/a-tale-of-two-qubits-how-quantum-computers-work.ars/>
is a great place to start. The language is about as accessible as it's going to
get and there are helpful diagrams sprinkled throughout. For example, the engine
of a quantum computer -- entanglement, and its result: "action at a distance" --
is analogized thusly:

"Imagine if someone showed you a pair of coins, claiming that when both were
flipped at the same time, one would always come up heads and one would always
come up tails, but that which was which would be totally random. What if they
claimed that this trick would work instantly, even if the coins were on opposite
sides of the Universe."

[image]The final two pages delve into the quantum physics and present some of
the main concepts -- and equations -- which is where things get a good deal
hairier, if it's been a long time since you've seen notation of this sort.
However, any discussion of quantum physics soon blurs the line between hard,
measurable physics and philosophy. At some point, the equations abandon us and
it becomes very difficult to know what's going on or even to know what we know
about what's going on or to be able to trust that which we observe or that which
our carefully planned experiments observe because even our most careful selves
are still influenced by us being ourselves and being constrained by the physical
system in which we enjoy degrees of freedom.

Scientists have already reached the point where they are presented with an
"equation [that] means that every part of the experiment, even the experimenter,
are all part of a single quantum superposition." (Emphasis in original.)
Heisenberg showed long ago that an observation influences that which it
observes; in the world of quantum computing, the systems -- or superpositions of
states -- being observed are so delicate and involve such miniscule energies
that the measuring instrument exerts an even greater influence because the
energy introduced into the system by the act of measurement is disproportionate
to the energy of the system itself. The really strange thing is that if, as
stated above, the experimenter is part of the superposition, all attempts to
follow the chain of superposition to find an end where there is a so-called
collapse of the waveform and things are decided one way or the other -- à la
Schroedinger's cat -- have failed to find it.

The article concludes:

"Maybe, at some point, it all gets too big, and new physics happens. In other
words, something beyond quantum mechanics stops the chain of larger and larger
entangled states, and this new physics gives rise to our largely classical
world. Many physicists much smarter than myself think that this happens. Many
physicists much smarter than myself think it doesn't, and instead imagine the
universe as an unfathomably complex, inescapably beautiful symphony of
possibility, each superposed reality endlessly pulsing in time to its own
energy. To be honest, we just don't know yet. 

"But as far as we've looked, it's turtles all the way down. [1]"

How the hell are you supposed to build a computer based on that? We know how to
build 2- and 3-qbit computers, but the 100-qbit computer will likely have to
wait until we can answer some of the seemingly unanswerable questions outlined
above. As with every generation that looks up toward the next, just before a
quantum leap of intuition and reasoning, it seems impossible. But imagine how
impossible all that we take for granted today would seem to someone from just a
century ago. Maybe humans in just a few generations will take "acting outside of
the superposition of reality" for granted and be able to perform the most
breathtaking calculations in no time at all. More likely, though, they'll be
taking quantum computing for granted and most will be using it without even
knowing it -- perhaps to make the Genius mode on their iPods seek out much
cooler playlists.

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


[1] A phrase from the book Yertle the Turtle by Theodore Geisel aka Dr. Suess.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Mencken & Dawkins]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2331</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2331"/>
    <updated>2010-02-08T23:03:43+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Though it sometimes seems that religion always has the upper hand in
public debate, there is usually at least one crusader per generation
willing to come out strongly in favor of the Enlightenment and against
superstition. The article "Mencken, Islam, and Political Correctness"
<http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=5699> cites the early...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 8. Feb 2010 23:03:43
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Though it sometimes seems that religion always has the upper hand in public
debate, there is usually at least one crusader per generation willing to come
out strongly in favor of the Enlightenment and against superstition. The article
"Mencken, Islam, and Political Correctness"
<http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=5699> cites the early 20th-century
journalist H.L. Mencken on the subject of religion and other closely related
superstitions.

"What the World's contention amounts to, at bottom, is simply the doctrine that
a man engaged in combat with superstition should be very polite to superstition.
This, I fear, is nonsense. The way to deal with superstition is not to be polite
to it, but to tackle it with all arms, and so rout it, cripple it, and make it
forever infamous and ridiculous."

Note that Mencken railed against "superstition" and not just religion.
Superstition is that which one believes despite a lack of any supporting
evidence or even despite strong evidence to the contrary. Superstition is that
which is taken on faith and used as a guiding principle. It is entirely
acceptable in a post-Enlightenment world for superstitions -- and their
supporters -- to have to defend themselves on the basis of provable,
reproducible facts. It does not suffice to point to a text more than two
millenia old and of dubious origin to "prove" that miracles occurred at some
point. Even if they did, that they no longer do and seem to be wholly
unpredictable in that regard makes them irrelevant as tools in the modern world.

And the only way to go after an idea is to go after its supporters. In the case
of religion -- and in the specific case of the U.S. -- every politician is a
supporter. It is, in fact, hard to imagine anyone being elected in the U.S. to a
high office with an explicitly non-religious platform. And aspirants would do
well to stick to high-falutin' Christianity, if they want to have any chance
whatsoever. But Mencken would not approve of this; why let fools who believe in
unprovable fairy tales and superstitions anywhere near the levers that control
our society? We wouldn't let these buffoons anywhere near anything important
(like a nuclear power plant, Homer Simpson notwithstanding), so why do we so
blithely let them God Bless America their way into office time and again?

Again, Mencken:

"Is [a superstition], perchance, cherished by persons who should know better?
Then their folly should be brought out into the light of day, and exhibited
there in all its hideousness until they flee from it, hiding their heads in
shame. True enough, even a superstitious man has certain inalienable rights. He
has a right to harbor and indulge his imbecilities as long as he pleases,
provided only he does not try to inflict them upon other men by force."

Would that that were the case. Instead an airing of their fantastical opinions
only seems to strengthen the support they enjoy from their equally fanatical
base.

Despite the many counterexamples in modern American politics, Mencken is,
factually, right, and the superstition and misinformation to which he refers
lurks everywhere...not just in religion. It seems even the most careful of us
make assumptions about subjects in which we are not adequately educated. It's
the embodiment of the principle that "a little bit of knowledge is dangerous":
We learn just enough to convince ourselves that we know everything and start
espousing opinions based on that knowledge. 

As a case in point, the author of the Mencken article himself avers about 2/3 of
the way through the article that "[t]here is no pick and choose, or mix and
match, no half-doses of belief in Islam, as there is Christendom, as the
numerous varieties of faiths and sects in it attest." This is just a silly thing
to believe, regardless of how "numerous" the "varieties of faiths and sects" he
interviewed. There is just as much discussion over the true meaning of sections
of the Koran -- ranging from basic translation to determining whether something
was intended as metaphor or literally or whether a particular Sura is considered
canon or not -- as there are of the Bible. Just because some people interpret
the Koran as ordering all believers to kill non-believers (having perhaps, but
not necessarily, failed to convert them first) doesn't mean that a given
practicing Muslim actually believes this or is likely to act on it. Certainly no
more so than their Christian counterparts are likely to actually believe that
their non-Christian friends will end up in hell. It is only our all-too-human
love for alienation of the other that lets us believe some obviously
preposterous lines of reasoning (or to be swayed by them when employed by
others). Most people who identify as Christian probably interpret that whole
Judgment Day/Heaven/Hell thing a little more abstractly than their own
particular sect dictates. But, the Muslim is the other and so we feel perfectly
comfortable ascribing to him an otherworldly discipline -- especially when it
comes to wishing for all of our deaths.

Richard Dawkins enthusiastically takes up Mencken's mantle in the 21st-century;
in "Haiti and the hypocrisy of Christian theology" by Richard Dawkins
<http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/panelists/richard_dawkins/2010/01/haiti_and_the_hypocrisy_of_christian_theology.html>,
he discusses Pat Robertson's putatively horrendous reaction to the earthquake in
Haiti (he blamed it on the Haitians having angered the one true God by
practicing Voodoo):

"Loathsome as Robertson's views undoubtedly are, he is the Christian who stands
squarely in the Christian tradition. The agonized theodiceans who see suffering
as an intractable 'mystery', or who 'see God' in the help, money and goodwill
that is now flooding into Haiti, or (most nauseating of all) who claim to see
God 'suffering on the cross' in the ruins of Port-au-Prince, those
faux-anguished hypocrites are denying the centrepiece of their own theology. It
is the obnoxious Pat Robertson who is the true Christian here."

It is Dawkins at his finest, simply citing the Christians' own scripture back at
them. To which most will scratch their heads and proclaim that they do not
believe this, that they instead believe in turning the other cheek and being the
Good Samaritan and all that rot. For those, Mr. Dawkins elucidates further,
making his point quite crystal-clear:

"Dear modern, enlightened, theologically sophisticated Christian, your entire
religion is founded on an obsession with 'sin', with punishment and with
atonement. [...] Educated apologist, how dare you weep Christian tears, when
your entire theology is one long celebration of suffering: suffering as payback
for 'sin' - or suffering as 'atonement' for it? You may weep for Haiti where Pat
Robertson does not, but at least, in his hick, sub-Palinesque ignorance, he
holds up an honest mirror to the ugliness of Christian theology. You are nothing
but a whited sepulchre. (Emphasis added.)"

It takes a Dawkins to shake the agnostics out of their rut and remember
(realize?) that Christianity does not involve too many sunny moments, actually.
Christianity is very firmly about slogging through a sin-encrusted mortal life
in the hope that things get better in an unconfirmable beyond. And, with the
recent idiocy about the anti-choice commercial aired during the Super Bowl,
Dawkins also has something to say about the highly specious reasoning employed
to justify not having aborted said Tim. The argument goes something like this:
since the mother decided against all logic not to abort her fifth child and,
since he grew up to play football really well, all abortions are wrong. Dawkins
cites the idiotic faux-syllogism about Beethoven happily bandied about by the
anti-choice crowd and then concludes (from the article "The Great Tim Tebow
Fallacy" by Richard Dawkins
<http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/panelists/richard_dawkins/2010/02/the_great_tim_tebow_fallacy.html>):

"If you follow the 'pro-life' logic to its conclusion, a fertile woman is guilty
of something equivalent to murder every time she refuses an offer of copulation.
[...] As far as anything that matters is concerned, an aborted fetus has exactly
the same mental and moral status as any of the countless trillions of
unconceived babies."

An abortion is just one way of not conceiving a potential genius, though perhaps
that's the reason Catholics are not to spill their seed wastefully (a topic most
thoroughly covered by Monty Python in The Meaning of Life with Michael Palin
leading off with "The Sperm Song" [1]). Bill Hicks also already covered this
ground long ago in his comedy routine. [2] Dawkins is certainly not alone -- and
should be proud to be in such august company -- but he's one of the few (like
Mencken) with enough gravitas to get published in a halfway mainstream
newspaper...and thank goodness for that.

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


[1] Here are some of the lyrics to "Every Sperm Is Sacred"
    <http://www.lyricsdepot.com/monty-python/every-sperm-is-sacred.html>:
  "CHILDREN:
   Every sperm is sacred.
   Every sperm is great.
   If a sperm is wasted,
   God gets quite irate.

   "GIRL:
   Let the heathen spill theirs
   On the dusty ground.
   God shall make them pay for
   Each sperm that can't be found.

   "NUN:
   Let the Pagan spill theirs
   O'er mountain, hill, and plain.
   HOLY STATUES:
   God shall strike them down for
   Each sperm that's spilt in vain."


[1] Hicks actually gets across the same point as Dawkins, but is much funnier.
    Here is the "partial text of the routine"
    <http://www.alternativereel.com/includes/top-ten/display_review.php?id=00047>
    (see the link for the full text):
  "Here's another idea that should be punctured, the idea that childbirth is a
   miracle. I don't know who started this rumor but it's not a miracle. No more
   a miracle than eating food and a turd coming out of your butt. It's a
   chemical reaction and a biological reaction. You want to know a miracle? A
   miracle is raising a kid that doesn't talk in a fucking movie theater . . .
   I'll go you one further, and this is the routine that has virtually ended my
   career in America. If you have children here tonight—and I assume some of
   you do—I am sorry to tell you this. They are not special. I'll let that
   sink in. Don't get me wrong, folks. I know you think they're special. You
   think that. I'm telling you—they're not. Did you know that every time a guy
   comes, he comes 200 million sperm? Did you know that? And you mean to tell me
   you think your child is special? Because one out of 200 million sperm
   connected . . . that load? Gee, what are the fucking odds? Do you know what
   that means? I have wiped entire civilizations off of my chest, with a grey
   gym sock. That is special. Entire nations have flaked and crusted in the hair
   around my navel. That is special."

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Linguistics: The Hardest Languages]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2306</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2306"/>
    <updated>2010-01-08T21:48:23+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA["In search of the world’s hardest language"
<http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15108609>
is an interesting read, proposing candidates based on number of sounds,
number of genders or genres, number of individual sounds, number of
difficult-to-make sounds, number of consonants, consistency of spelling
(adherence to consistent phonetic rules) or...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 8. Jan 2010 21:48:23
------------------------------------------------------------------------

"In search of the world’s hardest language"
<http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15108609>
is an interesting read, proposing candidates based on number of sounds, number
of genders or genres, number of individual sounds, number of difficult-to-make
sounds, number of consonants, consistency of spelling (adherence to consistent
phonetic rules) or agglutination (combining of words to express concepts).

So, for example, spelling in French and English are not particularly predictive,
so that makes them difficult to write error-free without a lot of practice.
While French has two genders for nouns, English has none, which makes it much
easier in that regard. None of the major western languages have a lot of sounds,
with languages from Eastern Europe, Africa and South America providing languages
with many more sounds.

As far as declension goes, English is an absolute godsend, with very little to
worry about in that regard, compared to a nightmare like German, which has
several generally used cases, each of which has different rules depending on
noun gender (three of 'em: masculine, feminine and neutral) and there are, of
course, exceptions. While German is in the witness chair, we'll also note that
genders are pretty much randomly assigned, with very few rules to guide a
non-native speaker to the right one. Then there are the many foreign words
(Fremdwörter) that are generally neuter ... unless they're not. In some cases,
the foreign word is so strongly assimilated that it gets a masculine or feminine
gender, sometimes -- but not always -- taken from the gender of the word in
German that it replaced.

The Economist article notes that Tuyuca has a "feature that would make any
journalist tremble", which is a requirement that a verb ending correlate to
whether or not the implied speaker of the sentence knows something happened or
whether the speaker is positing that it did. German's got this one too: It's
called the subjunctive. For many common verbs, the subjunctive shares a suffix
with the case of other non-subjunctive cases so, when you're first learning
German and you're reading a newspaper, you keep thinking someone doesn't know
how to write German because they keeping screwing up the cases. Later, when you
learn about the subjunctive, you realize that all those times you read something
as fact, it was actually an unsubstantiated allegation.

Though Tuyuca gets the prize for hardest language -- it has between 50 and 140
noun groups (or genders) -- German gives it a run for its money. German is much
more common and yet contains a large number of the features that make a language
hard to learn and master. The article didn't even mention different verb forms
depending on relationship of the addresser to the addressee. Here, German
mercifully has only two (formal and informal), but it adds another layer of
complexity to the act of properly conjugating and declining a verb or choosing a
pronoun or possessive. The romance languages have this as well, but they're
missing some other tricks that make German so much fun.

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


Another very interesting article on a language not mentioned in the Economist
article above is "Why Chinese Is So Damn Hard?" by David Moser
<http://pinyin.info/readings/texts/moser.html>

"There is truth in this linguistic yarn; Chinese does deserve its reputation for
heartbreaking difficulty. Those who undertake to study the language for any
other reason than the sheer joy of it will always be frustrated by the abysmal
ratio of effort to effect. Those who are actually attracted to the language
precisely because of its daunting complexity and difficulty will never be
disappointed. Whatever the reason they started, every single person who has
undertaken to study Chinese sooner or later asks themselves "Why in the world am
I doing this?" Those who can still remember their original goals will wisely
abandon the attempt then and there, since nothing could be worth all that
tedious struggle. Those who merely say "I've come this far -- I can't stop now"
will have some chance of succeeding, since they have the kind of mindless
doggedness and lack of sensible overall perspective that it takes."

Another very common language not mentioned in the Economist article is "I'm
Trying To Learn Arabic" <http://www.slate.com/id/2120258/>:

"MSA [Modern Standard Arabic] has about the same role in the Arab world that
Latin had in medieval Europe: It's the language of writing, religion, and formal
speeches, but it is no one's native spoken language any more. Arabic has long
since become a series of "dialects," which are actually more like separate
languages, as many varieties are mutually incomprehensible. [...]

"So, if I go to Egypt or Lebanon in a year, having managed to get some near grip
on my classroom language, I will be walking down the street asking people for a
bite to eat in something that will sound almost as conversationally
inappropriate to them as Shakespearean English would to us."




]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Space Exploration]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2230</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2230"/>
    <updated>2009-10-25T23:02:40+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[image][image][image]With recent rumblings from NASA as to the successor
to the aged and mostly retired space shuttle fleet, National Geographic
published the lovely graphic of human space exploration seen to the
left. Also very recently, NASA has been trumpeting their images of
Saturn as sent back over the years by...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 25. Oct 2009 23:02:40
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[image][image][image]With recent rumblings from NASA as to the successor to the
aged and mostly retired space shuttle fleet, National Geographic published the
lovely graphic of human space exploration seen to the left. Also very recently,
NASA has been trumpeting their images of Saturn as sent back over the years by
the Cassini probe. The second image to the left is from the photo essay, "Saturn
at equinox" <http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/10/saturn_at_equinox.html>.
The final image on the bottom is from another photo-essay called "Hubble's final
servicing mission"
<http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2009/05/hubbles_final_servicing_missio.html>.
Click the images to make them bigger; click the links to see many more pictures.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Opinion-Based Reality]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2037</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2037"/>
    <updated>2008-12-27T16:18:40+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA["Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."

Though the phrase above was originally intended to apply to
technological gadgets, it applies equally well to any concept of
sufficient complexity. The trick is often used to get people to believe
things that are wrong or that...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 27. Dec 2008 16:18:40
Updated by marco on 27. Dec 2008 23:09:17
------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."

Though the phrase above was originally intended to apply to technological
gadgets, it applies equally well to any concept of sufficient complexity. The
trick is often used to get people to believe things that are wrong or that they
would not believe in were they mentally equipped to follow the reasoning.
Instead of simply reserving judgment because they don't know enough, most people
will elect to bluff and simply agree with the most competent-sounding person in
the room or, failing that, the loudest.

However, instead of being baffled about advanced alien technology (as in
Clarke's case), people are baffled about most of the world around them. They
survive only because the world has been so thoroughly idiot-proofed, drawing
laughable conclusions that a five-year could tear apart logically, but buoyed in
their beliefs because of all of the similarly mentally under-endowed people who
agree with them. They perceive their argument as gaining weight based solely on
the number of people who believe it and the volume at which they shriek it to
others. Since these people have no actual information, they also don't believe
that there is such a thing as actual information. Everything becomes a matter of
opinion, a matter of faith. It's just too bad for them that the real world
doesn't care what they think. Reality does not forget history or basic physical
laws.

This mechanic is in ample evidence today as the world tilts into an abyss of its
own making. The economic situation is complex and involves many, many factors on
which sound decisions about public and domestic policy must be based. The
relationship between causes and effects -- not to mention second- and
third-order effects -- is not always obvious and is often counterintuitive.

Nevertheless, people who've heretofore spent no time educating themselves about
history, the workings of the government or the actual conditions in the nation
or the world, are holding forth with opinions. Though this dearth of experience
applies to people you know, it also applies to most of the people in the media
as well. People are lent credence merely because they express themselves with
confidence and use a large vocabulary. They may not use it correctly and the
basis of their argumentation may be utter hogwash but, for many people, it is
indistinguishable from magic. They believe it because it sounds believable and
they are woefully unequipped to dispute it.

For example, a meme currently cruising the airwaves -- mostly courtesy of Fox
News -- is that FDR caused the Great Depression with his social spending plans.
The first thing to note is that there no longer seems to be such a thing as
lying in American News anymore. In America, everything is a matter of opinion,
even historical facts. Fox's egregious attacks on written history will likely
never see a retraction, nor will anyone be thrown off the airwaves for
incompetence. This will not happen because no one sees this as a problem; the
line between fact an opinion does not exist, so there will never be need for a
retraction or correction again. It's true because they say it is. If you
disprove it will "facts", well, that's just your opinion, man. 

America's last depression started well before FDR became president. The effects
of the depression were being beaten back mostly with social spending, all
heartily endorsed by the wisest economist to have ever walked the planet, John
Maynard Keynes. When political pressure forced an end to this social spending
before it was economically wise to do so, the country resumed its calamitous
nosedive into a depression, from which only World War II could rescue it.

Now, the version of history above is easily corroborated -- especially with the
sheer awesomeness of the Internet -- by checking the sequence of events in
history books. And, no, a book by a famous television personality does not count
as a history book. However, if a person doesn't know anything about history and
doesn't question authoritative voices, they could easily be convinced that the
upswing between FDR's election and the plummeting return, five years later, to
depression conditions, simply never existed. That is, with history and economics
firmly in the "magic" category for them, people would then believe that, while
social spending is incapable of preventing or fixing a depression, military
spending works gangbusters. Though logic says that spending is spending, it's
all magic to them, so they accept the expert opinion on faith. 

Unfortunately, because of their information-poor state, they can't tell the
difference between facts and complete bullshit. They are, in fact, woefully
unqualified to have an opinion at all, putting them on par with most of the
talking heads with whom they agree. With a minimum investment of energy, the
system is self-perpetuating and, all of a sudden, they've got people with much
better things to do spending all of their time debunking argumentation that
should never have even seen the light of day. Instead of talking about how to
get out of Iraq and stop waging war around the world, you end up mired in a
conversation about whether or not there were WMDs; instead of talking about
energy policy, you end up in a conversation about whether or not there are waste
products from nuclear power plants or whether or not the word "clean" when
applied to coal is really all sunshine, unicorns and rainbows. With no history
and no information and only magic, useful discussion is dead before it begins.

There are such things as facts and there are such things as opinions that are
worth much more than others. (As the old saying goes, "opinions are like
assholes...everybody's got one.") People who don't know anything about anything
are still strongly encouraged to question what they hear; the whole point is not
to simply believe what one hears because it's been presented in an appealing
way. Think about what you hear and learn and don't accept overly simplified
reasoning about or solutions for problems that are clearly much more complex. A
good rule of thumb is to disbelieve the person who claims to have the answer to
everything and to listen closely to the person who clearly delineates what he
knows and clearly indicates that he is only offering a well-educated guess. And,
for God's sake, stop believing things that are so clearly illogical and
impossible just because it's easier than actually learning something or
thinking.

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


The ruminations above were triggered by a few sources.

[1] One interesting source was "Spot the math errors!"
    <http://skullsinthestars.com/2008/12/12/spot-the-math-errors/>, which
    presents math problems that, very convincingly, prove that 2 = 1, pi = 3 and
    -1 = 1. Each problem has a logical error that is not immediately evident to
    a layman.

[1] Another source was an excellent interview with Richard Feynman, "Take the
    world from another point of view"
    <http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2008/12/feynman-take-the-world-from-another-point-of-view.html>,
    wherein he declares that the most important thing a person can do is to ask
    questions. If you can't justify something based on other information you
    have, then find out why. His example is about people brushing their teeth;
    most people only brush their teeth because that is what one does. But, is
    this behavior based on clinical studies? Do the rest of the people in the
    world brush their teeth too? Are our teeth better than theirs? Until you
    find out for sure, you're simply brushing your teeth on faith, believing in
    magic.

[1] Another source was the long-suffering George Monbiot, who wrote Heat about
    global warming and has been dealing with the particularly mind-boggling
    level of uninformedness found in people opining about global warming and
    climate change. It is here that the one finds some of the most fervent
    practitioners of pseudo-science (creationism is another fertile hotbed of
    such). "A Beardful of Bunkum" by George Monbiot
    <http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2008/12/09/a-beardful-of-bunkum/> has this
    example:
  "Until now the “sceptics” have assured us that you can’t believe the
   temperature readings at all; that the scientists at the Met Office, who
   produced the latest figures, are all liars; and that even if it were true
   that temperatures have risen, it doesn’t mean anything. Now the temperature
   record (though only for 2008) can suddenly be trusted, and the widest
   possible inferences can be drawn from the latest figures, though not, of
   course, from the records of the preceding century. This is madness."
  
  In the case of climate change, there are entrenched interests deliberately
  spreading misinformation, which is happily gobbled whole and regurgitated by
  the bleating sheep until, through the resonance built up by repetition, it
  becomes true. And don't expect the newspapers and media to do the research --
  it's up to you to provide your own filter.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Cheap Glasses for Everyone]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2031</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=2031"/>
    <updated>2008-12-22T23:44:06+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Compared to the problems caused in the first world, third world problems
can generally be solved relatively cheaply. It costs well north of a
trillion to even make it look like you're doing something about saving
the U.S. economy, but it takes a few paltry tens of billions to feed
everyone in...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 22. Dec 2008 23:44:06
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Compared to the problems caused in the first world, third world problems can
generally be solved relatively cheaply. It costs well north of a trillion to
even make it look like you're doing something about saving the U.S. economy, but
it takes a few paltry tens of billions to feed everyone in Africa. How much is
that? A couple of months in Iraq? We can spend our money on blowing things up,
but not on feeding people or controlling disease. While building a military
machine to grind the world under its bootheel seems to quite clearly be the
government's job, the job of curing eminently curable diseases and feeding the
world's poor is apparently left up to previously rapacious tech-industry tycoons
who've turned over a new leaf (I'm looking at you, Gates). Whereas Gates doesn't
yet have anything to do with the invention described in the article, "Inventor's
2020 vision: to help 1bn of the world's poorest see better"
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2008/dec/22/diy-adjustable-glasses-josh-silver>
(Inventor's 2020 vision: to help 1bn of the world's poorest see better:
Professor pioneers DIY adjustable glasses that do not need an optician), it's a
safe bet he will. 

It's also a relatively safe bet that the U.S. government will find some way to
disparage the idea and offer zero funding for it because they won't be able to
figure how to monetize or militarize a cheap pair of glasses. After all, how can
one even conceive of getting glasses cheaply to the world's poor? We can
conceive of a six-year operation like the one going on in Iraq, with hundreds of
billions of dollars spent, hundreds of thousands of people involved and military
infrastructure like this world has never seen, but bring up the idea of
distributing cheap glasses to the poor in Africa and everyone will look at you
like you have three heads for even thinking that such a thing is possible.

Instead of dwelling on the negative though (like we do), let's hear about these
glasses:

"Inside the device's tough plastic lenses are two clear circular sacs filled
with fluid, each of which is connected to a small syringe attached to either arm
of the spectacles. [...] The wearer adjusts a dial on the syringe to add or
reduce amount of fluid in the membrane, thus changing the power of the lens.
When the wearer is happy with the strength of each lens the membrane is sealed
by twisting a small screw, and the syringes removed."

Coupled with increased programs to combat the diseases and maladies that make so
many of the world's poor (prematurely) blind in the first place, these glasses
could be just the thing for so many people in need. Unfortunately, some can't
see the utility, as with the members of the "Reddit" <http://reddit.com>
community, who could only point out that the prescription wouldn't be spot-on or
that it wouldn't be able to address stigmatism or produce bifocals or trifocals
... and so on. Their negativity was apparently based on their complete inability
to think of how much less miserable life for tens of millions would be if they
could actually see anything at all. Instead, they based their analysis on what
they thought the glasses could do for their rich, pampered asses, which is a
sadly typical reaction.

Here's hoping these glasses find some funding and find some way of being
manufactured in quantities and at prices that will really help. Let's hope
fervently that they don't end up cursed by ridiculously high prices, like many
drugs, medicines and seeds whose patents belong to the international
pharmacological and agricultural concerns. We've got enough things on the "stuff
that could be produced cheaply and sold at-cost to the poor, but we're not
socialists, are we now?" list.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[LHC Almost Online]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1890</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1890"/>
    <updated>2008-08-02T21:42:00+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[[image]The LHC (Large Hadron [1] Collider) is located in France and
Switzerland at CERN [2]; the first experiments begin in early August
2008 and a full test of all 27km of track is planned in September.
Project members expect to be analyzing the first collisions by the end
of the year. The entire track will be...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 2. Aug 2008 21:42:00
Updated by marco on 2. Aug 2008 21:44:47
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[image]The LHC (Large Hadron [1] Collider) is located in France and Switzerland
at CERN [2]; the first experiments begin in early August 2008 and a full test of
all 27km of track is planned in September. Project members expect to be
analyzing the first collisions by the end of the year. The entire track will be
cooled to just 1.75ºC shy of absolute zero (to -271.25ºC) and will be in-use
for decades. The big expectation is that the long-sought Higgs Boson [3] makes
an appearance.

The article "Large Hadron Collider nearly ready"
<http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2008/08/the_large_hadron_collider.html> has
dozens of high-quality images showing this incredibly large-scale machine.

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


[1] Hadrons like protons and neutrons are much larger particles than the
    electrons and positrons accelerated in smaller devices; therefore, the LHC
    is also much larger and can generate much more energy than any of its
    predecessors.


[1] Originally stood for Conseil Européen pour la Recherche Nucléaire, but is
    now commonly translated as the European Organization for Nuclear Research.


[1] A very massive subatomic particle predicted by theory, but extremely
    short-lived and requiring large amounts of energy to generate. The LHC is
    the first device capable of both generating the amount of energy needed to
    bring it into existence and having detectors sensitive enough to
    unequivocably pinpoint it when it does.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Peer Review]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1696</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1696"/>
    <updated>2007-12-18T21:05:05+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Just as governments seek to justify everything they do -- regardless of
how violent or fascist -- as being in the name of democracy or the
greater good or for moral reasons, other dubious ideas have glommed onto
the idea of portraying themselves as science in order to accumulate more
than their fair...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 18. Dec 2007 21:05:05
Updated by marco on 20. Dec 2007 05:30:34
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Just as governments seek to justify everything they do -- regardless of how
violent or fascist -- as being in the name of democracy or the greater good or
for moral reasons, other dubious ideas have glommed onto the idea of portraying
themselves as science in order to accumulate more than their fair share of
respect. It seems that the cloak of science is just the spoonful of sugar the
media needs to make any crackpot idea go down without a hiccup. Two areas in
particular are swirling with boasts of provability and scientific evidence:
intelligent design and denial of anthopogenic climate change. The second agenda,
in particular, has been accused of not having support in the form of
peer-reviewed journal articles. Seeing that acceptance without peer review was
not easily forthcoming, the various support systems for this point-of-view have
set about generating scientific consensus.

Given enough financial means and enough power, this isn't so difficult to do;
what is difficult is to build a preponderance of evidence. That's where the
media will be very helpful, as they are notoriously reluctant to take a position
of any kind in any issue, regardless of how much less justifiable one side may
be. [1] So, with issues of climate change, it suffices to say that a world
coalition of scientists have issued a report that climate change is driven by
human activity ... however, other scientists disagree. Now, your average,
hurried viewer is going to absorb the idea that everything's up in the air, and
the media will not have lied. They will merely have misrepresented as one side
is represented by a concordance of scientists from all over the world, whereas
the other is a much smaller group of individuals -- primarily from the U.S. and
primarily in the employ of or heavily funded by right-wing think-tanks or energy
companies -- who have formed their own, much smaller echo chamber.

It is in this way that peer review can be twisted to the purposes of any idea.
"Last Words on Saletan" by Cosma Shalizi
<http://cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/weblog/546.html> puts it quite well:

"A journal's peer review is only as good as the peers it uses as reviewers. If
everyone, or almost everyone, who referees for some journal is in the grip of
the same mistake, then they will not catch it in papers they review, and the
journal will propagate it. In fact, since journals usually recruit new referees
from their published authors or people recommended by old referees, mistakes and
delusions can become endemic and self-confirming in epistemic communities
associated with particular journals. ... Put simply, the problem is that any
group of quack scholars with a shared delusion can put together a journal, dub
each other peer reviewers, and go on their cheerful way by endorsing each
others' work for their journal."

Naturally, our media should be aware of this and avoid it, if they were at all
interested in the end result of a better-informed public regardless of the
interests of their corporate masters. Even without assuming evil intent on the
part of those that half-ass their jobs as journalists, it's reprehensible how
easily so many of them tend to get it wrong the first time, then only
occasionally apologize for their stupefying incompetence some time later. It
seems there is no way to get fired from some jobs these days.

To some degree, the reluctance to take sides can be regarded as a form of
politeness, an especially liberal disease toward any other opinion. In a
generous mood, one could toss journalists this bone and forgive them their
transgressions as niceness rather than incompetence. It's an almost purely
liberal disease as the right wing (and not just in the U.S.) almost never
reciprocates, happily steamrolling over other ideas in what for them is quite
clearly an ideological war with only one clear winner.

"This is such a big heap of partisan right-wing bullshit..."
<http://d-squareddigest.blogspot.com/2007/11/this-is-such-big-heap-of-partisan-right.html>
(This is such a big heap of partisan right-wing bullshit that there must be a
pony in there somewhere!) goes into more detail:

"Why are American liberals so damnably obsessed with extending intellectual
charity to right wing hacks which is never reciprocated? It reaches parodic form
in the case of those tiresome "centrists" [...] They're practically 50% of the
way between Republicans and Democrats! Yeah, specifically they're right-wing
Democrats in non-election years and party line Republicans any time it might
conceivably matter."

The argument breaks down, however, when you consider to whom liberals are
willing to extend this eternal olive branch. Seeing good qualities in political
opponents extends only to those that espouse the more hard-line stance of those
in power or in control of major purse-strings. That is, while the most extreme
warhawk, poor-pillaging opponent is given the benefit of the doubt that he or
she [2] truly believes their ideas will work for the greater good in the long
run, Communist or labor opponents are attacked as simpletons, madmen or
evildoers. So it's clearly not "intellectual honesty [or] pure scholarly
decency" that drives them. We must therefore assume that it's compliance with a
prevailing mindset within which they must make their living ... and to which
they are willing to sacrifice truth and honesty in the name of their careers and
personal comfort. If you express honest ideas that don't slam immigrants,
terrorists, communists, labor unions or other such scum accordingly, you'll find
yourself looking for a job or looking the wrong way over the fence in Cuba. You
have freedom of speech; but everybody knows you have to watch what you say. [3]

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


[1] Though only one example is given to illustrate the point, other examples
    abound. From more recent news, there's (and this is paraphrasing from a CNN
    report): "The NIE says that Iran has not been working on nuclear weapons for
    four years ... but President Bush says they have." (in this case lending
    just as much weight to the baseless opinion of a known simpleton as to the
    consensus of more than a dozen notoriously infighting intelligence
    agencies.)


[1] Gotta give a shout-out to that bitch-on-wheels Ann Coulter here.


[1] Unless you're just a mad, babbling blogger on the internets who thinks he's
    safely ensconced in a foreign country and further protected by having a
    minute readership.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Levels of Abstraction]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1574</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1574"/>
    <updated>2007-04-04T23:34:43+02:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The universe is, apparently, quite big. This is made all the more
amazing in light of how small its constituent components are, since it
clearly takes quite a lot of them to make up something so
mind-bogglingly huge as the universe. "Brian Cox at LIFT Conference
(LIFT07)"
<http://rodrigo.typepad.com/english/2007/03/brian_cox_at_li.html> gave a
brilliant talked...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 4. Apr 2007 23:34:43
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The universe is, apparently, quite big. This is made all the more amazing in
light of how small its constituent components are, since it clearly takes quite
a lot of them to make up something so mind-bogglingly huge as the universe.
"Brian Cox at LIFT Conference (LIFT07)"
<http://rodrigo.typepad.com/english/2007/03/brian_cox_at_li.html> gave a
brilliant talked aimed at the layperson -- if the lay-person happened to be
versed in the basics of particle physics. "Dr. Brian Cox explains nuclear
physics" <http://rodrigo.typepad.com/english/2007/02/dr_brian_cox_ex.html> is
another, wider-shot video of the same event, on which you can actually see the
things he's constantly gesticulating at and referencing to in the first version
of the video. [1]

The talk goes on for perhaps 20 minutes, with question & answer taking another
10. Cox starts small, working up from the smallest particles, stretching
analogies and metaphors to the breaking point in an effort to get across just
how brobdingnagian the dimensions truly are. Many of us don't look up from our
daily lives -- our small, local worlds. Perhaps we hang on to the edge of our
seats every night, wondering which lucky contestant walks away with two rectums
thanks to Simon on American Idol or perhaps we think ourselves above the
hoi-polloi because we take part in -- or, at the very least, follow -- local
politics. Perhaps we're computer savvy or savvy about national or even world
politics, knowing the ins and outs of suffering peoples everywhere and the
exacts steps necessary to solving the Middle East, if only someone would listen.

And then, there's Brian Cox, on stage, telling you how the image you're looking
at is the equivalent of a dime held up to the sky at a distance of 75 feet from
you and, that within that speck of sky are a hundred thousand galaxies, each of
which holds a hundred billion stars [2]. And then, like magic, there's
time-lapse footage from the Hubble telescope -- the greatest data-gatherer ever
created by man -- showing two galaxies crashing into each other and proving the
existence of dark matter. [3]

His explanation of gravity sweeps even the most stalwart listener away to the
fantastical 11-dimensional landscape of string theory, which posits an actual
universe much stranger than the observable one. A universe in which the strong
forces are strong compared to gravity only here, in the limited 4-dimensional
space that it is our lot to be able to observe. He first cordones off gravity as
the odd-man out of forces because of its extraordinary weakness (1040 times
weaker), proving it by reminding you that you can pick up a piece of paper,
despite the entire planet pulling on it in the opposite direction. He then uses
the piece of paper to represent our paltry 4 dimensions, in which the other
forces are so strong, within the auditorium, which represents the universe's
11-dimensions, throughout which the force of gravity is dispersed. 

And, for just a minute, you're in his world, and making the particles -- and the
Greek letters that represent them -- get in a row and dance the Conga is all
that matters. Purely Earth-based problems and issues seem trite and small in
comparison to converting 4 million tons of hydrogen to pure energy per second
[4]. It's easy to be seduced into thinking that it is more important to know
what happened one billionth of a second after the Big Bang, that if we can only
find the Higgs Particle, we can finally know that the incredibly elegant theory
we have [5] for everything -- everything, from the very big to the very small,
from the very fast to the very slow, from the very strong to the very week -- is
correct. But, then come thoughts of the many people that don't have the luxury
of caring more about the universe than where their next meal is coming from or
where their next billet will be. But, it's good that the Brian Cox's of the
world can clear these things up and, hopefully, make all of our lives better in
the long run. 

The audience was either over- or underwhelmed, making the responses in the q&a
session much more pedestrian, focusing on the technology used to store and
process all of the data from the LHC. This kind of talk generally pulls
different people in different directions: for the unindoctrinated, it can sound
just as much like a fairy tale as the Bible. This is an unfair conclusion
because, where the Bible is made up out of whole cloth (more or less), theories
of the Higgs particle and strings are built on gosammer lattices of logical
thought, with each piece strengthening and reinforcing the whole. In science
only the fittest of ideas survive, not necessarily the most entrenched. More
understandable is the response of "who cares?" from those who see enough
life-threatening problems to solve close by. But humanity -- since the
enlightenment -- has always been dragged forward by science, which tells it what
is and isn't possible.

Watch the video; it's a half-hour well-spent.

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


[1] If you want to get up-close and personal with Brian Cox, go with the first
    video; if you want to follow along and don't quite know instinctively what
    tau or mu look like, you're better off with the second one.


[1] I may, quite honestly, be missing a zero here or adding a zero there, but
    I'm sure you get the point. Unfathomably, mind-numbingly, incomprehensibly,
    pants-shittingly huge. Or small.


[1] The movement of the bits of luminescent matter -- made of the same stuff as
    we, and detectable by our instruments -- that make up the galaxies cannot
    wholy be explained in terms of the other bits of luminescent matter. That
    is, they seem to be, at times, reacting to unseen forces; more specifically,
    responding to the pull of masses that we can't detect, except through
    devious means like noticing its there because of how it affects the bits we
    can see. It's kind of like knowing the invisible man is just around the
    corner because he casts a shadow.


[1] As he explains our Sun does, which is a middle-class yellow star and only
    one of hundreds of billions, each of which is converting the same
    incredible, awesome amount of energy and flinging it into the endless,
    scythian depths of space.


[1] One that can be expressed so succinctly that even the ancient Greeks could
    have done it using only their alphabet, had they invested their time and
    energy into creating a 27km long tunnel 100m underground to fling protons
    around 99.999% of the speed of light, giving each tiny, tiny, tiny --
    infintesimal, really -- particle the momentum of a freight train, then
    smashed them together and examined their aftermath for clues -- shadows --
    of missing clues.

]]>
  </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
      <title type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Measuring Body Fat]]>
  </title>
    <id>https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1472</id>
    <link href="https://www.earthli.com/news/view_article.php?id=1472"/>
    <updated>2006-12-03T23:16:06+01:00</updated>
    <author>
        <name type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Marco von Ballmoos]]>
  </name>
      <uri>https://earthli.com/users/marco</uri>
    </author>
      <summary type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[The BMI, or Body-Mass--Index, has been in the news a lot lately. Whether
because of runway models, whose BMIs are dangerously low, or because of
kids in first-world countries, whose BMIs are dangerously high. "The BMI
myth" by Peta Bee
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/health/story/0,,1958685,00.html> takes a look
at the utility of this measurement in determining health. As...
]]>
  </summary>
      <content type="text" xml:lang="en-us">
    <![CDATA[Published by marco on 3. Dec 2006 23:16:06
Updated by marco on 4. Apr 2007 22:33:53
------------------------------------------------------------------------

The BMI, or Body-Mass--Index, has been in the news a lot lately. Whether because
of runway models, whose BMIs are dangerously low, or because of kids in
first-world countries, whose BMIs are dangerously high. "The BMI myth" by Peta
Bee <http://www.guardian.co.uk/health/story/0,,1958685,00.html> takes a look at
the utility of this measurement in determining health. As usual, now that the
public (as well as insurance companies and government agencies) has glommed on
to this statistic as the final say in health, scientists have taken a look at it
and found it wanting.

[Calculating BMI]

The BMI has gained popularity because it can be calculated from easily
obtainable statistics. Using weight in kilograms and height in meters,
calculate:


BMI = kg / (m x m)

Americans will have to do a bit more work, either converting from pounds and
inches to the metric system (yuck!) or using the formula below: 


BMI = (lbs / (in x in)) x 703

The magic number, 703, normalizes the value back to the same scale as that
calculated with metric inputs. [1]

Now that you know how to calculate it, realize that it's more or less useless
for athletes or any other reasonably fit and active people. The problem, in a
nutshell, is that it doesn't take body composition into account. Muscle weighs
more than fat; therefore, an athlete weighs more than a non-athlete of similar
build. In fact, many top athletes have BMI ratings of "obese" precisely because
of this. According to other research, in order to determine actual health
(rather than just obtaining a numeric evaluation of conformance with society's
beauty standards), "[t]he important thing to consider is how body fat is
distributed around the body, as the real problems occur when fat accumulates in
the central abdominal region".

Two things comes out of this research:

   1. Measuring the percentage of fat in a person is very useful in determining
      fitness and health
   2. Measuring the distribution of fat in a person is very useful in
      determining risks of disease

[Measuring Percentage Body Fat]

According to "How to Calculate Body Fat"
<http://www.annecollins.com/body-fat-calculators.htm>, there are a few ways to
measure the percentage fat in a body.

Skinfold Calipers

   The size of the fat above the hips (the "love handles") is measured; this is
   accurate only when done by an experienced and trained person (though you can
   teach yourself, of course).

Hydrostatic Weighing

   The most accurate method, but the most difficult to do, as it requires a
   hydrostatic weighing tank in which you are completely submerged and the
   amount of fat in your body is measured using Archimedes Principle.

Home Body Fat Scales

      This is probably the easiest method:

   "A low-level electrical current is passed through your body and the
      "impedance", or opposition to the flow of current, is measured. The result
   is
      used in conjunction with your weight and other factors to determine your
   body
      fat percentage."

      However, the accuracy of this method is severely affected by "amount of
   water
      in your body, your skin temperature and recent physical activity". They
      recommend not exercising or eating for at least 4 hours before the test in
      order to improve accuracy. If you have one of these at home, this is
   pretty
      easy to achieve, in that you simply step on the scale right after getting
   out
      of bed. [2] This method's precision is not at all related to its accuracy:
      measuring under the same conditions day after day results in extremely
      consistent readings. Therefore, this method is very useful for determining
      change, as when dieting.

[Measuring Fat Distribution]

The most effective of the quick methods for determining overall health is
waist-circumference measurement, as "it is a direct measure of the part of the
body that tends to accumulate fat". In order to normalize this measurement for
all body types, including children, doctors recommend using a waist to height
ratio [3]. Just the waist measurement alone, however, is enough to determine
whether you're at high-risk for heart disease:

"Having a waistband of more than 88cm (35in) in women and 102cm (40in) in men
indicates the highest risk of cardiovascular and metabolic disease. There is an
increased risk of the diseases for women with measurements of more than 80cm
(32in) and men whose measurement is over 94cm (37in)."

[Do It Yourself]

Though the BMI is the de-rigour standard, it is extremely inaccurate for
determining actual health or fitness. Body fat scales are relatively cheap and
quite precise, if not 100% accurate, and can be used for determining changes
over a period of time. Waist measurement is even lower tech and is also a fairly
accurate indicator of susceptibility to the number one killer -- in America
anyway -- heart disease. These two used in conjunction offer a relatively cheap
and effective way of tracking health at home.

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


[1] Formulas obtained by examining the JavaScript source code on "Calculate your
    Body-Mass Index" <http://www.nhlbisupport.com/bmi/bmi-m.htm>


[1] Though most will do something else first, just take that extra bit of weight
    off before stepping on the scale.


[1] Again, presumably normalized using the metric system ... have fun, Americans

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