11.16.2007

The Assault on Geography

Copied this from the Guardian Unlimited where Mr. Simon Jenkins has put things into perspective quite nicely...

Just as the education system has downgraded geography in the pantheon of GCSE subjects, along with history, so the computerised shrinking of space has led to the loss of a sense of place. Beyond the walls of home and hearth lies nothing but the great wide world, comprehended through the prism of a screen. When we leave home, even driving a car no longer requires map-reading skills, as GPS guides us to our destination. If it fails we are as lost as if the engine breaks down. Knowledge of maps has gone the way of knowledge of gaskets and carburettors. Yet I cannot see how a well-rounded education can be stripped of a sense of spatial perspective and a sense of the passage of time. In this respect, the Thatcher/Baker curricular reforms of the late 80s were a disaster. They made maths and science compulsory and geography and history optional. They narrowed and dehumanised a large part of the syllabus.

For millions of children, the curriculum is now obsessed with subjects of little or no relevance to life outside school. If the examination figures are to be believed, the new curriculum has not inspired any surge in love of maths and science; if anything the opposite. Most children seem to hate them. Yet the GCSE has left pupils unaware of the world about them - its story, its nature - and, so we are told, even its fate. Britain's curricular priorities are crass.

Geography in the widest sense of the concept remains to me the queen of sciences. It holds the key that unlocks the coherence of the physical world as its sister, history, unlocks that of mankind's occupation of it. Without geography's mapping of planet Earth, the work of chemists, biologists and physicists is disjointed, mere technique.

It is geography that applies common sense to the statistical hysteria of the climatologists. It is geography that brings global warming into context and applies the test of feasibility to whatever political priorities are deemed necessary. It is geography that explains why each of us is located where we are, in neighbourhood, nation, continent and planet, and how fragile might be that location. Without geography's instruction, we are in every sense lost - random robots who can only read and count.

That government should regard such instruction as less important than algebraic equations or the listing of elements is not just baffling but Orwellian. Like the suppression of history, the suppression of geography has been a conspiracy against the true education of the human mind, against scepticism and the exercise of the imagination. It underlies the increasing evidence that British schools have hit some invisible barrier to educational advance, through which other nations have been able to pass.

The internet has plainly liberated millions from the confines of conventional sources of knowledge. But it remains limited to the dimensions of a lighted screen. The user can surf the world but not experience it: the world is squeezed into the experience of the screen. By eradicating distance, the internet eradicates an understanding of what distance means, of the diversity of peoples, nations, climates and environments. It reduces the world to a trillion pixels. Everest is neither in Europe nor Asia, it is on screen.

I cannot believe it makes sense to replace star-gazing with screen-gazing. The awareness of distance defines villages and communities, just as physical contact, not a chatroom, is the essence of friendship. Geography is the narrative of that distance.

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10.29.2007

Ahh Exxon - Climate Change Specialists

Nothing to pull me out of the doldrums like big corporations funding bad science from an ivy league school that is afraid of peer review. Check this out from New Sci...

"The US House Committee on Science and Technology is scrutinizing ExxonMobil's motives for funding research by an astrophysicist into the impact of climate change on the polar bear population of western Hudson Bay in Canada. If the polar bear is listed under the Endangered Species Act, steps to protect its habitat could directly hurt ExxonMobil's economic interests, subcommittee chair Brad Miller wrote in an open letter to the oil giant. The researchers, including Willie Soon of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, published their findings as a "viewpoint", which is not peer-reviewed. They conclude that the polar bears are not threatened by climate change... "

go figure... put it out there for peer review and we'll talk...

First off - an astrophysicist is not, last time I checked, qualified to say much about biology, habitat, or ecology - guess they ran out of stoolies in the right field... That would be like me choosing the parts for the supercollider... or putting out an opinion piece on Neutrinos...

Second... I can only say that things like this hurt the reputation of Harvard, the Smithsonian, Astrophysicists everywhere, and probably the city of Cambridge Mass....but most of all - the polar bears.

Lastly, Exxon - if you want to contribute to the arctic, how about finally getting around to paying all the money you owe for the Valdez, or are you hoping the world has forgotten what a disgrace your company is?

Ahh, one more thing. THANK YOU BRAD MILLER and the US House Committee on Science and Technology for starting to cut through the smoke and mirrors. The people of the US have had about enough of that.

8.12.2007

Summer at JPL

Been away for a bit - spent the summer at JPL working on the radar team for Saturn's moon Titan! Has been a great experience and terrific opportunity - check out some pictures from there and around SoCal through the link to Cosmic Bob's.

2.17.2007

Abe Lincoln vs. MLK

It occurred to me today that there is something a bit strange in the US (well, there are a lot of things...) - As I looked at my spring calender, I noticed that while I had MLK day off... President's day, the cheap amalgamation of Washington and Lincolns birthday... is barely still a holiday (ie, I'm still going in to work...) How can that be? Don't get me wrong, I think MLK day is well deserved. I just don't understand how we can slowly marginalize ol' Abe and George. Maybe putting GW's face on the dollar coin (brilliant! 3rd time is the charm!) was enough this year...?

2.08.2007

GOP strategist Frank Luntz

There are some days that you come across something so upsetting that you just want - well, I shouldn't even say that... - First some history, Luntz became notorious in environmental circles in 2003 for a leaked memo he wrote telling Republicans how to green their image. He told Republicans to "make the lack of scientific certainty a primary issue in the debate" over climate change, because "[s]hould the public come to believe that the scientific issues are settled, their views about global warming will change accordingly."

Yet, in his interview he says...

Q. Do you believe that climate change is real and happening?
A. I believe that it is, uh ... I have no solution to it right now.
Q. But is it real and happening?
A. Yes, I believe that it is an issue.

I've tried to write my opinion in a sane and 'nice' way about 20 times now and have just decided to let it go. All I can say is you are a hypocrite and it is sad that someone such as you can have more influence than a thousand scientists...

2.04.2007

181 Things to Do on the Moon

I am constantly asked, why bother going back to the Moon. Haven't we already done that? The only people who really ask that are those that haven't really done their research. Even Mars Overlord Bob Zubrin (who is super cool btw), had to admit that going to the Moon first is a reasonable idea. Well, now we Moonies (or is that taken...) have something to pull out and show - Check out this new document, 181 things to do on the Moon. I'll meet you there - tea is at 3.

Overwhelming evidence of human induced climate change

Well, here it is... the Fourth report - No matter how skeptical you are, you simply cannot ignore this report. 400 authors from 40 countries!!! This is not about politics, it's about having a future. If you don't believe, ask yourself why... Who are you supporting? Is that extra profitiablity next quarter really worth it? It's time for some hard choices - and you can either help create a solution or be held accountable... and believe me, you will be...

The world is getting rapidly hotter, and human actions are the driving force behind global warming. This is the conclusion of a report by The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), released on February 2 in Paris. The fourth assessment of its kind by the IPCC, the study builds on past assessments and six years of research by 400 authors from 40 countries.

The report states in a straightforward manner that "global atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide have increased markedly as a result of human activities since 1750 and now far exceed pre-industrial values." The causes of the increase in carbon dioxide concentration is determined to be due to fossil use and land-use changes. Agriculture takes the blame for increases in nitrous oxide and methane.

Globally both land and sea temperatures are rising at an alarming rate. Because the atmosphere is warming, water vapor content has increased since the 1980s because warmer air can hold more vapor. Melting glaciers and polar ices have caused rising sea levels, and annual average Arctic sea ice has shrunk by 2.7 % per decade, increasing to 7.4% in the summer.

1.17.2007

Winter in Oregon and other things

Well, since we've been here, we have had one of the wettest winters ever, more snow and colder temps than is normal and a windstorm that knocked out power across town... All that said, it still is easier to get to work than it was in North Dakota!

Alot has happened and I've avoided posting for a bit to let the dust settle. The surge and the death of Saddam both deserve some comment.

For Saddam, I can only say that I'm not sure I believe it or that it matters. I am a bit surprised HW Bush didn't go over to pull the lever (or did he... ;) People act upset that some footage made it out - frankly, only enough was shown here to make me wonder - how easy it would be to make things look a certain way...

I don't think making a martyr was a particularly good idea...long term...

As for the surge, more troops are not the way to a long term peace - especially if they are on a timetable. Not only do we not gain tactically, but everyone can already see our will is underminded. More importantly, you can't beat them into submission and proper behavior even with 10 million troops. If you put a cop on every corner in New York, would you stop crime?

I happen to also agree that you just can't pull everyone out however, with no clue about the people, the history, the culture, the language and the faiths, we are trying to impose conditions that simply will never work. Perhaps they need to work some of this out for themselves. Now might be the time to take a step back and get some help from outside our ranks rather than secure our position in this quagmire...

Of course, GW is a bit too proud to do that...

12.27.2006

The Sightline Institute and the Carless Experiment

"WHEN ALAN Durning's son, Gary, totaled their ancient Volvo last February and the insurance company sent a munificent replacement check for $594, his family made a decision that would land them on national TV: They would go for a year without a car..." From CNN to Fox, national media attention has focused on this decision (with obvious biases one way or the other). Read about their story for yourself and perhaps get some inspiration as to a better way of life at the Signtline Institute at:
http://www.sightline.org/

It is exciting (and rare...) to see people put values into action. Having lived without a car for six months now, I understand the types of decisions and difficulties being carless produces. Yet, it is not as hard as you might think. (Admittedly, Corvallis is an amazing city to make such a decision in...)

It all comes down to doing the right thing and being part of the solution. If YOU knew for certain that your Hummer, your consumption, your waste and pollution or any other factor was destroying the planet and that your grandchildren were going to suffer because of your decisions, would you not want to try and make a change?

How certain would you have to be?

If there was even a good chance that it was, would you not want to change your life for their sake (if not for humanities as a whole)?

Down deep inside YOU know right from wrong. YOU know that your decisions will effect the future and YOU KNOW that YOU can do more. I'm not asking you to change to world, I'm just asking for you to try and do ONE thing that will decrease your footprint on the environment. Anything will help and it's easier than you think!

12.05.2006

Science gets the beat-down

11.17.2006

Lasse Gjertsen - Amateur

A fantastic and funny idea!

11.12.2006

Flying Spaghetti Monster spotted in Germany

OMFGWTFBBQ! I knew it was true!! Long live the pirate fish!

11.10.2006

Thumpin

Well, I took a snippet of the Wootens thump off below and added some GW vocals...

A THUMPIN THUMP OFF with GW



11.08.2006

Thump off for the Thumpin

Well, Ol GW said it best - the election was a thumpin! and speakin of thumpin - gotta enjoy this!! You've earned it.

11.07.2006

Move On Call for Change

Tired of things as they are yet? Help convince others.

Call For Change

11.06.2006

Vote or Die

It's not that hard, just do it.

The Diebold AccuVote TS Voting Machine

Just in case you are not convinced - here the folks at Princeton lay it out.

Voting with Electronics

Just a reminder for those of you using electronic voting - you may not be getting what you vote for...Without confirmation, anything can (and perhaps already did) happen...

10.27.2006

Cheney endorses simulated drowning

Plain and simple - no politics - either it is or it is not torture. 99% of the world agrees that it IS torture. If keeping American's safe requires that we give up the things that make us American, then we don't deserve to be safe. You can't say you are a moral Republican and then endorse crap like this - it's a double standard and it is unAmerican and it does NOT make us any safer - however it DOES make you look just like Sadam. When you have become the enemy...you've lost the fight.



Mr Cheney told his interviewer that the ability to interrogate high value detainees
had "been a very important tool that we've had to be able to secure the nation ... we need to be able to continue that".

In some versions of waterboarding, prisoners are strapped to a board and their faces covered with cloth or cellophane while water is poured over their mouths to stimulate drowning. In others, they are forced head first into water.

"Well, it's a no-brainer for me," Mr Cheney replied. "But for a while there, I was criticised as being the vice president for torture. We don't torture. That's not what we're involved in."

Mr Cheney's comments set him at odds with the Military Commissions Act, which bars, under all circumstances, treatment of prisoners that inflicts serious physical or mental pain or suffering.

10.23.2006

Viking landers may have missed Martian life

You can't go looking for humans on another planet...every place is unique and life is not nearly as constrained as some have thought...

Gilbert Levin, one of the Viking scientists who has long argued that the GCMS test was flawed, told New Scientist that the new study provides "strong support" to the idea that life was indeed detected on Mars...

The outstanding puzzle is to explain what causes the high reactivity of the Martian soil, which keeps the level of organics so low despite a constant influx of organic material from asteroids, comets and other planetary sources. Most astrobiologists assume that some mysterious oxidising material in the soil is destroying the organic material but other possibilities are emerging.

Schulze-Makuch and Joop Houtkooper of the Justus-Liebig-University in Giessen, Germany, suggest that an exotic form of Martian life might provide a tidy explanation. They propose that an organism might have evolved on the Red Planet to use a solution of water and hydrogen peroxide as an intracellular fluid, rather than just water as Earth organisms do.