Month: December 2009

  • Another Way To Hide The Decline

    I have been sitting on this story for a couple of days – waiting for verification. I now have some. Watts Up With That says that the CRU (of ClimateGate fame) cherry picked Russian data. And you probably couldn’t guess this in a million years, but they left out the data from the coldest stations.…

  • The smart way to avoid bankruptcy

    I’ve been marveling over the president’s contention that unless we spend a ton more money, we will soon be bankrupt. I like the way David Harsanyi puts it in his column with the appropriate title of “All the president’s mendacity“: President Barack Obama grimly warned America this week that if his health care plans fail,…

  • It Would Damage What We Hold Dear

    That I think is one of the most eloquent points ever made against the alternative energy craze as it is currently being manifested. We know what the world looks like now. How will it look if we have to get 100% of our energy from natural sources with technology that is available now? Or even…

  • Being white isn’t “enough”

    I’ll say it isn’t! I woke up to see a truly marvelous headline staring me in the face. Ethnic groups say ‘white’ isn’t enough on the 2010 census What is apparently going on (at least according to Detroit Free Press staff writer Niraj Warikoo) is that Arab Americans and others fear a “loss” of “benefits”…

  • Polywell Down Under

    Among the many wonderful links from the 2009 IEC conference, we learn the boys at the University of Sydney have made their own small Polywell device: Cute little guy. Congrats to proud parents Matthew Carr and Dr. Joe Khachan, who got the wee tyke up to 1T magnet strength and 250KV drive depth. Also of…

  • “Precautionary principle” throws caution to the wind

    The misapplication of the so-called “Precautionary Principle” is one of my pet peeves, because it is selectively invoked. It is routinely applied to the risk of environmental damage but never the risk of economic damage. Rand Simberg takes a close look at the Precautionary Principle, which is problematic at best: Those advocating that we upend…

  • 210 years ago….

    Yesterday marked the 210th anniversary of George Washington’s death, and Michael McNeil has a fascinating overview of the man and his life. Despite his immense importance, notes McNeil, Washington is more of a mystery now than ever. This year (2009) marks the 210th anniversary of the passing (on earthdate 1799-12-15) of the man who, first…

  • What to do with a Senator in need of an etiquette lesson?

    Reading that Senator Schumer called an airline flight attendant a “bitch” simply because she asked him to turn off his cell phone as federal rules require, a couple of things came to mind. First, we have one of the quintessential champions of massive federal power — a guy whose daily existence consists of figuring out…

  • Sorry, but the green just had to go!

    It was getting tired. And confusing. Yeah, I get that way myself, but back in June, acting with the very best of intentions, I added the green color at the top of this blog in order to express solidarity with the Iranian protesters. It was intended to be temporary, and while I of course still…

  • dead issue

    Dead bodies suck. No, really. I feel incredibly sorry for the owners of this land: Some people have skeletons in their closet. Others have ’em buried beneath their house. That’s the life lesson a group of construction workers learned in Fairmount on Saturday, when they unearthed seven old graves. Police spokesman Lt. Frank Vanore said…

  • An idea whose time has cum?

    In Nevada, brothel owners are contemplating adding male prostitutes to their stables: The owner of a brothel more than two hours’ drive from Las Vegas said she hopes to hire Nevada’s first legal male prostitutes within a month, now that state health officials have approved a method to test men for infectious diseases. The world…

  • Fewer people means fewer emissions!

    On CNN, there’s been a serious discussion of implementing a worldwide one-child policy, and Jack Cafferty is obviously sympathetic. CNN’s Jack Cafferty all but endorsed a global version of China’s oppressive one-child policy on Friday’s Situation Room. He repeated the argument of Canadian journalist Diane Francis, that population control is the only way to fight…

  • “Copendeniers” at the gate!

    Probably in the hope of driving a stake through the heart of AGW skeptics in Copenhagen, a self-described Al Gore trainee named Kevin Grandia has created the term “Copendenier.” He must really like it, for he has even authored a Wiki page announcing the term to the world. I’m always fascinated by new words, but…

  • The AP Investigates ClimateGate

    The Associated Press puts one of their top reporters on the ClimateGate scandal. LONDON – E-mails stolen from climate scientists show they stonewalled skeptics and discussed hiding data — but the messages don’t support claims that the science of global warming was faked, according to an exhaustive review by The Associated Press. Ah. Yes. It…

  • Fraud for a worthy cause?

    It’s a complicated read, but “The Smoking Gun At Darwin Zero” by Willis Eschenbach (which Jerry Pournelle calls a must-read) explains in detail why Climategate is about a lot more than the scientific bitch fight that the AGW advocates and their media allies are allies would have people believe. You should read it all, as…

  • Sarah Palin Reads Poetry

    Note what a warm welcome Wm. Shatner gets when he comes on. Then note how much warmer the welcome for Sarah is. More reactions at Hill Buzz. And if you want to read Sarah’s book to make sure Shatner got his lines right may I suggest: Going Rogue: An American Life Cross Posted at Power…

  • Communist Physics

    Conserve momentum comrades? I don’t think so. The time has come to liberate it from those who have captured it in the name of greed and personal profit. Cross Posted at Power and Control

  • Does the Constitution limit Congress? At all?

    This video discussion (with Senator Orrin Hatch, Eugene Volokh, and Randy Barnett) of the constitutionality of the Health Care Mandate is over an hour long, but really worth watching. I was especially impressed by what Senator Hatch says about the importance of the Constitution as a restraint on government. Renewed my faith to see a…

  • God Bless America

    MMcA notes some health care polling: Are you opposed because it gets government too involved in health care or because it would not involve government enough? Too much government involvement: 90% Not enough government involvement: 6% Not sure: 4% I am so damned proud of my country right now. PROGRAM NOTE: My blogging may continue…

  • Is being right more important than winning?

    Regardless of what her politics are, I liked what Carly Fiorina said here about Climategate. This week, diplomats from around the world are gathering in Copenhagen for the global climate change summit–an event that has been marked by controversy in the wake of the “climate-gate” scandal that has recently and rightly gained significant international media…