Philosoraptor
Monday, November 09, 2009
 
Funny Venn Diagrams

Actually funny (though some are actually Euler diagrams, and others are incorrectly drawn).
 
 
The Weekly Standard, Where It's Always Good News For Republicans

Jonathan Chait at TNR.
 
Tuesday, November 03, 2009
 
Bad Day For the OD
McDonnell, Bolling, Cuccinelli Win

Ugh. The red team wins the races for governor, lt. governor, and attorney general.

Lean times ahead for the beleaguered VA state university system coming up.
 
Monday, November 02, 2009
 
Deeds for Governor

The case for Deeds over McDonnell is clear and compelling.

Deeds is a reasonable centrist, McDonnell is a far-right conservative. Deeds has been up-front about the fact that the OD has little choice but to raise taxes to help solve its transportation problem. McDonnell wants to take the money out of the education budget...and, let me tell you, we don't have any to spare. (I'm the first to admit that Va universities have to do their part in hard times...but we're operating on virtually nothing as it is.)

Deeds is a moderate who's got a demonstrable record of finding a middle ground between reasonable liberal policies and the conservative positions held by many Virginians. Deeds is obviously a smart bet for governor; one can't really say the same thing about McDonnell.
 
 
Nations Are Not Brands
Nations Do Not Have Brands

This is the proximate cause of my current irritation on this front. (See also: this.)

This is not a difficult point to understand. Are people so conceptually impoverished that they have to understand everything in terms of buying and selling? The United States is built upon certain ideas and principles, and associated with certain orientations and projects. These things are far more important than the frivolous business of marketing. We are not a cereal, we are not a shiny new car, we are not a pair of jeans. The great American project, flawed though it is, is not analogous to some mere money-making scheme. The Constitution is not the Nike swoosh, nor is it similar to it in any interesting sense. Nor, even, is the flag, though there is at least a minimal similarity there.

Shut up about the brad BS already. "Branding" is not a word, unless its something done to cattle.

There's normally no good reason to harp on words, but the mindless assimilation of everything human to selling lurks in the background of such misuses of 'brand' and its cognates, and that is not only confused but otherwise pernicious as well.

Two seconds of thought is enough to see why it's past time for this irritating piece of lackwit jargon to go.
 
Sunday, November 01, 2009
 
Paranormal Activity

Scariest new movie I've seen in a long time. Really well done. Probably could have been 20 minutes shorter, but that's a pretty minor complaint. Not for those with a low tolerance for hand-held camera effects.
 
 
Personal Locator Beacons, Stupid Hikers and Unnecessary "Rescues"

Not only are rescue crews risking their lives on this ridiculous BS, but the rest of us are paying for it.

Here's one case:
Last month two men and their teenage sons tackled one of the world’s most unforgiving summertime hikes: the Grand Canyon’s parched and searing Royal Arch Loop. Along with bedrolls and freeze-dried food, the inexperienced backpackers carried a personal locator beacon — just in case.

In the span of three days, the group pushed the panic button three times, mobilizing helicopters for dangerous, lifesaving rescues inside the steep canyon walls.

The Grand Canyon’s Royal Arch loop, the National Park Service warns, “has a million ways to get into serious trouble” for those lacking skill and good judgment. One evening the fathers-and-sons team activated their beacon when they ran out of water.

Rescuers, who did not know the nature of the call, could not launch the helicopter until morning. When the rescuers arrived, the group had found a stream and declined help.

That night, they activated the emergency beacon again. This time the Arizona Department of Public Safety helicopter, which has night vision capabilities, launched into emergency mode.

When rescuers found them, the hikers were worried they might become dehydrated because the water they found tasted salty. They declined an evacuation, and the crew left water.

The following morning the group called for help again. This time, according to a park service report, rescuers took them out and cited the leader for “creating a hazardous condition” for the rescue teams.

Morons. If I'd have pulled this kind of crap even once I'd never be able to look at myself in the mirror again.

I understand the reasons that states are hesitant to make such people pay for their own rescues, but surely the worst offenders could be charged for them.

 
 
Vatican Condemns Halloween as Anti-Christian

Because fake zombies are more dangerous than actual pedophilia.
 
Thursday, October 29, 2009
 
Pachycephalosaurus, Sygimoloch, and Something I've Never Heard Of All The Same Species?

Interesting.
 
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
 
Is Modern Man A Wimp Compared To Our Ancestors?

I hesitate to post this, not only because I'm going to hear about it from the Mystic, but also because its claims sound more than a little sensationalist.
 
Monday, October 19, 2009
 
Fighting Over There So We Don't Have To Fight Over Here
Or

Are Civilian Lives More Valuable Than Military Lives?


Since 9/11 I've advocated giving al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan both barrels. Little doubt remains that our Iraq adventure was, to put it delicately, counterproductive. But in Afghanistan, the cause was just and the goals were clear and rational. However, I'm starting to wonder whether an argument that's long percolated in the back of my mind against the Iraq war might cut against the Afghan war as well. (The argument might very well be hogwash, but I present it here for your consideration.)

The Bush administration and its cheerleaders were fond of saying that we had to fight "them" "over there" (i.e. in Iraq) so that we didn't have to fight them over here. This struck me as a terrible argument for some fairly obvious and widely-understood reasons--first, if "they" were supposed to be al Qaeda, then "they" weren't actually
in Iraq (not at least until after we invaded). Second, you don't get to pull an innocent third party (in this case the Iraqi people) into a war just because you'd rather not fight it on your own soil. Nothing new there. (Although we did get rid of Saddam, and that should not be underestimated as a benefit. We did somehow manage to replace him with something not obviously better--which a priori I would have thought impossible.)

But I've also thought rather a lot about the following point:
9/11 aside, we've long been pretty damn safe in fortress America. Attacking us here--in a major way at least--is hard. It was largely our own complacency that allowed the 9/11 plot to succeed. (Or, we should say, partially succeed, because we (in some sense of 'we') thwarted a large percentage of it when the passengers of flight 93 won their partial victory against their hijackers.) Now, were we to take the analogy seriously, we'd note that, even if you've got a mighty fortress, sometimes it's in your interest to sally forth and meet your enemy on the field of battle. However, when you've got approximately the most badass fortress of all time, and your enemy is puny and backward, let me suggest that you really ought to think twice about leaving your fortress to go fight said enemy on exactly his terms. It simply isn't obvious to me--even ignoring all the other very fine reasons not to have invaded Iraq--that some guy ought to have to ride through the streets of Falluja in an unarmored Humvee in order to marginally decrease the probability that I will be attacked here safe in the Shenandoah Valley. In order to (allegedly) make fortress America just a teensy bit safer, we send our troops into the very belly of the beast, to a place where planting IEDs is a piece of cake, and avoiding them is virtually impossible--to the only place where our enemies have something like an advantage. I'm not against sending in the troops in cases in which it makes sense; I'm just not sure that this one makes sense.

I mean, suppose there's a monster in the mountains. It's really, really hard for him to get into our valley, and if he does, even if everything goes perfectly for him, he cannot even dream of harming or killing more than a tiny fraction of our people. The valley just isn't an easy place for him to attack. But in the mountains, in his domain, he's a real demon. Now, are we sure we want to send out a hunting party to hit him exactly where he's strongest? I mean, if that's the smart thing to do, then fine. But is it? Heck, I'd even be willing to sign up if the strategy were sound. But I'd want to know what the problem is with just, um, staying out of the mountains and letting him come to us, where we have innumerable advantages. Let him be the one to fight on unfamiliar ground and unfavorable conditions.

Two points:

A. I'm wondering if people somehow think that military lives are less valuable than civilian lives. That would explain why they're willing to send soldiers out to fight on the enemy's home turf, where he is strongest, instead of making him come to us, where we are. I reject this view entirely, of course. I don't see any significant way in which military deaths are less tragic than civilian deaths.

B. I wonder whether--if an argument like the above is correct at all--it might not be applicable to Afghanistan now. I wonder whether we've reached a point of diminishing returns there, whether it might be better at this point to just pack our boys up and bring them back home safe, and let them take their (excellent) chances here with the rest of us. If al Qaeda masses in bombable units again in the future, then we'll bomb them. But for now, maybe it'd be better to let them try to come and get us if they think they can.


And last of all a final question about Iraq: do even the Bush dead-enders think that there's any appreciable chance of al Qaeda having killed 4,300, injured 30,000 others and wiped out two trillion dollars of American assets if we
hadn't gone into Iraq? Even if they'd pulled off another 9/11 they couldn't get those numbers. They in essence scored a super-9/11 because the Bush/Cheney administration sent our troops over there. And this is not even to mention Iraqi casualties. (Of course we did kill a lot of al Qaeda operatives, though it's not clear how many we created. To determine whether this argument is sound we'd have to know how all those numbers shake out.)

So the point is really just something like: it may be time to bring 'em all home, even if that does make us marginally less safe. It's not clear to me that, in a case like this, they ought to have to be lots less safe so that the rest of us can be more safe. We're already pretty darned safe, and in a case like this, it's not clear that what we collectively stand to gain outweighs what our troops stand to lose.

(I'm fairly sure there's some kind of error in there, but I don't know what it is.)
 
The sleep of reason begets monsters
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