Climate, Dengue and a Moon for Pluto Mail 684 2110721

Mail 684 Thursday, July 21, 2011

· News on climate and models

· Police State ability or counter terrorism capability?

· Dengue Fever?

· A Chinese scam: alert Steve Jobs

· We got prizes?

· Pluto Has Another Moon

clip_image002

There is a variety of mail on matters related to climate modeling and global warming’

Enormous Underwater Volcanoes Discovered Near Antarctica

Jerry: You’ve been suggesting that underwater volcanoes might have some effect in the warming of the earth, if there is any way to measure the warming of the earh.

Enormous Underwater Volcanoes Discovered Near Antarctica <http://shar.es/HyJU5>

Source: popularmechanics.com

A British expedition finds more than a dozen underwater volcanoes, some of which are two miles high, near Antarctica. The remote area is home to hydrothermal vents and unusual, previously unknown animal species. <http://shar.es/HyJU5>

Russ

==

Earths Internal Heat

I have read on your website about the amount of heat coming from the interior of the earth. A recent post on Watts Up With This speaks to this subject: http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/07/21/20-trillion-watts-is-not-even-trenberths-missing-heat/#more-43819

Take care

Don

Don Horne

==

Heat from the Earth

Dr. Pournelle,

As usual, I much enjoy your blog. I have seen you wonder aloud how much heat comes from volcanoes under the oceans. This doesn’t quite address that problem, but gives a more general answer.

Adrian Ashfield

"The researchers found the decay of radioactive isotopes uranium-238 and thorium-232 together contributed 20 trillion watts to the amount of heat Earth radiates into space, about six times as much power as the United States consumes. U.S. power consumption in 2005 averaged about 3.34 trillion watts.

As huge as this value is, it only represents about half of the total heat leaving the planet. The researchers suggest the remainder of the heat comes from the cooling of the Earth since its birth."

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43786480/ns/technology_and_science-science/

Adrian Ashfield

==

And Dr. Spencer believes the evidence is overwhelming that the AGW theory is not credible:

http://www.drroyspencer.com/

I remain concerned about unrestricted increases in the amounts of CO2; enough so that I strongly recommend research and development into ways to remove it, probably by biological means, if the need becomes great. I don’t like open end experiments. That does not mean that we ought to bankrupt the United States reducing our CO2 emissions because even if ours were driven to zero the atmospheric CO2 would continue to increase as China and India develop. If CO2 is a threat, it will have to be dealt with, but Kyoto and carbon taxes and all that won’t do it; and without wealth we won’t be able to do anything else either.

clip_image002[1]

Police State News

Dozens of police departments nationwide are gearing up to use a tech company’s already controversial iris- and facial-scanning device that slides over an iPhone and helps identify a person or track criminal suspects. The so-called "biometric" technology, which seems to take a page from TV shows like "MI-5" or "CSI," could improve speed and accuracy in some routine police work in the field. However, its use has set off alarms with some who are concerned about possible civil liberties and privacy issues. The smartphone-based scanner, named Mobile Offender Recognition and Information System, or MORIS, is made by BI2 Technologies in Plymouth, Massachusetts, and can be deployed by officers out on the beat or back at the station.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/07/20/us-crime-identification-iris-idUSTRE76J4A120110720

——–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

I am a conservative, not an anarchist. I do not always fear when law enforcement gains new technical abilities. I don’t worry about that as much as I do about our inability to recognize a threat when we see one.

Our northern neighbor…

http://takimag.com/article/menstruating_at_the_mosqueteria/print

"As they might say on The Simpsons, the Toronto District School Board turned into the Taliban so slowly, I hardly noticed."

‘…even the Toronto District School Board didn’t notice, or else it would have been forced to charge itself with violating its own policy against “gender-based discrimination.” <http://www.tdsb.on.ca/_site/viewitem.asp?siteid=15&menuid=5016&pageid=4375> ‘

"Who are the appointed “menstruation inspectors”? The teachers? The imams? The boys who’d formerly played hooky?"

"Belligerent Muslims come as no surprise. It’s their infidel enablers and defenders that have me confused (again). "

Charles Brumbelow

The question is, can the West win a cultural war? Do we have enough faith in our own culture even to recognize that we may be in danger?

 

clip_image002[2]

This is bad.  This mosquito fits the profiles for a dengue fever mosquito — based on my memory of places I went that had that disease.

  The Asian Tiger mosquito made its way as far West as Arizona and as far north as New York!

<.>

The Asian tiger mosquito, named for its distinctive black-and-white striped body, is a relatively new species to the U.S. that is more vicious, harder to kill and, unlike most native mosquitoes, bites during the daytime. It also prefers large cities over rural or marshy areas—thus earning the nickname among entomologists as "the urban mosquito."

</>

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303795304576454312427933764.html

The dengue fever mosquitoes bite in the daytime and these mosquitoes are more common in urban environments or places where many people gather on certain islands.

——–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

clip_image002[3]

 

‘ . . . the set-up of the stores was so convincing that the employees themselves seemed to believe they worked for Apple.’

<http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Entire-Apple-stores-being-apf-403861469.html?x=0&.v=10>

Roland Dobbins

An amazing story, actually.

Globalization for you.

http://birdabroad.wordpress.com/2011/07/20/are-you-listening-steve-jobs/

Being the curious types that we are, we struck up some conversation with these salespeople who, hand to God, all genuinely think they work for Apple. I tried to imagine the training that they went to when they were hired, in which they were pitched some big speech about how they were working for this innovative, global company – when really they’re just filling the pockets of some shyster living in a prefab mansion outside the city by standing around a fake store disinterestedly selling what may or may not be actual Apple products that fell off the back of a truck somewhere.

clip_image002[4]

Prizes…we got prizes…
Importance: High

I was reminded of your exposition of “an instant space program” stimulated by prizes in your recent interview with Glenn Reynolds when I read the story below. Apparently prizes for technology development are good for shit…so why not space travel? Hmmm…maybe that is not a compelling argument…on the other hand, this will likely fertilize many Windows jokes…

Chris Christopher

 

BILL GATES SEEKS TO REINVENT THE TOILET

By Zoe Fox

Mashable

July 19, 2011

http://mashable.com/2011/07/19/bill-gates-reinvent-toilet/

The man who revolutionized the personal computer is putting his efforts — and foundation — to revolutionizing toilets. Microsoft founder Bill Gates said he will dedicate $42 million towards reinventing the toilet.

Water hygiene and safe waste disposal are two of the biggest causes of infant mortality in the developing countries. Gates and his foundation hope to create inexpensive toilets to vastly improve the living conditions of millions of people. It may seem like a silly subject but it’s one that could save lives around the world.

“No innovation in the past 200 years has done more to save lives and improve health than the sanitation revolution triggered by invention of the toilet,” said Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the president of the Global Development Program at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. “But it did not go far enough. It only reached one-third of the world. What we need are new approaches. New ideas.”

The initiative was launched by Burwell on Tuesday in Kigali, Rwanda.

Part of the foundation’s plan is the Reinventing the Toilet Challenge http://nhne-pulse.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/wsh-reinvent-the-toilet-challenge.pdf which funds research at eight universities around the world to develop a toilet that will turn waste into energy, clean water or nutrients. The solution must be a stand-alone unit without piped-in water, a sewer connection or outside electricity. The foundation partnered with USAID to fix water sanitation as part of the UN’s 2015 Millennium Development Goals.

Today, 40% of the world’s population does not have access to flush toilets. One billion people defecate in the open. Each year, 1.5 million children die each year from diarrhea, many of which are preventable with improved sanitation.

The foundation is prioritizing convenience and affordability in the solutions it considers. The toilets must be easy to install and cost no more than $0.05 a day to maintain.

clip_image002[5]

Parkes Radio Telescope, Shuttle & ISS

Jerry,

Today’s APOD has the Australian Parkes radio telescope with Atlantis and ISS streaking overhead. The telescope was featured in the delightful "little" film, "The Dish."

Regards, Charles Adams, Bellevue, NE

<http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap110721.html>

"The Parkes 64 meter radio telescope is known for its contribution to human spaceflight, famously supplying television images from the Moon to denizens of planet Earth during Apollo 11. The enormous, steerable, single dish looms in the foreground of this early evening skyscape. Above it, the starry skies of New South Wales, Australia include familiar southerly constellations Vela, Puppis, and Hydra along with a sight that will never be seen again. Still glinting in sunlight and streaking right to left just below the radio telescope’s focus cabin, the space shuttle orbiter Atlantis has just undocked with the International Space Station for the final time. The space station itself follows arcing from the lower right corner of the frame, about two minutes behind Atlantis in low Earth orbit…"

clip_image003

3d

Dr. Pournelle,

Jay Leno has been using a 3d printer for two years to fabricate parts for collector cars–the finished copy

goes to a machinist, who then can have an exact model while machining the new part.

http://www.jaylenosgarage.com/search/?tag=3D printer

jomath

clip_image003[1]

Hubble Spies Another Moon of Pluto

Jerry,

I just saw this release on the New Horizons website. Note the PI for New Horizons calls Pluto a planet–right on! To me Pluto will always be a planet; I remain a fuddy-duddy.

Regards, Charles Adams, Bellevue, NE

Headline on New Horizons website:

<http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/news_center/news/20110720.php>

"Fourth Moon Adds to Pluto’s Appeal

July 20, 2011

"Could this planet get any more interesting?" says New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute, Boulder Colo. "We already know that when New Horizons provides the first close-up look at Pluto in July 2015, we’ll see planetary wonders we never could have expected. Yet this discovery gives us another hint of what awaits us in the Pluto system, and we’re already thinking about how we want to study this new moon with New Horizons. What a bonus for planetary science and for New Horizons!"

A Hubble Space Telescope observing team led by Mark Showalter of the SETI Institute, Mountain View, Calif., and Douglas Hamilton of the University of Maryland, College Park, detected the new moon in five sets of Hubble Space Telescope images taken over the past two months. Astronomers are still trying to better peg orbital details on the object, designated "S/2011 P1" or "P4" until it receives a permanent name. They’ve put its diameter at between 8 and 21 miles (13 to 34 kilometers) and estimate that it travels on a circular, equatorial orbit nearly 37,000 miles (about 59,000 kilometers) from Pluto – placing the new moon between the orbits of the moons Nix and Hydra….

In a Box Offset:

…P4 is the smallest moon discovered around Pluto. By comparison, Charon, Pluto’s largest moon, is 648 miles (1,024 kilometers) across, and the other moons, Nix and Hydra, are in the range of 20 to 70 miles in diameter (32 to 113 kilometers). On the anniversary of the first landing of men on our moon, New Horizons mission team scientists have announced the discovery of a fourth moon around Pluto…

P4 on Jun 28, 2011 & July 3, 2011:

<http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/news_center/news/pictures/20110720_01_lg.jpg>

 

Pluto is a planet. Clyde Tombaugh told me so personally.

clip_image002[6]

 

clip_image005

clip_image002[8]

Obamacare and Job Creation 20110721

View 684 Thursday, July 21, 2011

· ObamaCare and Jobs

· Secrets of economic growth

· Death, Taxes, and Federal Service

·

clip_image002

I frequently get mail proclaiming its importance, but this time my old friend and correspondent Joanne Dow may be right:

This is the most important graph of the day courtesy of HotAir.com.

Report: Private sector job creation ground to a halt almost instantly after Obamacare passed "http://hotair.com/archives/2011/07/20/report-private-sector-job-creation-ground-to-a-halt-almost-instantly-after-obamacare-passed/"

Before April 2010 we see more than 67,000 jobs created per month. After that date it dropped to 6400 jobs per month.

{^_^}

Of course I can’t vouch for the data. I know little about this web site. Still, it seems reasonable: businesses were told that if you hire people you will have to provide healthcare for them or pay fines. That makes expansion of a company a risky business. The Republicans were pledging to repeal ObamaCare or to refuse to fund it, but that doesn’t seem to be happening. If this is anything like correct, it certainly is the most important graph of the day – and ought to be informing the Republican strategists who are busy participating in the next round of the Deficit Dance.

clip_image002[1]

Los Angeles has a new law making it a hate crime to shout at a bicyclist who is trying to annoy you, and awarding them triple damages if they sue you for verbal assault, etc. The ruling class has decided. Motorists must pay for the roads. Bicyclists get to use them free, and lawyers get to shake the motorists down. Isn’t that fun? It’s neither democracy nor rule of law; it’s just the modern system.

If I seem in a bit of a foul mood, I wasted considerable time trying to set up an account with Barnes and Noble to publish some of my works for the Nook. I filled out all their forms, and got an email saying I had to confirm some of the details by telephone. After 43 minutes of being on hold waiting for “the next available agent” (I have no evidence that there was ever more than one, or indeed any at all) the phone system ceased making automatic announcements about all agents being busy and simply hung up on me. Redialing got me the message that the office was closed for the day, please call during business hours. I had intended to announce that you could get some of my works in eBook format for the Nook, but at the moment that is not true. I’ll try again tomorrow, but one wonders if B&N is not getting business advice from Borders.

The Last Shuttle has landed, and the United States is no longer a space faring nation.

Fortunately the world now knows one of the secrets of economic growth. I would have thought that cheap energy and lots of economic freedom would produce economic miracles, but there appears to be another important factor.

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/global/2011/07/chart-penile-length-leads-little-economic-growth/40117/

Steve Chu

And, we seem to have made another discovery. Something is as certain as death and taxes.

Death, Taxes, and a Federal Job?

Dr. Pournelle —

Apparently we can add a federal job to the list of certainties.

Some federal workers more likely to die than lose jobs http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2011-07-18-fderal-job-security_n.htm?loc=interstitialskip

"The federal government fired 0.55% of its workers in the budget year that ended Sept. 30 — 11,668 employees in its 2.1 million workforce. Research shows that the private sector fires about 3% of workers annually for poor performance, says John Palguta, former research chief at the federal Merit Systems Protection Board which handles federal firing disputes."

"The job security rate for all federal workers was 99.43% last year and nearly 100% for those on the job more than a few years."

"Only 27 of 35,000 federal attorneys were fired last year. None was laid off. Death claimed 33."

Getting rid of the bunny inspectors is going to be hard.

Pieter

Getting rid of the bunny inspectors will indeed be hard. It is set up to be hard, and no one is seriously trying to make it happen. The goal of the ruling class is to continue to raise revenues while borrowing more money, and “paying” with promises to cut spending Real Soon Now. Death and Taxes and Federal Service. Das Buros immer stehen. The Iron Law prevails.

And I see I have spent the day trying to get set up with Barnes and Noble, to no avail. Thanks to all those who have recently subscribed and renewed subscriptions. That helps a lot.

clip_image004

clip_image002[2]

clip_image006

clip_image002[3]

Chaos Manor Reports: A Guide

 

July 20, 2011

In June/July 2011 the Chaos Manor web site moved from a boutique web host maintained by my friends Greg Lincoln and Brian Bilbrey to Blue Host. The Chaos Manor Site has been around a long time, and we have accumulated a great deal of information, some of historical value only to those with an interest in the development of the Web, but some of continued interest, and a few of considerable importance.

Begin with the general summary page for Chaos Manor Reports at http://www.jerrypournelle.com/reports/Reports.html. This page isn’t well organized, and it’s not entirely complete, but it’s about the best we have. It can also be confusing, because it points to just about everything, and it would take a while to browse through everything there. It is also in FrontPage, which means it is exceedingly hard to revise. Fortunately, this page is in the new and modern system, which makes it possible for me to make revisions and generally keep it up. It should be obvious that I prefer the old FrontPage, but that is no longer a supported program, and I’ve been advised that I will learn to love this WordPress system Real Soon Now.

There is a lot of interesting stuff here. It’s all free, but of course you are welcome to subscribe. Indeed I urge you to…

Some are long standing, such as The Iron Law of Bureaucracy. Some have to do with the Space Program. They are all worth attention.

 

image

There are also Science Reports, which has its own summary. It contains essays on:

image

There is also a special reports page listing reports I have recommended from time to time.

 

image

Other Reports recommended at one time of another. These include:

 

image

I will have more revisions of this page from time to time. There is a rich store of intellectual wealth in the Chaos Manor Reports, and while finding the gold among all the clutter can be confusing, it is often worthwhile. More another time; I’ll try to keep this page updates at leas a little.

 

image

 

const

Things to Come: Gloomy Dancing View 684 20110720

View 684 Wednesday, July 20, 2011

· The Deficit Debates: outcome

· Doom, Gloom, and the future

· Albert Jay Nock on liberty

clip_image002

Things to Come

The Deficit Dance will continue. When it’s over, we will raise the deficit limit. We will pledge to cut spending, and there will be a great deal of self congratulations over the pledges. Some programs will not increase quite so much, and that will be called a big cut. We will raise taxes in order to get the pledge to cut spending.

The Department of Agriculture will continue to send out inspectors to see that stage magicians who use rabbits in their acts have Federal Permits to do so. People who sell rabbits as pets will continue to be shaken down for Federal Permits, although those who raise rabbits for restaurants, or who sell rabbits as food for serpents, do not need the permit. Incidentally, the simplest way to continue to sell rabbits out of your back yard is to get each purchaser to certify that this rabbit will be fed to a snake or a komodo dragon or a human gourmand, but will not be loved and kept as a pet. Show that to the Federal Inspector, and contemplate that the Inspector probably makes more money than nearly anyone who is selling rabbits out of his back yard. And probably more than the stage magician.

The Department of Education will continue to maintain a Special Weapons and Tactics team, which it can use to raid people’s houses at dawn in search of education fraud perpetrators whether they live at that house or not. It will probably hire some new people as the Department gets automatic increases.

Whoever enforces the Consumer Products “safety” standards will hire more people to harass bicycle and toy makers, driving what little manufacturing that still exists in the United States out of the country. Retailers will be harassed as the standard goes from the present 300 parts per million of lead in bicycles to 100 parts per million, and those involved in the toy industry, already shaken by the imposition of the 300 parts per million rule on everything in their inventory will have further burdens as they try to prove that everything they have in stock meets this new standard. More inspectors will be hired. The number of firms they inspect will decrease as more are driven out of business. Big companies will absorb the new costs, and chuckle as their smaller competitors fold. Toy prices will rise. Employment in the toy industry in the United States will fall.

The unemployment rate will continue to be officially at 9% or so; the real rate will continue to be higher as more people stay unemployed year after year.

More regulations will be promulgated. More federal employees will be hired to enforce them. No one will ask much less answer the question “Is this something we ought to be borrowing money to do? Could we get along without this?”

All over the government life will go on. Some government workers will get less overtime and will have to find other income or actually cut back on their standard of living. All will get smaller cost of living increases, but they will keep their jobs and pensions and health care.

Taxes will rise, and the economy will continue to suffer from high energy costs and excessive regulation.

clip_image002[1]

Gloom

I don’t mean to be excessively gloomy. This is what will happen this year. The only remedy to this mess is a return to sanity. The present Administration believes that hope and change means more government control, and that any cut in government is a threat to meaningful change; bunny inspectors are part of progress, as are inspectors to be sure that children can safely eat bicycles and children’s books, and unsafe old CAT IN THE HAT volumes printed before the new benign regulations will be destroyed. Government is good, and more is better. So long as this sentiment prevails in the White House, the Kabuki theater will continue.

Obama will insist on strings to be attached to any permission to raise the debt limit; those strings will let him spend more money, not do drastic cuts in spending.

I don’t know the details of what will happen, but we will survive it. America is going to get the government it deserves and it will get it good and hard. We are going to have to take an economic dose of salts. We will have to stop Washington from spending all that money. If something can’t go on forever, it will stop.

As to our overseas adventures, if something cannot go on forever, it will stop. The Kabuki dance can’t go on forever. Hope and Change can’t go on forever.

clip_image002[2]

If you have not seen Albert Jay Nock’s essay on just what happened with the New Deal, it may provide you with some illumination as to what is going on now.

I believe that when the historian looks back on the last 20 years of American life, the thing that will puzzle him most is the amount of self-inflicted punishment that Americans seem able to stand. They take it squarely on the chin at the slightest provocation and do not even wait for the count before they are back for more.

True, they have always been good at it. For instance, once on a time they were comparatively a free people, regulating a large portion of their lives to suit themselves. They had a great deal of freedom as compared with other peoples of the world.

But apparently they could not rest until they threw their freedom away. They made a present of it to their own politicians, who have made them sweat for their gullibility ever since. They put their liberties in the hands of a praetorian guard made up exactly on the old Roman model, and not only never got them back, but as long as that praetorian guard of professional politicians lives and thrives – which will be quite a while if its numbers keep on increasing at the present rate – they never will.

There is considerably more. Nock understood that freedom is not free.

clip_image002[2]

You wrote: "America is going to get the government it deserves and it will get it good and hard."

I vehemently and strenuously disagree. America — or more correctly my generation and the next few — will get the government the Boomers deserved. It takes time for decisions to take effect

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Nock would disagree: the decision to trade in liberty for something else was made long ago. There were several opportunitied for recovery and trend reversal, particularly with Reagan, and later with the Gingrich recovery of Congress, but the opportunities were squandered in favor of “big government conservatism” whatever that is. Now we continue to learn: freedom is not free. Free men are not equal, Equal men are not free. The universe is not always fair. All too often

the race is not to the swift or the battle to the strong, nor does food come to the wise or wealth to the brilliant or favor to the learned; but time and chance happen to them all.

We believed that with enough government all things would be possible: that inequality is a “social problem” and all social problems can be “solved” with government action. Alas, the only actions government can take involve creating bureaucracies and spending money. Bureaucracies act in their own manner through the Iron Law of Bureaucracy. Once created they may or may not do what they were created to do, but they will do. They will continue to do long after the need for their original creation has vanished. They will do even if their very existence harms the purpose for which they were founded. They will protect their existence at nearly any cost. Das Buros stehen immer.

The prevailing sentiment in this country, both the Boomer generation and yours, appears to be that there are “problems” and they can be “solved” by government; that government is the answer, not the problem. Over time some become enlightened. Perhaps we are learning. Perhaps we can cease to sow the wind; but the current Deficit Dance is not encouraging. The only encouragement I see is that more and more of the population is beginning to understand that not all “problems” can or even should be “solved” by government action: That that is not only a limit to the power of government to fix things, but good reason to believe that too much government breaks things. There may be a trend back toward freedom. We’ll just have to see.

clip_image002[3]

In one of my science fiction series I postulate the CoDominium, a formal arrangement in which the United States and the Soviet Union divide the world (and the small part of interstellar space accessible to them). They hate each other, but they fear outsiders more. They have devised a system to maintain power. One part of it is the Bureau of Relocation, which moves large groups of people, sending some out to interstellar colonies. There is also a Bureau of Science whose task is to suppress inventions that might threaten the CoDominium. Unlicensed scientists may be turned over to BuReloc.

Now it appears that the demise of the Soviet Union may not have precluded the formation of BuReloc.

CoDo BuReloc?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/
environment/2011/jul/20/
un-climate-change-peacekeeping

Jim. crawford

Note that once such a Bureau is created, it will be governed by the Iron Law. Will our Legions be involved in enforcement? We may be sure that we will not invade China to close unlicensed coal plants, of course; but an international bureau would be happy to use the US Courts to accomplish the same thing in West Virginia. It is not known what will be the fate of AGW Deniers under the new peace keeping mandate. Could Deniers be charged and transported to The Hague for trial and imprisonment? One is tempted to laugh at such absurdities, but stranger things have happened.

Incidentally, there is an explication of the Iron Law in action in a discussion of net neutrality here. Participants include John Dvorak, Leo Laporte, Larry Magid, and me.

 

 

 

clip_image002[3]

clip_image005

clip_image002[3]