Pneumonia, Washington hysteria

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

The map is not the territory.

Alfred Korzybski

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

bubbles

bubbles

This will be brief.

My long term infection was pneumonia. I suspected it when I just stayed in bed and began to feel better. Previously I would try to rally and the result was a relapse. I went to the doctors and they found nothing. By Tuesday I had had enough and had Mr. Galloway take me out to Kaiser for the day, where I found a young beginning resident who listened, examined me, sent me to x-ray – where the technician could see something going on in the lower left side of my lungs. After that it was shots to start the antibiotics, pharmacy to get a ten day course of antibiotics, and the rest of the day in bed.

The treatment is what you’d expect, sanitation, bed rest, and the anti-biotics. It’s working well enough that I have confidence it will work, but I am not starting a full work schedule until I know more. After a day of bed rest I’d feel enough better to act as if I were recovering, which would trigger the relapses. Not this time. If I’m not in bed I’m sitting quietly, warm, reading old Nero Wolfe novels. I owe you this report, and thanks to those who made inquiries. But I don’t know how long to recovery. I’ll let you know when I do.

But it’s definitely pneumonia.

bubbles

The news remains absurd. Today I heard on Fox News a Democrat official say that Mr. Trump clearly deserves impeachment. Asked for what crime – the Constitution is specific that there must be “high crime” – she said the President shared confidential information with the Russians. Since, so far as I know, that is an act of governance within the powers of the Presidency, and is certainly not prohibited in any statute, it is extraordinary that anyone claiming familiarity – much less expertise – would say such a thing in public, but it is apparently the new standard of journalism.

I haven’t much been following the news, but so far as I can see the President told Mr. Comey he hoped he’d be finished with the Russian investigation soon. This was apparently gleaned from leaks of Mr. Comey’s notes. If there is anyone on this planet, including Mr. Comey, who was unaware that President Trump wished the Russian investigation, started as a distraction from the flood of leaks coming from the State Department, would soon be over, I would be astonished; and even in Mr. Comey’s notes, conveniently leaked, I saw no hint of a direct order or a command. If that is a high crime we have come to a sorry state.

There is much more like this, If we need a special prosecutor, what of the one crime that seems to have come from all this investigating: the unmasking of American citizen names as a result of FISA surveillance? Those names were bandied about the White House during the last year of the previous administration, and were even leaked to the Press; a black letter felony. There is no grand jury investigating this known crime.

This is very tiring. I am going to bed.

bubbles

Proof of multiverses?

Since the Guardian is one of the more respected papers in Britain I have decided to forward this, despite that the article spends a good fraction of it’s length in irrelevant, snide political content and the “proof” of the existence of parallel universes, at least as expressed in the article, seems very tenuous.

The original Royal Astronomical Society press release contains the speculation repeated herein (https://www.ras.org.uk/news-and-press/2982-new-survey-hints-at-exotic-origin-for-the-cold-spot). However, they also note that models suggest that the “cold spot” (see links for detail) could have occurred naturally with 2% likelihood based on modeling today, so the absence for an alternate conventional explanation is rather meaningless.

Let’s not go crossing Einstein’s bridge just yet.

Subj: Proof of multiverses?

https://www.theguardian.com/science/across-the-universe/2017/may/17/multiverse-have-astronomers-found-evidence-of-parallel-universes

J

bubbles

The Cold Civil War

Jerry

I think this explains much:

http://www.claremont.org/crb/article/the-cold-civil-war/

It’s a middle-sized piece, but the main ideas are in the first few paragraphs. I can’t begin to do it justice.

Ed

 

more on The Cold Civil War

Jerry

http://www.claremont.org/crb/article/the-cold-civil-war/

The ideas that keep haunting me: “The government apparatus identifies with the ruling class’s interests . . . Ever since Woodrow Wilson nearly a century and a half ago at Princeton, colleges have taught that ordinary Americans are rightly ruled by experts because they are incapable of governing themselves. Millions of graduates have identified themselves as the personifiers of expertise and believe themselves entitled to rule.” <snip>

There is much to contemplate here. We cannot rule ourselves; we need “experts”; only the experts increasingly sound like babbling idiots.

bubbles

Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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Reporting health progress; Comey confusion. And other important or amusing matters.

Friday, May 12, 2017

The map is not the territory.

Alfred Korzybski

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

bubbles

I really thought that by now I could report full recovery from the lower bronchial infection that has laid me low, but I can’t do that. The vectors are in the right direction. I’m definitely improving. I feel better this morning than I have for weeks, but I’m not recovered.

I suspect one reason for depression is the depressing news flowing steadily out of Washington. Whatever President Trump does, it’s not merely wrong, but wrong-headed, with evil intent, and probably part of a treasonous conspiracy with the Russians to deny the Clintons their due.

And he was to be condemned for not firing Comey when the Democrats wanted him fired, but now Comey was fired as part of the cover-up. But be of good cheer, eventually Mr. Trump, who never does the right thing, will be made to go away and the Clintons will be restored.

Ridiculous as all this sounds, there are serious people holding high office in the media, Hollywood, and Congressional office – as well as holdovers in the Administration – who apparently believe it, or successfully pretend to do so.

And that’s depressing.

bubbles

1600 Friday: what was supposed to be a quick trip to the hair dresser and barber took all afternoon. The TV alternated between CNN and Fox so I got it all: still depressing, still noise, little information. Adding to that cacophony would serve little purpose or add to reasoned discourse.

I have a good bit of mail, some important and some quite amusing; we’ll add those before midnight, but meanwhile I’ll post this.

bubbles

9 :45 PM

 

Cyber attack spreads across 74 countries; some UK hospitals crippled | F…

I apologize to those who get this multiple times.

Bottom line: a virulent ransomware work built on top of hacked National Security Agency hardware is spreading quickly across the Internet. It has shut down hospitals and government offices in England, hit the Interior Ministry in Russia, and affected other targets across Europe and Asia. It is apparently just arriving in the US. The most recent Microsoft updates pushed down this week contain MITIGATIONS, not fixes, I am told.

Cautionary notes:

1.  This appears to be real enough that my son called me while I was driving home from work with the warning.

2. I will be taking my main computer offline to do a backup tonight after this, as recommended by my office IT guru.

3. There are several articles “above the fold” about the hack at Drudge Report.com. However, the “headline” article, a link to the ap article, attempted to download some adware or malware to my phone resulting in several reboots. Be cautious about even reputable sites (and not all of Drudge’s links are to reputable sites).

Subj: Cyber attack spreads across 74 countries; some UK hospitals crippled | Fox News

http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2017/05/12/cyber-attack-spreads-across-74-countries-some-uk-hospitals-crippled.html

This is a big one. Take precautions.

   J 

 

[A trusted competent subscriber]

 

There is a longer and readable analysis of Comey at http://blog.dilbert.com/post/160515646406/the-comey-firing

 

 

bubbles

Wonder material

Kansas State University researcher Gurpreet Singh has created a liquid polymer that can be heated into a high temperature, low-density ceramic, good to about 2000k, with pre-ceramic properties that range from watery to gel.  It seems like one can do a remarkable number of things with it.  Printing rocket engines was what came immediately to mind for me.  Maybe it’s too good to be true.
https://phys.org/news/2017-03-patents-waterlike-polymer-high-temperature-ceramics.html#nRlv
–Best, Gerald

  No other information available to me.

bubbles

 

 

 

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“We don’t just have a skeleton. We have a dinosaur as it would have been.”

<http://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2017/06/dinosaur-nodosaur-fossil-discovery/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

 

bubbles

Let this represent many:

 

You & Roberta

HI there Jerry & Roberta,
I popped in to check on you both. I hope Roberta continues to improve, and I’m sorry to hear about your circulatory troubles. The heat to your lower extremities is, of course a good idea. However a hot water bottle is not. I suggest you purchase what Bart & I call “hot rocks.” (I hope that gives you a laugh!) It is a cotton or muslin bag filled with a material – sometimes, buckwheat, corn, rice, etc., which is then placed inside another cotton bag. The entire gizmo can be placed in the microwave and heated. The inner materials last for years, and the nice thing is these units provide very long lasting and gentle heat with no worry of water leakage. Many companies make these items. There are even special booties available for purchase. Try a Google search on “Microwaveable Foot Warmers” These products can be found at Target, Bed, Bath & Beyond, on Amazon and elsewhere. Here is just one link to a company that uses corn in their products.
https://www.mainewarmers.com/
bye for now, and best wishes,
Adri

 

 

I have a lot of mail concerning cold feet.  Some suggest using bricks, which certainly hold heat but are less than convenient.  Bags of rice will heat in a microwave but present logistics problems. Hot water bottles work fine, but inevitably spring leaks.

 

HealthSmart Thera Beads from Amazon (available as Prime) heats in three minutes in the microwave, and holds enough heat when inserted between the covers down at the foot of the bed do the job nicely. Recommended. 

bubbles

: Here’s A Hint Of The Meltdown If U.S. Banned Laptops On Europe Flights – Vocativ

It’s nonsense like this that makes me think the next four years will be a continuation of the Bush years. They aren’t interested in winning the war, but they sure are interested in fighting it. Meanwhile the rest of us suffer to support incompetent empire.

http://www.vocativ.com/429088/meltdown-laptop-ban-european-flights/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Social&utm_campaign=social

R

I can only hope you are wrong. Banning Laptops seems outrageous.  I do not detect more than the usual  support for continued fighting.

bubbles

Space Race To Hunt, Mine Asteroids In Next Five Years – MSN News

“Core material” — exactly what the asteroid miners were seeking in THE ROLLING STONES.  *Again*, Heinlein was right.

Space Race To Hunt, Mine Asteroids In Next Five Years

Greg Price

Newsweek – Newsweek – ‎Friday‎, ‎May‎ ‎12‎, ‎2017

The Chinese have plans to hunt, mine and even build a space station on asteroids, but are decades away from most ambitions.

http://a.msn.com/r/2/BBB2SsL?a=1&m=en-us

 

I wrote those stories forty years ago, about the next few years…

 

bubbles

Comey redux —

This might be a better take on it.

http://blog.dilbert.com/post/160515646406/the-comey-firing

Richard White
Del Valle, Texas

 

bubbles

 

Royal Marines strapped to Apaches

 

That reminds me of an incident in the memoir of a Vietnam War Cobra pilot…
When the Cobra’s were first introduced, there was concern about their ability to pick up the crews of another helicopter. With a Huey, it was no problem. But the Cobra only had the 2 seats. So they looked at the door panels on either side that gave access to the gun turret and ammunition. The doors were rated for 300 pounds each, so in a pinch, they could land, and put a crew member of a downed copter on either side, and fly them out.
During one mission, a Special Forces team was pinned down, and needed rescue. They landed the Cobra, and put two soldiers on each of the doors. The guys were yelling something to the pilot, but he assured them that it would be alright, and just to hang on. The control tower at the base had problems understanding that a Cobra was inbound carrying 6 people, but then noted that it was actually 7… The soldiers had been trying to tell the pilot there was one more person — that guy ended up grabbing hold of the skids of the Cobra as it lifted off.

 

 

bubbles

Someone is catching wise to the Iron Law

 http://www.intellectualtakeout.org/blog/overlooked-statistic-may-explain-americas-education-problems

Richard White
Del Valle, Texas

 

bubbles

John Oliver is Wrong About Net Neutrality.

<http://blog.erratasec.com/2017/05/john-oliver-is-wrong-about-net.html>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

 

Most writers are wrong about net neutrality as it has turned out.The regulators mean well, perhaps, but most haven’t a real clue.

 

bubbles

 

 

Lost Generation: The Relay Computers.

<https://technicshistory.wordpress.com/2017/05/10/lost-generation-the-relay-computers/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

 

Long , but amusing and educational.

 

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

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Recovery and health care, and other important matters

Monday, May 8, 2017

If you like your health care plan, you can keep your health care plan.

Barrack Obama

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpa-5JdCnmo

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/11/11/fact-check-keeping-your-health-plan/3500187/

The map is not the territory.

Alfred Korzybski

If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightfully consider it an act of war.

Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education, 1983

bubbles

Recovery remains slow, but the vector seems to be in the right direction. My malaise is definitely not helped by the near winter conditions we are experiencing. The late Jack Smith, a Los Angeles columnist I read since I came to LA in the 60’s, used to remind us that LA had a season most ignored: Wummer, Winter in Summer, sometimes called “June Gloom” but worse than that; but this is early May. I have poor lower body circulation and try to keep me feet warm, sometimes warming my feet against my legs; an uncomfortable and time consuming ritual. Last night was too much, and in the middle of the night I found the hot water bottle I had put away last April or so. I use it every night in winter – my bed is a long way from an electrical outlet, and running wires across the floor is dangerous for late night bathroom expeditions with a walker – and soon had warm feet. Alas I also had a wet bed as well, because the hot water bottle had sprung a small leak I had not detected. No great problem; my upper body circulation and heat generation are fine. But it was uncomfortable for a while.

Of course I threw the old water bottle away and ordered another, but it won’t get here for a day or so. I suppose I’ll microwave a towel – carefully – and try that. My feet don’t get cold under the covers, but if they’re cold when I go to bed they don’t warm up without another heat source. Not your problem, but time consuming. Very. Which is why I don’t have a lot of time to work on this.

I do find that it improves my demeanor and attitude if I get some work done, and I’m determined to keep that up. I have notes on finishing Mamelukes, and I’ve done some work on that. I’m not just vegetating.

Roberta continues to improve, and seems to have escaped the lower bronchial infection that plagues me. Between us we need 24 hour attention — she more than me, as she is less mobile – and that proves to be expensive. I have no choice but to keep working: I need the money. Getting old is expensive.

bubbles

I continue to have nothing to add to the health “insurance” debate. Obamacare declared that for most of us, the responsibility to pay for our medical expenses did not rest on us, but on other citizens and residents of the United States; and we were all “entitled” to equal treatment, no matter how expensive. This is of course impossible. There isn’t room for all of us at Sloan Kettering, and if everyone who got cancer went there, it wouldn’t BE Sloan Kettering. “Insuring” against something that has already happened – pre-existing conditions — isn’t insurance, it’s a subsidy, it’s someone else paying your bills. A prominent intellectual said on television tonight that he wished everyone who wanted to repeal Obamacare had pre-existing conditions to a painful fatal disease. He is saying in effect that if you don’t want to pay for his problems, he wishes you a plague, a painful death, and he will be glad to dance at your deathbed. I have heard no liberal comments on this. Fox news showed him making the statement but did not comment as I watched.

And that is what we have been driven to.

The Senate is unlikely to approve the House deal; Obamacare will continue to govern. Millions who previously had no health insurance now have something called “insurance”, for as long as the funds continue.

The President will continue to try; he’s a pragmatist. Democrats in both Houses will continue to say no one is allowed to govern but them, and they will say no to any attempts to do otherwise.

Perhaps the economy will grow so rapidly that it will not matter. The economic boom, and the increased productivity due to robots, will save us.

bubbles

You approvingly quoted J. Neil Shulman, who proposed that there be Medicare for all with pre-existing conditions. I left this comment:
>>
Medicare for pre-existing conditions? Not bad… but it leads straight to single-payer, as the insurance industry widens the definition of pre-existing condition. Ultimately we all have a fatal pre-existing condition, called Life.
>>
To this I add: “Your money or your life” is not a normal market.

Paradoctor

If you read my essay it is obvious that I do not approve or advocate relieving people of their individual health care expense responsibility; at least not with money collected at the point of a gun, which is to say, taxes. I have no objection to you paying someone else’s medical bills, including mine. Does that make me obliged to pay yours? When I was a lad, all the tenants bought burial insurance; they knew they would eventually need it. The insurance companies threw annual parties instead of paying dividends. Everyone seemed happy.

And the tax collector eventually does say “Your money or your life.”

bubbles

engineering shortage & the iron law

Dr. Pournelle,
This article quotes your Iron Law in re a fine levied for unlicensed engineering: http://hackaday.com/2017/05/08/the-dangers-of-engineering-while-unlicensed/
Together with this article http://reut.rs/2qOL3Ta , I think the two describe the real cause of the shortage of qualified engineers: suitability is determined by the expected cost of the employee added to the engineer’s willingness to kowtow to the “union.” My observation has always been that there are plenty of engineers, but relatively few of those are willing to toe the line.
Employers pay more and take on longer and greater non-salary financial obligations for U.S. workers.
Hoping for yours and Roberta’s continued recovery.
-d

I see.

bubbles

Where’s My Immigration Prediction Model? | Scott Adams’ Blog,

Jerry

He puts some sense into the argument:

http://blog.dilbert.com/post/160447583616/wheres-my-immigration-prediction-model

Ed

Indeed. But there are never grants for such models.

bubbles

Recovery

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

I’m sorry to hear you’ve been ill, but I’m glad to hear that you are recovering. Please accept my prayers for a swift one!

As towards your discussion of health care — to me, it seems very similar to the 90’s movie “The Matrix”, if the Matrix were not a simulation, but a human welfare state. In the story, the “red pills”

who were willing to live in hardship in order to be free were always a minority compared to those who were more than content to be taken care of, even at the expense of their freedom. I believe ‘Farnham’s Freehold’ by Heinlein addressed a similar topic.

I think that is the inevitable result of any civilization which becomes too successful. Politicians use the surplus wealth to buy votes, and once people are on the grain dole, or on health insurance, it’s pretty much impossible to get them off again; too many people depend on them.

It’s usually not possible to convince the mass of blue pills to live as free men, either in real life or in the movies. The most we can do is travel elsewhere , to a new frontier, and start the cycle over.

So we need to get hopping on inventing an Alderson drive!

Respectfully,

Brian P.

I thought that way for much of the Cold War; the CoDominium was the least dangerous outcome I could see. And the dispersion. Then Star Wars and Reagan won the Cold War, but are we better off? I make no assessment in my present state. We have officially told more than half the populace that they are not responsible for their medical bills. No one wants to lose that gift.

bubbles

CO2

You stated “Given the rise if CO2 and methane (CH4) it would be well to invest in techniques for removing excesses of those”
Why? CO2 is plant food; it does not cause ‘catastrophic global warming’ or ‘climate change’. There has been no significant warming for the past 20 years while CO2 concentration continued to increase. This increase in CO2 has been greening the planet; why is that a problem?
The trend of average global temperature measured over the past 8000 years since the Holocene Optimum has been cooling.
The trend of average global temperature measured over the past 400 years since the Little Ice Age has been warming.
The trend of average global temperature measured over the past 20 years shows no significant change.
Pick whichever time frame supports the political agenda you’re dealing with, the planet doesn’t care. Neither do earth scientists who are not beholden to any political masters.
To quote Matt Ridley:
“The inescapable if unfashionable conclusion is that the human use of fossil fuels has been causing the greening of the planet in three separate ways: first, by displacing firewood as a fuel; second, by warming the climate; and third, by raising carbon dioxide levels, which raise plant growth rates.”
http://www.rationaloptimist.com/blog/the-greening-of-the-planet.aspx

jean

I have discussed this before at greater length. I should not care to be part of an uncontrolled experiment to determine the tolerable upper limit of CO2; there is one, very likely and we have not begun to approach it. There are numerous ways of removing excess CO2 and CH4 from the atmosphere if the concentration gets too high; it would be well to develop one while we have the means to do it. Bankrupting ourselves by shutting down industries does not seem effective, and many won’t do it anyway. It is not an urgent project but it is eventually going to be needed.

I agree that for the moment CO2 is more like free fertilizer than pollution.

bubbles

Well worth reading:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/how-i-almost-killed-my-mom-with-a-simple-anti-itch-pill/2017/05/05/63359b74-1496-11e7-ada0-1489b735b3a3_story.html

Basically, medications we usually think of as completely benign (in this case, Benadryl) can have dramatic side effects in older people, even from a single standard dose.

I had no idea.

This document scores a great many common medications:

http://www.agingbraincare.org/uploads/products/ACB_scale_-_legal_size.pdf

Note that the scale here goes from “1” for the least risk to “3” for the highest risk.

.              p

Worth reading I agree. I have not had similar experience with Benadryl, which I first encountered as a prescription drug, and I have used a lot of it over time, but not much lately.

bubbles

A10’s very helpful That time 4 Royal Marines strapped themselves to Apaches – YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QSEX-c2W2yc

Certainly worth watching.

bubbles

Obamacare and Bleeding Kansas

Good morning, Dr. Pournelle –
I just read in your May 8th Chaos Manor that you feel you are improving. That is wonderful news. Even if you take three steps forward and two steps back, it’s still one step forward.
There were two comments of yours that I wanted to address;
1) I read where you posted, “It’s always better if you can give millions of people free stuff that other people must pay for. It always makes you feel much better,” in response to a post on the dems’ reaction on the vote to “overhaul” Obamacare.
Well, the only “overhaul” I’ll like is a complete repeal with no replacement, but I’m not holding my breath. Once again, republicans show themselves in competition to be the better democrat.
Anyway, I think there is one way to speedily bring about a major “overhaul” in federal healthcare all sorts of other misbegotten programs;
Take away payroll deductions for income tax. Give workers their entire paycheck and then require them to personally write the checks for their income tax burden to the government.
I’m willing to bet change will come pretty fast afterwards.
Unfortunately, I don’t see that happening, either. What I see is that it won’t be until the entire system comes crashing down around our collective heads, destroying what we know as the United States of America. Then, if other nations leave us alone – ha ha – we might be able to rebuild into something better.
Although, I spent a year teaching high school physics and I saw what the schools were putting out, so – well, maybe we won’t be able to build something better.
2) I saw your comment, “I wonder: do they even teach ‘Bleeding Kansas’ in schools any longer?” and have to say that I’ve never heard of “Bleeding Kansas.” I graduated high school in 1976, so, maybe they don’t.
Now, I’ll have to go look it up.
Cam Kirmser

It’s worth looking up. The Movie “The Outlaw Josey Wales” makes more sense, too, after you’ve done that. Many on the anti union side just wanted to be left alone. Many more fought “For our property we won by honest toil”…

bubbles

Tweaked titanium turns C02 into solar fuel

I find this pretty exciting. Technical solutions to CO2 that offer additional benefits and don’t require destroying economies seem vastly preferable to me.

An ability to convert carbon dioxide into energy using only the power of the sun, as plants do through photosynthesis, would be a monumental breakthrough in green energy research. More and more we are seeing promising strides in this area, the latest of which is the work of scientists at the University of Central Florida (UCF), who have come up with synthetic material that turns visible light from the sun into solar fuels, sucking harmful C02 out of the air in the process.

“The idea would be to set up stations that capture large amounts of CO2, like next to a power plant,” says Uribe-Romo. “The gas would be sucked into the station, go through the process and recycle the greenhouse gases while producing energy that would be put back into the power plant.”

http://newatlas.com/tweaked-titanium-c02-fuel/49222/?utm_source=Gizmag+Subscribers&utm_campaign=fa772c4f23-UA-2235360-4&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_65b67362bd-fa772c4f23-88920025

John Harlow

Vice President – Services

I have no other information.

bubbles

Trump moving on handing control of education back to locals

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/trump-asks-betsy-devos-to-study-federal-overreach-in-education/article/2621365

Hope you’re feeling better. It’s pretty bad up here as well.

Phil

Since few schools teach anything that any employer would pay money to have you do, school reform is needed; it may help build an economic boom; or rather to sustain one.

bubbles

NASA is Running Out of Spacewalk [spa] Suits.

<https://www.engadget.com/2017/04/27/nasa-is-running-out-of-spacesuits/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

Long ago I tried to get them to invest in better and cheaper suits. Everyone agreed they were needed – “But not out of MY budget!”

bubbles

Healthcare

Jerry,
Having the government as a single payer is similar to private insurance in the source of the money but has some important differences.  The executives of insurance companies are paid multi millions per year vs. the inefficiency of government bureaucracy.
The main advantage of a single payer is that the government would then have the power to actually lower medical costs, particularly drugs.  As you know, in every other advanced country the government runs the health system and it it costs 2  to 8 time less than here.  (According to Atlantic Monthly)
What we should do is look at the other countries and learn from them.  I thought one of  Singapore’s planners remarks priceless: when asked what he had learned from the American system.  “What not to do.”  He replied.
I don’t have a good answer for how to manage doctor’s pay.  I suppose in the long run having the government pay for their education might help.  I think the system will be unrecognizable in a decade due to AI and robotics anyway.
The American system isn’t as great as most believe.  Statically we don’t do as well as many other countries.  I read in Consumer Reports (May) 650,000 patients a year acquire a disease in hospital that is largely preventable and 75,000 die from it.  That’s a lot of people.  We spend a lot to reduce the 18/year killed by terrorists on average.
Best regards,
Adrian Ashfield

This needs discussion I haven’t time or energy for just now. The first thing to decide is who owes your doctor for time he spent taking care of your children? And if that’s not you, why does he owe it? Next, how much is owed him, and who determines that?

bubbles

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

bubbles

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Recovery Report; “Insurance”; and other matters

Friday, May 5, 2017

If you like your health care plan, you can keep you health care plan.

Barrack Obamas

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpa-5JdCnmo

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/11/11/fact-check-keeping-your-health-plan/3500187/

The map is not the territory.

Alfred Korzybski

“The wealth of our middle class has been ripped from their homes and then redistributed across the entire world.”

Donald Trump

Between 1965 and 2011, the official poverty rate was essentially flat, while the government spending per person on poverty programs rose by more than 900% after inflation.

Peter Cove

bubbles

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Health report. Two hours ago I would had said prospects are grim, but that turned out to be due to a number of changeable factors, and they all changed.

As of now the news is, recovering. Taking a damned long time to do it, but progress is still being made. I can still take a two mile walk (with the walker) but it leaves me so exhausted that I find good excuses not to do a report.

My head is still working, in that I can do logic and my memory is not gone. The news is depressing although not unexpected; more on that later.

I still find myself thinking politically incorrect thoughts. As for example, “Hidden Figures”, a tribute to diversity and incidentally one of the most profitable movies ever made. It’s a good movie, and deserves to be a success, but I lived through those times, and all of us did “calculations”. One of the better paying jobs in graduate school was doing calculations for various experimental projects. In my case, take a Monroe Calculator, Enter two numbers, say a two digit IQ number, followed by 6 0’s, then a performance number, say the rank order in a group if 40 people; say 9800000034. If you do everything right, you get x^2, 2xy, and y^2. Now add to that the next number, which still be an IQ, a bunch of zero’s, and rank order of performance. Keep doing that until you have entered all the data in that peculiar manner. You are on your way to calculating Pearson’s “r”, the correlation between IQ and rank order for that particular sample, Similar tricks produce mean and standard deviation for the sample of data (the experimental results). I’ve probably got some of the tricks wrong in my head; it’s been over 70 years.

In the days before electronic computers, this is how data were handled, and it was usually done by graduate students who were techies – I was required to take Calculus of Probability and various theories of Statistics in the Math Department – and while one of the most boring jobs I can describe it paid well – they paid for people who knew what they were doing, and how important it was to do it right. I cannot imagine making a career of doing that.

By the time I got to Aerospace Corporation in 1964 as Editor of Project 75, I had graduated to an Italian Olivetti mechanical/digital desk calculator. It was enormous, and everyone was astonished to see one on a stand next to my engineer’s desk; they weren’t for “professionals”. Couldn’t help that because the clearance list for Project 75 was very short, and the numbers were needed. If we’d had “calculators” I’d have been pleased as punch to make data available with all its background filed off; and yes, there’s a lot of calculation in modeling inertial guidance, or at least there was in those days. While I was at Aerospace we moved to central computers and I was able with help to get much of it done by FORTRAN, but that’s another story.

The point being that everyone welcomed computers – mostly central computing where you took you box of cards and technicians ran the program overnight, and you either got your answer or more likely a big core dump on why your program didn’t compile and you could go try to fix that. I sure could have used some “calculators” and in fact I probably could have got my answers sooner if I’d done them myself.

And I’m rambling. Not even sure why I started this, But so far as I can see, “Hidden Figures” is about women, black and white, who did work now done by any computer better than a 1620; which is admirable, and was needed, and saved other project engineers from having to do it themselves or (more likely) teach junior engineers to do it. Necessary work, important work, but Medal Of Freedom work? Not to take anything away from those who did it. It needed to be done. But a breakthrough to professional status might be an overstatement.

And this was a needless ramble, because I really can’t complain if Hollywood makes some money making a bigger deal out of the “calculators” back in the days before computers or pocket calculators; and I certainly don’t fault the people who did that any more than I would look down on the technicians and mechanics that built the space craft. General Schriever was known to carry tools forbidden to an engineer (by union rules) and get his hands dirty, but he didn’t actually build those rockets.

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Another ramble: one reason for my general depression is that there’s no way to “repeal” Obamacare. Oh sure, Congress could in theory simply return the health care industry – at least 20%, one fifth of the US economy – to where it was before the Democrats rammed it through with Senate debate or much else – “You have to pass the bill to see what’s in it” – but they won’t.

Obamacare told about half the American people that they were no longer responsible for their health care bills. Millions who never had “health care insurance” were now covered, even though they wouldn’t have to be employed, or pay more than a nominal sum – a poll tax? — to get it. And indeed if they didn’t bother they’d still be able to have “insurance”; there were subsidies everywhere.

Repeal of Obamacare would take those free goodies away from millions, and the media already have the stories written, the children filmed, the sob stories already on file. They’re ready with the stories, how the Republicans ruined America.

Enough Republicans just don’t want any part of that, and refused to repeal Obamacare. They can’t bear to tell people that they’re responsible for their own medical bills. They’ve been told – and now it’s true – that someone else is responsible. To wit: you. But you don’t take to the streets or dramatically refuse to pay for someone else’s medical bills.

But that’s all right, maybe we can stiff the doctors: here’s what we’ll give you. Take it and treat them. Or else no private practice. We can do that, you know.

There’s really no way out of this. For a long time we made do with charities, charity wards in many hospitals, religious orders, physician time donations, the whole panoply of what de Tocqueville called “the associations” that did for America what governments tried with less success to do in Europe. But charity wards were charities, and everyone is entitled to the best there is, and you can’t say different; so we don’t need no stinking charities. The Constitution contains not one word granting entitlements to health care, nor power to grant them to Congress; if there’s any “right” to health care, it must come from the residual sovereignty of the states. But since we have taken from the states any control of “citizenship” like residency or paying taxes, we can’t leave this to the states and let competition take over. A long time ago, California had a residency requirement: you had to live here, I think a year, before you were eligible for welfare. New York had no such residency requirement so there developed “California Welfare”: a bus ticket to New York City and instructions on how to apply.

We ended that thirty or forty years ago. Unfair.

The whole subject is depressing. President Trump is learning why very little actually changes in Washington. Obscure judges you never heard of stop your border control orders, and appeals take – well essentially forever. Doing anything takes much hard work, and the permanent government establishment will see that little of what you order actually has any effect. Your friends turn on you because you can’t do what you promised even if it looked easy – after all, Obama did it? Why can’t I? I have a pen and a phone…

That way lies madness. Mr. Gingrich understands how difficult it is to do anything in Washington that the Establishment doesn’t want done. Mr. Trump is learning.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYQvk2_x2Nk&t=87s

What we really need is for robots to take care of people on “insurance”; perhaps we could afford that. Everyone else is responsible for his own medical bills. Perhaps he could actually buy insurance against major crises? Or perhaps robots will so improve the economy we can afford to tell people they are no longer responsible for their medical bills? But until then, we can enslave robots. Not so much doctors and nurses.

For Mr. Gingrich’s much more hopeful view, see http://www.gingrichproductions.com/2017/0

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Jerry

I hate to bother you but it’s a short read:

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2017/05/what-you-need-to-know-about-climate-in-one-chart.php

Ed

Good chart. The upshot is, as always, we still don’t know, Given the rise if CO2 and methane (CH4) it would be well to invest in techniques for removing excesses of those, not by curtailing industry and impoverishing ourselves. What eats methane? We know what eats CO2.

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http://jneilschulman.rationalreview.com/2017/05/jneilcare/

“The issue the Democrats, liberals, and progressives all use against the “Repeal and Replace” of the Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare) is the disposition of those with preexisting conditions. The “heartless” Republicans want to kill off the poor because they oppose (they really don’t oppose it) Universal Socialized Medicine.
“So let’s remove everyone with a preexisting condition from the health insurance market by putting them all on Medicare.
“Yes, this is single-payer. But it’s not universal single-payer. It limits those who are single-payer clients to those who are currently breaking the back of the health-insurance market.
“The Affordable Care Act — by legally requiring those with preexisting medical conditions to be included in the insurance pool — denies the purpose and nature of insurance, as a market product, itself.
“Insurance, by definition, is based on risk of something happening in the future, a happening to which there can be an actuarial projection.
“Someone with a preexisting medical condition is to health insurance precisely like buying automobile liability insurance after you’ve already crashed. It’s a past, not future, event.
“Take these people out of the insurance market by putting them all on Medicare and everyone else can participate in a market for health insurance.
“It’s not a libertarian solution. It is, however, a solution that limits government and preserves a free-market in health insurance for everyone else.
“It’s a conservative or Minarchist solution.”

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SpaceX begs government for more money

Leaving space policy to the industrialists will leave us with more “infrastructure spending” that merely lines their pockets.

https://www.inverse.com/article/31141-spacex-will-launch-internet-satellites-2019

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: Random contemplation about automated vehicles

This seems to be the anniversary of an interesting event. The officers charged with beating Rodney King were acquitted. So the black community in LA behaved like a collection of depraved babies and rioted. As the rioting continued Larry Tarvin was severely beaten and Reginald Denny was damn near killed. While it is material to history that the man who saved Denny was a black who had actually grown up and took responsibility to save his fellow human it’s not material to this discussion. What is material is that both drivers stopped their vehicles in the middle of a riot. This does not seem to be a particularly safe activity.

Methinks that I will argue with the law as a live woman in her 8th decade rather than become a lump of statistic. If I ever find myself in that situation stopping or even slowing down is about the last thing I will do, chiefly because stopping might well BE the last thing I ever do.

With that background we have the recent wave of vehicles with automated driver assists. They will stop the vehicle if a “collision” is likely even with a lump of animated protoplasm.

Contemplate this a few moments.

Suppose my attitude becomes more generalized. (NC’s House has just formally made it legal to drive through protestors trying to hijack a road taking motorists who run up to them and stop hostage. That’s kidnapping, you know.) So we have vehicles on the road with drivers motivated, i.e. not dumb enough to stop, to push on through. Some of them have automatic stop that overrides the driver.

Some of them don’t. Guess who is going to get hurt in each case. If you were a rioter would you go after a 1990s beater or a brand new Tesla? I think I will put off any automated assist sort of vehicle purchase for awhile. They are as vulnerable to deadly attacks as the Android OS.

{o.o} (Ack to Michael Yon for the concept.)

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Recovery

Dr. Pournelle,
I fear your recovery is proceeding more slowly than you (or your family, friends, and fans would wish). You have my best thoughts and prayers for a speedy recovery.
Sincerely,
Douglas Lewis

I will let this stand for many like it: thanks for the kind word and good wishes, and regrets that it is taking so long. I do think recovery is happening.

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: Leftist Lunacy

The Democrats keep showing whey they can’t be trusted to govern:

<.>

“Na Na Na Na, Hey Hey Hey, Goodbye,” Democrats sang at Republicans. A few Democrats even waved goodbye.

The implication was obvious: Democrats believed many Republicans had just cost themselves their political careers by voting for an overhaul of Obamacare.

And the DC political class wonders why people hate them.

I understand that Democrats not only didn’t like the way this bill was passed — without any estimates on what it might cost or how many people might lose coverage as a result — but also believed the policies contained in it would leave the country and its people considerably worse off.

That is a worthy conversation to have. But, that’s not what Democrats were doing. Instead, they were jeering and mocking their colleagues.

</>

http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/04/politics/healthcare-democrats-booing-na-na-na-good-bye-singing/index.html

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

It’s always better if you can give millions of people free stuff that other people must pay for. It always makes you feel much better.

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Middle East Oil

“Events are moving rapidly to a possible new war involving Israel, the United States, Syria and Russia. Were it to take place, I honestly hope not, it would be yet another stupid war over oil. Only this oil war somehow feels far more dangerous than the US war against Iraq or Libya or previous oil wars. It’s about the part of Syria named the Golan Heights.”

http://journal-neo.org/2017/03/30/golan-heights-israel-oil-and-trump/

https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/international-news/middle_east/is-there-really-more-oil-in-the-golan-heights-than-is-saudi-arabia/

L

I wonder if they can come to a deal.

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Clinton Email Scandal….AGAIN

This Clinton email scandal continues!

<.>

“Somehow, her emails were being forwarded to Anthony Weiner, including classified information,” Comey said, adding later, “His then-spouse Huma Abedin appears to have had a regular practice of forwarding emails to him for him to print out for her so she could deliver them to the secretary of state.”

The two were investigated for possible mishandling of classified material, but the FBI ultimately dropped the matter without seeking charges because they could not show either of them intended to violate the law, Comey said.

“Really the central problem we had with the whole email investigation was proving people… had some sense they were doing something unlawful.

That was our burden and we were unable to meet it,’’ he said.

</>

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/fbi-director-james-comey-begins-testimony-to-congress/2017/05/03/9e3244bc-3006-11e7-9534-00e4656c22aa_story.html

Somehow? That’s amusing because when emails “get forwarded”, it is not some mysterious force that does it. I press the forward button, enter an address, and hit send. Is there another way this happens?

And that last part where they can’t prove that people knew they were mishandling classified information? You mean to tell me they did not attend briefings and sign documents on how to properly handle classified information? I know I did those things. And, as affairs occurred, I had to sign further documentation reminding me of my obligations and telling me that I could not speak about certain matters for a certain period of time and that I had to submit any book I wrote to the US government for approval — whether or not it contained anything related — else the royalties would be seized by the United States government. They were quite specific and quite controlling and I didn’t have clearance nearly as high as what these people had.

This all seems like BS to me. I believe if I had done what they had done, I believe I would have been punished in some way and — at the very least — I believe I’d be blacklisted from maintaining or receiving a security clearance without a waiver. Maybe my perception was off and I believed the briefings more than I should have, but that was my impression.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Surprise!

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coming apart?

Dear Mr. Pournelle,
An interesting column in today’s (London) Times:
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/comment/democrats-must-reach-out-to-small-town-usa-txvthrnlg
While the article focuses on Democrats, I think the point of concern is broader. Paragraphs that caught my attention:
“Now online media can go where it chooses and it generally chooses to be in New York or Seattle or some place where metrosexuals can gather and compare beards. Although we were told at the start of the internet boom that we would be free to work anywhere, the American experience has been the opposite: the jobs are more concentrated than ever before.
Politico’s interest was in the newspaper industry because of the political impact of all the nation’s reporters living in Democratic-voting areas. However, the broken model of America’s political economy is a wider phenomenon. Anything modern and zingy and potentially profitable is increasingly done in American cities and predominantly the cities near the coasts. The rest of the country gets the dregs.
This is not sustainable if America is to rediscover its unity in the post-Trump world.”
Yours,
Allan E. Johnson

So long as you have promised – contracted for – more entitlements than you can possibly collect enough to pay for, you may have a problem. Depressing, isn’t it? We have sown the wind for decades. Now we reap.

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Bleeding Kansas

Dr Pournelle 

The current situation in the country reminds me of the accounts of Bleeding Kansas in 1854. Kansas had vote fraud, unconstitutional government, and gangs brought in from Missouri and New England. Seven years after the bleeding started in Kansas, it spread to the rest of the country. 

I wonder when the current violence in California will spread to the rest of the country. 

Live long and prosper 

h lynn keith

I wonder: do they even teach “Bleeding Kansas” in schools any longer?

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Hi Jerry,

Don’t ever see much if anything about fusion in the MSM. In my mind it’s the only viable option to replace oil and gas. From the The Engineer (UK):

Switch flipped on UK’s newest tokamak fusion reactor

Known as the ST40, the reactor represents the third of five stages in the company’s plan to deliver fusion energy to the grid by 2030. Controlled fusion requires temperatures in excess of 100m°C, but this has never been achieved by a privately funded company. To reach that goal, Tokamak Energy is focusing on compact, spherical tokamak reactors, as it believes they are quicker to develop and offer the quickest route to commercial fusion power.

“Today is an important day for fusion energy development in the UK, and the world,” said Dr David Kingham, CEO of Tokamak Energy. “We are unveiling the first world-class controlled fusion device to have been designed, built and operated by a private venture. The ST40 is a machine that will show fusion temperatures – 100 million degrees – are possible in compact, cost-effective reactors. This will allow fusion power to be achieved in years, not decades.

More w/video: https://www.theengineer.co.uk/switch-flipped-on-uks-newest-tokamak-fusion-reactor/

-Blair S.

That could be the best news yet: the only problem we really have is an energy problem, as I pointed out fifty rears ago. With enough energy I can solve or control almost any problem

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Freedom is not free. Free men are not equal. Equal men are not free.

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