Improvement and Frustration; Investigations; Penrose and Strong AI; and other important matters

Monday, March 20, 2017

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

Donald Trump

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

One of the improvements they have made to Word is that it comes up with a list of things you’ve done recently and an offer to open the one you choose. These are only the recent documents themselves, not the folders they were in, which may save you time but can also be confusing if you don’t remember where they were. At the bottom of this list is the choice of “Open Other Documents, but if you are operating at less than full screen mode, you may not see it: I went up to the monk’s cell to work on fiction today, only to find in the travails around here someone had unplugged the power strip into which Zen, my USUS ZenBook laptop is plugged, resulting in near discharge of the computer, a bit of panic because the power strip was also turned off, and turning it on didn’t help. Eventually I found that it was also unplugged, but not before I – oh. Well. I needn’t burden you with details. I got it working and all’s well.

But I hadn’t worked on the interstellar colony book in a while, and it wasn’t a choice I was given for opening it; the window was sized just right to make the “Open Other Documents” choice invisible; and I’d forgotten where it was. There’s no key that just opens Word with the ribbon and the choice of looking for what you what – the ‘File’ menu. More panic, which is against the first rule, but it’s sometimes hard to control, especially if it’s tempered with previous panic and perhaps a bit of resentment for someone having let the computer go unpowered. Finally I hit on the bright idea of opening a blank document, which produced the ribbon, which produced “File” which produces the drop down menu that lets you go find what you wanted to work on. Unfortunately I was in fiction mode and all this shifted me into reporting mode, and I was pretty much stuck there, so I didn’t get much done. Tomorrow ought to be better.

bubbles

It’s after dinner, and the news is full of “Investigations”, none of which are meant to find truth, but to cover things up unless they embarrass the politicians the finder doesn’t like. Millions have been spent, not counting the supposedly valuable time of the Senators and Members of Congress involved, and what has been found?

One wiretapping we know of, and knew about before the investigations started: the conversation originating in Trump Tower between Lt. General Flynn, then advisor to President-elect Donald Trump, and the Russian Ambassador. We know that conversation was listened to by US security agents, because it resulted in one felony we know of, the leaking of Flynn’s identity as having spoken to Ambassador Sergey Ivanovich Kislyak on a wiretapped call.

General Clapper says no FISA warrant to tap the Trump Tower lines was ever issued. Various others have said that no US agency ever tapped the Trump Tower telephones, and you can believe as much of that as you want to. The inference is that the Russian Ambassador’s telephone was tapped, and that is how the Flynn to Kislyak call was transcribed; presumably with a FISA warrant, since no other warrant record is found; and of course the United States would never tap a telephone without a warrant. You may believe as much of that as you want to.

But whatever warrant was used, one thing is black letter law: if a warranted tap of a non-US Citizen’s phone discloses and records a conversation with a US Citizen – which of course Lt. Gen. Flynn is – then special rules apply to dissemination of any information, specifically including the identity of the citizen. Violation of that rule is a felony.

And therefore there must be a record of everyone who was officially informed of that phone call, including the person who informed Acting Attorney General Sally Yates. Every one of those is required to keep a record of everyone informed of the name of the citizen involved. If they did not make and keep such a record, penalties apply; and surely Yates knows who told her. The President has a right to know this identity.

It may be difficult to identify the person who leaked Lt. Gen. Flynn’s name, along with a transcript of the call, to the public, although given the restrictions on who can have access to that it can’t be a long list. The leaker is guilty of a black letter law felony, and should be found and prosecuted, and this wasn’t a computer hack or mistake; this was a deliberate and willful felony by someone who knew very well that it was a felony. And who did that felon conspire with?

That’s the interesting investigation. Have we any agents with the competence to conduct it?

sc:bubbles]

President Andrew Jackson famously said, “John Marshall has made his decision. Now let him enforce it. “ A Hawaiian judge has issued orders to the executive branch. For a commentary and some discussion, see http://www.breitbart.com/radio/2017/03/16/robert-barnes-trump-could-go-full-andrew-jackson-ignore-interference-activist-judges/ . I do not recommend invoking the inevitable Constitutional Crisis that would result, but clearly if this sort of judicial interference in powers granted by the Constitution to the Executive continue to be usurped by judges appointed for life, such a move is eventually inevitable.

bubbles

What if we go through the judicial process for deporting someone, but the home country refuses to admit him? He came here with a Ruritanian passport and visa and Ruritania doesn’t want him back; what now?

First, of course, we immediately cease to honor Ruritanian visas, and admit no more Ruritanians. That ought to be automatic. Of course some Ruritanian legally resident in the US will then sue to have a federal judge declare that unconstitutional and demand the right to be visited by his Ruritanian relatives, but we can ignore that one for a moment. Secondly, we can cease all aid to Ruritania; there may be none, but it is likely there will be quite a lot. Congress could also levy a 100% tariff on all imports from Ruritania. But assume Ruritania will not relent: they don’t want this dude nohow, and that’s that.

One thing we could do: auction the deportee off. We will pay $XX to the country that accepts him. Lowest bid wins. Perhaps that is a bit harsh, but it can be negotiated. Realistically, though, this is a real problem.

bubbles

A few web tabs I’ve kept open; this is not a recommendation or condemnation; just pointing to them. I’m about to close some;

 

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20170315-the-invention-of-heterosexuality

http://dailysignal.com/2017/03/12/the-daily-signal-wont-be-bullied-by-the-establishment-media/?utm_source=TDS_Email&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Top5&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTXprelpHUmxZamRqTTJRNCIsInQiOiJ0U3R4SVBFenpRSUh6aVB5emFNa2M2Uld0enV2d2EySVVLeU5HUmZWMld5WVA4YnNnY01cL1JRTzFvRzQyUU5tdW1MK2N4V2dkdUJrXC81M2N5emw1NlVBcmFMUzZkQ0tZU2VIRmpLWjhaVk45MlFyeHZHU3VYMkozcXJCRFlhck4wIn0%3D

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/03/space-travel-wont-save-you-from-capitalism/518853/

 

https://www.reddit.com/r/The_Donald/comments/5zovs7/holy_mother_of_mary_i_just_inadvertently/

http://exiledonline.com/malcolm-gladwell-unmasked-a-look-into-the-life-work-of-america%E2%80%99s-most-successful-propagandist/

 

bubbles

Limbaugh: We’re on the Verge of a Constitutional Crisis.

<https://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2017/03/17/were-on-the-verge-of-a-constitutional-crisis/>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

I’ve said that too. We’ll just have to see.

bubbles

New Study Suggests Our Understanding of Brain Cells Is Flawed, and Here’s Why.

<http://www.sciencealert.com/new-study-says-our-understanding-of-our-brain-cells-is-flawed-and-that-s-a-big-deal>

—–

“A fundamental belief in neuroscience has been that neurons are digital devices. They either generate a spike or not. These results show that the dendrites do not behave purely like a digital device,” said Mehta.

“Dendrites do generate digital, all-or-none spikes, but they also show large analogue fluctuations that are not all or none. This is a major departure from what neuroscientists have believed for about 60 years.”

—–

I’ve always thought Penrose had a strong argument on the nature of consciousness. This seems to support his stance on the (in)feasibility of strong AI.

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

It’s worth a lot more discussion than I have time for just now. Penrose is always worth paying attention to.

bubbles

Robots With Human Level Intelligence

https://www.markmanspivotalpoint.com/robotics/here-comes-i-robot-a-decade-early/?sc=PP-E

“In a little over a decade, the next evolution of human beings starts. According to a noted engineer and futurist, that’s when we can expect brain implants that will link us to supercomputers.”

Actually that description reminds me much more of “Oath of Fealty” than “I, Robot”.

Charles Brumbelow

bubbles

ADA to UC Berkeley: take free lectures offline

A DOJ ruling on an ADA complaint made by students at Gallaudet University resulted in UC Berkeley taking down 20,000 free online lecture videos to avoid the cost of adding closed captioning to all 20,000 videos.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2017/03/06/u-california-berkeley-delete-publicly-available-educational-content

Joel

Tragic but predictable. And more of that to come. It can only harm; there is no benefit.

bubbles

SteynPost #9 – Steyn on Sweden – YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUPgfEM9OzM

Mike

Interesting,

bubbles

EM Drive redux

Hope you finally have all your locusts (and termites) under control.
I just ran across a short-short called “Toy Story” by Harry Harrison which seems to be to be a perfect explanation for the progression of the EM Drive. It’s in the public domain at Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/22966/22966-h/22966-h.htm
I found it in an anthology:

England Sends Soldiers to Russian Border

According to this tabloid, England is sending almost an entire battalion of soldiers to the Russian border…. Almost a battalion but they’re sending more armor:

<.>

Britain is sending 800 assault troops to Europe’s border with Russia in the UK’s largest military deployment against Moscow since the Cold War.

An advance spearhead of more than 120 soldiers flew to Estonia to bolster the nation’s defences against the military might of Vladimir Putin.

Backed by 300 armoured vehicles including Challenger 2 tanks, the force will swell to 800 within weeks.

It is part of a huge NATO operation in Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Poland to strengthen 700 miles of Eastern Europe’s borders with Russia.

</>

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/british-troops-join-showdown-again-10049584?service=responsive

I tried to find more reputable sources to confirm this and what I found was interesting; troop movements from the UK of this character are common under conditions where tensions with Russia rise. Also aircraft and other assets are often committed in similar numbers of several hundred but nearly always under a thousand in terms of both personnel and materiel.

I also confirmed this story via Reuters, MSN, and other “mainstream”

sources. But, I heard about it first from a populist aggregation that listed the tabloid as the initial source of the story. However, Reuters mentioned that NATO plans to add 4,000 troops to the area on a rotational basis. That’s about four battalions, which generally means nothing in military terms but might help create populist revolts, and support for war, if those soldiers died in an attack. Ah the joys of political and social capital.

https://www.reuters.tv/v/FkF/2017/03/18/over-120-british-soldiers-arrive-in-estonia

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Massive troop movements are used as diplomatic signals, and to prevent border incidents. Presumably all parties know this; and it’s European matter. I hope.

bubbles

Oregon Descends to Feudalism?

It seems that we are going into feudal society after all. How is

this any different from making homeowners into lords of the homeless?

The more property you own, the more peasants on your land. I understand this is a simplification and I’m speculating on what could happen in the future, but I see this as part of the overall trend:

<.>

With more than $300,000 and volunteer homeowners, Multnomah County has a new idea to fight homelessness: Build tiny houses in people’s backyards and rent them out to families with children now living on the street.

The homeowners would pay nothing for the construction. They would become landlords and maintain the units for homeless families for five years.

Then the tiny houses would become theirs to do with what they want. If the homeowners break the contract before then, they pay the cost of construction.

</>

http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2017/03/multnomah_county_wants_to_ince.html

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Industrial feudalism — more local control – may be an answer to the modern age. Probably not, but let Oregon try it. Of course that’s not really feudalism.

bubbles

Doctors Who Kill

My father suffered with heart trouble in his later years (heavy smoker).  

He had such a massive heart attack he was lucky to survive it and

ended up on experimental medication to control his heartbeat.

Eventually luck ran out and his heart went into a fatal rhythm.

 

The paramedics managed to bring him back, but his brain was

without oxygen for too long.  So there he was on life support.

The doctor said he had a patient (much younger than Dad)

have this very thing happen to him and after treatment walked

out of the hospital on his own power.  The doctor ‘pinched’

Dad’s toe and just barely got a response.  After several days

of this the doctor said he did not expect Dad to get any better.

 

So Mom and I decided to pull the plug.

We were fortunate for him to have made his wishes clear

many years before about not wanting to live as ‘some kind 

of freak’, so there was no doubt what he would have chosen

if he had the capacity to choose.

 

This can potentially open up a long discussion about

Situational Ethics. How far gone does someone have to be before the quality

of life has deteriorated to where it is no longer worth it, and

how is something like that measured?  

B-

It is when the circumstances are not so clear that discretion enters the picture; and here is not always a rational solution.

bubbles

Alexa worth it?

Dr. Pournelle,
IMO, Alexa is not worth learning, and is difficult to turn off. If my only interaction with Amazon was frequent shopping for a small number of standard items, then perhaps it would be more valuable. Like Cortana, it seems to have a big local machine processor, network, and memory footprint, and I believe that there are privacy and personal security issues with the application. I’ve tried to disable it on my Kindles, and attempted to keep it disabled on my other devices, but the settings and administrative interface is pretty obscure to me.
Cheers,
-d

bubbles

War in Space is Becoming a Real Threat

Dr. Pournelle,
Please only use my alias Terrier1 for this posting. Do not publish my real name. Thank you:
The Washington Post figured out what has been known among readers of this site for a long time: that war in space is a real possibility.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/war-in-space-is-becoming-a-real-threat/2017/03/16/af3c35ac-0a8f-11e7-a15f-a58d4a988474_story.html?utm_term=.c60d3db3d139
Maybe Jeff Bezos, who owns Amazon.com, the Washington Post, and the Blue Origins private space program, has figured out that war in space can be a threat or a source of revenue to Blue Origins.
Terrier1

I doubt that. Mr. Bezos has never preferred quick profit to long term structure and long term gains. Remember when the joke was that Amazon might make a profit next year?

bubbles

bubbles

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

bubbles

bubbles

Court Crisis; Termite inspection; Illegals and Food Stamps; Talking to Alexa; and other stories.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

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

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

George Santayana

bubbles

The chaos continues. The locusts that ate my morning and a good part of the afternoon were trivially dealt with, but took time, and kept popping up unexpectedly, usually as I was just sitting down to work. Fortunately the last one is over, solved by Mike Diamond’s smell good plumber for $99, the only problem t=being that in the morning they could not assure an appointment before tomorrow; fortunately they found someone, and although he took a while getting here, once here everything was done quickly and simply. The termite people kept calling, one to say they needed to schedule an appointment for an annual inspection, then suddenly realizing that she didn’t have her appointments schedule, then an inspector (from the same company) to make an appointment, only to discover he had no openings for next week, then the same office girl to offer me an appointment for next Monday. This after about five earlier variations on this theme last week and earlier this week.

So either we have a termite inspection next week, or we don’t, but I have to be ready for someone to appear at the appointed time; which is the hoped for outcome, but I can’t shake the feeling that the next telephone call will be someone telling me I need a termite inspection, when would I like to schedule it?

I discovered also that paying property taxes by having your bank send a check does not work. The bank sent the check last December, and it was received there; the bank later informed me that it had not been cashed, and yesterday I got a new tax bill, with $150 penalty for not paying before the December deadline. At the same time the bank noted the check had been cashed after all. I sent them the taxes with the $150 penalty; I notified the bank to cancel the payment sent last December only to learn that about the same time they sent me the new bill with the penalty attached, they also cashed the check they got last December. Calling the County Tax Collector got sympathy but no results, and attempts to speak to someone who could do something were to no avail. The status now is that I have sent them the payment with the penalty, which I expect will satisfy them; and they’ll someday, I am sure, figure out that I paid twice, but I am not going to worry about it. Yes, it’s a lot of money, but spending time on it does no discernable good, and certainly does not produce additional income. Eventually I suppose I’ll turn my very patient lawyer loose on it, because I want that first payment back; but since I won’t get the penalty back, I suspect I’ll end up spending even more… Ain’t bureaucracy grand? And –

But enough. You don’t need a list of trivia that devoured my time, generally with a telephone call I did not expect just as I settled down to work. The toilets work, Roberta went to her appointments and has returned, and all’s well.

It’s getting late, and I want to get this put before dinner. I’ll probably have more later; there’s some interesting mail. I have nothing useful to say about the Hawaiian judge dictating to the United States as if the judiciary were invited to consult on national security. I’d swear that should be up the President and Congress, and Hawaiian judges do not have the authority to rule for the President on national security cases involving issuing new visas and not applying to citizens; only to aliens.

Andy Jackson once answered an edict by Chief Justice Marshall: “John Marshall has made his decision. Now let him enforce it.” I doubt that President Trump will go that far, but it will be interesting what the President and Congress do here. The interference of the judiciary in the political process, particularly as it is in general in favor of a defeated party which had appointed many of the judges, has caused Constitutional Crises before. FDR threatened to expand the numbers on the Supreme Court, and was appeased only when one Justice switched sides: Google “A switch in time saved nine” for details. There have been others. The original Marbury vs. Madison was deliberately decided in a way to make a Constitutional Crisis difficult to impossible.

I doubt that Ryan has the votes to impeach this Hawaiian judge, and given the Republican squishes as well as Democratic joy over the injunction, there are certainly not enough votes in the Senate to convict; but there are some Democrats who find the Courts’ interference in the political game rather alarming.

– – – –

It’s after dinner, and I’m about to be off to LASFS. I’ll try to add some mail before I go to bed. Stay tuned. This is a time when some might think there are no ways out: despite losing majorities in both Houses, most of the Governorships, even county dog catcher elections, and the Presidency, nothing seems to be happening.. The Democrats retain a claim to the popular vote (almost all of that in New York City and big cities in California). Doesn’t count. Elections matter only when Democrats win them. This is a dangerous belief.

Machiavelli had much to say on this subject; as did the Roman political writers. When a people no longer believe in elections as a means to settle disputes, the disputes don’t go away.

And here’s some mail.

 

bubbles

Termite inspection

Jerry:

I’m not all that clear on the whole “termite inspection” thing.

Is this like an ORI, or are the termites supposed to get in formation while the inspector walks through the ranks?

Keith

 

You’d be astonished at the lengths we go to to keep the termites sociable out here.

bubbles

Property Tax

The status now is that I have sent them the payment with the penalty, which I expect will satisfy them; and they’ll someday, I am sure, figure out that I paid twice, but I am not going to worry about it. Yes, it’s a lot of money, but spending time on it does no discernable good, and certainly does not produce additional income. 

—————

I have found sending a strongly worded letter to your local politician gets results.  Most are available by email.

Your State Senator/Representative and/or the City Council person for your district.  Sometimes it takes a while to get them to 

act and you might want to send a reminder.  Copious paperwork to prove what has been done helps a lot.

B

 

Good advice for younger people.

 

bubbles

 

The Helix Nebula in infrared – God’s Eye, indeed.

<https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/1609/Helix_SpitzerSchmidt_960.jpg>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

Beautiful

bubbles

Illegal Aliens Cancel Foodstamps

Fearing deportation, certain illegal aliens will no longer take food from a program paid for by US taxes and meant for US citizens.

<.>

“This is a response to the climate of fear and terror that immigrant families are living in because of the Trump administration,” said Jackie Vimo, a policy analyst at the National Immigration Law Center.

“These are unfounded fears. But they’re based in this environment, and they’re very widespread.”

</>

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2017/03/16/immigrants-are-now-canceling-their-food-stamps-for-fear-that-trump-will-deport-them/?utm_term=.f98223588c21

Why are non-citizens participating in SNAP? If one US citizen misses a single meal or lives with undernourishment for one second of his or her life then we simply do not have the money to be spending on non-citizens since our people need our money.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

 

I think it best if I do not comment on that.

bubbles

Building the first microcomputer – Computer for Apollo – Buffy Willow

Paper tapes, Hollerith cards and seamstresses with needles hand sewing magnetic core memory. Baby steps towards our world. Well told, in half an hour.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIBhPsyYCiM

B

Petronius

bubbles

: Sweden

Do you remember the outrage over Trump’s comments about Islamic Radicalism causing problems “just like in Sweden?” Remember how the Swedish government screamed foul? Their “Integration Minister” claimed there were no problems.

She comes clean: Sweden’s Integration Minister admits lying when she claimed rape rate was “going down”

https://www.jihadwatch.org/2017/03/swedens-integration-minister-admits-lying-when-she-claimed-rape-rate-was-going-down

Sweden is in deep deep denial while it is in the middle of an existential crisis.

This is why we MUST judicially throttle all immigration, particularly illegal immigration.

{^_^}

bubbles

‘Yarmosh’s 2-year-old son has been so enthralled by Alexa that he tries to speak with coasters and other cylindrical objects that look like Amazon’s device.’

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/how-millions-of-kids-are-being-shaped-by-know-it-all-voice-assistants/2017/03/01/c0a644c4-ef1c-11e6-b4ff-ac2cf509efe5_story.html>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

I fear I have not learned how to use Alexa.  Is it worth the effort? I suspect it is.

bubbles

Jerry

We still don’t know where cosmic rays are coming from:

https://arstechnica.com/science/2017/03/we-still-dont-know-where-cosmic-rays-are-coming-from/.

“Scientists thus find themselves in an awkward position: apparently, the sources of high energy cosmic rays should be close—think of distances on the order of 5,000 light years, which is just a tiny fraction of the diameter of the galaxy (100,000 to 200,000 light years). But, if they are that close, we should be able to make out bright and dark spots in the sky through careful observation.<snip>”

90 authors, and nobody knows. It’s been a conundrum for 40 years, at least.

Ed

 

bubbles

Temperature predictions

Jerry:

I check the local NOAA 7-day forecast several times each day. The predictions have a resolution of one degree (F).

It is common to see predictions being adjusted several times each day for what the temps will be the NEXT day, much less through the rest of the week. Those changes are often several degrees.

These are the people who claim to be able to predict the temps a century from now, with a resolution of less than a degree.

I leave others to draw their own conclusions, but I don’t see anything to put any faith in.

Keith

I still can’t get an answer to whether primary data are air or globe temperatures on land; half the people I ask didn’t know there was a difference,  The data collection stations I have seen at the Santa Monica airport are simple thermistors taking air temperature in a shaded box. I am sure others are more sophisticated, and likely the Santa Monica ones are, but in the 80’s that’s what they were. Globe temperature give radically different results on a cloudy night than they do when exposed to absolute night sky. As the Romans knew when they made ice cream in the deserts.

bubbles

So, the Obama FBI were going to pay for the absurd ‘Trump Dossier’.

<https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/fbi-once-planned-to-pay-former-british-spy-who-authored-controversial-trump-dossier/2017/02/28/896ab470-facc-11e6-9845-576c69081518_story.html>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

Hardly astonishing.

 

bubbles

Scott Adams: ‘Nye didn’t know.’

<http://blog.dilbert.com/post/157823678756>

—————————————

Roland Dobbins

bubbles

Doctors Who Kill

While this may be a perversion of Robert Heinlein’s 1973 Annapolis Address, it does strike me as a logical train of thought. Heinlein stipulated that moral behavior is “that which tends toward survival”, and that acts that promoted the survival of larger groups of humans were higher on the list than “mere” personal survival.
It can be shown that the severely disabled, with the rare exception (Christopher Reeves and Steven Hawking come to mind,) consume more resources than they produce. They eat, they produce waste, they require far more healthcare, and far more human labor to care for than any dog or cat; and produce little to nothing in return. The resources that would have been available for care and and advancement of healthy humans is lost, and can not be reinvested.
Did not the ancient Spartans practice infanticide of crippled or disfigured newborns, exposing them to die, or at best, enslaving them if they had any chance of survival, but not being considered fit to reproduce?
Many military members throughout history chose death before capture and torture by the enemy. I’d not be surprised if a large number of American soldiers wouldn’t kill themselves if they were about to be captured by ISIS; although I’d prefer to take a sizeable honor guard of them with me. Certainly Ghadaffi would have preferred that when his enemies got him.
This parallels the education system in the U.S. where we teach to the lowest common denominator, and nobody can excel. I think most would agree that our current public education system qualifies as being immoral. Well, in that case, so would a blanket program of providing care to all the severely disabled who haven’t paid for it already.
I personally know of several family members or friends who in the last stages of their lives, chose to refuse medical treatment because it would only prolong their pain and humiliation. (To be fair, I know several others who fought the Grim Reaper tooth and claw to the very bitter end.) And there is the euthansia movement of people who wish to have the right to self termination in the face of terminal illness. But in their case, they are the ones controlling their end, not a doctor, insurance company, or faceless bureaucrat.
I’m not God, nor a doctor, nor insurance agent, and while faceless, I’m no bureaucrat. I’m also not in chronic severe pain, or hopelessly crippled. So I don’t know if I would choose to end my own life in that situation; but if a friend were in the same situation begging me to help him die, I’d probably do so. But could I do it if he was so far gone he couldn’t even beg?
I have taken my pets on their last legs to the Vet take the Big Sleep, and occasionally done the deed myself. But those were living creatures, arguably not sentient beings, that I had total responsibility over. Infants, young children, and the severely mentally disabled also fall within the category of someone else having total responsibility over them. Do we allow those responsible to have the choice of life or death for their charges deemed less fit?
I was raised Catholic; so I have a considerable amount of indoctrination that says that it’s God’s decision whether someone lives or dies. I’ve read extensively on this. I’ve prayed about it. I don’t have an answer; other than it’s nobody else’s right to decide whether I live or die as long as I still have my faculties. Whenever I finally lose them, I’m not going to care, am I?

 

Jerry

The bit on doctors who kill was interesting. Too bad so much is video – I don’t watch video. It reminded me of the time my consultation duties took me to the ICU. The patient was covered in tubes and his wife didn’t want him to suffer. The doctors wanted to know if he was competent to make decisions so his wife could ask them and they could turn off his machines at her behest. (If you think that does not make sense, you’re right.)

I’ll admit – I feel like a fake when I do consults on the dying. In this case, I asked one question. I got up in the man’s face and asked, loud enough that he could hear me, “Do you want to die?” He frantically shook his head No and the wife instantly changed her mind on the subject of Quality Of Life. Why did I ask that? I remember my dad, paralyzed by Parkinson’s (he called it “rigor mortis on the installment plan”) saying about a proposed brain implant, “I don’t want to die.” This from a decorated WW2 vet who had made plenty of others do just that. Well, I remembered that for the man in the hospital. Too bad the Dutch doctors do not remember their predecessors.

Ed

 

 

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Subj: Washington Conjures Scientific Integrity

http://judithcurry.com/2010/12/22/washington-update-science-integrity/

Owen Glendower: I can call spirits from the Vasty Deep!

Hotspur: Why, so can I, and so can any man! But will they come when you do call them?

Rod Montgomery

 

 

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

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Health Care, Leaks, Wiretaps, Troop Movements, and other important subjects.

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

George Santayana

bubbles

Still more chaos here, and all over. Leaks everywhere, many of them felonious, although of not much merit other than the breaches in security. As I write this, all the discussion seems to be more resentful of Trump’s income than anything else; he paid more taxes, apparently, than the Clintons or Mr. Obama, or Romney; not a great surprise.

The Cabinet seems to have vacant seats; since Bunny Inspectors work for Agriculture as I understand it, and that’s one of the vacant Cabinet posts, I suppose we’re stuck with them for at least a year, which probably means forever.

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File 770 announces: PRATCHETT BUSTED. The BBC has the story.

A bronze bust of Sir Terry Pratchett has been unveiled ahead of plans to install a 7ft (2.1m) statue of the author in Salisbury, Wiltshire.

It was created by Paul Kidby, who illustrated Sir Terry’s Discworld novels, before his death in 2015.

Well deserved. I am sure he would have appreciated that.

 

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Noonan link around WSJ pay wall

Dr. Pournelle,
FYI, WSJ is covered by a pay wall, so the Peggy Noonan column you linked isn’t immediately available. She also self-publishes, however, and the column also appears at http://www.peggynoonan.com/. Worth a browser bookmark.
Cheers,
-d

 

I have several messages telling me that direct links to Wall Street Journal articles end up outside a pay wall. I always provide the exact title, and as I understand it, if you Google that you get to read what it hits. If someone knows otherwise, please tell me. I also know Googling the exact title always brings up other places you can see the article. You can cut and paste the title to Google – oops, I now realize that will carry the link too; I’ll stop doing that. But generally you can read the articles free if you want, although it may take a bit of patience.

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“Wiretaps” Versus Database Access

Jerry,

I’ve noticed it’s often not well understood what official “wiretaps”

actually involve in 2017. This gets in the way of understanding the current brawl. Can’t have that!

First, it’s been a while since most “wiretaps” actually involved someone going into a phone-wires cabinet and physically clipping on a wire-leads “tap”.

Law enforcement “wiretaps” generally involve taking a warrant down to the local phone company and having them intercept the relevant traffic via minor reprogramming of their switching computers.

Or sometimes, these involve setting up a “Stingray” fake-celltower intercept device nearby.

Either way, they accomplish the same end as an old-fashioned wiretap – recording all traffic to and from a particular device (or devices) that happens after the “wiretap” is set up.

An NSA (National Security Agency, or for its first several decades “No Such Agency”) “wiretap” is very different.

Americans, perhaps fortunately, are crap at keeping secrets. We’ve know for several years now that (along with hoovering up everything they can from the rest of the world) NSA is recording and saving “metadata” on pretty much all domestic calls. From and to what device, when, and how long – that’s officially been recorded and saved in a central database these last ten years or more.

What’s not official but is a poorly-kept secret – Americans, secrets, crap – there are many, many public clues – is that they quite probably also record and save in that database many, if not most (if not all) of these calls’ actual contents. Plus also pretty much all non-voice data communications. (Hi, guys!)

In theory, all this is in support of foreign intelligence gathering plus (under the famous FISA warrants) keeping tabs on foreign agents inside the US. In theory, only communications where at least one end is non-US are fair game to look at.

Everything else just gets swept up as a side effect and officially never used. But, the database exists.

Now, the government in its wisdom did decide that US citizens deserve some privacy protections in all of this. These aren’t applied before the fact – they collect just about everything – but rather after the fact, in terms of who can legally access NSA’s vast all-calls database, what they can legally ask for, and what they’ll then be given.

(It was direct access to this database that Obama expanded from NSA-only to sixteen different US agencies just before he left office.)

Meanwhile, official government wiretapping of an opposition Presidential campaign would be political nitroglycerin. Yet for months we were seeing story after story allegedly based on leaks of info from exactly such wiretaps, and nobody was picking up on that aspect.

Until, that is, this President tweeted that his campaign was wiretapped by the previous Administration, forcing focus onto exactly that.

Ever since, we’ve seen the organizations legally allowed access to this NSA database running for cover: One by one denying stoutly that *they* ever processed any such properly authorized “wiretaps”, AKA NSA database searches, of the Trump campaign.

Which leaves two possibilities: All the many leak-based news reports of Trump-related wiretaps were pure malicious fiction. (Some of them probably were. But all of them? Some of the alleged facts included certainly sounded like they’d come from wiretaps.)

Or, someone was doing NSA calls-database searches outside of normal properly authorized channels. Which, given what’s in it – everything – should be deeply disturbing to everyone.

Which brings us to today’s news: A claim that Britain’s GCHQ (their equivalent of our NSA) also has access to this NSA all-calls database, that they occasionally do off-the-books illegal-by-US-parties US searches as favors for the US government, and that this might be where the Trump campaign wiretaps actually came from.

http://www.dailywire.com/news/14394/bombshell-fox-news-sources-say-obama-used-brits-john-nolte#

Me, I’m not sure I believe it.

Oh, it’s highly plausible that GCHQ has such a deal, and does such favors. That sort of thing has been rumored for a long time, and Brit and US intelligence have been scratching each other’s backs since WWII.

But any sane GCHQ spook would recognize a US request to wiretap a major US Presidential candidate as political dynamite, and kick it upstairs to a political level where it would presumably die a traditional British politely noncommittal foot-dragging death.

I think it far more likely that the NSA’s database was being tapped into outside official procedures by the same sort of rabidly partisan US bureaucrats who carried out the IRS conservative targeting.

Only the NSA likely has far better monitoring and recording of who accessed its data than the IRS seems to. These hypothetical partisan bureaucrats might well still be identifiable. Hence this current bit of what looks to me like misdirection?

Worth investigating, I’d say.

Mind, even if I’m wrong here, either way, someone high in the previous Administration would have been coordinating the targeting and leaking of these wiretaps. And either way, it might be possible to track them down too.

interesting times

Porkypine

 

I make no doubt that President Trump will attempt to get to the bottom of this, using both career government agents and others. Felonies have not only been committed but boasted of, and I am told this irritates him. It’s called Rule of Law; reverence for the Law was eloquently pleaded for by Lincoln, not least in a Disneyland address by a live action statue for many years (quoting a real speech, of course). It was elementary civics when President Trump was growing up.

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CIA/NSA “stealing” Russian malware

to use malware, you have to put a copy of it on the targeted computers. As soon as any targeted computer is analyzed, whoever does the analysis has a copy of the malware and can decompile it to see exactly how it works.
So OF COURSE the CIA/NSA/etc have copies of Russian malware. So does every other spy agency, and all of those agencies have copies of the CIA/NSA malware as well. If it’s any good, they will adapt it for their own use (why reinvent the wheel after all). And this lets them fool people who are stupid enough to say “the Russians were known to use this malware at some time in the past, so the Russians must have been the ones to use it this time”
Security Professionals have been saying this ever since the ‘analysis’ of the DNC hacking was released.

– –

But of course…

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Did you know there’s an ATF National Firearms Examiner Academy?

Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed eCollection eComments Requested; Extension Without Change of a Currently Approved Collection; Application for National Firearms Examiner Academy, ATF F 6330.1

Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposed eCollection eComments Re…

The Department of Justice (DOJ), Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), will submit the foll…

R

 

I did not know that, and I doubt many others do. Perhaps someone will tell Mr. Trump

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You sound like Heinlein’s ‘rational anarchist’ / Oxenlock / Pneumonia vaccinations…

Jerry,

Regarding your March 13th post:

Good discussion! You remind me of Heinlein’s ‘rational anarchist’ (The Prof) in The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress. I wonder if most social problems in this modern age might be expressed as too many ‘oxen’ at risk of being gored. The status quo cannot get a needed ‘tune up’ because influential oxen owners will ‘fight to the death’ to maintain the oxen-protection system — and their very oxen are ‘the bigger economic guns’? To coin a new word from ‘gridlock’, perhaps society is in ‘oxenlock’? <g>   I suspect that oxenlock eventually leads to systemic collapse or rebellion… or perhaps a partial ‘pancake’ collapse into a kind of disguised feudalism.

Pneumonia:

If you haven’t already had one, it might be prudent to ask your doctor about the two multi-bacteria pneumonia vaccines available. One inoculates against 13 strains, the other appears to be a superset of 23.

Stay healthy! The nation needs more ‘rational troublemakers’!  Watch out for those ox horns, though!  <g>

Regards,

-John G. Hackett

 

Thank you for the kind words, but I am reluctant to accept the label of “anarchist” no matter how modified. I believe good government is a blessing; it is also rare. When I taught senior level political science, I used C. Northcote Parkinson’s Evolution of Political Thought as a major text; it was then fairly easy to obtain, and covers the subject fairly well. Anarchy does not seem to work except in very small communities. The test of government is when there are large numbers of disaffected inhabitants, and there is change. Ours took place in 17878. Two years later the French tried a different approach.

Most people prefer a Napoleon to utter discord, even if they would not normally support him. Our English forbears brought over the son of the King they had beheaded to reestablish the Monarchy; they were fortunate to get him.

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Real government growth and healthcare reform

Dr. Pournelle,
In case you missed it (as I did), last month George Will summarize (https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/big-government-sneakily-gets-bigger/2017/02/24/70cb52d2-fa07-11e6-be05-1a3817ac21a5_story.html) a Brookings paper (https://www.brookings.edu/blog/fixgov/2017/02/13/ten-questions-and-answers-about-americas-big-government/) by John J. DiIulio Jr. DiIulio asserts that government funded bureaucracy has grown 3.5 times since 1961, despite directly employing approximately the same number today as back then.
IMO, that growth is in operations and not acquisition, especially DOD purchases, where I suspect the growth is even greater and less efficiently executed.
I do not know if the figures include the growth of government-financed industry, such as the huge growth of medical “insurance” and health care provider services companies, which has accelerated tremendously since the passage of the Affordable Care Act.
As an aside, I prefer ACA over the term Obamacare, since it has obviously been really Uncle Teddy’s Dream Care (which makes a poor acronym), and the other term seems to transfer some of the last president’s glamour to the program, an attribute that should be ignored. Best the two be separated. And since a stated goal of ACA was to make health care universally affordable and not to reduce costs, it can only be regarded as immensely Iron Law successful: Costs and the bureaucracy to administer the program are increasing at a rate that is out-of-control.
In service to the thought about your future essay (and to punish a deceased equine even more thoroughly) I ask why ACA should be replaced at all? An overdue reform of Medicaid (which has not been replaced by ACA) could provide health care for the lowest income citizens and repeal of ACA without a replacement would immediately lower the rate of spiraling costs.
Cheers,
-d

 

Explicitly denying that illegals are entitled to health “insurance” would help too, but “insurance” with no rate adjustments for “preexisting conditions” is not insurance at all; it is a mere entitlement requiring someone else to pay your bills. That is a free good, and the demand for free goods has no real limits.

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Your SFWA Experience Subject

Dr. Pournelle –
The SFWA section of the Mar 13th Chaos Manor was probably the best I’ve read of your posts.
I’ve encountered the upsetedness you mention towards the end and, usually, it comes from being unable to refute what is being said or is a symptom of being uncomfortable at having long-held beliefs shown to be invalid and being unable to come to terms with that invalidity.
My arguments against federal healthcare have been mostly met with “General Welfare” counters. Thing is, that healthcare check is written to cover the expenses of an individual. Individual is not General. Therefore, the General Welfare clause in no way covers federal healthcare plans.
I suppose the Commerce Clause could be, he said smirking, “liberally” applied to cover doctor’s expenses, if, perhaps, the doctor is reaching across a state line in order to perform an examination. I suppose a doctor with his office at Four Corners might be especially subject to federal controls.
But, if his limbs do not leave one state for another, the Commerce Clause could, in no way, predominate.
In my humble opinion, of course.
Unfortunately, it seems that the concept of “Black Robes Confer Infallibility” dictates otherwise.
Best wishes to you and your wife for continued improvement and protection from future concerns.
Cam Kirmser

 

There are many reasons to question the Constructional authority to establish entitlements. The federal government was not established to entitle the citizens; it can protect them from state tyrannies but giving them free stuff was not its purpose. There is a difference between building Interstate roads and distributing goodies and free stuff.

An aborted discussion by professional authors

All your discussion on the SFWA forum of government control of our lives is rather ironic — considering it is the Science Fiction Writers of America! Didn’t anyone bring up Jack Williamson’s 1947 novella, “With Folded Hands …”? Later expanded into “The Humanoids”?
Although it’s been a few decades since I read the novel, I still vividly remember the Prime Directive: “to serve and obey and guard men from harm.”
Reading Williamson’s comments from a 1991 interview is rather chilling considering what we have experienced with the rise of progressive politics and social justice warriors:
“…this experience produced in me a deep seated distrust of benevolent protection. In retrospect, I’m certain I projected my fears and suspicions of this kind of conditioning, and these projections became the governing emotional principle of “With Folded Hands” and The Humanoids.”
*SIGH* Unfortunately it is no longer benevolent…
WS

 

Williamson’s With Folded Hands” ought to be required reading for anyone programming robots.

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Aspirin for stroke prevention: the story of Dr. Craven and his discovery

Intrigued by your off-hand comment that “A Glendale dentist had noticed that patients who routinely took aspirin had fewer strokes than those who didn’t”, I went a-Googling, and found this:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1894700/

Thanks again for all you do!

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

 

Fascinating. Tells the whole story quite well.

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Starship Troopers Redux

Dr Pournelle,

In case you haven’t heard. A new version. Reportedly following the novel this time. 

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/starship-troopers-reboot-works-943882

Mark Swift and Damian Shannon, the writing duo behind the upcoming Zac Efron-Dwayne Johnson 'Baywatch' movie, will pen the script for the alien-bug war film.

‘Starship Troopers’ Reboot in the Works (Exclusive …

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com

The bugs are coming back. Columbia Pictures is rebooting Starship Troopers, the 1997 sci-fi film directed by Paul Verhoeven. The studio has tapped Mark Swift and …

Matthew

 

It cannot possibly be worse than the original. Ginny hated that one.

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Materiel Moving to East Coast!

I just saw videos of hundreds of tanks moving to the East Coast, loaded on trains — tan in color. I also saw hundreds of tan in color APCs in a video along highway 90.

Also, Russia is building up jamming capabilities in Crimea and we’ve moved B1s, B52s, and drones into South Korea in preparation.

I looked into it, and it seems that we know what units the materiel came from and where it is going and it seems that it is, indeed, going to Poland. Unless we experience mysterious delays, I think we can rule out domestic action:

<.>

U.S. soldiers offloaded scores of combat vehicles from ship to shore Sunday at the massive port here, pressing forward with one of the largest U.S. force movements in Europe since the end of the Cold War.

Some 2,500 pieces of gear belonging to the 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, including Abrams tanks and Bradley fighting vehicles, are bound for NATO’s eastern flank, making a 6,000-mile journey from Fort Carson, Col.

</>

https://www.stripes.com/news/poland-bound-us-tanks-roll-east-in-military-signal-to-russia-1.447977

Also, Japan is heating up and the Philippines has some confusion about the Chinese ship in it’s waters. The Defense Minister said it’s a threat and their president seems to think China is their friend and says that he agreed to have the ships here and that he was notified in advance and he doesn’t want to fight with China and he wants the money

they promised… He’ll get neither, I’ll bet. I doubt China will

pay much and I doubt China would find much of a fight without a real navy to meet them.

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

 

We are sending a fairly large armed force to Poland. I fervently hope that President Trump is smart enough to avoid actual war with Russia. Actually, I am pretty sure he is. You can’t invade Ukraine or Russia with a few brigades, and both President Trump and President Putin know it.  It’s a show of force, but who it is intended to impress is not clear.

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CIA Empowered by Trump?

Alright, I don’t understand this. Maybe you read this WSJ article:

https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-gave-cia-power-to-launch-drone-strikes-1489444374

This is the same CIA that is all over the news. This is the same CIA that seems to be leading the charge against Trump — or at least Bremer loyalists at CIA.

Why would you disempower the Pentagon and empower a bureaucracy that can’t keep it’s most secret secrets secret? Then again, the Pentagon

hasn’t been doing so well in Iraq and Afghanistan. Inter alia, WWII

took less time to fight and win but we can blame that on policy makers. CIA’s screwups, however, cannot be blamed on policy makers.

I’m not sure what the thinking is here; can you help me out?

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

 

No.

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UN Funding Cut “Draconian”

Alright, I skipped dessert to come write this email because I just had to share this laugh:

<.>

State Department staffers have been instructed to seek cuts in excess of 50 percent in U.S. funding for U.N. programs, signaling an unprecedented retreat by President Donald Trump’s administration from international operations that keep the peace, provide vaccines for children, monitor rogue nuclear weapons programs, and promote peace talks from Syria to Yemen, according to three sources.

The push for such draconian measures comes…

</>

https://foreignpolicy.com/2017/03/13/white-house-seeks-to-cut-billions-in-funding-for-united-nations/

I stopped reading at this point. It is now “Draconian” that an elected official does not see value in spending my taxpayer dollars on the problems of foreign nations through the United Nations? It’s Draconian that we can make our own decisions about how we spend our money and if we choose not to spend it on people who want it then we’re evil?

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

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Health care matters

Dear Dr Pournelle
First, fair disclosure. I was brought up as a typical post war baby boom kid in London. The “right” to health care, in the form of the NHS is so deeply programmed into me that rational arguments are hard to accept, even now. “Give me the boy and I will give you the man” Back in the fifties, everything was available on NHS. Dental, Optical, vaccinations, pretty much everything. I have watched it being gradually eroded by successive UK governments with dismay. Of course today it is a shadow of what it once was.
Now, that said, I am generally supportive of your arguments. But for one thing, best put by Dr Asimov regarding robotics. “A robot may not harm a human being, or through inaction allow a human to come to harm” (I think that’s about right) The second cause is the clincher. In your somewhat Ayn Randian view of things, if a doctor sees a bum knocked over in the street obliged in any way to help him? My feeling is “of course he is” You may or may not agree.
Best wishes to you and your missus,

David

 

“Of course, today it is a shadow of what it once was.”

Yet there have been all these advances in medical science.

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Political Humor for Today:

From a political humor mailing I got today, this one stands out my favorite:

 

 

image

Phil

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

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Proof of life; Lowering drug costs; an aborted discussion by professional authors; WikiLeaks; and other important matters.

Monday, March 13, 2017

“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

Liberalism is a philosophy of consolation for the West as it commits suicide.

James Burnham

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

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Every time I think I am recovering from the crud, I have a relapse. This time for sure, as Bullwinkle was fond of saying. I seem to have no more symptoms other than running out of energy; when I expel my tidal air I get wheezing, but some deep coughing clears that out. Maybe I had mild pneumonia, but I doubt it; friends tell me they had this cried for six weeks. But the weather is nice outside, and much of the domestic stress at chaos manor has been rectified, so things can improve rapidly. We have adjusted the staff taking care of Roberta, and the reconstruction of the house is in order.

I should get some time in the Monk’s cell, giving me a chance to run through Mamelukes; the interstellar colony book Steve Barnes, Larry Niven and I are working on; and the serious novel on artificial intelligence and robotics John De Chancie and I are doing. I can still work on non-fiction from down here in the chaos – after all, I wrote a lot of the columns in the press room at computer shows and AAAS meetings – but I can’t do fiction with constant distractions.

Speaking of which they are calling dinner. I’ll get this up fast to relieve curiosity; also I have finally recorded the subscriptions sent to the po box; I hadn’t been there in a month – actually in two months. Thank you all for renewing; there was a pretty big bundle.

I’ll have a substantive contribution and an amusing story later tonight.

bubbles

I posted this much before dinner.

 

I returned after dinner to write the rest of this.

 

bubbles

I thought I would have a substantive essay.  I have notes for several. unfortunately it is 2150, and I have had no time to work on it.  There are several things to contemplate. One is technical: the best keyboard I have found to work with is the keyboard of the ASUS ZenBook. The keys are large, larger than the keys of the Logitech Bluetooth keyboard I use on my main machine, but it’s a laptop; it doesn’t have the enormous disk capacity of my main machine, and maybe I just have a prejudice for big desktops; on the other hand, I can write faster on the ZenBook’s keyboard, and the ZenBook has at least as fast a CPU as does Eugene (this machine). On the gripping hand, Eugene has a lot of customizations; it has a big set of spam filtering rules, and a lot of junk mail addresses I have no idea of how to transfer to a laptop. It has a number of AutoCorrect rules that let me type faster with fewer corrections. It took a while to build that and I’d hate to lose it, but I have no notion of where that AutoCorrect table is stored. I suppose I can find it, and many of the other things on Eugene I want on a main machine, but since my stroke I am very nervous about starting big projects that I don’t really know how to do; that’s probably why I no longer do the monthly computing column. Intimidated; of course the most popular feature of the column was my log of attacking big problems and bulling through to a happy ending, but now I’m not so confident of the happy ending.

All of which argues that I should do that, and write up the experience in Chaos Manor Reviews, and I suppose I ought to do that. My experiments with keyboards since the stroke took away my touch typing capability have led me to the conclusion that the ZenBook keyboard is superior to any others I have tried – larger keys and better key separation, and all over better layout. It has output to a big screen, which is what I need to edit text – my eyes ain’t what they used to be – and since it has a docking station I can attach an enormous capacity disk to, I can simply copy Eugene’s D drive to that and it will be the ZenBook’s D drive. We’ll see about everything else.

It will take a while, though. For the moment, Eugene with the Logitech K360 will just have to do.

bubbles

If you have not seen Peggy Noonan’s “A Surprising Show of Confidence” in the Saturday, March 4-5 issue of the Wall Street Journal, it’s worth your time. Ms. Noonan learned her way around the White House in Nixon days, and has remained a respectable – and my many respected – journalist since. She is nominally conservative but often realistic and objective. This is her reaction to President Trump’s speech to Congress, and shows that some journalists might be getting the news of the election in November. I meant to write about her piece a week ago, along with my analysis of the speech, but chaos intervened.

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I contemplate three essays. One is probably part of a longer discussion of how to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, and just how much of the income of the healthy do the unfortunates rightfully claim? That is, if I’m healthy and you’re not, how much of your health care bill do I have an obligation to pay? And if I don’t have that obligation, who does? Our grandchildren? Immigrants? If they’re entitled to “insurance whose rates are nor raised by prior conditions” – clearly a losing proposition to any insurance company – someone must pay. Who should it be, and how did they get that obligation?

(And please don’t argue Christian duty. That may well be true, but nothing stops you from donating to Christian hospitals and clinics and for that matter missionary doctors; but that can’t affect non-Christians, nor legal obligations; see all kinds of Supreme Court rulings on that subject.)

One answer to health care problems is reduction in costs of health care. That is quite obvious, and certainly not being neglected by President Trump, but one reason for those high costs, particularly to the elderly, is the costs of drugs and pharmaceuticals in general. For more on that, see

A Doctor to Heal the FDA

Scott Gottlieb may be Trump’s most important nominee.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-doctor-to-heal-the-fda-1489357456

in today’s Wall Street Journal editorials.

[snip]One of Dr. Gottlieb’s priorities will be moving generic medicines to market, and competition is the best way to reduce the price of treatments like the now infamous EpiPen. About 10% of 1,300 branded drugs “have seen patents expire but still face zero generic competition,” Dr. Gottlieb wrote in the Journal last year. “New regulations have, in many cases, made it no longer economically viable for more than one generic firm to enter the market.” Now he can roll back such arbitrary directives.

The press is overcome with relief that President Trump didn’t pick Jim O’Neill, a Peter Thiel pal who supports making drugs available to patients after testing for safety, though not for efficacy. But that idea is far from crazy, especially for drugs that treat rare diseases when no approved options exist. Why should desperate patients have to take a sugar pill so the FDA can satisfy its demand for 100% certainty that a drug works? [snip]

And of course there is room to debate just what phrase in the Constitution gives the Federal Government power to forbid sale of something they think ineffective, when they know it’s not harmful, but there is no proof of ineffectiveness? Why can the Feds forbid snake oil? And of course the argument is that they know snake oil just wastes the badly needed resources of desperate people who have a powerful motive to buy anything that gives them the shadow of a hope.

While I was sick I did participate in some chatter in other conferences; one of them was the SFWA Forums, which are open to members only, and quoting anything said there without explicit permission from the author is explicitly forbidden; a policy I have no argument with, but of course I can give myself permission to quote myself, and I do.

I said:

Someone might develop the technology, but the FDA will require tests costing tens of millions of dollars before they will let anyone sell that technology to users, even if the users have full knowledge that this is a new technology not certified by the government to be effective. That will prevent upstarts from getting into the business, so the already established companies are safe from competition from newcomers. The use of government to prevent new competition to established business has been going on for a long time.  Adam Smith wrote about it.

Once a bureaucracy is established it inevitably cooperates with the established businesses to prevent new entries that would be competition.  The cost of tests for any new drug — not just tests that it does not harm, but that it is “effective” — keeps Big Pharma safe from new competition.  People who see some technique as their holy hope must beg the bureaucrats to let them try it, but they are not often successful.

Exactly why the Constitution gives the Federal Government the right to forbid me from buying a drug is not clear.  The Volstead Act forbidding us from alcohol was declared unconstitutional, there being no grant of power to the federal government to prevent it, and it required the 18th Amendment to make federal prohibition possible.  It sure turned out well.  It was repealed.

There is no Constitutional grant of power for the FDA, but apparently, it can forbid not only narcotics and hemp, but competition to aspirin and for that matter snake oil, although which clause of the constitution gives that power to the feds is not clear.  Perhaps it is a penumbra of some emanation?

This was answered by stating the good intentions of the Congress in giving that authority, and references to Henry VIII and his attempts to ban medical fakes and their drugs.

Yes; but how does the Federal Government get the power to forbid me from buying snake oil if I want to?  Or some new drug product that the FDA doesn’t “know” to be effective, even though there is no evidence that it is harmful? It took decades before the FDA finally approved aspirin as a possible blood thinner. A Glendale dentist had noticed that patients who routinely took aspirin had fewer strokes than those who didn’t. It was amazing how much effort was put into keeping him from saying that at medical conventions. Now, of course, it’s accepted wisdom. I doubt it would be if he hadn’t been a persistent nuisance insisting that it seemed to work.  Of course there’s no big money in preventative use of aspirin.

I have nothing against the FDA having the power to insist on labeling accuracy, and even to require that the seller label a drug “Not Approved by the FDA. Take at your own risk. This could be useless.” Well, I sort of do because I find no grant of power giving the Feds any control over that sort of thing, but we’ve let them do it for so long that it’s well established; but after they insist that the seller tell you that the Government doesn’t think this will do you any good, and maybe it will kill you, why do they employ armed agents to prevent you from selling it when it is properly labeled  “The FDA thinks you ought to avoid this stuff”? Or stronger labels. “The FDA believes this is a scam, and it may kill you.  Don’t buy it.”

I know some desperate people with terminal problems who’d be willing to try all kinds of stuff. Probably none of it will do them any good. They can afford snake oil. Why is this the people’s business? I can understand the government not wanting to make snake oil an entitlement and have to pay for it. I don’t understand why they won’t let me buy it.

You can argue that making them inform you that’s they think it’s worthless is a good idea, but it’s still your business if you want it anyway.

It was pointed out that this power is part of the power to regulate Interstate Commerce, and of course that is the Court decision. Rather wordily and not very brilliantly I said

My question is, where did the federal government get the power to substitute its judgment for mine when it comes to questions of my health or my children’s? 

The obvious solution is to take that away.  I can understand requiring proper labeling (although the source of that authority is subject to debate). I can understand requiring the label to say “The FDA has not approved this. Beware.  But to say it can’t be sold at all because some say it is not effective is another story.  if a doctor I trust says that snake oil is good for me, and the government disagrees, why should the government be involved at all?  Of course it really has to be snake oil, derived from snakes, or it has to explain that it isn’t, it’s really just swamp water; but isn’t even that the province of the states?

At which point came an eloquent assertion of people’s rights to be protected from fraudsters and snake oil salesmen who drain away the resources of people who desperately need them.

To which I said:

Because some citizens are incompetent all citizens must be deprived of the power to make what government thinks is a bad decision.  Understood.  Alas, I cannot agree.

Hardly the most brilliant argument I have ever made, but there it is. I did get one chap to say he agreed with me, this being Liberalism vs. Libertarianism; not precisely what I was arguing. There followed a long discussion of Liberalism vs. Libertarianism, and a protest that this was not assertion of control over people, but protecting them from obvious harm.

Since I am neither Liberal nor Libertarian, I wouldn’t know.  I thought I was pointing out that protecting people from things they don’t want to be protected from looks a lot like control. Children need to be protected from pederasts. One of those protections is jailing people who have child pornography on their hard disks; even cartoons of child pornography. How it got there is of no concern; claiming you didn’t know it was there is no defense.

In a case forty years ago, a chap was suspected of embezzling from a bank; also with mail fraud; both federal crimes. There wasn’t enough evidence to get a search warrant, but the feds were morally certain that he was guilty and a search of his house would prove it.  A federal postal inspector mailed him, registered mail, some kiddie porn (printed; this is before the Internet). The chap had to sign for it. Now they had absolute proof that he had kiddie porn in his house, obtained a warrant from a friendly judge, searched his house, ignored the porn but found plenty of evidence of embezzling, and charged him.  I expect it would be easier now to download a video file to someone, and in these days of terabyte hard drives it would not be noticed until discovered by a search team…

Good way to protect people?

Yes, often people do need protecting, and law officers need a victory over very clever criminals every now and then. Government is a positive good, not merely necessary. No one wants to live in a Hobbesian society where life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short. Hobbes solved that problem: absolute monarchy. He protects you, you submit to him.  In 1648 the English decided that had gone too far. Then they found they needed the King after all, and brought his son back. In 1688 the decided they needed a king, but not that one, and came up with a new balance between King and Parliament. That experiment was still going on in 1776. The Convention of 1787 had all that in mind when they drafted the Constitution (sorry to repeat what used to be taught in 5th grade). It’s always a balance between government doing too much, and places where anarchy reigns and it does too little. There are always people who think we have too much government and those who think we have too little. We will hardly settle that here.

I was trying to point out that people with perfectly good motives for protecting others do end up controlling them for their own good, and sometimes the protected people resent the hell out of it.

There followed a long discussion of child pornography laws irrelevant to this discussion, as well as discussion of various food supplements not approved by the FDA which some people found helpful and some did not. There was other chatter on that subject. You are very likely sick of the subject, but there’s a point to this long exposition (other than a desire to give you something I wrote while neglecting you; I do know it’s not my best).

Much of that discourse was in response to some well-made arguments I regret I cannot quote either the assertion or my answer without skating closer to the rules than I care to go. At one point, I said:

Here in southern California we have either a severe cold or bit-worse-than-moderate-flu going around. Laid me low for a week, and I find that many friends have lost four or five weeks to it;.  One couple eventually developed pneumonia. I have found Alka-Seltzer Plus, sudafed, and lots of down time the only things that work, and I’m slowly climbing out of it, but it’s quite real. I credit the myriad pills I take daily with keeping it from being as severe with me as it was for some of my younger friends.

We come now to the close of this, and the point. There was a long and impassioned defense of the good intentions of the authorities, and the good work they do. I replied:

Surely there is a way to let people mind their own business that doesn’t involve sending SWAT teams to raid a business for selling things that aren’t harmful? Particularly if they are clearly labeled?  I’m of the opinion that you should be able to sell snake oil so long as it is properly labeled; indeed, I have no objection to a label that says “The US Government believes the claims made for this stuff are ridiculous and absurd, and a waste of your money”  — and that it contains what it says it is, namely actual snake oil. 

Jailing doctors for prescribing off label — there aren’t enough billion dollar tests of the effectiveness of this for a particular disorder that it might work on, but you can prescribe it for something else — seems to me a bit of a stretch and a power I can’t find in the Constitution.  Whether a state can do that I can’t say.

The urge for well meaning people to mind someone else’s business for their own good is fairly strong.

The states may have inherited the crown powers of Henry VIII, but the federal government got only those granted in the Constitution, as witness the failure of the Volstead Act until the passage of the Prohibition Amendment, whereupon the feds could protect people from drinking alcohol. A well meant act with side effects severe enough that the Amendment was later repealed.

John Adams said that in America we believe that each man is the best judge of his own interests; of course he was speaking of the nation as a whole, not of the states with their inheritance of crown powers which used those powers in quite different ways one from another.

It is always good to protect small children from profit seeking capitalists, but how does that apply to protecting Jim Baen and me from SAMe, which we had to have brought to us from Italy where it was sold on the open market but prohibited in the US?  Now of course it is open market here in the US, but for years it was confiscated at the border if detected.  Possibly a folly, but one I indulge in.

Good intentions are not always justification for protecting people from their follies — or what others perceive as follies. Like aspirin as a heart attack preventative.

At which point there was a plea from an officer I respect to stop this discussion; no reasons given. I was ready to do so, but it continued anyway, and after other exchanges I said:

But surely there is room for disagreement on the effectiveness of various vitamins and other food supplements?  Linus Pauling was probably wrong about the universal effectiveness of saturation bombing with Vitamin C, but perhaps stupid is the wrong word to apply to a Nobel Prize winner?  And it may be that it is effective on some and not others, but we do not yet know how to distinguish one from another, so we use “psychosomatic effect” to “explain” the actual data that suggests that some do indeed have dramatic cures while others do not?  

Jim Baen found in his search of the literature (mostly from overseas literature) that SAMe has a dramatic beneficial effect, at least on some people.  At the time it was very expensive in the United States because it was illegal; perhaps it was much to the benefit of those manufacturing it to have the United States government involved in keeping the price high?  But it was so popular in some parts of Europe that there was competition in selling it, so the price there was low.  For years, the US spent money preventing the importation of SAMe, and people like Jim Baen and me spent money acquiring it. Eventually the US restriction was dropped, and you can buy it on line at reasonable prices now.  No one ever asserted that it was harmful; only that it was not “effective”; yet a great many people, here and abroad, thought it was effective in many ways.  Perhaps we were fooling ourselves, and the placebo effect was triggered, and there was nothing more to it.  Perhaps, but what little continued research there is suggests otherwise.

The point being, what power in the Constitution gives the Federal government the authority to keep the price high?  Perhaps the states have inherited that power from the Crown, but the Constitution explicitly rejects the notion that the Federal Government (as opposed to the States) inherited any powers at all, and has none not explicitly granted in the Constitution of 1789 as amended. I can well imagine that the Feds can and perhaps should refuse to pay for anything not proven effective by the FDA itself, but that brings up entitlement in general and that is certainly not a subject for this discussion; but not paying for someone’s use of a disputed substance is not the same as having Customs officials seize and presumably destroy a product not shown to be harmful  and in fact widely used elsewhere on the grounds that the FDA has not seen the results of a tens of millions of dollars double blind study of its effectiveness, and Federal officials’ judgment is superior to that of individual citizens.

We went through all this in the California battle over compulsory use of helmets for motorcycle riders.  For years cyclists protested that they have the right not to wear a helmet.  Now they do not, because head injuries use a lot of medical resources, some of those — probably nearly all, now — are provided by public money, and helmet protection is a reasonable requirement.  That has been accepted by most motorcycle associations, reluctantly by some. But surely that argument is far more reasonable than one substituting a public official’s judgment for that of a citizen when it comes to the use of SAMe — or snake oil, for that matter.

The discussion is not unimportant; perhaps it should be transferred to another topic,

That was too much. A SFWA moderator, backed by the officer who had requested that the discussion halt, locked the conference, and it sits in frozen silence. The reason given was that it was too personal, and I was privately informed that there were complaints about me. Since I named no one at any time, I mildly protested that I was unaware of what was personal about it that would be personally offensive to professional writers voluntarily reading a topic no one could possibly feel required to read.

The answer I got was that these discussions upset some members, and that a SFWA forum was no place for political discussions at all. And that’s the point: we have come to this, that a professional writers’ association finds that we can no longer have discussions that include politics because some members (who voluntarily read the topic) find it upsetting, and toxic, presumably because they disagree with the opinions expressed. For the life of me I cannot tell you what professional science fiction writer would find anything I said there personally offensive. Disagree, yes, of course; many disagree; that is to be expected, and it is those the FDA will rally to support the proposition that the FDA should insist that generic prescription of Name Brand drugs whose patents have expired be forbidden until double blind tests of the generic drug’s effectiveness have proved its effectiveness.

I think health care costs can be drastically lowered by letting doctors have more room to try different remedies; obviously only with informed consent of the patient, but medical associations I would suppose will work to assure that; but apparently the entire discussion can’t be discussed in a science fiction professional organization because some members are upset over encountering opinions contrary to their own – and if it can’t be discussed there, where the devil can it be discussed?

bubbles

I suppose another discussion of immigration enforcement is in order, but nothing will change physics: transporting ten million people to the borders will take time and many resources just to do; and the inevitable legal tangles will take more. Surely it’s best to start with the least desirable? In which case, do we have to let those who aren’t among the worst know they’re safe, at least for years? Or will that just make them bolder in protest rather than calming their fears? Perhaps a random process: undocumented immigrants arrested in a protest face a 5% chance of being deported? But that makes this a farce, and is not what we need.

bubbles

A new government? Or no government

Dr. Pournelle, hope that you are now on top of the cold or whatever it is… seems to be an epidemic around Northwest Florida as well.
This comes from Sign of the Times (https://www.sott.net/article/345144-A-week-in-the-life-of-the-American-kleptocracy) I submit this without any ability whatsoever to vet or verify. The salient quote seems to me to be this:
“This begs the question: if the government is overstepping its authority, abusing its power, and disregarding the rule of law but no one seems to notice—and no one seems to care—does it matter if the government has become a tyrant?
Here’s my short answer: when government wrongdoing ceases to matter, America will have ceased to be.”
In this article our current form of government is represented as a “Kleptopcracy” meaning a rule by thieves and enforced by “techotyrany” (ie: CIA, NSA).
The examples quoted range far and wide but all seem to tie into our current political malaise and mistrust of government in general.
John Thomas

 

I am no anarchist, nor am I Liberal or Libertarian; and having been read out of the Conservative movement I feel no need to defend them. I do think there are elements of a ship that exists only to serve its crew in what we have at present. And Bunny Inspectors?

bubbles

WikiLeaks and Umbrage

Dear Mr. Pournelle,
I’ve been following a useful series of articles in the (London) Times regarding Russian cyberwarfare. An article this Sunday caught my attention (http://www.thetimes.co.uk/past-six-days/2017-03-12/focus/yo-bro-im-totally-watching-you-zcxtckcq9) Here are a few brief quotes.
‘But perhaps the most significant element of the cache was the claim by WikiLeaks that the CIA’s “umbrage” division” had been “fabricating” Russian hacks against the West. …
‘One British intelligence source told The Sunday Times that this was the key “revelation” in the WikiLeaks dump, and would be used to discredit western-backed allegations about Russian cyber-attacks on Britain and the U.S.
‘The source added: “Winston Churchill famously once said: ‘In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies.’
“In the Russian manual of disinformation, lies are so precious they should always be attended by a bodyguard of truth. Assange’s Russian masters have inserted a conspicuous lie in these documents, which are otherwise largely accurate.
“Wikileaks claims that the Americans have stolen Russian cyber-weapons are are now using them. Doubtless this line of defense will be used in Washington in the coming months by parties with an interest in muddying the waters.”
‘The party with the greatest interest in Washington in “muddying the waters” is Russia …’
And further down:
‘Michael Hayden, former CIA director, said “I’m now pretty close to the position that WikiLeaks is acting as an arm, as an agent, of the Russian Federation.”‘
I would use WikiLeaks as a source of information extremely cautiously; if at all.
Yours,
Allan E. Johnson

I distrust most intelligence sources; one of my jobs was once to sort out credible technological threats. There is a strong incentive for spies to find what they’re looking for. And of course an astonishing number of agents on the other side are turned by ours, leading to the obvious speculation…

bubbles

Health Insurance

Dear Dr Pournelle,

So far I have resisted the temptation to comment on the Trump Presidency. But the following comments on Obamacare vs Trumpcare might be of interest.

The Irish healthcare system is hardly ideal, in fact it’s a shambles. Public healthcare (funded from general taxation) is great for certain things but not so good when there’s a shortage of hospital beds or specialists. Private healthcare, which is funded by individuals who can afford to pay the premium, effectively allows you to jump the queue and get a better level of care. We have several providers in Ireland.

While private health insurance is frequently paid for or subsidised by employers, it’s not tied to the job. So if I quit work or change jobs, I can contact the insurer and agree to continue my payments and thus not break my cover. I can switch providers or change plan with no break in cover. If I am starting cover (for the first time or after a break in cover) or if I increase my level of cover, then pre-existing conditions are excluded for a minimum of 6 months. So buying cover right after I find a nasty lump won’t work.

This isn’t all ideal. While healthcare in Ireland is typically 5x cheaper than the US, some specialised treatments and drugs are not available. And even the private system can have capacity issues. Premium costs are going steadily up. Public healthcare staff here move to other countries where working conditions are better and salaries higher.

I do not envy the legislators trying to sort out the system in the US. In Ireland there have been moves politically to eliminate the existing two-tiered system but so far nothing has come of it.

Best wishes,

Simon Woodworth.

I don’t envy them either. There must be ways to lower costs.

bubbles

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

bubbles

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