Archive of previous posts
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Man blames bar for scooter crash
BRADENTON -- A 73-year old man who crashed his motorized scooter after too many drinks is suing the bar that served. him. John Wasko filed a lawsuit this past week against The Oasis, saying the bar should have stopped giving him drinks. He is seeking more than $15,000 in damages. On Jan.18th, Wasko was riding home on his scooter when he was struck by a vehicle. He blames the bar for injuries from the accident. Bradenton Police cited him for walking in the path of a vehicle. [story from the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, 9-27-10]
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Misuse of handicapped placards is widespread
We've all seen people park in handicapped spaces, leave their car, and walk perfectly well or even jog to their destination. Click on this link to read a Washington Post article (9-26-10) about the widespread abuse of handicapped stickers and placards. The article describes how spouses and friends of the handicapped use the placards and how some placards are handed down in families after the person dies. They are also stolen by thieves and sold. One study cited suggested that 75% of the placards where being used improperly. Do you think the whole enterprise of handicapped spaces should be abolished? Or is there a way to crack down on abusers so that the spaces are reserved for those genuinely in need? The article notes that police are hesitant to accuse a person who seems to be misusing the placard of not really being disabled, hence enforcement is minimal. Are handicapped spaces an example of Nietzsche's concern that we've grown weak, whiny, and pathetiic as a species, or do they represent a genuine and legitimate exercise of compassion?
Is it wrong to leave water bottles for illegal immigrants?
Activist groups such as No More Deaths have been leaving plastic jugs of water in the Arizona desert for illegal immigrants who cross the border there. They believe the flow of immigrants is inevitable and are trying to prevent these individuals from dying of thirst in the harsh desert terrain. Critics argue that this supports criminal activity and pollutes the environment. Click on this link to read a Sarasota Herald-Tribune story (9-27-10) about this practice. Do you believe this is a compassionate or criminal action?
Does it make a difference who runs a local library?
Public libraries have been a central institution in America since Benjamin Franklin founded the first one. Librarians operate according to a strong ethic of neutrality and have resisted many attempts to censor library holdings. A new trend, however, is to turn the management and staffing of libraries over to for-profit private corporations. Click on this link to read a Sarasota Herald-Tribune story (9-27-10) about this movement to save money. Do you think turning this key public information portal over to private companies is a good idea?
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Genetically modified salmon? We're not going to tell you
Click on this link to read a story that first ran in the Washington Post (9-18-10) about the new FDA rules concerning genetically modified salmon. Not only do the rules not require companies to disclose that their fish is GM, they also forbid companies that don't genetically modify their food from advertising this. The ruling continues the huge controversy about whether such foods are safe and whether the FDA is protecting the interests of companies that use genetic modification to produce food. Salmon is the first fish product that has been allowed to be sold GM.
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Redesigning the Dollar
I came across this article that is trying to promote redesigning the American dollar. They seem to think that by redesigning the dollar they will "find a catalyst to restart our economy". I highly doubt that just by making our money look prettier we can restart the economy, but what do you think? Does our dollar need to be revamped?
The whole article can be found here...
http://news.yahoo.com/s/huffpost/721294
The whole article can be found here...
http://news.yahoo.com/s/huffpost/721294
The realities of illegal immigration and sexual slavery
This is an article that Sara brought to my attention. It discusses the realities of young girls who have dreams of coming to America for a better life but end up being forced into prostitution upon arrival. The teenage girls live in Mexico and are swept away by men who tell them stories of great lives in America, and finding jobs. They then sneak them illegally into the US and force them into becoming prostitutes with threats of beating them or killing the girls parents if they don't do as the men wish. This is a terrible tragedy that many people don't realize is going on. It causes me to wonder if immigration were easier things like this wouldn't be happening. The whole article can be read here.
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/09/16/human.trafficking.claudia/index.html?npt=NP1
What do you think is the cause of this? And how can we stop it?
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/09/16/human.trafficking.claudia/index.html?npt=NP1
What do you think is the cause of this? And how can we stop it?
What the Bleep do we know? Flatland
Here is a clip from the very interesting movie "What the Bleep do we know?" which discusses quantum physics and consciousness. This is a clip about Flatland, which we have been discussing in class.
Thanks for the clip Scott!
Thanks for the clip Scott!
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Yankee baseball caps correlated with crime?
Click on this link to read a Sarasota Herald-Tribune (9-16-10) story that investigates alleged correlations between the wearing of Yankees baseball caps and committing crimes. Do the explanations cited by the article indicate the cause of this strange statistical anomaly or does this fall into the "weird shit happens" category?
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Dangerous anti-censor software?
Click on this link to read a Washington Post article about Haystack, an application designed to circumvent Iranian censors. Human testing of the software in Iran has been halted for fear that authorities might be able to determine the identities of the testers. The software anonymizes the testers, but security in the program was apparently lax. Should the U.S. government (which approved Haystack's export to Iran) be encouraging the creation of programs that defeat other governments' attempts to control the Internet in their countries?
Paranoid about paranoia
Click on this link to read a New York Times column (9-8-10, reprinted in the Herald-Tribune) that warns about paranoid thinking by both liberals and conservatives. What does such thinking do to our political process?
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Imagining and Visualizng the different dimensions
This is a cool video Scott sent me about the different dimensions we might live in. Its a bit long but pretty interesting it discusses the theory that we live in a universe with 11 dimensions. They make some pretty interesting points, its worth taking a look at.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Why Is the Anoka-Hennepin School Board Doing Nothing About LGBT Suicide?
Lesbian and gay students in a Minnesota are committing suicides at an alarming rate, and the school district is doing nothing to stop it. Three gay students commited suicide this year due to bullying and feeling uncomfortable in their own skin. The school distrcit is scared to do anything because they're worried about offending some socially conservative religious leaders in the area, who want to keep any mention of homosexuality, even if it relates to anti-bullying, verboten on high school campuses. I personally think this is a horrible tragedy. Students are dying and the school is scared of offending anyone? Do you think it is the school districts job to step in and stop this?
You can read the whole article here http://gayrights.change.org/blog/view/why_is_the_anoka-hennepin_school_board_doing_nothing_about_lgbt_suicide
There are a lot of other interesting articles on change.org, you can also sign petitions and find out ways to get involved in helping to resolve some of these problems.
You can read the whole article here http://gayrights.change.org/blog/view/why_is_the_anoka-hennepin_school_board_doing_nothing_about_lgbt_suicide
There are a lot of other interesting articles on change.org, you can also sign petitions and find out ways to get involved in helping to resolve some of these problems.
Sunday, September 5, 2010
Understanding the Theory of Everything
I recently saw a video describing the way we try to understand multiple dimensions as being similar to Plato's Allegory of the Cave, and I thought it was a really neat comparison between ancient philosophy and quantum physics.
True, we may have trouble grasping the truths behind scientific processes when all we are capable of understanding are the "shadows" of what we can comfortably perceive. But even when addressing a difficult concept, like Garrett Lisi's Theory of Everything illustrated below in an eight-dimensional model, there is the possibility of comprehension.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Cyber-bullying defies traditional school bully stereotype
Click on this link to read a Washington Post (9-2-10) article about how young girls are playing the role boys traditionally played as bullies in the world of social networking.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Corpse-tested cars
From Slate (9-1-10):
Corpses Used As Crash Test Dummies
Virtually every part of your vehicle that affects driver safety, from the steering column to the windshield, was tested by having a human corpse slammed against it, reports Wired. Computer modeling is used to design new safety features, company officials say, but when push comes to shove there's still no substitute for testing new equipment using a genuine human cadaver. "It's still very important," said a Ford safety specialist. "Even though we have very good math modeling of dummies, human modeling hasn't reached that state yet." The bodies are swaddled in stockings to protect their dignity, then used in exactly the same way as a conventional crash-test dummy; after a simulated crash, the cadavers are rushed away for X-rays and autopsies to check for organ damage. Some automakers deny using cadaver testing, but even those who are bashful about using human bodies fund independent research groups that conduct testing on their behalf. "It's always a good idea when you're developing something to do cadaver testing," the Ford safety official says.
Read original story in Wired.com | Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2010
Iranian newspaper calls for death of France's first lady
French First Lady Must Die, Says Iranian Newspaper
An Iranian daily newspaper with close ties to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, has called for the execution of French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy. The attack, which came in response to Bruni-Sarkozy's defense of an Iranian woman sentenced to death for adultery, began on Saturday when the Kayhan newspaper ran a story headlined: "French prostitutes enter human rights uproar." The newspaper continued its assault today, calling the French first lady a "decadent actress" and "immoral woman ... known for her extramarital relations," and saying that she too deserved capital punishment for adultery. Iran's government sought to distance itself from the comments, and warned the country's media to be more restrained in future. "Insulting the officials of other countries and using inappropriate words … is not approved of by the Islamic Republic of Iran," a foreign-ministry spokesman said. "We don't think using inappropriate words and insulting words is the right thing to do."
Read original story in Reuters | Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2010
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Diagnosis by cellphone?
Click on this link to read a Washington Post article about how physicians are using cell phone photos of wounds sent by their patients to make initial diagnoses. There is a large push nationally for doctors to do more of their work from a distance via technology. Do you think this is a good trend, or only one justified by emergency?
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Straddling bus solution to mass transit
Click on this link to read a Sarasota Herald Tribune article (8-26-10) about a new kind of bus in China that drives above cars on the road by straddling them.
A Show of faith, or an act of hate?
Click on this link to read a Sarasota Herald-Tribune piece about an evangelical Christian pastor in Gainesville who is planning to publicly burn the Quran. His plan has provoked widespread protest, but also support from some. Do you believe this is an exercise of religious freedom, or a dangerous idea? Both?
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Tax on bloggers?
Click on this link to read a Washington Post story (8-24-10) about how Philadelphia is taxing bloggers who make money from advertisements running on their blog page. They regard such bloggers as "running a business" and therefore expect a $300 "privilege fee" for doing so. Do you think this is a legitimate form of taxation? The article lists several other web-based, advertisement-laden activities; should these be included too? How long do you think it will be before the Web becomes the focus of attempts by government to regulate and tax it?
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Death threats apparently OK after all
Court Rules Death Threats Against Corporations Are Legal
In a 2-1 decision, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a conviction against Kurt William Havelock, the 40-year-old Arizona man who plotted a massacre outside of the 2008 Super Bowl in his home state because his death threats were not mailed to any specific targets. "It will be swift and bloody," Havelock wrote in letters sent to media outlets half an hour before he abandoned his plan. (He still made it all the way to the site of the Super Bowl with his new assault rifle and dozens of rounds of ammunition.) "I will sacrifice your children upon the altar of your excess." Havelock was arrested after turning himself over the local police and was convicted on six counts of mailing threatening letters, for which he was sentenced to a year in prison. In making the decision Tuesday that overturned those convictions, Judge William Canby wrote that the threatening-letters statute requires that any death threats be addressed to an individual and not an institution or corporation. "The result of the majority's interpretation is that the statute prohibits sending a threatening communication only if the outside of the envelope or package explicitly directs deliverty to a natural person," Judge Susan Graber wrote in her dissent, which argued that the convictions should stand. The law, she noted, was adopted "to protect individuals from mailed threats of kidnapping, ransom demands, threats of bodily injury or death, and certain other serious threats." The court, she said, should have interpreted the word person in the statute to include other entities and should consider the context of the letters.
Read original story in Wired | Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2010
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Earth Overshoot Day
Click on this link to visit a website that "celebrates" Earth Overshoot Day. This is the day of the year when we have outspent the earth's annual resources (air, water, etc.) for our human activities. Here's a link to a video about the overshoot.
Friday, August 20, 2010
Another good story on the NYC proposed mosque
Click on this link to read a Washington Post story (8-20-10) about how New Yorkers are responding to the media debate surrounding the proposed Islamic Center to be built in the neighborhood (but not on the site) of the September 11th destruction. The article notes that the congregation proposing to build the center is a Sufi congregation--a branch of Islam very different from that espoused by Al Qaeda.
Exploding cell phones
Man Killed Midconversation When Cell Phone Exploded
There were no witnesses to the incident, but it is believed that Gopal Gujjar, a 23-year-old man from from India's Banda village, was killed when his cell phone exploded midconversation, causing serious injuries to his ear. Gujjar's body was found near his farm along with the charred remains of his cell phone and battery Tuesday morning. Gujjar suffered burns on his left ear as well as on parts of his neck and shoulders, according to the police who recovered his body earlier this week.Gujjar was using a Nokia 1209, a model that came out in 2008, according to the New York Daily News. "It is probably the first incident in the country in which a mobile phone exploded while it was not being charged," the Times of India reported. "However, there have been cases when users sustained injuries as phones exploded." Earlier this year, a woman was killed when talking to her husband on a Chinese-made cell phone while it was plugged into the wall. And deaths from mobile phones have been reported in a handful of other countries, including Korea and Nepal.
Read original story in The Times of India | Friday, Aug. 20, 2010
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Ear buds causing hearing loss?
From Slate (8-18-10):
Experts Link Headphone Use to Shocking Rise in Hearing Loss
One in every five teenagers in the United States today has slight hearing loss, according to the authors of a new report published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The proportion of teenagers with slight hearing loss has jumped 30 percent in the past 15 years.While the new report doesn't speculate as to the causes of problem, a similar study done in Australia this year linked hearing loss to the increased use of headphones and many experts have agreed with those findings. "Personal stereos are the most important change in the culture in the last 15 to 20 years," said Dr. Tommie Robinson Jr., president of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. "Everybody has their own little device now, and how many times have you passed somebody and could hear their music?" Reportedly, even slight hearing loss can have a significant impact on speech perception, self-image, social skills development, and learning. "It may seem like they are not in touch," Dr. Gary C. Curhan of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, said of teenagers with slight hearing loss among their peers, "and kids are very aware when someone is a little different." Curhan co-authored the report, which found that males are more likely than females to suffer hearing loss, as are teenagers living below the poverty line. "A variety of factors can increase susceptibility to hearing loss, including genetics, certain medicines, head trauma, very loud noises and the existence of hearing loss, which predisposes a person to further loss," the Chicago Tribune reported. Extrapolating the findings of the study, which analyzed data on nearly 3,000 12- to 19-year-olds from the National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey conducted by a branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, would mean that nearly 6.5 million teenagers in the U.S. suffer from slight hearing loss.
Read original story in The Chicago Tribune | Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2010
Monday, August 16, 2010
Don't send in the clones
Click on this link to read a New York Times column (8-10-10) by Maureen Dowd that argues for the importance of diversity in picking college roommates. Dowd worries about services that now help incoming students to pick roommates matched exactly like themselves. Do you agree that living as a roommate with someone very different than oneself is a good preparation for future life and profession, or could such a selection turn out to be disastrous?
Off road vehicle race accident raises safety questions
Click on this link to read a Sarasota Herald Tribune story about spectators were killed at a desert race of off road vehicles. Should these races be more tightly regulated or is there a place for this kind of dangerous recreation (dangerous to the racers and to spectators)?
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Did our ancestors give up easy sex for beer?
Did Humans Give Up Easy Sex for Easy Beer?
Did our ancestors inadvertently sacrifice a smorgasboard of sexual partners for easier access to beer? That's what Gizmodo's Joel Johnson thinks after reading Christopher Ryan and Cacilda Jetha's Sex at Dawn and Patrick McGovern's Uncorking the Past. In Sex at Dawn, Ryan and Jetha argue that "before humans settled down into civilization, we were small bands of hunter-gatherers who had no notion of sexual monogamy." But after humans began cultivating, "it became important to ensure that you weren't wasting your precious grains on someone else's offspring, especially if it meant you own kid was getting short shrift. Hence monogamy." McGovern, who has done the hard work of studying the history of alcohol, thinks it's possible that humans first began tilling the soil to grow grain for beer, not bread. "I'm sure it seemed like a great idea at first," Johnson says. "Who wouldn't want to get drunk whenever they chose?" But those industrious agriculturalists had no idea that "in just a few generations the idyllic, if unpredictable era of lazy browsing, casual sex, and occasional fruit-fueled orgies would give way to the terrible force of civilization—all so we could bring home a six-pack every night."
Read original story in Gizmodo | Wednesday, Aug. 11, 2010
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Dangerous intersection or stupid drivers?

Click on this link to read a Sarasota Herald Tribune story (8-11-10) about an intersection (pictured) in Sarasota where people keep running into a clearly-marked wall. If accidents continue to occur there, is this a sign that the intersection is poorly-designed, or must we write it off to idiocy of drivers on Florida roads?
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Strippers protest at church
Strippers Protest Church for Protesting Strippers
Dancers from the Foxhole, a gentleman's club in Coschocton County, Ohio, stood outside the New Beginnings Ministries in their bikinis to protest against the church for protesting against them. "For the last four years, the pastor at New Beginnings has led a protest outside the Foxhole every weekend," Consumerist reported. "Beyond just voicing disapproval of the strip joint, the church members also videotape the license plates of the bar's patrons and then post the info online." Fed up, the club's employees decided to turn the tables. And they know how to protest: Churchgoers arrived to find the ladies writing down their license plate numbers, but also cooling themselves off with Super Soakers. When they weren't busy grilling hamburgers, the women held up signs with Bible quotes: "Matthew 7:15: Beware of false prophets who come to you in sheep's clothing; Revelations 22:11: He that is unjust, let him be unjust still." "When these morons go away, we'll go away," said the strip club's owner, who has tried to sue the church in the past. "The great thing about this country is that everyone has a right to believe what they want. They're just mad because their wives won't let them come to my club." The pastor, who has said he protests not to condemn the dancers, but to offer them an alternative, said that strippers outside of his church would only strengthen his conviction. "These church people say horrible things about us," said one of the dancers, a married mother of six. "They say we're homewreckers and whores. The fact of the matter is, we're working to keep our own homes together, to give our kids what they need."
Read original story in Gawker | Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2010
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Russian fires choke Russian capital
Click on this link to read a story about Russia's hottest summer ever.
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
Cutting the arts to balance gov't budgets?
Click on this link to read a Washington Post article (8-4-10) about the radical cuts in government funding of the arts in Britain that are being contemplated to reduce levels of public debt.
Monday, August 2, 2010
Be gay: break the law (in 76 countries)
Study Finds Being Gay Is a Crime in 76 Countries
Read original story in The Independent on Sunday | Monday, Aug. 2, 2010
Saturday, July 31, 2010
World population approaches 7 billion
From Slate (7-30-10):
Forecasters Expect World Population to Reach 7 Billion Next Year
The population of the world will climb above 7 billion sometime in 2011, says the Population Reference Bureau, a research group. With 267 people being born every minute and only 108 dying, developing countries are adding more than 80 million people to the world's population every year. Carl Haub, the group's senior demographer, estimated that by 2050 the world's population will be more than 9 billion.While the news can be celebrated because it represents longer life spans, the group is concerned. A closer look at the data shows that the ratio of working-age adults to the elderly that they are called on to support is rapidly declining because of lower birthrates. It also shows that the majority of population growth is happening in the world's poorest countries, "exacerbating poverty and threatening the environment," according to William P. Butz, the president of the Population Reference Bureau. "While the United States, Australia, Canada and New Zealand will continue to grow because of higher birthrates and immigration, Europe, Japan and South Korea will shrink (although the recession reduced birthrates in the United States and Spain and slowed rising birthrates in Russia and Norway)," the New York Times reported. In the U.S., where people seem constantly worried by the state of Social Security and Medicare, the proportion of the gross domestic product spent on those two entitlement programs will jump from 8.4 percent this year to 14.5 percent by 2050.
Read original story in The New York Times | Friday, July 30, 2010
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Warlords as allies in Afghanistan?
Click on this link to read a Washington Post (7-29-10) story about a brutal warlord who has been enlisted as an ally against the Taliban. Do you think it is a good idea to use such people in Afghanistan? Do we have any real choice? Are such dilemmas a sign of a war we shouldn't be in to begin with? Or does a realistic assessment of our dangerous world suggest that such alliances are inescapable?
Continuing controversy over proposed Islamic Center near Ground Zero
Click on this link to read a New York Times column (7-27-10) by Clyde Haberman that complains about the protests regarding a proposed Islamic Center near the site of the 9-11 World Trade Center collapse. Do you think building such a center near (not "at", as the column notes) is a bad idea? Should it, even if so, still be permitted?
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