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By Steve Erbach on Thursday, May 28, 2009 8:22 AM

I subscribe to an Amazon Community discussion group on climate change.  Its activity waxes and wanes over the months.  This particular group has had 338 messages posted since it began in March of last year.

Today I saw a little message posted by lady who is interested in septic tank aerators, "sweet filters", green homes, and stopping global warming.  The post that caught my eye reads:

Reducing greenhouse gas emissions will stop global warming. Turning off lights or denying yourself simple pleasures will not change much. Some things you can do at home will make a big difference are:
Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Friday, May 22, 2009 10:01 AM

You've probably seen at least one of the "De-motivation" posters published by Despair, Inc. You can see a load of them here.

I'm not a fan of their stuff, but entering a contest for the best caption for a new poster seemed like a fun idea.  So I went to http://site.despair.com/captions/ and tried my hand at sloganeering. Here's the contest photo:

EPIPHANY: When the stupendous scope of your blunder finally shreds the fabric of your cow-like complacency...

Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Wednesday, May 20, 2009 5:30 AM

A fellow from one of the email groups to which I belong posted this story yesterday late afternoon.  I've known Dickford Cohn for 15 years, one of the original curmudgeons:

Hawker dragged from trailer fire

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

By Steve Erbach on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 6:34 AM

On Friday night while enjoying the chance to ask any question of WolframAlpha that popped into my head, I was reminded of Robert Heinlein's "Friday".

I had asked WolframAlpha the question, "What is the circumference of the Milky Way galaxy in centimeters?"  A completely absurd question, I know; but I asked the same question of Google and had gotten, as usual, a list of web sites where I might find the diameter of the Milky Way galaxy in light-years ... Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Saturday, May 16, 2009 6:59 PM

Wolfram|Alpha is like having a roomful of reference librarians helping you do research. One of them is devoted to displaying beautiful geometric shapes:

Diagonals in a regular heptadecagon

Nothing earth-shaking; just a beautiful diagram.

By Steve Erbach on Friday, May 15, 2009 9:01 PM

Stephen Wolfram in the WolframAlpha launch center in Champaign, ILStephen Wolfram being interviewed in tonight's live webcast of the launch of Wolfram|Alpha.

Wolfram|Alpha is live at the moment (10:10pm CDT).  The official launch will be Monday, May 18th.

Go to the site and type in your question.  Wolfram|Alpha is an answer engine, not a search engine, á là Google.

For example, I typed in "mcdonalds burger king" and Wolfram|Alpha knows that I'm interested in financial data for those two fast food chains.  It gives me tables comparing:

Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Friday, May 15, 2009 8:44 AM

The space shuttle Atlantis against the sun

The kind of astronomical photo you don't see every day: the space shuttle, Atlantis, against the sun, apparently the first of its kind.  From the story in the UK Sun.

By Steve Erbach on Tuesday, May 12, 2009 10:20 PM

I subscribe to "Imprimis", the small opinion journal of Hillsdale College.  The most recent issue contains a dandy essay adapted from a speech by Mark Steyn given in March.  The article is available on-line here.

Here's the first part.  The rest is at the link:

April 2009

Mark Steyn

Live Free or Die

Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Monday, May 11, 2009 6:48 AM

WolframAlpha blog

I look forward with great anticipation to the launch of Stephen Wolfram's newest venture: Wolfram Alpha.  May 18th is the offiicial launch date, but a test occured on the 8th according to the WolframAlpha Blog.

By Steve Erbach on Sunday, May 10, 2009 10:51 AM

I highly recommend Randal O'Toole's book, "The Best-Laid Plans".  As Ringo Starr said in "A Hard Day's Night", "You can learn from books, ya know."

I say that because I learned something about the real estate market from reading his book.  I commented on it at NeenahPolitics.com. Here's the link:

http://www.neenahpolitics.com/Home/tabid/171/EntryID/185/Default.aspx

In the Cato Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Saturday, May 09, 2009 3:54 PM

A week ago, Nobel Economics Prize laureate, Paul Krugman, wrote an opinion piece: "Can we afford to address climate change? Yes."  As you can tell from the title, Krugman makes the pitch that limiting greenhouse gas emissions would, indeed, be affordable.  All right, lets follow his reasoning.

Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Friday, May 08, 2009 12:39 PM

Spinal Tap

The aging members of "the world's loudest band" have gotten together for a tour to perform the "hits" from the movie.  Here's the full story .

By Steve Erbach on Friday, May 08, 2009 10:23 AM

Stuff that doesn't make headline news: the deaths of 10 young people in College Park, GA, prevented because one sensible young man carried a handgun and knew how to use it.

The story [at the WBSTV.com web site] describes the scene:

Two men wearing masks and brandishing firearms came through the patio door into Charles Bailey's apartment where a birthday party was in progress.  The armed men separated the men from the women into different rooms and demanded their cell phones and wallets.

Jerry Bader of WTAQ-AM, Green Bay, this morning continued the story like this: The gunmen raped the women and then methodically killed each of the 10 college students.

He then asked if anyone ha ... Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Thursday, May 07, 2009 2:18 PM

How worried are you about the swine flu?

(published 11-May-2009, Appleton Post-Crescent)

I can't seem to shake a Chicken Little feeling. All the media appearances by politicians and government officials making somber pronouncements give people the false idea that the government is actually able to do something. What have we heard over and over and over? "Wash your hands often" and "Stay home if you're sick". That's it! Are those things that the government can enforce? No. Is there a vaccine? No. Do they know how serious it is compared to your garden variety influenza? No. Then what good are they except at stirring up panic about a pandemic? Yes, the disease has caused deaths. So do the other flus -- tens of thousands a year in the United States alone. Hong Kong flu, Avian flu, SARS, Ebola, and now Swine flu. Excuse me, H1N1. Sorry, all you pork producers! I just eviscerated your sales of ham ... Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Wednesday, May 06, 2009 6:16 PM

I told my friend, Phil, about the Post-Crescent comment I'd made to the question: "What do you think of Obama's first 100 days."  I suggested to him that he could post a comment as well since we generally have our comments posted in the same Reader Reaction Forum group in the P-C.  Not that I agree with him, you understand; but he's a lively writer and goes toe-to-toe with me on occasion.

He replied via email a couple of times and I asked if I could post his remarks on this blog.  He consented, reluctantly, but he consented.  So herewith the first comment:

Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Wednesday, May 06, 2009 3:18 PM

Reason magazine published a piece written by Canadian Ezra Levant about his struggle against his government after his magazine re-published those anti-Muslim cartoons.  Very interesting and chilling reading.  Here's the first part:

The Internet Saved My Tongue

How I beat Canada's 'human rights' censors

By Steve Erbach on Tuesday, May 05, 2009 8:15 AM

No, not in UFOs, but in the human-caused scourge of global warming.

I read a fair number of stories about global warming every month. I have my own views based on what I've read. Personally, I think that really selling the idea to the voters that cutting back on human carbon emissions would be worth the cost will cause pretty much nothing of substance to be done by our shadowy puppet masters (SPMs) in the government. This is a gridlock I'm wholeheartedly in favor of.

What caught my attention today was a National Geographic story by Anne Minard about the lull in solar activity (sunspots) on the sun.

National Geographic is without a doubt invested in the idea that human-caused global warming is a massive threat. to the existence of life on our planet. The story by Ms. Minard contains ... Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Tuesday, May 05, 2009 7:10 AM

...that England actually bars non-criminals from coming to its shores. Besides "murderer and Hezbollah terrorist Samir Al Quntar and Kashmiri terror group leader Nasr Javed," the UK -- personified by Home Secretary Jacqui Smith -- has barred American radio talk show host, Michael Savage. From The Independent story:

"This is someone who has fallen into the category of fomenting hatred, of such extreme views and expressing them in such a way that it is actually likely to cause inter-community tension or even violence if that person were allowed into the country," Ms Smith told BBC Breakfast.

Whether you agree with her or not, it actually astonishes me that it would be official government policy to refuse entry to someone wh ... Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Monday, May 04, 2009 3:54 AM

What do you think of Obama's first 100 days?

(published 4-May-2009, Appleton Post-Crescent on-line)

Have you ever watched the "Planet Earth" series of nature programs?  In several sequences, sailfish and dolphins herd huge schools of fish into smaller clusters, much easier to gobble up.  Then there's that incredible slow-motion shot of a great white shark leaping out of the water to devour a seal.  With respect to President Obama's first 100 days, I feel like one of those doomed seals.  We voters are those schools of fish.

We see so much nonsense in the media regarding the hateful employment policies of big corporations. Walmart is the one most people love to hate.  What is amazing to me is that anyone could ever thi ... Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Sunday, May 03, 2009 2:27 PM

What else but the New York Times would publish a story about what "global warming" should be called from now on so as to make people feel warm and fuzzy about saving the planet again...

 May 2, 2009 

Seeking to Save the Planet, With a Thesaurus

Read More »

By Steve Erbach on Friday, May 01, 2009 5:20 AM

I subscribe to a few political newsletters.  One of them is from DownsizeDC, an organization devoted to reducing the size of the federal government.  Its newsletter is written by one of the best politico-motivational writers I've seen, James Babka.

Babka was involved with the Harry Browne for President campaign in 2000 and was a founding director of DownsizeDC.  I read his newsletters with pleasure and have often responded to his calls for action, usually in the form of emails to my Congresscritters.

One of the organization's primary goals is to get legislation passed, like the Read the Bills Act, that reduces the lurching juggernaut of government spending and lawmaking.  You can see a banner for the Read the Bills Act to the right.

Anyway, I just received another newsletter from DownsizeDC and I ... Read More »


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