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Open Thread:  Hey Lurkers!  (Holiday Post)

Open Threads

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Saturday Open Thread

by Tim F|  March 25, 20065:16 pm| 128 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

Some stories just make you shake your head:

ETA’s Ceasefire may Leave Guards Without Job

We never think very much about the downside to global harmony. Why not? Defense contractors got families to feed. Some third-world kids would starve if they didn’t have jobs making cheap AK47 knockoffs. Peace doesn’t sound like such a great deal for them.

Chat about whatever.

Saturday Open ThreadPost + Comments (128)

Open Thread

by Tim F|  March 22, 20067:54 pm| 148 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

Slow day? When they’re not harping on Jeff Goldstein the bloggers in my RSS reader seem really focused on Ben Domenech, the WaPo’s new blogger and the co-founder of RedState. Pachacutec at Firedoglake has an especially thorough linkfest. Sure, I think that it’s embarrassing that the Washington Post has to “balance” a career journalist like Froomkin* with a hardcore Republican operative, but keep in mind that evil liberal extremists run the media. They must have set him up as a laugh-at-the-crazy extremist freakshow sort of thing. If they wanted to hire a war-supporting conservative with a basic knowledge of his subject matter they could have picked Gregory Djerejian.

There’s Iraq. Blogging about Iraq has become as interesting as blogging about global warming. Some new outrage comes up every day (Iraq, global warming), but the narratives have already been written. The people in charge of policy will adapt to the latest news just like I’m going to sprout wings and fly to the Sharp Edge in time for happy hour.

…

(*) Note to rightwingers – muckrakers rake muck about people in power. It’s their job. If Froomkin wanted to spend his time fellating federal officeholders he would host cable news.

…

Finally, a gratuitous beer pic to celebrate the return of our server upload capacity. In case you know how that works (which I don’t). We had this at a recent lab mixer and true to its name this brew is hoppy as hell. And tasty. It’s also my boss’s favorite beer so I’m contractually obligated to recommend it.


Not Friday? Says you.

Open ThreadPost + Comments (148)

The Balloon Juice Book Club

by Tim F|  March 21, 200611:49 pm| 29 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

I’m not an insatiable book-eater like some bloggers (cough, Josh Marshall) but most of my life I have had something or other beside the bed. Lately I’ve read a few things which seemed worth passing on:

Jared Diamond’s book Guns, Germs and Steel came out some years back and promptly blew the minds of many who read it. Diamond’s writing reminded me of the long early-morning bus ride during freshman year in high school when I knew exactly nobody. To pass the time I’d casually observe something and ask, why. Ususally I could figure that our after thinking about it for a while, like why it was dark before the sun came up and why people wait at stoplights. Then I’d ask why again. After a while the going would get tougher and I’d bump up against either a faith in science (because little molecules that I don’t know about yet make it that way) or a faith in God (because some force that I don’t understand willed it to be that way). Reading Jared Diamond is like finding somebody who played that game as if I was the last pick for a sandlot softball game and he batted third for the Yankees. He’s scary good. Similar to my old game Guns gets its start when a New Guinean friend looks at all of the stuff (cargo) that white people carried around that New Guineans generally didn’t have and asks Diamond why. Three hundred plus pages after posing the question the author answers his friend by way of a delirious journey through the livestock origin of human plagues, latitudinal versus longitudinal transfers of technology and why Columbus discovered and subjugated the New World rather than vice-versa, with time in the middle for a memorably good digression that reconstitutes the Bantu expansion through Africa using linguistics. Short version, when you look at a map of the world Eurasia is long while the Americas are tall. It makes sense when you read it.

Diamond’s latest book, Collapse, asks the corollary question to the problem he addressed in Guns. Why is it that some societies collapse and disappear like Ozymandias into the mists of history while others make it to present day? For all the books that have been written by, about and for the environmental movement this one hits the nail right in the sweet spot. For one thing it wins the framing wars by stripping environmentalism of the anti-progress new-age baggage that it has picked up in the decades since the first Earth Day. If everybody cares about keeping our society from collapsing into chaos, and it seems like we all at least pretend like we do, then we’re all environmentalists. We just need to know how to keep the negative outcome from happening. Diamond attacks the problem of historical collapses with a scientist’s enthusiasm, creating a correlated matrix of risk factors and teasing out the critical variables in the various collapses of Vikings in Greenland, Polynesians on a few separate Pacific islands, the Maya in the Yucatan and the Anasazi in the American southwest.

In the end Diamond distills three main threats to a society’s survival. Assuming that it stands on risky ground a society can fail to anticipate a likely problem (should Easter Islanders cut down their slow-growing palms?), it can fail to perceive when a problem has arrived (the palms disappeared from Easter Island too gradually to notice) and it can fail to act once they perceive a problem (segmented land ownership and a mania for competitive monument building allowed Easter Islanders to cut the few remaining trees).

You can read Diamond’s book for its academic look at dead cultures, but for most of us the real meat of the book comes at the end when he looks at industries that simultaneously sustain society and threaten its survival. Diamond gives an accessible overview of the specific risks from such industries which include logging, hardrock mining, fisheries and petroleum, and he makes a good case for why unique structural incentives make some easier to bring into harmony with the local environment than others. Environmentalists will hate the part of the book where Diamond enthusiastically endorses progress made by some long-hated industries but that’s simply not a serious attitude. We need wood, oil, coal and metals and until we have alternatives fully online we’ll go on needing them, so the best thing that we can do for the world is to find out how to make do with what we have rather than getting in the way and shouting. Anti-environmentalists will call it pointless fear-mongering. In the end activists on both sides should bite their tongue and pick up Collapse.

Coming soon: this looks like a cool read. Expect a review whenever I get around to finishing it.

The Balloon Juice Book ClubPost + Comments (29)

SPAM E-Mail

by John Cole|  March 21, 200610:23 am| 13 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

I will be back this afternoon with something to say, but for now, what the hell is up with all the spam e-mail I have been getting at my gmail account? It has quadrupled in the past two weeks.

SPAM E-MailPost + Comments (13)

Open Thread

by Tim F|  March 17, 20061:20 pm| 172 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

John is incommunicado and I have work and beer blogging keeping me busy, so the inmates will have to run the asylum for a while. Some interesting links to tide you over:

  • Saturn has a moon 500 kilometers across that somehow manages to sport water geysers, and possibly life as well.
  • A new shark species discovered in Mexico. If you’re wondering what was that unnamed critter that gnawed your ankle, it might have been Mustelus hacat.
  • The nominee to replace Gale Norton, Idaho Gov. Kirk Kempthorne at Secretary of the Interior hasa 1% voting score from the League of Conservation Voters. Call it a net gain for the environment.
  • Sunnis not happy that we’re talking to Iran.
  • Add your scoops in the comments.

    Open ThreadPost + Comments (172)

    Open Thread

    by Tim F|  March 8, 20067:41 pm| 163 Comments

    This post is in: Open Threads

    A busy day for John and I. Hash out everything that we missed.

    Open ThreadPost + Comments (163)

    Hours Of Fun

    by Tim F|  March 7, 20068:32 pm| 14 Comments

    This post is in: Excellent Links

    If you’re a board warrior who can’t stand the way google constantly gives back unfriendly data along with the ideologically-acceptable stuff, Google’s rival Kosmix has an interesting solution. Via Wired, you can enter any topic into the Kosmix politics engine and it spits out the web, organized into whether a given page is likely to come from a conservative, libertarian or liberal perspective. Kittens for example.

    I don’t know yet whether this is a good thing or a bad thing, but it will make your life much easier if you’re searching for information and you already know what kind of information you want to find.

    Hours Of FunPost + Comments (14)

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