Chill

Tidalsun

A reader writes:

Dude you’ve been posting like non-stop from dawn till late in the evening like 7 days a week. Eh nice work crazy. Your Atlantic corporate overlords must have figured out the right mix of sand, sea air, THC, Pet Shop Boys, steroids, CPAP, zoloft and Gatorade to keep you constantly on the job. Now for your own good – put down the mouse, step away from the keyboard, shag the fiance and take at least part of the day off. Sheesh.

How does he know about the Gatorade? Did I let that slip?

To be honest, I do manage to sneak off to the beach most days. Future publishing lets me get away from the laptop for a couple of hours without relenting on the blog-pace. I went for a four-hour walk yesterday through the tidal lagoons and beaches at the far end of the cape. I under-estimated the time required and had to find my way home in the dusk. But the light! And the water! In this part of the world, the world beyond us is somehow closer. And I long for it. The pic above was taken waist-deep in tidal water. It was rising fast.

CDC Adjusts

This may confound Gabriel Rotello, but the CDC has just revised downward its HIV estimates for 2001 – 2005. Not a big adjustment, except for 2005, when they over-stated the numbers by 8 percent. Meanwhile, HIV infections among gay men in San Francisco fell 33 percent in the same time period. And no, it wasn’t because they were still terrified.

Christianism Watch

George Packer in the heartland:

Many of the quarter of a million people expected to visit the Creation Museum by the end of the year will be children. They will be indoctrinated into an ideology that systematically warps their understanding of the physical world and fills them with hostility toward the facts and concepts of modernity. As we have learned over the past few years, this doesn’t mean that they’ll be outcasts and failures. A great political party has largely abased itself before their world view and offered them unprecedented access to government power. The Creation Museum, a combination of a natural-history museum and a Communist Party propaganda center, will help to arm and arouse the next generation of Christianists in the ongoing war against secular and scientific America.

Hitch on MGM

Another strange overlap of agreement:

"As to immoral practice, it is hard to imagine anything more grotesque than the mutilation of infant genitalia. Nor is it easy to imagine anything more incompatible with the argument from design. We must assume that a designer god would pay especial attention to the reproductive organs of his creatures, which are so essential for the continuation of the species. But religious ritual since the dawn of time has insisted on snatching children from the cradle and taking stones or knives to their pudenda."

It’s from "God Is Not Great." He goes on about mutilating willies for a few pages, my reader tells me. Barbarism is the right word for it.

Europe’s Beleaguered Drug Companies

I’m sorry to burst Kevin Drum’s bubble, but the pharmaceutical companies in Europe have been in difficulties for quite a while now, under the burden of the socialism he favors for the U.S. healthcare industry. According to the industry’s own website, as long ago as 1994, the European Commission Report on Europe’s ailing drug industry said the following:

"Europe as a whole is lagging behind in its ability to generate, organise, and sustain innovation processes that are increasingly expensive and organisationally complex". The report underlines that the pharmaceutical market in Europe has been negatively affected by significant, excessive and uncoordinated government intervention that stifles competition and discourages innovation. This also creates significant inequity among European patients’ rights to access of medicines.

Socialism fails. Always has. Always will. And the toll in Europe in so many areas is clear. Here’s what socialized medical systems have done to European pharmaceutical research:

# For over 100 years, Europe has been a powerhouse of pharmaceutical progress and innovation. Over the last decade, however, Europe has gradually lost its leadership in the pharmaceutical sector, with a steady transfer of its R&D to the US – where policies and market conditions are more favourable to pharmaceutical innovation.
# Key benchmarking indicators show that between 1990 and 2002, R&D investment in United States rose more than fivefold, while in Europe it only grew 2.5 times.
# In 1990, major European research-based companies spent 73% of their worldwide R&D expenditure on the EU territory. In 1999, they spent only 59% on the EU territory. The USA was the main beneficiary of this transfer of R&D activity.

America is the last refuge for pharmaceutical innovation. And the left wants to kill that off. There’s more evidence of what socialism does to healthcare R&D in Europe:

# The latest data on new molecular entities (period 2001-2005) show the predominance of the US which has now become the leading inventor of new molecules in the world (61 against 51 for Europe)
# The top 20 companies worldwide shows the leadership of US companies. In 2005, nine (9) of the top 20 pharmaceutical companies in the world are of American origin (against 8 for Europe).
# US companies significantly increased their share in the world’s top selling medicines. On the top 30 worldwide products in 2005, 21 originate from the US against 8 from Europe.
# US companies are more successful in disseminating their new medicines at international level: 70% of the sales of new medicines launched on the world markets during the period 1998-2002 were made in the US, compared to only 18 % in Europe.
# Whereas the European pharmaceutical market was still the world’s largest market in 1990 (representing 37.8% of the world market), it now only represents 30% of the world market (compared to 47 % for the North American market).

This is what the left wants to do to pharmaceutical research in the US as well. There’s a case for it: the usual leftist case for nominal equality over quality and progress. They’re not being honest about it. They need to be.

Cures Or Treatments?

A reader raises an interesting question on healthcare:

I tend to agree that we should let the market drive innovation through rewarding solid research and groundbreaking results with profits that can feed further developments. What worries me is that when money is your motivator, what sort of research has a greater chance of being funded: a treatment, or a cure?

There isn’t much to be gained, from a financial perspective, from a cure. Treatment, however, is a goldmine. Improving the quality of life for the sick is certainly a noble goal, but I fear that when money is the sole motivator then we will have executives deciding between pursuing a cure and pursuing treatment for symptoms – and choosing the latter every time.

Not that I’m suggesting socialized medicine would help – at least, not on its own. If the profit for drug research is slashed by government caps on prices, then it becomes a question of who picks up the financial slack and enables continued innovation?

If the government picks up this slack, perhaps they could have some say in the matter, drive decisions toward cures instead of treatments when possible. The government could save some cost when a cure replaces a treatment, so the motivation would be there. But this is all pure speculation on my part, so I’m turning to you and your readers to find out if current socialized systems see any such effects?

No idea. But I’m sure other readers can help. With HIV, the problem is the extreme elusiveness of a mutating retrovirus that makes a vaccine-cure close to impossible. The good side of treatments, moreover, is that they do reduce your viral load in most cases to a negligible level. That makes you much less infectious, which helps restrain the epidemic. And so a treatment becomes a prophylaxis.

Impeach Cheney

A conservative makes the case. Conservatives should be more outraged by his assault on the law, the constitution and individual liberty. He’s also clearly a war criminal – a knowing enforcer of torture and abuse of military detainees. We once executed Nazis for the same techniques as Cheney has approved and enforced. I don’t want to see him impeached. I want to see him prosecuted under American and international law as a criminal.

Pity VE Day Was Taken

Mark Krikorian rhapsodizes about the defeat of comprehensive immigration reform:

Today’s defeat of the Senate amnesty bill was more than a run-of-the-mill legislative victory, representing as it did a self-organizing public’s defeat of combined force of Big Business, (some of) Big Labor, Big Media, Big Religion, Big Philanthropy, Big Academia, and Big Government. So I looked at what else has happened on June 28 — the closest parallel would appear to be the Battle of Monmouth in 1778, of the only two times when Gen. Washington managed to fight British regulars to a draw in a conventional battle. Because that’s all this is — a draw, because the open-borders folks aren’t going to give up. It’s just that they went from their usual tactics of piecemeal, behind-the-scenes victories, buried in appropriations bills and little-known courtrooms and bureaucratic offices, and tried to get the whole enchilada — trying to emulate something else that happened on June 28, the Turks’ defeat of the Serbs at the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, leading to Ottoman conquest of all southeastern Europe.

No, you can’t make this shit up.

Face of the Day

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Supporters of the ruling party, Fretilin, shout slogans during a campaign rally in Dili, 27 June 2007. East Timor’s nearly 530,000 voters are to cast ballots to elect 65 parliamentary representatives after successful presidential polls last month that saw Nobel peace laureate Jose Ramos-Horta sweep into office. The 30th June polls are likely to be a close contest between a new party created by former president and independence hero Xanana Gusmao and the ruling Fretilin party, which lost some of its lustre after violence rocked the nation last April and May, leaving at least 37 people dead and many homeless. By Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty.