The Groupon Bubble

David Sirota preemptively pops it:

[T]o be fair, the new social networking/aggregating companies with the most speculative buzz right now do not share the completely Seinfeldian nature of the most infamous dot-com companies of the 1990s — that is, they aren't totally "about nothing."

However, their business model is based on building and aggregating mass consumer audience share for the purposes of selling that audience share to other companies who want to sell things to consumers. … And in an economy where consumers are getting crushed by recession, simply aggregating those hard-hit consumers — rather than actually making something tangible that creates new economic value — well, it may not be "nothing" in terms of new value, but it's pretty damn close.

The Seesaw Of Troops And Contractors

Scott Horton interviews Laura Dickinson about her new book, Outsourcing War and Peace: Preserving Public Values in a World of Privatized Foreign Affairs. She warns about the future:

As we draw down troops from Iraq, the number of contractors there will likely soar—the Commission on Wartime Contracting reports that the State Department would need to double its contractor force to handle its needs there.

Hospice And Assisted Suicide, Ctd

A reader continues last week's thread:

Whenever I read or hear somebody get on their high horse about "assisted suicide", I get so angry. The first thing I want to ask is if they've ever watched anybody they dearly love die over the course of months of agony.  I watched my father die from cancer.  All I can say is thank god (and I'm agnostic) for hospice care and morphine.  While his death was horrible, I can't imagine what his last few months would have been like without them.

And to support what was written about hospice, his doctor gave us instructions for giving him morphine when a hospice worker wasn't there.  The last part of the dosing instructions was that we could give him whatever it took to ease the pain.  It was made abundantly clear to us that there was no limit.  So should my father's family have been prosecuted for murder if one of us gave him a morphine dose that was higher than a level considered dangerous to, say, a basically healthy person with a leg injury?  Apparently some think so.

Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go wipe my eyes.

Another writes:

My grandfather and grandmother had done everything right: completed DNR statements, living wills, and power of attorney for each other to make decisions at the end of life.  When my grandfather was in his mid-80s he had a serious fall with head trauma, followed by a series of strokes.  As he was transferred through each level of hospitalization – from emergency to ICU to a nursing home – at each move (despite my grandmother having all of the papers organized and presenting them at admissions) the notations in the files did not accurately reflect the DNR wish.  My father is a doctor and so was able to more fully understand the medical records and constantly had to reiterate my grandfather’s wish for no heroic measures in order to have the medical orders notated correctly.  

At each stage of treatment, my family was asking questions about whether this was potential cure vs. an extension of a non-conscious life. The default was to keep this failing body alive as long as possible.

Our society doesn’t handle the end of life well.  Our instinct is to keep bodies going, sometimes beyond a comfortable life.  Death is painful and sad; grief is real.  But so is watching your 94-year-old grandmother shrivel before you in a nursing home with no enjoyment or quality of life.

It is cruel to say, but we treat our animals better than our families.  Anyone who has had an elderly dog in pain – unable to stand, urinating in the house, losing interest in food – knows both the great sadness, but also the relief and the grace, to be able to put the dog to sleep.  Family gathered surrounding the pet, alternatively crying and laughing recalling a life well lived, and the pet peacefully and comfortably succumbing to sleep.  Why we don’t allow a critically ill patient to express a want to have their life end with the same peace, is beyond me.

Society’s Hard Drive

Kevin Kelly applauds Brewster Kahle's mission to archive a physical copy of every book we've digitized:

Brewster noticed that Google and Amazon and other countries scanning books would cut non-rare books open to scan them, or toss them out after scanning. He felt this destruction was dangerous for the culture. … Brewster decided that he should keep a copy of every book they scan so that somewhere in the world there was at least one physical copy to represent the millions of digital copies. That safeguarded random book would become the type specimen of that work. If anyone ever wondered if the digital book's text had become corrupted or altered, they could refer back to the physical type that was archived somewhere safe.

Almost touching, no?

A “Gay” “Girl” In “Damascus”

Actually, a bearded guy in Edinburgh. Money quote:

I never expected this level of attention. While the narrative voıce may have been fictional, the facts on thıs blog are true and not mısleading as to the situation on the ground. I do not believe that I have harmed anyone — I feel that I have created an important voice for issues that I feel strongly about.

I only hope that people pay as much attention to the people of the Middle East and their struggles in thıs year of revolutions. The events there are beıng shaped by the people living them on a daily basis. I have only tried to illuminate them for a western audience.

He then blames "Orientalism" for his being a fraud. Still, I guess it's progress of a sort when an open lesbian is regarded as a more interesting source than a married Scot.