That's David McRaney's reading of the literature.
What The World Needs Now
TED debates nuclear power. The initial exchanges, which span the first 14 minutes or so, are better than the audience responses:
As The Fourth Estate Crumbles
Friedersdorf praises journalists who have exposed local government corruption. He wants to know who will take over that role as print dies:
I am pessimistic about the ability of a lot of newspapers to survive. So I'd like to suggest that, however you feel about newspapers, it's important that we generate ideas for replacing the local watchdog functions discussed in this post. Are there any readers who've observed viable replacements for the beat reporter in your community? Does anyone have ideas that are as yet untried?
What Do Those Extra Pounds Cost?
While arguing for a soda tax, Leonhardt digs up a study:
Mr. Goldman and his U.S.C. colleagues have made an estimate that takes into account both higher short-term spending and reduced longevity (including the fact that the government does not have to pay for as many years of Social Security when someone dies prematurely). In their work, they assume that obesity returns to its 1978 level. If that happened, the federal government would save about $17 billion a year. That’s equal to about 3 percent of Medicare’s and Medicaid’s current budget.
Now They’ve Done It
An Iranian fatwa against keeping dogs and pets. I'm guessing a blogging sodomite with two beagles wouldn't last very long in Qom.
AIPAC’s Latest Email
Josh Block continues the new campaign by the pro-Israel lobby to demonize Turkey and equate this critical bridge between West and East with Ahmadinejad and Assad. Why? Because Turkey has criticized Israel, of course. Here’s the email:
From: jblock@aipac.org [mailto:jblock@aipac.org]
Sent: Friday, June 18, 2010 10:38 AM To: xxx@xxx.com
Subject: Funny Video!! The Three Terrors – Erdogan, Ahmadinejad, Assad sing in a trio
OK, this is another video, but a really funny one:
The Three Terrors – Ahmedido Domingo (aka Ahmadinejad), Erdogano Pavarotti (aka Erdogan) and Assad Carreras (aka Bashar Assad) singing about the benefits of terrorism.
full text:
Based on Funiculi Funicula
Sung by the Three Terrors:
Erdogano Pavarotti, Assad Carreras and Ahmedido Domingo
Erdogan: I say — it’s time that I restore the Empire
Let’s get to work (let’s get to work!)
Because in Europe everybody knows that
I’m just a jerk (he’s just a jerk!)
Assad: And I , the serial killer who should spend all
his life in jail (oy vey oy vey)
To reach the hearts of all the world media
We found the trail (hurray hurray)
Erdogan: Terror, Terror, that’s my cup of tea
Terror gains us love and sympathy
To beat the West, to be the one
From Tripoli to Teheran
Yalla yalla, ya — Jihad is sweet, Jihad is fun
All: Terror, Terror, that’s how you convince
That you’re cool and charming as a prince
To beat the West, to be the one
For Hezbullah and Erdogan
Yalla yalla, ya — Jihad is sweet, Jihad is fun
B.
Ahmedi: So now, the UN has imposed the sanctions
(Ironically) Oh my, oh my… (oh my, oh my)
Together here we stand, no opposition,
I hung them high (he hung them high)
I wish to thank Obama for his patience,
For playing dumb (for playing dumb)
Coz now I got the peace of mind to build me
The nuclear bomb (The nuclear bomb)
Terror, terror, that’s my cup of tea
Assad: Terror gains us love and sympathy
Erdogan: To beat the West, to be the one
From Tennessee to Teheran
Yalla, yalla ya, Jihad is sweet, Jihad is fun
All: Terror, Terror, gets us all the grants
Terror makes you all piss in your pants
To beat the West, to be the one
From Tennessee to Teheran
Yalla yalla, ya — I hit the switch and you are gone
Trying To Live Benedict’s Dogma
And you end up with Ahmadinejad-style arguments like this one:
When Manhattan Sold For $24
Tony Perrottet checks out the housing market and land deals throughout the ages:
The colonial era is full of subversive deal-making, but the world’s most notorious real estate coup occurred in 1626, when the energetic Dutch settler Peter Minuit, as an agent for the West India Company, purchased the unimproved woodland “island Manhattes,” covering 15,000 acres, for 60 guilders worth of goods (around $24 today). The 300 resident Native Americans, referred to in documents as the Manhatesen, were not aware they were selling their island paradise at all, thinking instead they were simply allowing the Dutch to share it. As related by Russell Shorto in The Island at the Center of the World, the chief, Sackimas, deemed that the Dutch access to Manhattan’s resources was a reasonable exchange for a valuable array of European items — knives, axes, hoes, awls, cloth, and coats, but probably not beads — and the additional promise of support by the Dutch against enemy tribes. For 40 years, the casual sharing arrangement worked well, with Indians still hunting and fishing in the forests and river-fronts. But then the Manhatesen were squeezed out to a less enviable site off-island — forests in the north, now known as the Bronx. Still, the Dutch were no visionary real estate geniuses: In 1644, they traded Manhattan for Surinam.
Mental Health Break
Some final glimpses of spring:
Springtime – A Journey Into Macro Space from Gunther Machu on Vimeo.
Pessimism, The Key To Happiness?
Roger Scruton defends negative thinking:
In order to see human beings as they are, therefore, and to school oneself in the art of loving them, it is necessary to apply a dose of pessimism to all one’s plans and aspirations. I don’t go along with Schopenhauer’s comprehensive gloom, or with the philosophy of renunciation that he derived from it. I have no doubt that St Paul was right to recommend faith, hope and love (agape) as the virtues which order life to the greater good. But I have no doubt too that hope, detached from faith and untempered by the evidence of history, is a dangerous asset, and one that threatens not only those who embrace it, but all those within range of their illusions.