What is Maximum Advantage?
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Monday, March 21, 2011
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Hype
Most of the time, hype is better unbelieved. However, especially in disaster situations, there are times when the hype may not go far enough.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
EM Radiation Guns
In case your looking for a hobby project:
This EMP Cannon Stops Cars Almost Instantly.
MICROWAVE GUN.(If so, you have way to much free time.)
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Tragedy
1. Compared to human induced disasters, nature's tragedies are more readily excepted.
2. No one loses their self respect because nature destroyed one's home.
3. Hence, those made homeless by economic conditions will fare worse than those made homeless by earthquakes and tsunamis.
2. No one loses their self respect because nature destroyed one's home.
3. Hence, those made homeless by economic conditions will fare worse than those made homeless by earthquakes and tsunamis.
Saturday, March 05, 2011
Monday, February 28, 2011
Waking to the Truth
Per Morris Berman:
Link.
We are now, I believe, in a position to answer the question of what all of this frenetic activity is designed to hide; what Americans are running away from. Toward the end of his life Williams wrote: "America is the kind of culture that wakes you in the night, the kind of nightmare that may [yet] possibly lead us closer to the truth." This is a haunting, if enigmatic, sentence. What truth, after all? Possibly, an example of what not to do. For the truth here is an emptiness at the center, to which is added a desire to never grow up. It should be obvious by now that the American definition of "progress" is little more than a joke, and that running away from the responsibilities of adulthood–including the construction of a society not based on endless consumption, competition, and expansion–could be the single greatest thread in American history. That there is a possible alternative history, and a very different type of progress, characterized (for example) by marginal figures such as Lewis Mumford or the late Jane Jacobs, is something Americans don't wish to contemplate, for alternatives to the life of running faster to get nowhere scare them. No, the expansion game, and the life of limbo, as Williams puts it, will continue until we hit a wall, and the game cannot be played any longer (although I suspect we shall be able to limp along with "crisis management" for two or three more decades). This game, of self-destruction and the destruction of others, will continue until there is no place for America to go except to the graveyard of failed empires. And as Williams suggested, violence is very likely part of the equation.I do disagree with the assertion that things will limp along for "two or three more decades." The desperation of political elites is too palpable for anything lasting that long. Their spectacles have become too frantic.
Link.
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Power
Power breeds arrogance by justifying itself through inflation. However, a tipping point is reached when power believes itself infallible and therefore invincible: thus do dictators fall. At that level only a true paranoid survives.
Monday, February 21, 2011
Sunday, February 20, 2011
High-Tech Sociopaths
From Stars and Sewers:
Online anonymity has created what the computer scientist Jaron Lanier calls a “culture of sadism.” Some Yahoo comments were disgusting. “She got what she deserved,” one said. “This is what happens when dumb sexy female reporters want to make it about them.” Hillbilly Nation chimed in: “Should have been Katie.”
The “60 Minutes” story about Senator Scott Brown’s revelation that a camp counselor sexually abused him as a child drew harsh comments on the show’s Web site, many politically motivated.
Acupuncturegirl advised: “Scott, shut the hell up. You are gross.” Dutra1 noted: “OK, Scott, you get your free pity pills. Now examine the image you see in the mirror; is it a man?”
Evgeny Morozov, author of “The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom,” told me Twitter creates a false intimacy and can “bring out the worst in people. You’re straining after eyeballs, not big thoughts. So you go for the shallow, funny, contrarian or cynical.”
Nicholas Carr, author of “The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains,” says technology amplifies everything, good instincts and base. While technology is amoral, he said, our brains may be rewired in disturbing ways.
“Researchers say that we need to be quiet and attentive if we want to tap into our deeper emotions,” he said. “If we’re constantly interrupted and distracted, we kind of short-circuit our empathy. If you dampen empathy and you encourage the immediate expression of whatever is in your mind, you get a lot of nastiness that wouldn’t have occurred before.”
Leon Wieseltier, literary editor of The New Republic, recalled that when he started his online book review he forbade comments, wary of high-tech sociopaths.
“I’m not interested in having the sewer appear on my site,” he said. “Why would I engage with people digitally whom I would never engage with actually? Why does the technology exonerate the kind of foul expression that you would not tolerate anywhere else?”
Why indeed?Technology is not amoral. It is a machine morality. The technical morality promotes efficiency above all else. For example, omitted from the above op ed piece is any mention as to why a MSM organization would allow these posts to be placed on their site. They could easily moderate. If Internet trolls are so despicable, the why allow them to post in the first place? The controversy attracts and holders readers, of course. Hence the technical requirements of technological commercialism may only equate "good" with more eyeballs. Although hardly a revelation, it is part of a pattern that imposes itself on the human technological society and culture. Of course, humans are not machines, and therein lies the conflict. Technological society may materially elevate. As a result, expectations are raised and cannot be met. Well being ceases to be a factor. Survival instincts grow decadent. One must grow hard against nothing. Sociopaths lash out. So might everyone else, but who really wants to be like a sociopath?
And the mass stays in line a little longer.
Friday, February 18, 2011
Saturday, February 05, 2011
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