Friday, April 11, 2008

The Smartest / Dumbest Bouncer in the World


Christopher Langan

It's claimed that this guy has a testable IQ of between 190-210, which puts him in the running for highest testable IQ in the world. He seems reasonable enough, until the points of his thoughts on the world come up. I like to say crazy things sometimes, and I definitely enjoy pushing the limits or reasonable debate, but this guy in crazy talking and in fighting could beat the shit out of me.

Check out the three part video series on him at the bottom. If you have 1/2 hour to burn, it's worth it. It gives you the distinct understanding that a high IQ does not mean you have to be a reasonable person. His views just don't seem to fit with our values and mores as a society. In the video series he's asked how he would change the world. Just to give you a taste it could involve such fun as forced sterilization for members of society deemed unfit for procreation, freedom being earned not considered inherent, and if he could he would be perfectly willing to train everyone on how to use their freedom properly (these points are mostly from the third video aroun 1:20 in).

This series is incredible to watch, but terribly distressing that someone can be so competent in cognitive ability, but so lacking in humanistic consideration. Maybe that's just my incredibly inadequate mind not comprehending his genius though.



Part 1:


Part 2:


Part 3:




Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Multi-Tasking and It's Effect on Decision Making

Via digg.com, I found this article from Newsweek about multi-tasking, over-stimulation and the problems it could cause you mentally.

When you get down to brass tacks, effortful thinking requires energy (blood glucose). Your brain is essentially an energy user much like a muscle. If you are exercising and begin to run low on blood glucose you will not be able to exert yourself as much and exercise will become less efficient. If you were to correlate this to cognition, it's easy to make the leap that over-extending yourself mentally will result in poorer performance and decision making (confirmed in part in the article above). So if you're constantly running your concentration down by mentally taxing exercises (reading a bazillion blogs, inundating yourself with media, trying to multi-task as much as possible) you're likely to be doing yourself a disservice by making concentration and decision making more difficult than it should be.

There is a lot to be said about simplifying one's life. I am very guilty of trying to do everything at all times, but I am starting to see the the other side of the coin. I've said to myself after reading fark.com or digg.com for an hour or more, "Am I any smarter for having read this stuff? Am I really going to remember any of this in a day? What benefit has this given me?" I'm usually pretty disgusted with my answers to those questions.

Here is one suggestion that I feel is pretty helpful.

Isolate yourself from distractions while working. Turn the cell-phone to vibrate, turn off e-mail notification, turn off all instant messaging, shut down your internet browser and work uninterrupted for xx minutes. It could be 10 for those who are terribly frazzled, it could be an hour and a half for those who are more disciplined. But the big kick here, is celebrate a job well done and take a few minute break. Relaxe, recharge, check out what those distractions were (check e-mail or phone) and then refocus on the job at hand. If you find your mind wandering, notice the distraction for what it is and let it pass. You will have time to deal with whatever it is later.

In a real job this is difficult to do as there are floor problems that need addressed immediately, in the hospital there are codes which need addressed now, and in the porn industry there's always a midget just waiting around the corner ready to throw a wrench (sometimes literally throw a wrench) into your well crafted S&M scene.

It always feels like I need more time for things. I don't need more time. I need more simplification. I need more discipline. I need to go read digg for another half an hour before I get back to work...

Pretentious quote of the day:
Dost thou love life? Then do not waste time, for that is the stuff life is made of.
- Benjamin Franklin -

Friday, April 4, 2008

Maybe Everyone Isn't a Helicopter Parent

How is this kind of a story worthy of news? I love the moral of the story, and Lenore Skenazy is right on, but what the fuck! Is it that amazing that a 9 year old can understand what a train map is, what a bus map is and then successfully not fall off the face of the Earth?!

Here is a Daily Mail (British newspaper) article contrasting the area a great-grandfather, grandfather, mother, and son were allowed to roam unattended in their hometown growing up. When this type of anecdotal information is mapped out, it seems quite disturbing. There is something fundamentally wrong with saying "The newest generation is going to hell because of:
  • overprotective parents
  • internet (myspace / facebook)
  • violent video games
  • grunge music
  • crack cocaine
  • disco
  • drugs
  • free-love
  • rock and roll
  • women wearing pants
  • the horseless carriage
I try my hardest to always temper over-excitement by saying "The kids are alright." I still have the urge to tell how I was allowed to walk to school 50 miles, over broken glass, naked, with my older brothers on my back. In all honesty though, I was allowed to pretty much ride my bike wherever I wanted to by the time I was in 4-5th grade (max of about 20 mile radius due to exhaustion).

There's someone close to me that doesn't do well with driving or directions by himself because, "What if I get lost?" Something tells me his parents didn't encourage experiences like Leonore Skenazy does.

Our media saturation of tragedies has skewed our understanding of reasonable risk. Individually my future children are no more likely to be abducted / molested than to be mauled by a opera singing, hairlipped, eskimo. I know that's not entirely true, but we have to understand that our world today is very nearly as safe as it was in the "good old days".


Well, on second thought, there may be good reason for at least a little paranoia...

Stuff White People Like: Free Healthcare




It seems like I've been on a binge of healthcare related articles recently and I couldn't help but notice this article from Stuff White People Like.

Personally I think they overlooked a large part of what the allure of Free Healthcare is: Knowing What's Best for Poor People.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Anti Government Hippies, and Government Healthcare

If you read Reason's Hit and Run blog you will see the vast majority of what gets me hot and bothered. It's a libertarian think tank that has a similar distaste for statists (read: socialists) and paternalists (read staunch conservatives). They never fail to please, especially with this.





What is it with anti-war protester's and thinking that government as an entity can do nothing right. Hippies should not be saying this, because they're making me agree with them! That cannot be right. At the same time though, before dreadlocks come to rest from their epileptic description of genocide for oil, if asked about universal healthcare, you'll hear about a bunch of mindless drivel about how awesome the government could be if only it had the power to regulate everything healthcare related!


I say government, by the simple fact that they have to manage over 300 million people are incapable of developing, let alone maintaining, a system that is fair (by my standards) and doesn't cause more problems than already exist. The US government is not inherently evil; I would have the same reservations if this system were to be managed by the most benevolent and competent organization in the world.

What is great though, is that the one girl is willing to say that she doesn't fully understand how she hate's government because of war, but looks to the government for all the answers regarding healthcare. She's willing to say she isn't entirely informed. That's awesome! If we are reasonable creatures we have to be willing to acknowledge our lack of knowledge sometimes. I like to think I'd be willing to say I'm wrong (if it ever ends up happening).

Government Managed Healthcare: How Do You Decide What's Covered?

What kind of system needs to be in place to determine what is and what is not covered by Universal Health Care Dollars: British style.



Article by Maggie Mahar on the NICE system in Brittain. NICE is used to evaluate technologies and procedures based on the effectiveness per dollar. Basically if there is a technology out there which is A-OK but there is one that comes out which is twice as expensive, but a little better, the NICE system publishes this and basically decides that the new technology will not be covered by the national system's dollars. This is all well and good, but it brings forth a question of what people are allowed to pay for. This makes very reasonable sense if you have a large, over-arching system which is in charge of everyone's care (and the associated cost there-of).

Reason does a terrific job of bringing to light some problems with this type of system:
Reason:
"
Debbie Hirst, a woman with metastasized breast cancer, wanted to take Avastin, a drug that, per The New York Times, is "widely used in the United States and Europe to keep such cancers at bay." The NHS refused to pay for it, saying it was too expensive. That much is par for the course in a system that holds down costs by rationing care according to standards set by a single central authority. But then Hirst, with the support of her oncologist, decided to raise the $120,000 she'd need to pay for the drug on her own, mainly by selling her house. The NHS said she was perfectly free to do that, but then she would have to pay for all of her care out of pocket, a financial burden that was far beyond her means.
"



NY Times article on the woman will breast cancer in Brittain:
"
Officials said that allowing Mrs. Hirst and others like her to pay for extra drugs to supplement government care would violate the philosophy of the health service by giving richer patients an unfair advantage over poorer ones. Patients "cannot, in one episode of treatment, be treated on the N.H.S. and then allowed, as part of the same episode and the same treatment, to pay money for more drugs," the health secretary, Alan Johnson, told Parliament. "That way lies the end of the founding principles of the N.H.S.," Mr. Johnson said.
"
There are many moral hurdles which must be crossed when we start down this path. Having an independent agency which reviews technologies for effectiveness for dollar is perfectly reasonable for a universal coverage system. There must, however, be the option of utilizing your own money for getting the best possible treatment at any cost. We must realize the following:
  • There will (and should) be a two-tiered system
    • People should be arguing for universal coverage, not equality in all things healthcare
  • There will be points at which a bureaucrat says, "Nope, you've spent too much, you can't get that surgery" Or, "Well, it may extend your life, but there's only a 10% chance, we're not willing to spend $xxx,xxx of tax-payer dollars for this" Or, "Well, since you've smoked your life away, we will not pay for a lung transplant".
  • We need to seriously look at the incentives currently in place for primary care doctors
    • Right now, there is a bias towards specialization that very well may cause a shortage of primary care docs. Just generalizing here, but specialists (orthopaedics, cardiologists, and the like) get paid 3+ times more than a primary care doc. Since the baby-boomers will be needing more consistent care here soon, and if there is a flood of millions upon millions of newly insured individuals, there will be a massive shortage of primary care docs to understand and manage a patient's health situation.
So what's to be concluded from all of this? Well, I don't think there's any way of us not having universal health-care in the future. It just makes people feel better about themselves when we can say, "Everyone has a right to live healthy." By that logic, everyone deserves to have a job, everyone deserves to feel like they're treated justly (let's take more money away from the rich so the poorer feel less down-trodden comparatively). I don't like where we're going, but we have to be honest about the ramifications and what we can do to make the best of the situation. We need to poke and prod the ideas being put forward, as well as the ideas in practice in Brittain, France, Canada, etc. etc.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Stuff White People Like

Yes! I have found a new favorite blog! It's a blog explaining to the world what white people like and why they like them. The best that I can tell, "White people" actually means "white, urban, liberal, yuppies who are (or more accurately: feel) morally superior to their white brethren because of a complex system of having minority friends, hating corporations, studying abroad, and having an arts degree". Sadly there's a few that hit a little too close to home for me:

There are so many though that I just can't get enough of:
Please, take a few minutes and check this site out, it is freakin' hilarious. I know it's stupidly ironic that I feel morally superior because I believe I'm more honest or more of a man than to feel like I need to bow to other's sensibilities of political correctness. Just humor me and make fun of them (them this week, means yuppie douchebags).

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Undeniable Global Warming


To the Enlightened of This Age: Our Lord and Savior...



Am I really unbiased, or do I purposefully go out of my way to find these kinds of stories? I try to keep an open mind, but I am just way too skeptical that we have to drastically change our way of living because we're all going to boil to death.

The oil-shill that is NPR has had something to say recently about Global Warming. You know what they say? We don't fucking know what's going on with the Ocean's temperature. Scientists have expected the below surface temperatures to have increased the past 4 years, but they have not (if they're interpreting data right). What this means is that there's a whole bunch of heat energy that no one knows where it went. One of the suggestions in the article was that the excess heat could have been expelled into space. Whelp, I had better go buy a Prius so the entire Universe doesn't overheat...

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Obama's Speech on Race


Yes, I will admit this guy has brains. I am certainly not an Obama supporter, but this guy is able to garner a large portion of popular support while not having to defend or talk about his voting record (easily on of the most liberal in the Senate). His talk of uniting (as his is incredibly partisan in voting) is not all that terribly truthful, but the way in which he chooses his words seem uncommonly heartfelt and straightforward.

Obama took the opportunity Tuesday at the Constitution Center in Philadelphia Pennsylvania to discuss his thoughts on race, what his connections to the Reverand Jeremiah Wright mean, whether he will agree to disavow his preacher's stances, and throw in some specifics on what he wants to do with the presidency.

(*full length clip: over 9 minutes long, transcript is here*)




I almost shit my pants when I realized that not only was he expounding on the views of many blacks in America, but he also brought their counterpoint forward as well. He spoke of his connections with the outspoken (and really freakin' crazy) Reverend Jeremiah Wright, and told why he couldn't throw his preacher under the bus (politically). I believe this speech Obama gave will easily be considered historic. I believe that Obama as a man is genuine, but with regards to where he wants to take this country, genuinely wrong. Read the transcript, or watch the speech for yourself, you will certainly gain something from it. My views on race and race relations have not changed one bit, but I am heartened by the fact that someone at the national level understands some of the most difficult nuance on this subject and is willing to talk to the nation about it.

I wish more people were willing to step up to a podium and lay bare their views like this. I wish also that people would judge those thoughts on their merit and not based on some arbitrary and harmful standards which political correctness forces on this debate.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Unbelievable Robots

I absolutely love how systems and controls can be used to make sci-fi looking stuff a reality.

This "robot-dog/horse" thing is incredible.



Here's a different implementation of this technology, but towards the exo-skeleton side. This is a military implementation. It's a bit hokey, but amazing none-the-less.




This Japanese prototype looks much more refined, but with less emphasis put on sheer strength.



This is a semi-autonomous RC plane which takes off and lands vertically on a wall. This is not an Osprey type plane with propellers which transition to helicopter like orientation. It is a regular single prop RC plane, with fully autonomous transitions from vertical take-off to level flight and back to vertical landing.



This stuff is awesome.