One of today's blog headlines from Isikoff is striking "Democrats blast GOP 'front groups,' but use them too"
Once again we see that both parties are composed of sniveling, dastardly ne'er-do-wells. To see what is behind all this, just imagine to yourself what is the common thread here. It should be quite obvious to those thinking clearly that both these "parties" have an abject lust for quite filthy lucre--the people and the nation be damned!
Eratosthenes first measured the circumference of the earth from the shadows cast by the sun. Today, humanity's fitness to survive will be measured by our ability to conquer that same thermonuclear fusion that casts those shadows. Thus, Prometheus will truly be unbound.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Saturday, October 30, 2010
More "Quant" Arrant Nonsense
A typically hubristic paper makes its way upon the scene on the arXiv today with the sententiously ponderous title of "Replicating financial market dynamics with a simple self-organized critical lattice model." Now I am not going to attempt to put you to sleep with any quotes from this latest mathematical excrescence, dear reader. Suffice it to say that this is more of the same gobbledygook that gave the world the equivalent of a financial venereal disease known as derivative securities. The object of which is to perform a looting of the physical economy via computerized trading, etc.
The whole risible facade of this sham "chaos quantum field gauge group dilation theory" falls apart at once when you simply consider that it has been the space program which has caused the bringing forth into being of whole new classes of products benefiting society. That this is not some random happenstance only some quant idiot savant might try to pretend otherwise. But of course, while there are sheep to be fleeced, such shenanigans will continue apace...
Genomic Organization Proven To be Non-Random
As the recurring theme here attests, it is the author's delight to put the purveyors of a-causal randomness to flight. It is with great joy that I welcome some recent research on nucleic acid three dimensional structure of yeast that does just that. I quote some relevant excerpts below. But please read the entire contents for details.
Eukaryotic genomes are non-randomly organized in the nucleus. It is becoming clear that intra-nuclear positions of genomic loci are influenced by various nuclear processes including transcription, replication and repair... It has recently been suggested that transcription factors are involved in the association of genes with these transcription factories. However, how transcription factories function remains unclear, partly because they have been studied in complex mammalian cells. Studying the factories in a model organism with a much simpler genome can facilitate understanding of the role of transcription factories with regard to transcriptional regulation.
Eukaryotic genomes are non-randomly organized in the nucleus. It is becoming clear that intra-nuclear positions of genomic loci are influenced by various nuclear processes including transcription, replication and repair... It has recently been suggested that transcription factors are involved in the association of genes with these transcription factories. However, how transcription factories function remains unclear, partly because they have been studied in complex mammalian cells. Studying the factories in a model organism with a much simpler genome can facilitate understanding of the role of transcription factories with regard to transcriptional regulation.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Today's Polished Musicians
These days performance of classical music is all surface. Techniques to enhance gymnast-like mechanical abilities abound. There is no sense that beauty is anything other than mere effect. Even the idea of substance is relegated at most to some arbitrary outpouring of supposedly intense emotion...Can it be that that same art that produced the Ninth Symphony dedicated to Schiller's call for a universal brotherhood of mankind has now become so trivialized and debased? Wagner inflicted his hateful compositions upon the world a century and a half ago...I'm afraid the musical world has never recovered.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
The Truth About the Fraudulent U.S. Political System: Cholera in Haiti
Dear fellow citizens, let me put this question to you: would it have made one scintilla of difference whether republicans or democrats were in power when the humanitarian crisis in Haiti called upon this once great nation of ours to act to prevent what is now a cholera epidemic? The criminal fraud of international finance's derivative securities prompted our politicians to dump trillions of dollars in these same criminals' pockets due to the oft repeated rubric of "too big to fail." What can we say about the eminently preventable unfolding tragedy in Haiti but that our government's shamefully wicked policy in reality is "too poor to matter."
Sunday, October 17, 2010
The Lunatics Continue to Bay
Today's march of folly comes to us from a member of a "think tank" called the Hoover Institute. This from that same illustrious Stanford university that houses a promoter of Nazi ideologue "philosopher" brainwasher Ernst Mally . One Peter Berkowitz opines thusly in the Wall Street Journal:
"Highly educated people say the darndest things, these days particularly about the tea party movement. Vast numbers of other highly educated people read and hear these dubious pronouncements, smile knowingly, and nod their heads in agreement. University educations and advanced degrees notwithstanding, they lack a basic understanding of the contours of American constitutional government."
Here’s a fact about Alexander Hamilton's federalism that needs to be understood today by the clueless cranks on the so called left and right. In his report to Congress as Secretary of the Treasury on the subject of manufactures, Hamilton openly and unambiguously attacks by name Adam Smith! The reason we are currently reeling in the midst of economic hell is that we have allowed an unfettered, oligarchical clique of private financiers to loot this once great agro-industrial economy. The Heritage Foundation right hails this as a free trade race to the bottom capitalism a la Adam Smith. The environmentalist left abhors Hamilton’s correct understanding that technologically progressive manufacturing is the real source of wealth. The irony is that China, with its investment in high speed rail and water projects, is functioning much closer to what Hamilton’s economic genius was about. So much for the meaningless debate of left versus right in our hallowed halls of academia. Both their roads equally lead to hell…
"Highly educated people say the darndest things, these days particularly about the tea party movement. Vast numbers of other highly educated people read and hear these dubious pronouncements, smile knowingly, and nod their heads in agreement. University educations and advanced degrees notwithstanding, they lack a basic understanding of the contours of American constitutional government."
Here’s a fact about Alexander Hamilton's federalism that needs to be understood today by the clueless cranks on the so called left and right. In his report to Congress as Secretary of the Treasury on the subject of manufactures, Hamilton openly and unambiguously attacks by name Adam Smith! The reason we are currently reeling in the midst of economic hell is that we have allowed an unfettered, oligarchical clique of private financiers to loot this once great agro-industrial economy. The Heritage Foundation right hails this as a free trade race to the bottom capitalism a la Adam Smith. The environmentalist left abhors Hamilton’s correct understanding that technologically progressive manufacturing is the real source of wealth. The irony is that China, with its investment in high speed rail and water projects, is functioning much closer to what Hamilton’s economic genius was about. So much for the meaningless debate of left versus right in our hallowed halls of academia. Both their roads equally lead to hell…
Saturday, October 16, 2010
The Only Unquenchable Appetite
It never fails to be a source of amusement when psychologists stumble upon some half truth in their investigations and then declare that they have made a discovery. When in fact, if they had even a smattering of classical training in the history of philosophy, they would recognize the absurdity of their claims.
Take the case reported by experimental psychologists at Stanford that study doesn't need to be interrupted by a break, because they conclude that will power to concentrate is not a limited resource. It has been accepted since the time that Plato wrote his Symposium, that the principle of the power of the intellect is driven by the unending and universal desire to produce good for humanity's future. But, since we, in our modernist, existentalist's cesspits of institutional "learning," have foolishly tossed aside all such wisdom in favor of utter and fraudulent nonsense, we seem to have quite lost our moorings. And go blindly flailing about like some chaos theorist's delusion.
From De Pace Fidei, Nicholas of Cusa 1453
"We recognize that in ourselves there is a certain appetite which is
called spirit because of the motion present in it. Moreover, we recognize
that the explanation for this motion is the Good, for by reason
of the Good the appetite is moved. Accordingly, we see that by
its own power the Good attracts our spirit and that the only reason
the Good is desired is because it is the Good. Therefore, the end of
our desire is the Good. And our spirit cannot have its appetite for the
Good from anywhere other than from the Good. Therefore, the Good
is the Creator of our spirit—creating us for the attainment of itself-
and is both our spirit’s Beginning and its End. Hence, our spirit
is not at rest except in its Beginning. And because our intellectual
spirit is not that very Good which it desires (because that Good is not
present in our spirit; for if it were present in the intellect, it would be
the intellect, just as in our knowledge the known is our knowledge),
the intellect does not know what that Good is. Therefore, the intellectual
spirit by nature desires to understand that Good. For although
that Good cannot be lacking to anything that is—since to be is something
good—nevertheless, unless the intellect understands the Good,
it will be deprived of it and will not be able to be at rest."
Take the case reported by experimental psychologists at Stanford that study doesn't need to be interrupted by a break, because they conclude that will power to concentrate is not a limited resource. It has been accepted since the time that Plato wrote his Symposium, that the principle of the power of the intellect is driven by the unending and universal desire to produce good for humanity's future. But, since we, in our modernist, existentalist's cesspits of institutional "learning," have foolishly tossed aside all such wisdom in favor of utter and fraudulent nonsense, we seem to have quite lost our moorings. And go blindly flailing about like some chaos theorist's delusion.
From De Pace Fidei, Nicholas of Cusa 1453
"We recognize that in ourselves there is a certain appetite which is
called spirit because of the motion present in it. Moreover, we recognize
that the explanation for this motion is the Good, for by reason
of the Good the appetite is moved. Accordingly, we see that by
its own power the Good attracts our spirit and that the only reason
the Good is desired is because it is the Good. Therefore, the end of
our desire is the Good. And our spirit cannot have its appetite for the
Good from anywhere other than from the Good. Therefore, the Good
is the Creator of our spirit—creating us for the attainment of itself-
and is both our spirit’s Beginning and its End. Hence, our spirit
is not at rest except in its Beginning. And because our intellectual
spirit is not that very Good which it desires (because that Good is not
present in our spirit; for if it were present in the intellect, it would be
the intellect, just as in our knowledge the known is our knowledge),
the intellect does not know what that Good is. Therefore, the intellectual
spirit by nature desires to understand that Good. For although
that Good cannot be lacking to anything that is—since to be is something
good—nevertheless, unless the intellect understands the Good,
it will be deprived of it and will not be able to be at rest."
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
A Royal Mess and Babylonian Quackery
"QE II".
For the cognoscenti among us, there is an irony that the euphemism for the monetarist self immolation into which we are now hurtling has the same acronym as Her Royal Highness. How very apropos. The old adage certainly applies that many roads lead to hell, it seems.
The obscurantist practice of substituting symbols for intelligible words is now supposed to substitute for thought... Just today, it has been announced that a project to map some umpteen billions of neural networks into some ballyhooed computerized googol complex. The only problem is that many of these gentlemen seem to have lost their marbles themselves. That is, they ardently believe that the human mind is some sort of unfathomably complex mechanical device.
With this much I will have to agree: to the rank reductionism of artificial intelligence/neural network methodology the truly human mind will forever remain in their lingo a black box.
For the cognoscenti among us, there is an irony that the euphemism for the monetarist self immolation into which we are now hurtling has the same acronym as Her Royal Highness. How very apropos. The old adage certainly applies that many roads lead to hell, it seems.
The obscurantist practice of substituting symbols for intelligible words is now supposed to substitute for thought... Just today, it has been announced that a project to map some umpteen billions of neural networks into some ballyhooed computerized googol complex. The only problem is that many of these gentlemen seem to have lost their marbles themselves. That is, they ardently believe that the human mind is some sort of unfathomably complex mechanical device.
With this much I will have to agree: to the rank reductionism of artificial intelligence/neural network methodology the truly human mind will forever remain in their lingo a black box.
Wednesday, October 06, 2010
More used-up monetarist "debating" speeds to nowhere, except hell
Today's Washington Post headlines "Will America come to envy Japan's lost decade?" Unfortunately it's just more of the same monetarist tripe...
My rebuttal follows:
This whole line of monetarist thinking, on both putatively liberal and conservative sides, completely and tragically misses the boat. No amount of manipulation of mere money, in whatever form, will prevent economic collapse. Why? Because the issue is the multi-trillion (or better quadrillion) speculative bubble in sundry and assorted so-called derivatives. This whole "bucket shop" monetary cancer was unleashed from a proverbial Pandora's box when Nixon pulled the plug on Roosevelt's Bretton Woods gold reserve mechanism to settle trade imbalances among nations. This led to a speculative arbitrage orgy in currencies a la the so-called carry trade. Later when the last vestige of that same Roosevelt era anti speculative Glass Steagall legislation was extinguished by the machinations of Larry Summers, et al, during the Clinton administration the doors were flung open to the current debacle. Without forcing this mass of speculative funny money through bankruptcy and returning to a credit system based upon long term survival of nations via productive investments in infrastructure, energy, water, industry and agriculture, everything else is mere whistling past the graveyard to the tune of London and Wall Street. Krugman, and his monetarist brethren, understanding less than nothing of how a physical economy functions, of course will have none of this. (They can only argue to blow up a bubble further, which just feeds the cancer.) But it is the only cure.
My rebuttal follows:
This whole line of monetarist thinking, on both putatively liberal and conservative sides, completely and tragically misses the boat. No amount of manipulation of mere money, in whatever form, will prevent economic collapse. Why? Because the issue is the multi-trillion (or better quadrillion) speculative bubble in sundry and assorted so-called derivatives. This whole "bucket shop" monetary cancer was unleashed from a proverbial Pandora's box when Nixon pulled the plug on Roosevelt's Bretton Woods gold reserve mechanism to settle trade imbalances among nations. This led to a speculative arbitrage orgy in currencies a la the so-called carry trade. Later when the last vestige of that same Roosevelt era anti speculative Glass Steagall legislation was extinguished by the machinations of Larry Summers, et al, during the Clinton administration the doors were flung open to the current debacle. Without forcing this mass of speculative funny money through bankruptcy and returning to a credit system based upon long term survival of nations via productive investments in infrastructure, energy, water, industry and agriculture, everything else is mere whistling past the graveyard to the tune of London and Wall Street. Krugman, and his monetarist brethren, understanding less than nothing of how a physical economy functions, of course will have none of this. (They can only argue to blow up a bubble further, which just feeds the cancer.) But it is the only cure.
Tuesday, October 05, 2010
First Movie Recommendation: Inside Job
Larry Summers and the Subversion of Economics
Jim Watson, Agence France-Presse, Getty Images
By Charles Ferguson
The Obama administration recently announced that Larry Summers is resigning as director of the National Economic Council and will return to Harvard early next year. His imminent departure raises several questions: Who will replace him? What will he do next? But more important, it's a chance to consider the hugely damaging conflicts of interest of the senior academic economists who move among universities, government, and banking.
Summers is unquestionably brilliant, as all who have dealt with him, including myself, quickly realize. And yet rarely has one individual embodied so much of what is wrong with economics, with academe, and indeed with the American economy. For the past two years, I have immersed myself in those worlds in order to make a film, Inside Job, that takes a sweeping look at the financial crisis. And I found Summers everywhere I turned.
Consider: As a rising economist at Harvard and at the World Bank, Summers argued for privatization and deregulation in many domains, including finance. Later, as deputy secretary of the treasury and then treasury secretary in the Clinton administration, he implemented those policies. Summers oversaw passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which repealed Glass-Steagall, permitted the previously illegal merger that created Citigroup, and allowed further consolidation in the financial sector. He also successfully fought attempts by Brooksley Born, chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the Clinton administration, to regulate the financial derivatives that would cause so much damage in the housing bubble and the 2008 economic crisis. He then oversaw passage of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which banned all regulation of derivatives, including exempting them from state antigambling laws.
After Summers left the Clinton administration, his candidacy for president of Harvard was championed by his mentor Robert Rubin, a former CEO of Goldman Sachs, who was his boss and predecessor as treasury secretary. Rubin, after leaving the Treasury Department—where he championed the law that made Citigroup's creation legal—became both vice chairman of Citigroup and a powerful member of Harvard's governing board.
Over the past decade, Summers continued to advocate financial deregulation, both as president of Harvard and as a University Professor after being forced out of the presidency. During this time, Summers became wealthy through consulting and speaking engagements with financial firms. Between 2001 and his entry into the Obama administration, he made more than $20-million from the financial-services industry. (His 2009 federal financial-disclosure form listed his net worth as $17-million to $39-million.)
Summers remained close to Rubin and to Alan Greenspan, a former chairman of the Federal Reserve. When other economists began warning of abuses and systemic risk in the financial system deriving from the environment that Summers, Greenspan, and Rubin had created, Summers mocked and dismissed those warnings. In 2005, at the annual Jackson Hole, Wyo., conference of the world's leading central bankers, the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, Raghuram Rajan, presented a brilliant paper that constituted the first prominent warning of the coming crisis. Rajan pointed out that the structure of financial-sector compensation, in combination with complex financial products, gave bankers huge cash incentives to take risks with other people's money, while imposing no penalties for any subsequent losses. Rajan warned that this bonus culture rewarded bankers for actions that could destroy their own institutions, or even the entire system, and that this could generate a "full-blown financial crisis" and a "catastrophic meltdown."
When Rajan finished speaking, Summers rose up from the audience and attacked him, calling him a "Luddite," dismissing his concerns, and warning that increased regulation would reduce the productivity of the financial sector. (Ben Bernanke, Tim Geithner, and Alan Greenspan were also in the audience.)
Soon after that, Summers lost his job as president of Harvard after suggesting that women might be innately inferior to men at scientific work. In another part of the same speech, he had used laissez-faire economic theory to argue that discrimination was unlikely to be a major cause of women's underrepresentation in either science or business. After all, he argued, if discrimination existed, then others, seeking a competitive advantage, would have access to a superior work force, causing those who discriminate to fail in the marketplace. It appeared that Summers had denied even the possibility of decades, indeed centuries, of racial, gender, and other discrimination in America and other societies. After the resulting outcry forced him to resign, Summers remained at Harvard as a faculty member, and he accelerated his financial-sector activities, receiving $135,000 for one speech at Goldman Sachs.
Then, after the 2008 financial crisis and its consequent recession, Summers was placed in charge of coordinating U.S. economic policy, deftly marginalizing others who challenged him. Under the stewardship of Summers, Geithner, and Bernanke, the Obama administration adopted policies as favorable toward the financial sector as those of the Clinton and Bush administrations—quite a feat. Never once has Summers publicly apologized or admitted any responsibility for causing the crisis. And now Harvard is welcoming him back.
Summers is unique but not alone. By now we are all familiar with the role of lobbying and campaign contributions, and with the revolving door between industry and government. What few Americans realize is that the revolving door is now a three-way intersection. Summers's career is the result of an extraordinary and underappreciated scandal in American society: the convergence of academic economics, Wall Street, and political power.
Starting in the 1980s, and heavily influenced by laissez-faire economics, the United States began deregulating financial services. Shortly thereafter, America began to experience financial crises for the first time since the Great Depression. The first one arose from the savings-and-loan and junk-bond scandals of the 1980s; then came the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s, the Asian financial crisis; the collapse of Long Term Capital Management, in 1998; Enron; and then the housing bubble, which led to the global financial crisis. Yet through the entire period, the U.S. financial sector grew larger, more powerful, and enormously more profitable. By 2006, financial services accounted for 40 percent of total American corporate profits. In large part, this was because the financial sector was corrupting the political system. But it was also subverting economics.
Over the past 30 years, the economics profession—in economics departments, and in business, public policy, and law schools—has become so compromised by conflicts of interest that it now functions almost as a support group for financial services and other industries whose profits depend heavily on government policy. The route to the 2008 financial crisis, and the economic problems that still plague us, runs straight through the economics discipline. And it's due not just to ideology; it's also about straightforward, old-fashioned money.
Prominent academic economists (and sometimes also professors of law and public policy) are paid by companies and interest groups to testify before Congress, to write papers, to give speeches, to participate in conferences, to serve on boards of directors, to write briefs in regulatory proceedings, to defend companies in antitrust cases, and, of course, to lobby. This is now, literally, a billion-dollar industry. The Law and Economics Consulting Group, started 22 years ago by professors at the University of California at Berkeley (David Teece in the business school, Thomas Jorde in the law school, and the economists Richard Gilbert and Gordon Rausser), is now a $300-million publicly held company. Others specializing in the sale (or rental) of academic expertise include Competition Policy (now Compass Lexecon), started by Richard Gilbert and Daniel Rubinfeld, both of whom served as chief economist of the Justice Department's Antitrust Division in the Clinton administration; the Analysis Group; and Charles River Associates.
In my film you will see many famous economists looking very uncomfortable when confronted with their financial-sector activities; others appear only on archival video, because they declined to be interviewed. You'll hear from:
Martin Feldstein, a Harvard professor, a major architect of deregulation in the Reagan administration, president for 30 years of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and for 20 years on the boards of directors of both AIG, which paid him more than $6-million, and AIG Financial Products, whose derivatives deals destroyed the company. Feldstein has written several hundred papers, on many subjects; none of them address the dangers of unregulated financial derivatives or financial-industry compensation.
Glenn Hubbard, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers in the first George W. Bush administration, dean of Columbia Business School, adviser to many financial firms, on the board of Metropolitan Life ($250,000 per year), and formerly on the board of Capmark, a major commercial mortgage lender, from which he resigned shortly before its bankruptcy, in 2009. In 2004, Hubbard wrote a paper with William C. Dudley, then chief economist of Goldman Sachs, praising securitization and derivatives as improving the stability of both financial markets and the wider economy.
Frederic Mishkin, a professor at the Columbia Business School, and a member of the Federal Reserve Board from 2006 to 2008. He was paid $124,000 by the Icelandic Chamber of Commerce to write a paper praising its regulatory and banking systems, two years before the Icelandic banks' Ponzi scheme collapsed, causing $100-billion in losses. His 2006 federal financial-disclosure form listed his net worth as $6-million to $17-million.
Laura Tyson, a professor at Berkeley, director of the National Economic Council in the Clinton administration, and also on the Board of Directors of Morgan Stanley, which pays her $350,000 per year.
Richard Portes, a professor at London Business School and founding director of the British Centre for Economic Policy Research, paid by the Icelandic Chamber of Commerce to write a report praising Iceland's financial system in 2007, only one year before it collapsed.
And John Campbell, chairman of Harvard's economics department, who finds it very difficult to explain why conflicts of interest in economics should not concern us.
But could he be right? Are these professors simply being paid to say what they would otherwise say anyway? Unlikely. Mishkin and Portes showed no interest whatever in Iceland until they were paid to do so, and they got it totally wrong. Nor do all these professors seem to make policy statements contrary to the financial interests of their clients. Even more telling, they uniformly oppose disclosure of their financial relationships.
The universities avert their eyes and deliberately don't require faculty members either to disclose their conflicts of interest or to report their outside income. As you can imagine, when Larry Summers was president of Harvard, he didn't work too hard to change this.
Now, however, as the national recovery is faltering, Summers is being eased out while Harvard is welcoming him back. How will the academic world receive him? The simple answer: Better than he deserves.
While making my film, we wrote to the presidents and provosts of Harvard, Columbia, and other universities with detailed questions about their conflict-of-interest policies, requesting interviews about the subject. None of them replied, except to refer us to their Web sites.
Academe, heal thyself.
Charles Ferguson is director of the new documentary Inside Job and the 2007 documentary No End in Sight: The American Occupation of Iraq.
Thank you for a bit of sanity in what otherwise seems at the moment to be a ginned up political lunatic asylum governing America. The one I'm referring to is where we are given phony choices that are all artificial bluster constituting a medicine man con game show of left versus right. Where international financiers control the game from behind the scenes and get exactly what they want no matter which party is in power. That is, the power to loot the populace at will. Although you don't offer any remedies, at least you have diagnosed the disease.
Monday, October 04, 2010
Elasticity, Stem Cells, Telomeres, and Loss of Histones
Two results from separate investigations were announced last week that seem to have a peculiar similarity. One showed that stem cells respond and multiply when their environment causes them to stretch. The other showed that as telomeres shorten, the production of histones declines. These are what wind the DNA tightly in a spool like fashion. As histones are lost the DNA unwinds, causing loss of fidelity in transcription and hence epigenetic changes to the genome. So the positive or negative response to stretching or winding and age appears to be similar here.
One more piece of intriguing research in this vein. The elastic energy of DNA itself has now been measured. And it kinks as it is stretched by a critical amount. This to me appears to point strongly in the direction of the soliton model for DNA.
One more piece of intriguing research in this vein. The elastic energy of DNA itself has now been measured. And it kinks as it is stretched by a critical amount. This to me appears to point strongly in the direction of the soliton model for DNA.
More Grist For The Mill From Professor Krugman
Fearless Fosdick Krugman now ever so bravely takes to task Big Money, Fox News and Republicans on the take. Mon dieu! How dumb does he take us to be? Because they NY Slimes has frozen yours truly out of its portion of the blogosphere: I place my reply to the Krugman here:
Your choice reader: right wing Fox pot or left wing NY Times kettle? What's the difference? They are just scoundrels and whores from a different side of town, is all...
Your choice reader: right wing Fox pot or left wing NY Times kettle? What's the difference? They are just scoundrels and whores from a different side of town, is all...
Saturday, October 02, 2010
Even the Washington Post Sometimes Divulges the Truth (If Only by Accident)
In an article in today's Post anent the so-called Flash Crash, the writer matter of factly states the following:
"At 2:32, Waddell decided to sell $4.1 billion worth of financial contracts, known as E-Minis. The E-Minis are linked to the value of the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index, a broad indicator of blue chip stocks. They are traded on an electronic futures market, one of a handful of alternative venues to bet on the direction of the market without buying and selling stocks." (Emphasis not in original.)
Now, dear reader, if you have been keeping at all up on the latest financial chicanery ongoing amongst the financial oligarchies, you may have come across the erstwhile institutions known as "bucket shops." For the definition of the same you need look no further than what I have italicized above.
Today, it is also quite obvious that our press sewers see no evil in this at all... Rather, they exult in it and would have us believe that if these practices were snuffed out, why then. the very economic fabric of society would be irretrievably rent asunder. Isn't also obvious, dear reader, that both Obama and Bush, are mere appendages of this very same financial oligarchy?
Let me recommend a very interesting book by William Lyon Mackenzie for some historical perspective on how this oligarchy has put its toadies in the White House in times gone by. It is called The Life and Times of Martin Van Buren. Some quite disgusting practices seem never to change at all.
"At 2:32, Waddell decided to sell $4.1 billion worth of financial contracts, known as E-Minis. The E-Minis are linked to the value of the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index, a broad indicator of blue chip stocks. They are traded on an electronic futures market, one of a handful of alternative venues to bet on the direction of the market without buying and selling stocks." (Emphasis not in original.)
Now, dear reader, if you have been keeping at all up on the latest financial chicanery ongoing amongst the financial oligarchies, you may have come across the erstwhile institutions known as "bucket shops." For the definition of the same you need look no further than what I have italicized above.
Today, it is also quite obvious that our press sewers see no evil in this at all... Rather, they exult in it and would have us believe that if these practices were snuffed out, why then. the very economic fabric of society would be irretrievably rent asunder. Isn't also obvious, dear reader, that both Obama and Bush, are mere appendages of this very same financial oligarchy?
Let me recommend a very interesting book by William Lyon Mackenzie for some historical perspective on how this oligarchy has put its toadies in the White House in times gone by. It is called The Life and Times of Martin Van Buren. Some quite disgusting practices seem never to change at all.
Two very telling signposts -- one pure evil and one just nuts
Information Physics: The New Frontier
(Submitted on 27 Sep 2010)
At this point in time, two major areas of physics, statistical mechanics and quantum mechanics, rest on the foundations of probability and entropy. The last century saw several significant fundamental advances in our understanding of the process of inference, which make it clear that these are inferential theories. That is, rather than being a description of the behavior of the universe, these theories describe how observers can make optimal predictions about the universe. In such a picture, information plays a critical role. What is more is that little clues, such as the fact that black holes have entropy, continue to suggest that information is fundamental to physics in general.Update: The YouTube short movie was apparently removed from that site due to complaints. It was a truly disgusting bit of evil that unveiled the fascist nature of the green movement. In short, several human beings were blown up in three short clips when they refused to participate in lowering their "carbon footprint." In each case an environmental avatar pushed a button that caused the human to graphically explode on screen. The British authors of the removed video apologized that their attempt at "humor" might have offended anyone. They then declared they they will carry on ever "onward and upward." Indeed. Just like the Nazi salute, methinks...
In the last decade, our fundamental understanding of probability theory has led to a Bayesian revolution. In addition, we have come to recognize that the foundations go far deeper and that Cox's approach of generalizing a Boolean algebra to a probability calculus is the first specific example of the more fundamental idea of assigning valuations to partially-ordered sets. By considering this as a natural way to introduce quantification to the more fundamental notion of ordering, one obtains an entirely new way of deriving physical laws. I will introduce this new way of thinking by demonstrating how one can quantify partially-ordered sets and, in the process, derive physical laws. The implication is that physical law does not reflect the order in the universe, instead it is derived from the order imposed by our description of the universe. Information physics, which is based on understanding the ways in which we both quantify and process information about the world around us, is a fundamentally new approach to science.
Friday, October 01, 2010
Plasma soliton kink breather at the heliosphere?
To my mind, once again, this tremendous bit of astrophysical research bespeaks a scale free, self-similarity self-organizing soliton-like plasma process:
Knot in the ribbon at the edge of the solar system 'unties' (Update)
September 30, 2010 by J. Kelly BeattyRoughly the size of a card table, the Interstellar Boundary Explorer is the latest in NASA’s series of low-cost, rapidly developed Small Explorers spacecraft. Credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
(PhysOrg.com) -- The unusual "knot" in the bright, narrow ribbon of neutral atoms emanating in from the boundary between our solar system and interstellar space appears to have "untied," according to a paper published online in the Journal of Geophysical Research.
When NASA launched the Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) on October 19, 2008, space physicists held their collective breath for never-before-seen views of a collision zone far beyond the planets, roughly 10 billion miles away. That’s where the solar wind, an outward rush of charged particles and magnetic fields continuously spewed by the Sun, runs into the flow of particles and fields that permeates interstellar space in our neighborhood of the Milky Way galaxy.
No spacecraft had ever imaged the collision zone, which occurs in a region known as the heliosheath, because it emits no light. But the two detectors on IBEX are designed to “see” what the human eye cannot. The interaction of the solar wind and interstellar medium creates energetic neutral atoms of hydrogen, called ENAs, that zip away from the heliosheath in all directions. Some of these atoms pass near Earth, where IBEX records their arrival direction and energy. As the spacecraft slowly spins, the detectors gradually build up pictures of the ENAs as they arrive from all over the sky.
Mission scientists got their first surprise six months after launch, once the spacecraft had scanned enough overlapping strips of sky to create a complete 360° map. Instead of recording a relatively even distribution all the way around, as expected, IBEX found that the counts of ENAs — and thus the strength of the interaction in the heliosheath — varied dramatically from place to place. The detectors even discovered a long, enhanced “ribbon,” accentuated by an especially intense hotspot or “knot,” arcing across the sky. (see IBEX Explores Galactic Frontier, Releases First-Ever All-Sky Map)
Now scientists have finished assembling a second complete sweep around the sky, and IBEX has again delivered an unexpected result: the map has changed significantly. Overall, the intensity of ENAs has dropped 10% to 15%, and the hotspot has diminished and spread out along the ribbon. Details of these findings appear in the September 27th issue of Journal of Geophysical Research (Space Physics).
One of the clear features visible in the IBEX maps is an apparent knot in the ribbon. Scientists were anxious to see how this structure would change with time. The second map showed that the knot in the ribbon somehow spread out. It is as if the knot in the ribbon was literally untangled over only 6 months! This visualization shows a close-up of the ribbon (green and red) superimposed on the stars and constellations in the nighttime sky. The animation begins by looking toward the nose of the heliosphere and then pans up and left to reveal the knot. The twisted structure superimposed on the map is an artist's conception of the tangled up ribbon. The animation then shows this structure untangling as we fade into the second map of the heliosphere. Credit: IBEX Science Team/Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio/ESA
“We thought we might detect small changes occurring gradually throughout the Sun’s 11-year-long activity cycle, but not over just 6 months,” notes David McComas (Southwest Research Institute), principal investigator for the IBEX mission and the paper’s lead author. “These observations show that the interaction of the Sun with the interstellar medium is far more dynamic and variable than anyone envisioned.”In the past, space physicists had little notion of what to expect along the boundary where the Sun’s own magnetic bubble, the heliosphere, meets interstellar space. Even though the solar wind travels outward at roughly a million miles per hour, it still takes about a year to reach the heliosphere’s edge. Also, the encounter zone within the heliosheath is believed to be several billion miles thick (roughly Pluto’s distance from the Sun). Finally, the ENAs take another six months to many years to complete the return trip back to Earth, depending on their direction and energy.
With ENAs starting out from such a wide range of distances and traveling back toward Earth at different speeds, IBEX mission scientists had expected that any highs and lows in intensity arising within the heliosheath would be hopelessly smeared out in the spacecraft’s all-sky maps. So they’re elated by the variations and changes seen so far by IBEX. These early results hint that the solar wind and the interstellar flow might be interacting in a thinner layer than many researchers had imagined possible.
McComas says the dropoff in intensity between the two all-sky maps perhaps makes sense, because the Sun is only now emerging from an unusually long period of very low activity and a correspondingly weak solar wind. The fewer the solar-wind particles that reached the heliosheath in recent years, the fewer the ENAs that got created. “We didn’t plan it this way,” says McComas, “but it’s an almost perfect situation, in that we’re seeing the interaction in its simplest state — before trying to interpret what turns out to be a much more complicated interaction than anticipated.”
If IBEX remains healthy, and if the team gets approval to continue well past its planned two-year mission, then the changes it’s seeing in the distant heliosheath should become more dramatic as solar activity ramps up later in this decade.
“The surprising results from IBEX show that there is still exciting science that can be done with small missions,” comments Eric Christian, a member of the spacecraft’s research team and the program’s Deputy Mission Scientist at the Goddard Space Flight Center. “This is clearly a huge success for the Explorer program.” IBEX is one of a dozen Explorer-class missions operated by NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.
“The public might think that scientists make measurements and instantly know what’s going on, but that is not how science really works,” McComas observes. “We thought the outer heliosphere would be stable over time — and IBEX is showing us that it’s not. This is changing the game completely.”
More information: The paper, "The evolving heliosphere: Large-scale stability and time variations observed by the Interstellar Boundary Explorer," by D.J. McComas, M. Bzowski, P. Frisch, G.B. Crew, M.A. Dayeh, R. DeMajistre, H.O. Funsten, S.A. Fuselier, M. Gruntman, P. Janzen, M.A. Kubiak, G. Livadiotis, E. Mobius, D.B. Reisenfeld, and N.A. Schwadron, was published online Sept. 29 in the American Geophysical Union's Journal of Geophysical Research.
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