Musings from Brian J. Noggle
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Saturday, May 08, 2004
A Doctor With Perspective At the risk of imperiling my marriage, I shall link to this piece, entitled Second Hand Joke, wherein Dr. Sydney Smith recognizes that smoking's bad, but also that trampling individual rights for abstractions such as "public health" or "the good of the individual" are worse. Read:
Smoking is a filthy habit. It causes bad breath. It stains the
fingers and the teeth. It rots the lungs and it takes the breath away.
Spend a day in any doctor's office and you can quickly spot the long
time smokers, such is its impact on the body. And death by tobacco is a
truly horrible death, with the final days spent gasping for breath and
drowning in ones own secretions while the doctors look on helplessly. Readings in Prosecutorial Overreach Slate published a couple good articles on Friday dealing with prosecutors and their new cudgels with which to beat the citizenry into proper obsequiousness. Read:
Friday, May 07, 2004
Book Review: Video Fever: Entertainment? Education? Or Addiction? by Charles Beamer (1982) As you all know by now if you've been reading these book reviews and haven't skipped over them to get to the snarky humor, I read a lot of books that are not only sociological studies, but also are artifacts of their time periods. What they say about whatever they're talking about reflects the time in which they're written as much as the subject they cover. So I picked this book for under a buck during one of those binges of used book-buying in which my my beautiful wife and I often indulge. I read it over the course of a couple weeks during my lunches at work. I even pasted a number of Post-It notes into the book with snarky comments so I could do a longer, more reasoned evaluation of the book. However, since it's been on my desk here, just to the right of the MfBJN mainframe for a couple of weeks now, this is all you get. Sorry. You can pretty much guess how the book's going to go from the title. Unfortunately, the book's cover doesn't have the proper soap opera score to illustrate the way you should read the title. Ideally, it would be Video Fever: Entertainment? [piano tinkle] Education? [tinkle] or Addiction [heavy chord DUM DUM!] Charles Beamer, high school teacher, examines the video game craze as you would expect a high school teacher might. He goes to video arcades (remember them?), asks questions to which anyone not called "faculty" in a professional capacity would raise an eyebrow, and then extrapolates results from a limited statistical sample. You know what he found? Bad elements liked to hang out in arcades, smoke marijuana, and sometimes those bad kids stole a couple bucks from their parents' purses or wallets to play. Sometimes, games were the "only friend" of the players, and other anthropomorphic mayhem ensued. Beamer "examines" the typical player archetypes, from the preteen misfits to the 20-somethings blowing off steam. He briefly examines the benefits that video games might provide--raising a generation comfortable with that fad "computer" thing. But he's just waiting to get into the harm video games provide. Stealing quarters from parking meters. Smoking pot (brother, have we got a surprise for you in a couple years, when people start to smoke crystallized cocaine). Antisocial superpredators--no, wait, sorry, that's what Then he examines what can be done, which devolves from a study of good family life into a screed favoring extremely strict Christian discipline. Frankly, that particular turn in an attempted even-handed sociological study couldn't have been more jarring if the author had written Iä! Iä! Shub-Niggurath! The Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young! So it's an amusing tract, almost worth the thirty-three and a third cents I paid for it (if that much). I'm not sure it's worth the hours I spent reading it, but hey, I'm jumping on that grenade for you, gentle reader, to spare you the horror. Marginalia: As I mentioned, I noted some sections for extra snarkage. I'd hate to have wasted all those expensive little yellow slips with adhesive on one end, so I've included the best for you below:
Book Review: The Art of Deception by Kevin D. Mitnick and William L. Simon (2002) This, the most Holy Tome of Mitnick, describes the various means through which social engineers infiltrate your company to extract sensitive information. Coupled with a bit of technical knowledge, a bit of insight into large corporate community, and two heaping tablespoons of audacity, these fellows play upon the good will of corporate insiders to get into places where they shouldn't. Each chapter and section analyzes different techinques used and psychological traits preyed upon, with sample scenarios (often told from real-life hearsay), but you, gentle reader, should buy this book, learn from its contents, and trust no one. Granted, I started out Of course I recommend the book. Read it now! And just so you know how much I value this book, I paid whole paperback book club price for it! Thursday, May 06, 2004
Perhaps This Will Make the Arab Street Feel Better Eugene Kane writes another of his screeds in the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, this one entitled "Abuse of detainees nothing new in U.S.":
"People in Iraq must understand that I view those practices as abhorrent," Bush said on Arab television, referring to alleged abuse of prisoners by the U.S. military at Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad. "They must also understand that what took place in that prison does not represent the America that I know." Maybe he ought to tell it to Curtis Harris, a Milwaukee man in danger of never walking again after an encounter with Milwaukee police officers last December. Blech. I am sorry I bothered you with it, gentle reader. Those Geniuses at MIT According to the Boston Globe, those young geniuses at MIT have come up with a way to meld exercise with video games to make exercise "fun":
It worked. On the TV screen in front of him, the balloon slowly rose, clearing the peak with room to spare. De Francesco even got a couple of bonuses. He snared a floating gold coin worth 50 points, as well as a vigorous cardiovascular workout. As a 2000 graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, De Francesco still has use of the school's Zesiger Sports and Fitness Center. That's why he's one of the test subjects for an MIT project that merges video gaming with physical fitness. It's called CycleScore, and it's a recumbent bicycle connected to a personal computer programmed with a simple, engaging game. CycleScore transforms the bike's pedals and handlebars into game controllers, and offers a game program that rewards steady effort and the occasional burst of speed. There's even a touch of the shoot-'em-up, as the balloonist can fire missiles at passing targets for extra points. The idea is to create a system so interesting and enjoyable that people will forget they're sweating. Milennium Arcade had one of those in Crestwood. In 2001, I played it several times and told everyone I was going to open a chain of health clubs where all the cardio equipment had a video game component. I am going to be a little saddened when someone with, you know, follow-through comes along and makes money off of it. Kinda like that database with a Web front end wherein you can enter little scraps of information and links and the software will serve it up as a Web page. Something else I didn't follow up on when I had the idea in 1998. Trust Me, I Know What I Am Doing Count down the days with me. July 27, 2004. Can't wait? Listen to the opening theme and visit these sites: Is it July yet, mommy? (Invaluable resource: TV Shows on DVD.com.) Slightly Heralded Bush Unlike this story, at least the media --the Cincinatti Enquirer anyway--caught a story of Bush's common empathy:
"This girl lost her mom in the World Trade Center on 9-11." Bush stopped and turned back. "He changed from being the leader of the free world to being a father, a husband and a man," Faulkner said. "He looked right at her and said, 'How are you doing?' He reached out with his hand and pulled her into his chest." Faulkner snapped one frame with his camera. "I could hear her say, 'I'm OK,' " he said. "That's more emotion than she has shown in 21/2 years. Then he said, 'I can see you have a father who loves you very much.' " "And I said, 'I do, Mr. President, but I miss her mother every day.' It was a special moment." (Link seen originally on Wizbang!, but it's everywhere by now.) Lileks on REM From his column in the Star-Tribune (registration required):
Of course, even when I was young (and even considered a van Dyke briefly), I preferred Billy Joel. I mean, he sang about being young when he was young, and he sang about aging as he aged. REM? One trick ponies: disaffected youth, even as they grew old. Billy Joel covered that, too, in "Angry Young Man". Roeper's Hair Care Tips Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times offers some hair care tips:
Wednesday, May 05, 2004
Take Two Clap the, well, clapboard, for the St. Louis Post Dispatch has a new reason to oppose the discontinuation of emissions testing in the St. Louis area:
Its contract runs through August 2007. Ending it early could mean the state would have to refund $40 million to company. With a general fund that already faces shortfalls, that could mean the death of legislation that narrowly won first-round approval in the Missouri House on Monday. But it's not about just payng the forty million, oh no:
It's good to see persistence on the part of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. They hit us with the dreaded runny nose and lost jobs attack, now it's contract "refunds" and lost state revenue. What will it be tomorrow, lack of emissions testing leads to increased ecstasy use and removes St. Louis from consideration for an NBA expansion team? What A Novel Concept! Something seems awfully familiar about Anne Taintor's new book:
Check Out the Information-Systems-Industry-Venom Sacs on Him Dale Franks examines the beauty in the boondoggle that is the Navy/Marine Corps Internet. Oh, yeah, an enterprise-caliber, best-in-breed solution designed to do nothing but cause money to exchange hands. Lots of money. Taxpayer money. Beautiful. Steinberg Stings Greene In his current column in the Chicago Sun Times, stings Bob Greene in a simile:
Me, I am disappointed. Not because I am a fan of Greene's, which I am, but because I've been polishing my own Greene zingers since I'm reading Bob Greene's America and will undoubtedly deploy those zingers in the online review. Unfortunately, now they'll seem derivative of a real writer. Thanks a lot, Mr. Steinberg. Tuesday, May 04, 2004
But Wait, There's More! Instead of having a life, I have blogged a pile already tonight and I have updated Pop-Up Mocker. More value for your blog-reading dollar. Can I have that dollar? A couple more and I could buy a Guinness. Google Search of the Day Apparently, you have reached the number two hit in Poland for proposal swapping my wife .Not interested. Don't offer. Go away. It's Still All Good Although this story from yesterday has been retracted, I stand upon my inferences thereupon. Viva la economie! (Link seen on Instapundit.) Common Sense Check Today, in the Chicago Sun-Times, Richard Roeper takes on the American Idol racism manufactuversy. He sums it up:
How could this happen? How could arguably the three most talented performers finish with the three worst vote totals? Hmmm, could it have something to do with the fact that they're black? A lot of people, including Elton John, seemed to think so.
From what I understand, you vote by calling a 900 number for your favorite singer. You can vote as often as you want or your parents can afford. That sort of election process selects a special subset of viewers, a subset that has superfluous money, time, and motivation to call a 900 number. It's not white versus black. It's idiots versus people with lives apart from the television. Thank you. Please note, this Internet is not an idiot box because it has more than a box. It is two boxes, a big calculator with letters on it, and a unicycle with two buttons on it. That is all. Doing It For The Good news: The Missouri Legislature has begun the process of eliminating emissions tests required for automobile licensing in the St. Louis area. As cars become cleaner, these tests' burden, in terms of resident money and time spent, have not yielded that many results. The sponsor says:
The bad news: opposition invokes a scattering of silly reasons to keep the program running:
Politicians like this think you can legislate full employment by creating enough government regulations and divisions and offices. It got us out of the Greast Depression, didn't it? Hmm, no, I think that was the techno-military-industrial complex gearing up for WWII, not the CCC. But hey, I was less alive than the Baby Boomers were to experience it first hand. What would I know? More From The Noggle Economic School Command Post reports:
More Unheralded Bush Via Snopes.com, a story about President Bush jogging with an injured serviceman:
Who's Your Theologian? I know I'm a couple hours short of that degree in Theology, but I recognize the problem in Hugh Hewitt's assertion:
John Kerry --connecting again with yet another audience. ADL is a largely Jewish organization, which is not likely to recognize John Kerry's "commandment" as one of the big 10. A more nuanced reading indicates that the members of the Anti-Defamation League will not recognize Kerry's "Love your neighbor" edict as one of the ten commandments because it's not in the ten commandments, not because the Jews don't recognize the ten commandments. Take care with your words, brother, because someone out there will hop on it to paint you as anti-semitic, somehow turning your ill-written assertion into repeating the blood libel. (Link first seen on Power Line.) Monday, May 03, 2004
All Aboard, We've Been Expecting You.... It's hard to tell if the author and the sources for this piece in Time are helping Kerry, or damning him. Explaining why John Kerry sounds like an unprincipled opportunist when he's just the opposite:
Perhaps the Kerry campaign should not deploy senators whose understanding of nuance match Kerry's own:
The Economist Speaks More from the Brian J. Noggle "Capitalism: It's All Good" School of Economics. Take this story, which says:
"High oil prices, both at the pump and for home heating, depress consumers' ability to spend more," said a report by the Food Marketing Institute released at its annual trade show in Chicago yesterday. "It is not surprising that more shoppers are buying food today in discount stores and other low-price venues than ever before," the study said. What about the grocers out there? Well, people are choosing low price over....what is it again a full grocery offers? You see, the Brian J. Noggle "Capitalism: It's All Good" School of Economics sees through every little ping of "bad" news as a net positive. When the man on the radio says copper prices are going up, that's good for the miners and it's good for the people who make alternatives to copper. Copper prices going down? Good for people who want to buy or make things with copper. Gas prices going up? Good for refineries and Big Oil, as well as for people who make hybrid automobiles, mass transit, and pastimes close to home. Gas prices coming down? Good for transportation companies, consumers, and tourist destinations. Keep that in mind when these reports come out. The news is typically bad for whomever is releasing the report (well, probably good fro whomever got paid to prepare the doomsday scenario), but it's good news for someone else, and it's probably not zero sum. It's better news for everyone when capitalism is unfettered. Sunday, May 02, 2004
Book Review: Fielder's Choice by Michael Bowen (1991) This book is supposed to be a whodunit. It's more a WTF? The book is set in 1962. The backdrop: The end of the Mets' miserable season. During a ballgame in late September, Jerry Fielder, a "businessman" with a shady reputation, is murdered in the pressbox with a number of people nearby. Who could have done it? Who cares? For starters, the first person narrator is a somewhat minor character, recounting things that happen to other people. It's kind of jarring to try to keep that bit straight. Second, it takes like 70 pages until the murder is committed. Thirdly, it's difficult to keep the suspects straight, much less the investigating characters and the partners and whatnot. Some characters call suspects by their first names, others by their last names, and at by the middle of the book, I gave up trying to keep it straight, instead, I just wanted to get through the book. Someone did it. Or did someone else? Who knows? The Mets didn't win the pennant that year, and the scorecard for the game in question was the vital clue. A fielder's choice was marked an error. So you see, the title's a pun playing on that, not the character's name! Ha hah! The gimmick got ya! Ha hah! I paid under a buck for it in hardback, of which the author got what he deserved: nothing! Excuse me, I am bitter because my own masterpiece has not yet been published, and it only takes fifty pages to get interesting. Where's the justice, I ask you. More Urban Planner Pap Once again, highly paid academic consultants decide what's good for cities: the creative class. From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on April 29:
It's an argument waged by author Richard Florida, and it has set off a firestorm of debate about what makes up a vibrant economy.
Stupid schnucking city planners and elected officials keep shoveling money to consultants who want to elevate their cool, unemployed academic bohemian friends, all the while anticipating the day when they're highly-paid consultants with with cool artistic friends. Conspiracy! James Joyner has uncovered a conspiracy to keep Republicans home on November 2:
*** The Redskins? performance has aligned with the presidential outcome in the last 18 elections ? a probability of 1 in 263.5 million, according to Dave Dolan, an assistant professor of statistics at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay.
Thank you, that is all. See you in the voting booth on November 2. On Chris White's List As some of you know, I enjoy Chris White's Top Five List, and I am a paying member of Club Top Five. So it's with great honor that I was awarded the number nine spot on a recent Club 5 list for the topic "The Top 16 Celebrity Contributions to Humanity". My entry:
I Think Someone Has Modified The History Books Here's a newsbit on CNet dated April 29:
Google on Thursday denied that it has had any contact with the FBI regarding the design of its
Critics immediately criticized EPIC's request as a publicity stunt and
because the nonprofit likened Google's Web-based e-mail service to the
FBI's controversial Carnivore wiretapping utility and the Pentagon's
discontinued "Orwellian Total Information Awareness program."
EPIC's request also asked whether Google had discussed licensing its
search technology, in use by customers in the private sector, to the
FBI "to further law enforcement investigations or intelligence
gathering activities." Google spokesman Nathan Tyler replied: "I cannot
confirm whether they're using our technology." But I'd better not draw attention to it, or it's off to Room 101 for me for questioning CNet. Where's the Punchline? From a story on Yahoo! news:
Judge George Wu ordered the report from the Knoxville Zoo on Thursday during a hearing in a lawsuit that seeks to return Ruby to the Los Angeles Zoo. |
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