Author's posts
Jul 30 2015
Told you so.
New Zealand Prime Minister Admits Drug Prices Will Rise Under TPP — Leaves Out The Part About More People Dying
by Mike Masnick, Tech Dirt
Thu, Jul 30th 2015
As we’re in the middle of crunch time for the final TPP negotiations, New Zealand’s Prime Minister John Key has finally admitted what many experts have been saying for years — that under the TPP, drug prices will undoubtedly rise, because it extends monopoly protections on important medicines. Key tries to play this off as no big deal, because it’s the government paying for the medicine so the public won’t notice (leaving aside the fact that it’s their tax dollars). However, folks who actually understand basic economics note that, when the price goes up, access to drugs gets more difficult even in New Zealand, where it’s noted that some key life saving drugs have not been made available because they’re too expensive.
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Back in the US, even a bunch of Congresscritters who voted in favor of giving the USTR fast track authority appear to be having a bit of buyer’s remorse as they’ve asked the USTR to explain why it appears the current draft of the TPP will make drugs more expensive rather than less.
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And even the AARP has stepped in to point out that it appears the TPP is going to make it more difficult for the US elderly to afford drugs.
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How can the USTR and the Obama administration continue to insist that the TPP is in the public interest when it’s abundantly clear that it’s in the pharmaceutical companies’ interests instead?
Jul 30 2015
The Breakfast Club (Reactionless Drive)
Or maybe not quite so reactionless but certainly a puzzle if true. Conventional rockets operate on the sound Newtonian principle that every action (in a vacuum where there are no other significant factors to consider) has an equal and opposite reaction. Essentially it’s an outgrowth of the concept that the total energy of a closed system does not change. If your closed system is you and some mass you can separate and propel away and the intitial state is that you are motionless with respect to each other and some arbitrary fixed point, when you propel that mass it does indeed move away from you but you also move away from it and also relative to your fixed point in proportion with the ratio of the mass you have acted on to you, and the velocity with which you have propelled it away.
Up until Robert Goddard many scientists were under the misconception that you needed something to push against and that therefore flight in a space environment was impossible when it’s really not and quite conventional reactions will work provided you supply them with the chemicals needed (for instance liquid oxygen and kerosene).
However even advanced propulsion systems like Ion Drives rely on kinetic energy to create thrust. What makes them attractive and revolutionary is that they are very fuel efficient and can, since they operate fairly continuously compared to chemical rockets which go very fast initially and then coast the rest of the time, achieve quite high velocities… eventually.
What makes the EmDrive different is that it doesn’t seem to rely on kinetic energy at all.
Instead you set up a resonating microwave in a sealed cavity and out comes measurable thrust. Oh sure, you need to add energy to the system in the form of electricity, but solar panels are good for that so essentially you have a drive with an unlimited fuel supply.
How does it work? Nobody knows and the math to tune the microwave and the cavity is really tricky, but the parts are very cheap and almost every country that has a space program is examining prototypes.
What makes it news and not just some elaborate perpetual motion scam is that Martin Tajmar, professor and chair for Space Systems at the Dresden University of Technology who has a reputation for tracking down experimental error, has duplicated the previous results and is presenting a paper on it.
While it’s not some faster than light warp drive it does solve some fundamental problems in planetary exploration, NASA projects that even at modest output levels it could reduce the time needed for a probe to reach Pluto from 9 years to 18 months.
The ‘impossible’ EmDrive could reach Pluto in 18 months
by David Hambling, Wired
24 July 15
Last summer WIRED revealed that Nasa’s Eagleworks Lab was testing a copy of the EmDrive, a propulsion device frequently labelled as “impossible” because it appears to violate the law of conservation of momentum. Against all expectation they found it produced thrust. The response from the scientific community was dramatic, and generally sceptical — but the “anomalous thrust” stubbornly refuses to disappear as more research zeroes in on it.
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(T)he subject is attracting serious examination from scientists who want to know if a sealed cavity filled with resonating microwaves can really produce net thrust. Previously the effect has been measured by British scientist Roger Shawyer, who invented the EmDrive, and a Chinese team, as well as Nasa.
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(Tajmar)has investigated claims of “electrostatic torque,” a twisting force meant to occur between charged spheres, and found the supposed anomaly was due to a slight asymmetry in the experimental setup. His work on claims of gravitational shielding with spinning superconductors had led to a better understanding of sources of error in high-precision gyroscope measurements. These are cases where an apparatus apparently producing small anomalous forces needed to be examined closely.The same applies to the EmDrive. The obvious sources of error — air currents, leaking microwaves, ionisation — have long ago been ruled out. But this is the first time that someone with a well-equipped lab and a strong background in tracking experimental error has been involved, rather than engineers who may be unconsciously influenced by a desire to see it work.
Science Oriented Video
The law that entropy always increases holds, I think, the supreme position among the laws of Nature. If someone points out to you that your pet theory of the universe is in disagreement with Maxwell’s equations – then so much the worse for Maxwell’s equations. If it is found to be contradicted by observation – well, these experimentalists do bungle things sometimes. But if your theory is found to be against the second law of thermodynamics I can give you no hope; there is nothing for it but to collapse in deepest humiliation.
–Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World (1927)
Science News and Blogs
- Unearthing Jamestown’s Leaders, and a Mystery, By NICHOLAS FANDOS, The New York Times
- Anoles Going Strong on Hispaniola Millions of Years Later, By JAMES GORMAN, The New York Times
- ‘The Bomb’ Helps Return Nukes to the TV Spotlight, By NEIL GENZLINGER, The New York Times
- Astronomers find aurora a million times brighter than the northern lights, by Ian Sample, The Guardian
- Pluto’s flowing ice and mysterious red haze highlight ‘a scientific wonderland’, by Alan Yuhas, The Guardian
- French student finds tooth dating back 560,000 years, by Angelique Chrisafis, AFP
- Everyone’s A Bad Guy: German Regulator Orders Facebook To Drop Its Stupid ‘Real Name’ Policy, by Timothy Geigner, Tech Dirt
- Washington Post Publishes… And Then Unpublishes… Opinion Piece By Ex-Intelligence Industry Brass, In Favor Of Strong Encryption, by Mike Masnick, Tech Dirt
- Reminder: When Ron Wyden Says There’s A Secret Interpretation Of A Law, Everyone Should Pay Attention, by Mike Masnick, Tech Dirt
- Pendulum, Pendulum On The Wall: This ‘Odd Kind Of Sympathy’ Syncs Them All, by Kevin Knudson, Forbes
Obligatories, News and Blogs below.
Jul 30 2015
The Daily/Nightly Show (Credible History)
Discontinuity
Arby’s Enema
This week’s guests-
- Wednesday 7/29: Doris Kearns Goodwin
- Thursday 7/30: J.J. Abrams
Doris Kearns Goodwin is my least favorite credible historian.
Let’s get least favorite part out of the way first. She’s my least favorite because she’s a constantly sycophantic toady to power who has never met a Beltway trope or a piece of Villiager conventional wisdom that she was not willing to parrot or at least let pass unprotested.
Doris is a conservative historian, thoroughly unchallenging and well conected and thus trotted out frequently by talk shows (including Jon unfortunately) as a veneer of respectability.
Is she respectable? Well, more than those idealogues and cretins you see trotted out by the racist and fascist right wing. She might come to decide Barack Obama was a bad President (and he was) but she would never compare him with Hitler where I, a less credible historian, might.
Oh you want to get into it? Torture, assassination by association, Gestapo-like Security State, undeclared wars of aggression. Q.E.D., and don’t bother telling me he had no agency, he and his ‘Just Us’ department actively worked to thwart every effort at accountability. That’s what we call accessory after the fact.
But she’s not totally unhinged from reality and as an example of historical reality and how it plays out over time I give you the underlying causes of the War for Slavery.
There was a time in the mid ’60s when the Civil Rights Movement was peaking and the centenials of this and that were being celebrated. In secondary schools and some colleges the prevailing narrative is that it was the growing economic might of the North and a fear for diminishing political influence that were the prevailing causes of the War of Southern Rebellion.
Some far out historians (probably pot smoking dirty hippies) suggested that the two precipitating forces were the economic value of Black Human Beings as property and flat out racism. Now they had plenty of contemporaneous primary sources that said just that in unmistakable black and white but no said the historical establishment, the North was as fully implicated in the Institution of Slavery as the South and it couldn’t possibly be.
Well, the elite North was (which it would do not to forget) and the average person was just as racist as those in the South, but what they also saw was an economic system that, even if they couldn’t articulate it as directly as we do today, Slave Labor would drive Free Labor out of the marketplace. The resentment against the Fugitive Slave Act wasn’t driven entirely by altruistic sympathy for the poor downtrodden Black.
At the time (the 1960s not the 1860s) most historians denied that Slaves had any economic value at all and argued the South was trapped in a dying system. Modern historians almost universally accept that the South was wealthier than the North and was poised to add to that disparity on the Cotton Trade and expansion of Slavery. The South was not all picking and grinning, many Plantations sported Factories and Ironworks, all staffed by Slaves.
Doris Kearns Goodwin blows with the breeze, neither the best or worst, just another hack but at least a credible one.
Senior Black Correspondent
Tonightly we will be talking about Cecil The Lion with our panel Rory Albanese, Baratunde Thurston, and Bobcat Goldwait.
The real news below.
Jul 29 2015
The Daily/Nightly Show (Xenu)
Discontinuity
Calvinball
This week’s guests-
- Tuesday 7/28: Tom Cruise
- Wednesday 7/29: Doris Kearns Goodwin
- Thursday 7/30: J.J. Abrams
Tom will be on to whore Mission Impossible Whatever which is fine I guess.
The Church of Scientology says that a human is an immortal, spiritual being (thetan) that is resident in a physical body. The thetan has had innumerable past lives and it is observed in advanced Scientology texts that lives preceding the thetan’s arrival on Earth were lived in extraterrestrial cultures.
At least Tom doesn’t believe in any wierd culty things like, oh, say, Mormonism.
Word Blerd
Tonightly the topic is Trump, another fellow with very strange ideas about what does and does not constitute ‘consent’. The panel is Penn Jillette, Brina Milikowsky, and Ricky Velez.
The real news below.
Jul 28 2015
The Daily/Nightly Show (Penultimate)
Discontinuity
I like the brisket with Carolina sauce, but what do I know?
It’s cruise week.
This week’s guests-
- Monday 7/27: Ted Cruz
- Tuesday 7/28: Tom Cruise
- Wednesday 7/29: Doris Kearns Goodwin
- Thursday 7/30: J.J. Abrams
Who knows what madness Ted will spout but he desparately needs to pump up his polls before next week’s Republican debate and The Donald has no monopoly on crazy.
The Church of Scientology says that a human is an immortal, spiritual being (thetan) that is resident in a physical body. The thetan has had innumerable past lives and it is observed in advanced Scientology texts that lives preceding the thetan’s arrival on Earth were lived in extraterrestrial cultures.
See?
But there are no Black people in Maine
You just don’t hang with the right people.
Maine is the Arkansas of the northeast and basically everyone who doesn’t live in the touristy areas is dirt poor and doesn’t have all the teeth they were born with. The rest steal everything they can from the ‘aways’ who stare and take pictures of rocks, water, and trees WHICH WE HAVE MORE OF THAN YOU, YOU NEW HAMPSHIRE BASTARDS!
Yeah, come February and I’ll tell you what upstate New York, New Hampshire and Maine are all about. Cold and dark, on the positive side there aren’t as many bugs.
Me, I live in the armpit of New England where we hide the stinky and smelly by products of the Industrial Revolution with a thin screen of trees because we have class.
Tonightly the topic is more Cosby. The panel is Colin Quinn, Sally Kohn, and Gina Yashere.
Ta-Nehisi Coates’ 2 part web exclusive extended interview and the real news below.
Jul 27 2015
Anti-Capitalist Meetup: How Neoliberal is Hillary Clinton?
By Le Gauchiste
The term “Neoliberal” is used a lot here at Daily Kos: 203 posts included the term during the first half of 2015 alone, a little more than one every day. Many of these posts stimulate lively discussion, especially regarding the alleged neoliberalism of various Democratic Party figures, most notably President Obama and Hillary Clinton.
Quantity is not always a sign of quality, however, and many of these discussions suffer from a failure to define neoliberalism adequately or even at all, leading to understandable confusion and misplaced accusations that the term is meaningless. This post will try to avoid that pitfall by proposing a definition of neoliberalism that emphasizes its nature as an ideology, and will then apply that definition to one of Clinton’s most important recent speeches, in which she was widely reported to have returned to traditional liberalism.
Jul 27 2015
Listen to the Lyrics
Anarchy is the condition of a society, entity, group of persons or single person which does not recognize authority.
What about anarchy are we not understanding?
Teach us not to be too loud
We’ll try and fit in with the crowd
But we are St Trinians
We cant fake the way we feel
We were born to keep it real
Hockey sticks and balls of steel
We are St Trinians
You bite us, we’ll bite you back
Better be scared when we attack
Feel the fear we’re maniacs
St Trinians
Check out our battle cry
A song to terrify
No one can stand in our way
We are the best, so screw the rest
We do as we damn well please
Until the end, St Trinians
Defenders of anarchy
So scam all the toffs the neats and the freaks,
Blackmail the goths, the slappers and the geeks,
And if they complain we’ll do it all again
We do as we damn well please
ASBOs, the chavs, the emos and their mates,
To torment the slags we offer special rates,
And if they complain we’ll do it all again
Defenders of anarchy
We are the best, so screw the rest
We do as we damn well please
Until the end, St Trinians
Defenders of anarchy
St Trinians
So scam all the toffs, the neats and the freaks,
Blackmail the goths, the slappers and the geeks,
And if they complain we’ll do it all again
We do as we damn well please
ASBOs, the chavs, the emos and their mates,
To torment the slags we offer special rates,
And if they complain we’ll do it all again
Defenders of anacrchy
Check out our battle cry
A song to terrify
No one can stand in our way
We are the best, so screw the rest
We do as we damn well please
Until the end, St Trinians
Defenders of anarchy
Victorious, Rebellious
We do as we damn well please
Until the end, St Trinians
Defenders of anarchy
St Trinians
Jul 25 2015
Good Politicians
An honest politician is one who, when he is bought, will stay bought.
– Simon Cameron
I like Simon, he has loyalty.
His corruption was so notorious that a Pennsylvania congressman, Thaddeus Stevens, when discussing Cameron’s honesty with Lincoln, told Lincoln that “I don’t think that he would steal a red hot stove.”When Cameron demanded Stevens retract this statement, Stevens told Lincoln “I believe I told you he would not steal a red-hot stove. I will now take that back.”
Banks revolt over plan to kill $17B Fed payout
By Peter Schroeder, The Hill
07/25/15 12:25 PM EDT
When banks join the Federal Reserve system, they are required to buy stock in the central bank equal to 6 percent of their assets. However, that stock does not gain value and cannot be traded or sold, so to entice banks to participate, the Fed pays out a 6 percent dividend payment.
The Senate proposal says it would slash that “overly generous” payout to 1.5 percent for all banks with more than $1 billion in assets. While the summary language outlining the proposal said that change would only impact “large banks,” industry advocates argued that banks most would identify as small community shops could easily have assets in excess of that amount.
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While banking advocates make the policy argument, they also acknowledge they are facing a hard political reality – $17 billion is hard for members to pass up to help cover costs in a must-pass bill.“It’s difficult to have a policy discussion when people are looking for a pay for,” said Ballentine. “That’s the issue we’ve been running into.”
The Senate bill is facing an uphill climb towards enactment, as House leaders from both parties have pushed the Senate to instead take up its short-term extension of highway funding and continue working on a longer-term proposal. But now that the Fed dividend has been identified as a way to raise billions of dollars, the industry now will be on high alert for it pop up elsewhere, when lawmakers are looking for a way to cover the costs of their preferred policies.
“That’s a genuine concern,” said Merski. “We’re going to remain actively opposed to this in any form.”
“Pay fors, they never die,” agreed Ballentine. “Perhaps we can take some of the spotlight off of this provision, which we think has served a good purpose.”
Bwahhahhahhahhah.
Jul 24 2015
I am shocked, SHOCKED!
I have a higher and grander standard of principle than George Washington. He could not lie; I can, but I won’t.
In stunning attack, Cruz accuses leader McConnell of lying
By Erica Werner and Laurie Kellman, AP
July 24 at 1:39 PM
In a stunning, public attack on his own party leader, Republican Sen. Ted Cruz accused Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of lying, and said he was no better than his Democratic predecessor and couldn’t be trusted.
Cruz, a Texan who is running for president but ranks low in early polling, delivered the broadside in a speech on the Senate floor Friday, an extraordinary departure from the norms of Senate behavior that demand courtesy and respect.
“Not only what he told every Republican senator, but what he told the press over and over and over again, was a simple lie,” Cruz said.
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“It saddens me to say this. I sat in my office, I told my staff the majority leader looked me in the eye and looked 54 Republicans in the eye. I cannot believe he would tell a flat-out lie,” Cruz said.“We now know that when the majority leader looks us in the eyes and makes an explicit commitment that he is willing to say things that he knows are false.”
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“We keep winning elections and then we keep getting leaders who don’t do anything they promised,” Cruz said.
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