Times of London: 712 words to "hotshot" sniper

Photo: Cory Doctorow/Flickr CC

A British army sniper got lucky in Afghanistan last year, when he plugged two enemy fighters more than one-and-a-half miles away, with his 8.59 mm long range rifle.

The rifle has a 25X scope.

The Times of London, in a piece that furthers the sniper mystique, says the soldier scored his record kills in November of last year, in a piece that reads like something ran today.

“Tom Irwin, a director of Accuracy International, the British manufacturer of the L115A3 rifle, said: ‘It is still fairly accurate beyond 4,921ft, but at that distance luck plays as much of a part as anything.’”

via Hotshot sniper in one-and-a-half mile double kill – Times Online.

via I am Military on Twitter.

Popular Science makes pitch for "Mark of the Beast"

Microsoft proposes tattooing patients. PopSci appears to like the idea. — MB

Photo: Yuichiro C. Katsumoto/Flickr CC

You might take this PopSci bit about an “invisible,” ultraviolet tattoo ID system, for another inconsequential workup of an industry press release.

But what bothers me about this webby, is that it uncritically pushes the RFID industry’s latest, dubious storyline: that the only way to be “truly safe” (from phantom villains, hacking into pacemakers) is with “permanent,” implanted devices and IDs.

This graf, for example, exemplifies the imprecise prose George Orwell describes, in Politics and the English Language. Rather than encouraging critical thinking, it conceals and prevents it:

“More and more implantable devices, like pacemakers or defibrillators, are turning to wireless signals as a means to communicate with external devices, but in doing so they open themselves to security breaches. Several solutions are in the works that tackle this problem by upping device defenses, but by piling on security measures, yet another risk emerges: that at a critical time an authorized physician might not be able to access the device.”

The graf — as does the rest of the piece — tosses up unspecified threats, against which it proposes tattooing patients (i.e., everyone). In all that vagueness, the vulnerabilities posed by implanted devices become infinitely vast and dark.

Without those threats, the RFID industry will have a tough time tattooing serial numbers on people for whom the tagging, tracking, and tracing of humans remains a bitter, and fresh, memory, and Christian end-timers, for whom the Mark of the Beast is a very real fear.

via Tattooing Patients With UV Ink Could Protect Pacemakers From Hackers | Popular Science.

The PopSci piece uses this Microsoft paper, proposing the tattoos, as its primary source.

Classic iPad games push boomer buttons

In my Boston Globe personal technology column this week, I take a look at casual games for the iPad.

And one commenter accuses me of snobbery, for including this bit in my column:

“Asteroids, Space Invaders, Ms. Pac-Man: Back in the 1980s, on Long Island, my friends and I played these games compulsively at home and at the local tennis club, while players sat around, sipping Perrier water.”

But that’s how we rolled, up on the North Shore of Long Island…

via A classic pops up quickly on the iPad – The Boston Globe.

US Government to Scrutinize Patriot Radio

Alan Watt makes the MSM, again, this time for hosting his show on RBN. Also, a prediction: By 2011, the federal government will confirm that it is directly investigating RBN, or another underground radio network. — MB

Photo: Kyle May/Flickr CC

John Stadtmiller’s Republic Broadcasting Network is taking heat in the Christian Science Monitor, for broadcasting a show hosted by the head of the Guardians of the Free Republics.

Stadtmiller, a competent broadcaster, appears to be getting out in front of this week’s story, about the Guardians’ apparently clumsy attempt to get dozens of US governors to step-down. (The word “investigation” alone is enough to make a broadcaster’s heart skip a beat.)

RBN also broadcasts Alan Watt’s Cutting Through the Matrix. The weeknight show features excellent insights — often on science and technology news stories — from Watt, one of the underground’s best-known conspiracy historians. (Watt’s commentary has informed my MSM reporting on RFID technologies, for example.)

But the network also airs a show by one, rabid anti-Semite, along with other voices that might not otherwise find a significant audience. And it runs ads from Holocaust-denying publishers:

“Republican Broadcasting Network is a satellite, shortwave, and Internet radio station that features 31 shows with names like ‘Cutting Through the Matrix, ‘Govern America,’ and ‘Road Warrior Radio.’ It has loose ties to the American Free Press newspaper, which Michael calls “the most important newspaper of the radical right.’”

Watt receives no money from RBN for his show, which is supported by direct book sales and donations to his website.

via Guardians of the free Republics tied to Texas radio station / The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com.

Coleman accused: short shrift to Bigfoot sex

Image: Cryptomundo. (Click to visit Coleman's blog.)

Loren Coleman — one of the Heretic’s “Ten to Watch in 2010” — reports that one Bigfoot sex-obsessed lecturer complained to the Portland Daily Sun (in its April 1 edition) that his research was omitted from the legendary cryptozoologist’s forthcoming tome about the beast:

It seems that “Henry Yarncooler, a lecturer on Bigfoot legends, said he can’t understand why [Loren] Coleman and co-author Michelle Souliere, owner of the Green Hand bookstore where the [International] Cryptozoology Museum resides, want to censor details of Bigfoot’s breeding habits.”

It does not appear, from Coleman’s post, that the Portland Daily Sun contacted him, or cited his past presentations and writings on  “cryptosexology,” particularly those pertaining to the mighty, hairy, one.

via Cryptomundo » Dueling Cryptos: Coleman vs Yarncooler.

Cannabis, computers, conspiracies: latest MSM recipe for disaster

The takeaway, from this week's Pentagon shooting: Pot will make you crazy. Photo: nimbin mardi grass 2009/Flickr CC

The Washington Post today describes John Patrick Bedell as “a troubled 36-year-old Californian who loved marijuana, computers, and conspiracy theories.”

If those interests form some kind of explosive mix, as the WaPo story indicates, then we’re in a hell of a lot of trouble.

Suspicions that 9/11 was an inside job are widespread, as are pot use and technophilia — the latter two, at least, are directly supported by the government.

Bedell pulled a gun at an entrance to the Pentagon this week not because of his interests, or his character, but — as Bedell’s parents rightly put it — his mental illness.

I’d be interested, then, to know which psychiatric and psychological treatments Bedell did get, if any. That will go further to answering the “why” of this story, than a list of hobbies.

Here’s a bit of the sensational stuff, though, from WaPo:

Bedell left an electronic trail thick with written, video, and audio manifestos. In an audio address posted on the Internet, he suggested that after the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy the United States had been infiltrated by a cabal of gangsters he called the “coup regime.’’ Bedell believed that the group has continued manipulating the country “up to the present day’’ and was probably responsible for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the Iraq war.

via Gunman troubled, friends say – The Boston Globe.

Zorgy Awards: Put Tim Binnall over the top

I just picked Tim Binnall’s podcast, Binnall of America, for the Best Paranormal Podcast of 2009.

Loren Coleman gets my vote for top paranormal researcher.

Both are on my list of Ten New England Esotericists to Watch in 2010.

From The Other Side of Truth, which hosts the Zorgy Awards (only a few days to go):

“Voting begins… now!

The polls will close on March 7, 2010, at 11 pm AST.

via The Other Side of Truth: The 2009 Zorgy Awards – Voting Begins.

EC journo presents at esoteric-themed conference

Emmanuel College journo MacKenzie Peltier (a psychology major) filed a post from the SXSW of scholarly conferences, recently.

The conference, SWTX (for the the Southwest Texas Popular Culture and American Culture Association) was chockablock with analyses of spooky fiction:

“…panels, papers and lectures on everything vampire, especially Twilight-themed vampires. The Science Fiction and Fantasy Area extensively examined books, television shows and movies for themes of power, sex and violence, while the implications of such pop-culture trends on society were endless explored.”

Peltier is a genius-level undergrad, majoring in psychology. She was at the conference in February, actually, to present a paper of her own.

The topic for Peltier’s paper is a timely one: “Beautiful on the Inside? Thematic Analysis of Pseudo-Fat Acceptance on
Reality TV.”

Given the conference’s “alien” (i.e., “otherness”) theme, I wish I could been there.

Peltier had me sold on the conference, too, from the moment she showed me its program cover (above).

You can find a PDF link to the SWTX program, here.

via MacKenzie Peltier « The Tack.

Heretic on 2012: Fear people, not God (news video feature)

The young Boston investigative journo Dan Rowinski recently produced this news feature about 2012 (below), as part of his graduate studies at BU.

Dan interviews me (I’m cited as an “apocalyptic expert”), along with Mayan and millennial experts from BU, and end-timers on the street.

I enjoyed watching the piece. The point I make in it is that the risk of chaos in 2012 is very real: not from above, mind you, but from crazy people getting amp’d up with anticipation.

Apocalyptic – 2012 News Feature from Dan Rowinski on Vimeo.

Pot as "miracle drug": It's complicated

Andrew Sullivan. (Photo: Trey Ratcliff/Flickr CC)

Marijuana not only doesn’t kill brain cells, as do alcohol and heroin — and depression –   it grows ‘em back, Andrew Sullivan asserts.

He quotes some recent rat brain research:

The team found that rats treated with HU-210 on a regular basis showed neurogenesis – the growth of new brain cells in the hippocampus. This region of the brain is associated with learning and memory, as well as anxiety and depression.

The effect is the opposite of most legal and illicit drugs such as alcohol, nicotine, heroin, and cocaine. “Most ‘drugs of abuse’ suppress neurogenesis,” Zhang says. “Only marijuana promotes neurogenesis.”

For me, the key phrase in this excerpt (above), is “drugs of abuse.” No doubt, pot is one of them — experience tells us this. (There is also massive anecdotal evidence of pot’s benefits.)  And the drug’s effects on the brain are more complex than Sullivan’s post suggests.

Still, as Lester Grinspoon says, that pot will eventually emerge as the gold standard among anti-anxiety medicines.

I also agree with Sullivan: Reason dictates that pot must be made legal, and fully available to scientists, if we are serious about relieving human suffering.

via The Miracle Of Marijuana – The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan.