Striking while the iron's hot: Heat waves common in coming decades, scientists announce

Photo: Lucy Boynton/Flickr CC

The body forgets pain easily. Perhaps that’s why Stanford scientists are taking this opportunity to do a little imprinting.

The Stanford scientists — one of whom is now working for a US DOE lab — insist that heat waves “and other hot events” might be commonplace by 2039.

The researchers also determined that the hottest daily temperatures of the year from 1980 to 1999 are likely to occur at least twice as often across much of the U.S. during the decade of the 2030s.

“By the decade of the 2030s, we see persistent, drier conditions over most of the U.S.,” Diffenbaugh said. “Not only will the atmosphere heat up from more greenhouse gases, but we also expect changes in the precipitation and soil moisture that are very similar to what we see in hot, dry periods historically. In our results for the U.S., these conditions amplify the effects of rising greenhouse gas concentrations.”

via Heat waves could be commonplace in the US by 2039, Stanford study finds.

Bombshell NY governor hopeful: Legalize pot, liberate courts

As a native New Yorker, I can’t tell you who disappoints me more: the NYPD, for chasing dopers around town, because they’re easy marks, or the “46,000 New Yorkers” too indiscreet to avoid getting busted with a bit of weed.

What’s happened to the Big Apple’s cosmopolitanism?

“Spitzer madam” and libertarian gubernatorial candidate Kristin Davis (right) is using her notoriety, and her cleavage, to draw attention to New York’s pot problem, as she sees it, as well as gay marriage, which she supports.

Here’s Davis’ take on government waste:

“High Times recently reported that New York City recorded, in 2009, the second highest number of marijuana arrests on record. The police arrested over 46,000 people – that’s right, 46,000 – for public possession of marijuana. That’s 46,000 people bogging down the judicial system, trudging through city precincts, and otherwise diverting the police from more pressing duties. I find this ludicrous and asinine.”

Davis also wants to legalize prostitution in New York, and reform the state’s penal system, in which she did a four-month turn, after providing hookers to some of New York’s most powerful men.

via NY Gov. candidate Kristin Davis: ‘I can think of few acts as harmless as smoking a joint, even in a public park’ | The Daily Caller – Breaking News, Opinion, Research, and Entertainment.

Welcome to the New World of the "Anthropocene"

Force of nature. Photo: Ville Miettinen/Flickr CC

Scientists are wielding a nonscientific term in an effort to modify human behavior. — MB

Humans have wrecked the planet so badly in the past two hundred years — on an order of magnitude equivalent to meteor strikes, or tectonic plate shifts — that we’ve earned a place in the geologic record, a group of scientists say.

Led by the Nobel Prize-winning atmospheric chemist, Paul Crutzen, they write in the latest issue of Environmental Science and Technology (excerpt and link, below) that we are living the “Anthropocene Epoch,” in which humans are cracking ice sheets and wiping out vulnerable critters with their CO2 emissions and settlement habits.

Shockingly enough, Crutzen, who first came up with “Anthropocene” (New Human) ten years ago, admits the term is “informal and not precisely defined.”

In other words, Anthropocene is not a scientific term at all.

But that doesn’t mean that scientists can’t use the term to push an agenda:

“The concept of the Anthropocene might, therefore, become exploited, to a variety of ends. Some of these may be beneficial, some less so. The Anthropocene might be used as encouragement to slow carbon emissions and biodiversity loss, for instance; perhaps as evidence in legislation on conservation measures 31; or, in the assessment of compensation claims for environmental damage. It has the capacity to become the most politicized unit, by far, of the Geological Time Scale—and therefore to take formal geological classification into uncharted waters.”

via The New World of the Anthropocene1 – Environmental Science & Technology ACS Publications.

In US "water wars," industry is the aggressor

Water shortages won't be her fault. Photo: D Sharon Pruitt/Flickr CC

270 gallons of H2O = 1lb of processed sugar. — MB

Think about this, the next time a TV actor implores you to skip shaving, or fix a leaky faucet: The US energy industry hogs almost half of country’s water supply each year for its largely inefficient plants.

And, for those of you seeking a “gotcha” on this one, the figure — from a first-of-its-kind study, looking at industrial water consumption — does not include hydroelectric power.

Agribusiness wastes water like crazy, as well. From the new report, an example:

Manufacturers, farmers, shippers and others in the ‘supply chain’ use almost 270 gallons of water to put $1 worth of sugar on supermarket shelves, according to a new study documenting American industry’s water use.”

Direct and Indirect Water Withdrawals for U.S. Industrial Sectors – Environmental Science & Technology ACS Publications.

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3589/3369921697_12e3599b18.jpg

Scientists: Vaccines provide "herd immunity"

Naked apes. Photo: Peter O'Connor/Flickr CC

By using “herd,” the scientific community belies its insensitivity, if not its outright contempt, for the rest of humanity.

Dose the kids, protect the “herd.” That’s the language hardhearted epidemiologists are using to describe how vaccinations work to protect human populations:

“An unusual study done in 49 remote Hutterite farming colonies in western Canada has provided the surest proof yet that giving flu shots to schoolchildren protects a whole community from the disease. Although previous studies have demonstrated what scientists call ‘herd immunity,’ none have been so incontrovertible, because they were done in less isolated places with more sources of flu passing through.

Stanhope to English, Irish, herd: "Go to hell."

Credit Canadian conspiracy historian Alan Watt, for noting how scientists use the word, “herd,” in a way that fails to jibe with any citation in popular dictionaries.

The scientists are, however, using the same, precise language of that obnoxious prig, the 4th Earl of Chesterfield,  Philip Dormer Stanhope (click the excerpt below, for the full text):

via NYT: Flu shots in kids provide ‘herd immunity’ – The New York Times- msnbc.com.

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.

Nanny State trash sniffers root out "unauthorized" waste

Too much confusion. Waste at the Boston Farmer's Market. Photo: Morris K. Udall Foundation. Flickr/CC

Never mind that there is absolutely no shortage of landfill space, and recycling programs waste energy. Hingham residents who toss a beer can, here-and-there, into the wrong barrel, risk sanctions:

To minimize problems, the town has adopted a “three strikes and you are out’’ program. Residents who put recyclables in the trash get a “friendly letter’’ about the rules, said Sylvester. More problems result in a suspension of trash privileges until the resident speaks with a member of the staff and signs a statement saying he or she understands the rules. A third infraction means suspension for a year.

via Less trash adds up to more cash – The Boston Globe.

Here in Milton, we’ve been unable at times to get legitimate trash (with a $3 sticker affixed to it), picked-up. (Try calling the DPW in the a.m., and see who they’re really working for.)

Really, we should burn our trash. (Link via Alan Watt.)

"Magic" protected by Irish Law

Photo: John Wigham. Flickr/CC

Atheist-activist Michael Nugent wants the Irish government to undo its protections for the Roman Catholic Church’s renewed practice of offering indulgences. He’s also concerned that non-Catholics might soon enjoy the same ability to sell supernatural fixes.

From Nugent’s letter to the Irish Times:

Madam, – From September 1st, the Charities Act 2009 has been offering State protection to the Roman Catholic Church, and only this one church, to sell Mass cards (Home News, September 1st). The legality of this Act is being challenged in the High Court, but for a reason that turns ethics upside down.

It is not being challenged to prevent people from selling claims of intercession with the creator of the universe to bereaved and vulnerable people. Instead, it is being challenged to allow a wider number of people to sell such unverifiable claims.

via Michael Nugent.

Our betters are shooting blanks

Photo: Erik Mill. Flickr/CC

The question is, who is defining “high quality,” here:

“The results support the suggestion that genes that are good for males may often be bad for their mates. Therefore, in beetles at least, multiple mating does not award females with genetic benefits,” says Göran Arnqvist.

via Males Of High Genetic Quality Are Not Very Successful At Fertilizing Eggs.

Risk of civil unrest is high…

… when unemployment surpasses 14 percent, my eighth grade social studies teacher taught me.

Photo: Franco Folini. Flickr/CC

Photo: Franco Folini. Flickr/CC

“If one considers the people who would like a job but have stopped looking — so-called discouraged workers — and those who are working fewer hours than they want, the unemployment rate would move from the official 9.4 percent to 16 percent, said Atlanta Fed chief Dennis Lockhart.

via Fed Official: Real Unemployment at 16 Percent.

via Blacklisted News.