Friday, October 31, 2014

10/31/14 Today's Inquiries

The one day a year I get to eat my Reese's!

The Links:

Sarkeesian's Op-Ed in the New York Times from last Tuesday.

And here she is on Colbert:


Also related:


Andrew Sullivan examines the reaction to Apple's CEO's coming out. I suppose all Christians have to return their Apple products or risk eternal hellfire.

Good GDP numbers yesterday. Let's hope they're not revised downward too much. More here.

We also had the FOMC meeting this week. Here's an overview but the biggest news is the end of QE.

Were the Fed's Critics wrong about QE all along? It kinda looks that way. I'll be eating my crow for a little while.

UC Berkeley's Dean's Speaker Series tackles inequality:


Free Exchange looks at UNIFEC's report on child poverty. It ain't good.

Arnold Kling has some rhetorical questions about education:
1. How much would somebody have to pay you to be a teacher in the middle school that you attended?
2. How well do you think that evolution trained the human adolescent to sit in a desk and pay attention?
3. When you were aged 13-18, how easy was it for a teacher to gain your respect?
4. When you were aged 13-18, did you only take rational risks?
5. When you were aged 13-18, did you want your friends to shut up so that you could listen to the teacher?
6. When you were aged 13-18, did you do what you would advise an adolescent to do today?
A report on the absurd expense of Greek Life on college campuses.
Do the math: Official charges include Panhellenic dues, chapter fees, administrative fees, nonresident house/parlor fees, a onetime pledging and initiation fee and contribution toward a house bond. Members must also buy a pin (consider the diamond-encrusted one) and a letter jersey. Without housing, basic costs for the first semester (the most expensive) average $1,570 at University of Georgia sororities, $1,130 at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and $1,580 at Syracuse University.
An interview with a guy who really doesn't like Hillary Clinton. Difficulty: He's a liberal economist.
The actual policies that she advocates are not going to change the material or social well-being of women or children in any significant way.
Mitch McConnell's family is into some shady shit. His father in law is part owner of a shipping company. One of the boats had 90 pounds of cocaine on board.

More about Georgia's 40,000 missing voter registration applications. Look, if they were going to register at republicans, we wouldn't be having this problem, would we?

Young people want to spend money on jobs and schools. The old like war and Social Security. The solution seems obvious: employ old people to fight in our wars and train them in schools.

Robots taking jobs from service sector employees in San Jose Lowes.

Serial Killers are pretty dumb.

"Participants' blood alcohol concentrations were found to positively correlate with utilitarian preferences."


Monday, October 27, 2014

10/27/14 Today's Inquiries

Good news everyone, I have some time for posting links today!


The Links:

Andrew Sullivan wants to know why Americans go out when they're sick. He looks at several responses but I found the one about our unbridled individuality and sense of self importance to be most persuasive.

How vulnerable is India to ebola? That's the real black swan right there. But we're so worried about Dallas and NYC that there's no chance we'll take a leadership role internationally.

Dropbox, Airbnb, and the fight over San Francisco's public spaces. The short version: The rich win. Why should socialism for the rich stop with banks and congress? Those public parks ought to be open to every white, employed, tax paying male!

The workers who destroy your right to post dick-pics on Facebook.

Julian Assange says Google is not what it seems. The whole piece is worth reading but here's a snippet:
In a series of colorful emails they discussed a pattern of activity conducted by Cohen under the Google Ideas aegis, suggesting what the “do” in “think/do tank” actually means.
Cohen’s directorate appeared to cross over from public relations and “corporate responsibility” work into active corporate intervention in foreign affairs at a level that is normally reserved for states. Jared Cohen could be wryly named Google’s “director of regime change.” 
According to the emails, he was trying to plant his fingerprints on some of the major historical events in the contemporary Middle East. He could be placed in Egypt during the revolution, meeting with Wael Ghonim, the Google employee whose arrest and imprisonment hours later would make him a PR-friendly symbol of the uprising in the Western press.
All this makes Rand Paul's recent speech on foreign policy seem like a breath of fresh air. Except that, like most politicians, he's completely full of it and changes his message to fit his audience.

Where the Tea Party rules. Also known as Anytown USA, home of John Everyman.

Speaking of Anytown, here's a list of every school shooting since Sandy Hook in 2012, 87 in all.

The making of the warrior cop. Yes, police need those grenade launchers so they can "persuade" you into forking over your money for their civil asset forfeiture program.

5 things Huff Po thinks you didn't know about slavery. Sadly, most people probably did not know these things.

Arnold Kling's been on a roll lately. Here he is writing about the failed convergence of financial services and supermarkets (although I've seen lots of tax prep booths in recent years). I like what he adds at the end:
As another historical point, when the S&L crisis hit, the government set up the Resolution Trust Corporation. Each failing institution was divided into a “good bank” and a “bad bank,” with the good bank merged into another bank and the assets of the bad bank bought by the RTC. While this was a somewhat distasteful bailout, it was conducted under the rule of law. When TARP was enacted in 2008, Congress and the public were led to expect something similar to the RTC, with TARP used to buy “toxic assets” in a blind, neutral way. Instead they ended up calling the biggest banks into a room and “injecting” TARP funds into them. They also spent TARP funds on restructuring General Motors. It was the opposite of government acting in a predicable, law-governed way. It was Henry Paulson and Timothy Geithner making ad hoc, personal decisions. I think that in the U.S., that is what bank concentration leads to–arbitrary use of power. That is why as a libertarian I do not think that allowing banks to become too big to fail is desirable.
And, we're getting the bubble back together. Low down payments are back! Call Ditech.com today.

If I'm reading this right, about 67% of the American workforce earned less than $43,000 in 2013.

Misleading headline misleads. Yeah, the only thing this school did was pay teachers 6 figure salaries. Other than that, the school is perfectly representative of American public schools.
The $125,000 number was eye-catching, but it was just the start of the school's approach to teaching. Teachers were also eligible for a bonus of between 7 to 12 percent of their salary. The teachers, who are not unionized, went through a rigorous selection process that included a daylong "audition" based on their teaching skills. The typical teacher already had six years of classroom experience before they were hired.
Teachers at TEP also get more time to collaborate and played a bigger role in school decision-making than teachers in other jobs. Teachers were paired up to observe each others' lessons and provide feedback, collaboration that experts agree is important but happens too infrequently. During a six-week summer training, teachers also helped set school policy.
The myth of the student athlete. More like the open secret of the student athlete. The sly con-job perpetrated by the NCAA of the student athlete. The outright lie of the student athlete.

Of course student athletes aren't the only ones getting screwed:
Our country needs well-educated people.  We used to build bridges and repair roads.  We built skyscrapers during the Great Depression.  Students now usually need to take out loans, so the big question is whether the training is worth the cost.  The local salary for a BS in computer science or MS in statistics is around $35,000-40,000, probably more in industry with less job security.  Is college worth it?  What is it for graduates of nice liberal arts schools?  How are jobs for welders?  Congress is making it easier to get student loans for STEM degrees, but repayment and finding a job are still problems.
Has science disproven free will? Only if you have a very limited definition of free will:
Daniel Wegner’s case amounts to generalising the surprising discovery that in Ouija-board situations, people can often be made to feel they are the authors of acts that are in fact caused by the experimenter’s accomplice.
More excellent game criticism which argues games are better without a damsel in distress.

You can read the most expensive comic in history, Action Comics no. 1, right here.

You may of may not have seen this:



Trailers!

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Newly remastered and recut:


Thursday, October 23, 2014

10/23/14 Today's Inquiries

Posting a bit late today. Also, I'll be out of town with Lisa for a few days so I probably won't post until Thursday 10/30.

The Links:

Obama is a Republican. I agree.

Athletes at UNC were taking classes which basically didn't exist. How exactly are student athletes getting an education again?

All those brain training companies are full of shit according to scientists. But they definitely prove the practice effect!

American's don't really understand what's in their economic best interest.
See, for instance, this Wall Street Journal video "Do You Make $400,000 a Year But Feel Broke?" from September 5, 2014 depicting the purported hard times for a couple in Chicago making $400,000 a year, buying a $60,000 car every four years, paying a mortgage on a $1.2 million house along with $25,000 a year in maintenance and , entertainment ($10,000 a year) going on vacations ($25,000 a year), club dues ($12,000 a year), and paying for their children's sports ventures ($10,000 a year). These and other  "necessities" and (purportedly reasonable) discretionary expenditures take all of their after-tax money. 
Given that perspective, no wonder those in the top have so little consideration and sympathy for ordinary Americans who have incomes in the $50,000 to $60,000 range, much less for the poor who struggle to put food on the table and heat in the furnace!  They can't even imagine such limited lives. With the growing inequality in this country, the gap between the upper class and the rest of us is increasingly wider.
Wealth Inequality in the United States sine 1913: Evidence from capitalized income tax data. (.pdf) Short version: the middle class is no better off than in 1986.

Now that oil prices are down, will be go back to our gas guzzling and energy consuming ways? TNR says no but I was under the impression that we never stopped.

40% of people have been harassed online.

A realtime simulation of global births and deaths.

Why you shouldn't drink your own urine.

How marble is made. Well, mined. Quarried?

Magnetic north has moved from polar south to polar north within the space of a single lifetime.

More content for the spurious correlations machine: How musical tastes correlate with SAT scores. Apparently stupid people listen to The Used.

Some folks have been annotating MST3K to explain all the jokes.


Wednesday, October 22, 2014

10/22/14 Today's Inquiries

In need of a fog lifter to get me out of my haze.


The Links:

Arnold Kling muses on Marc Andreessen's thoughts on online education. I think his response is a good example of just how differently teachers see learning.

The University of Michigan just earned accreditation for competency based degrees. I support this trend, especially for fields where demonstrated skills outweigh the degree itself.

Will mentioning social inequality, poverty, and class become reasons books are banned form public schools? Hey, in America we don't have rich and poor, just hard workers and lazy assholes. And we don't want our kids reading books written by those lazy assholes.

The Moral Economy of Debt.

31 States saw a decrease in the unemployment rate last month.

What makes cities successful?
Saiz’s focus is primarily on housing markets, with a particular view on understanding the demographic influences impacting their growth. “Immigration explains 50 percent of the differences in growth between metropolitan areas in the United States,” he says. “If you want to understand real estate markets or housing markets, construction values, etc., you have to understand immigration and immigration trends.”

Insurance companies are shifting away from covering weather disasters. Of course it's the financial disasters that really caught them flapping in the wind.

Americans are abandoning McDonald's. This is surprising:
A Double Quarter Pounder with cheese, fries, and a drink now totals about $7.50
Paul Krugman discovers Newsmax TV while flying to Boston. Yes, it's for an audience who find Fox News to be too liberal. They are about as close to being an unintentional parody of themselves as possible. Here's the homepage.

The Hunt for Red October?

Hong Kong's leadership openly debates student protesters and then broadcasts it to the whole city. That's a very different outcome than I expected!

Meanwhile, Mark Warren interviews 90 members of congress and finds that they think they're living in hell.
"When you have these one-party districts, the only election is in the primary, and the winner of the primary will be the one who is closer to the views of the narrowest base," says Angus King, Independent senator from Maine. "You can't be moderate. Who votes in primaries? You have a 10 percent turnout in a primary election in Georgia, and Republicans are 30 percent of the population. So 10 percent of 30 percent—that's 3 percent of the population voting to choose the nominee, and then if it's a multiperson race, and the winner gets 35 percent, that's one third of 3 percent—1 percent of the population chooses the nominee, who in a gerrymandered district will be the eventual member of Congress. That is bizarre, and it has completely polarized Congress. In the primary system that we have now, there is no upside for a Republican to be reasonable. I have a friend who is a very conservative senator, and he faced a primary this year, and I said, 'Good Lord, man, what are they gonna charge you with?' And he said: 'Being reasonable.' "

St. Louis Police hold an educational training session for state legislators. We get this picture:
Don't Shoot!
Big Data boondoggles and brain learning chips are just two of the thing we're really getting wrong.

Catholics are more progressive than the Vatican and almost everyone else. They must have been listening in church. Andrew Sullivan comments.

Still confused about gamergate? Watch this:


For some positive video game experiences try some Minecraft love:


Tuesday, October 21, 2014

10/21/14 Today's Inquiries

It's cold enough to wear winter socks.


The Links:

More evidence that sugar, especially in sodas, is the new cigarettes.

Sometime in 1984 the number of women in computer science completely flatlined. NPR's Planet Money investigates. I blame War Games.

Big data might be racist and sexist. That's the obvious outcome when you're creating an entire industry focusing on identifying and marketing stereotypes.

For poor minority teens, arrests by police are replacing school discipline.

Why poor kids don't stay in college.
Economic distress can dim a student’s chances by forcing her to take on part-time jobs or reduce her credit load to help out at home.
In short, the afflictions of poverty don’t just disappear after a student gets into college.
More coverage of young college grads moving to city centers. Even cities which experienced downturns in the past 50 years have seen an uptick in youth.

Is sex only for rich people? Yes, poors just fuck. The argument is basically that our policy choices about fertility and safe sex benefit only the well off.

Cory Doctorow links us a graph of American cities ranked by conservatism.

Meanwhile, it doesn't look like low taxes are encouraging people to move from state to state. I thought this was an important point which rarely gets made:
Income migration analyses ignore that the vast majority of people can’t take their income with them to a new state because they work for someone else.  When people leave a state, they usually also leave their job.  The income they made in that job then typically goes to the person who gets that job next; it does not leave the state.
What does social mobility look like in a dystopia?

I'll give you two guesses about who the 40,000 unprocessed voters in Georgia are. I also wonder how quickly after the election those voters will suddenly be registered.

The map is not the territory. Africa looks quite different from what our maps have led to to believe. I mean, you can't even see ebola on those maps!

Companies are making big "bets" on climate change. Which is weird because I thought the whole thing was made up but Obama to get the UN to force us all to ride bikes or something.
Stocks of companies that take climate change seriously beat the wider market by almost 10 percent over the last five years, according to a report released this week by a U.K. nonprofit. 
Algebraic:


Is John Oliver a prophet? The dude gets everything right. Literally everything.

Monday, October 20, 2014

10/20/14 Today's Inquiries

Iranian yogurt.


The links:

What kind of signal is the recent market turbulence sending? Well, assuming we don't get QE4, I'd say that many people and firms are reallocating positions to take advantage of a less artificially liquid market. The money on the sidelines is coming off the bench.

Do economies "reflate" if every country increases its exports?

The WSJ wants to know why the public is so skeptical of our public health institutions when they've been so supportive in the past. Let's see: Texas Presby hasn't exactly been doing a stellar job. The media loves a good failure/apocalypse story. Half of our political class has been actively undermining government for 40 years. What else am I missing?

Our recent Nobel Peace Prize winner doesn't fit neatly into the western media narrative. Let's take a look at what she really stands for.
Malala understands how poverty creates and perpetuates the very social and political ills against which she is fighting. She continuously stresses the importance of not just spreading education, but of directly combating poverty. Yet these calls fall on the selectively deaf ears of the Western media.
ISIS dates back to the Bush Administration. Yup, and is a direct result of American policy. At every stage of this conflict we've created our own enemies. We're a perpetual motion machine set to war.

What do the New Atheists get wrong about Islam and religion in general? This is a very important point:
People don’t derive their values from their religion — they bring their values to their religion. Which is why religions like Judaism, Hinduism, Christianity, [and] Islam, are experienced in such profound, wide diversity. Two individuals can look at the exact same text and come away with radically different interpretations. Those interpretations have nothing to do with the text, which is, after all, just words on a page, and everything to do with the cultural, nationalistic, ethnic, political prejudices and preconceived notions that the individual brings to the text. That is the most basic, logical idea that you could possibly imagine, and yet for some reason, it seems to get lost in the incredibly simplistic rhetoric around religion and the lived experience of religion.

An attempt to show that the "few bad apples" theory of gamergate is completely false.

The NY Times calls for a maximum rate cap on all consumer loans. I am agains this option. It's not that I don't understand predatory lending. Because I do. It's not that I think the burden should always fall on the borrower to understand the terms of a loan. Because I don't. Rather, I think we ought to be outlawing specific kinds of practices and predatory lending. Large scale rate limits would impact the ability of other kinds of loans (subprime home and auto loans, for example) to find an adequate clearing price. The interest rate is a key factor in understanding the risk of a loan and therefore the price of the debt. Better regulation and precise legal limits will minimize the distortions of policy more than the broad approach outlined here.

Poor kids who do everything right are still worse off than rich kids who do everything wrong. So just join a street gang and enjoy your short brutal life.

The racist housing policies that created Ferguson. TNC doing what, sadly, only TNC does.
But it bears constant repeating: The geography of America would be unrecognizable today without the racist social engineering of the mid-20th century. The policy included—but was not limited to—mortgage loans backed by the Federal Housing Authority and the Veteran's Administration
Single family housing is going out of style. Apparently we have millennial to thank for this. I think it's simple economic decision making. A world where everyone lives in homes on .5 acres and commutes into a city for work is terribly expensive in a variety of ways. The incentives are toward density.

Sunday, October 19, 2014

10/19/14 Today's inquiries

Nerd links! We learned this week that video games are better than the people who play them.


The Links:

Criticism of Apple and Facebook's paid egg freezing services. Hey, we don't really want to cover maternity leave and all that crap so let's just say you decide to be a good little employee and save those eggs for later, m' kay?

We now know what life was like for the real Amazons of ancient Greek fame.
The evidence, she writes, points to the fact that there really were Amazons: in some archaeological digs in Eurasia, as many as thirty-seven per cent of the graves contain the bones and weapons of horsewomen who fought alongside men. 
An essay against workplace techno-utopianism. Queue up Damn it Feels Good to Be a Gangster and go beat a fax machine to death.
Utopian reveries spill forth almost daily from the oracles of progress, forecasting a transformation of Information Age labor into irrepressible acts of impassioned fun. But we know all too well the painful truth about today’s ordinary work routines: they have become more, not less, routinized, soul-killing, and laden with drudgery.
Hey, William Gibson! You know a lot about the future and stuff, so how will the future look back at us? W.G.: I have no idea.

It's Digital Citizenship Week. Here's a bunch of resources for teachers to use in the classroom. I always did a big unit about healthy online behavior with my freshmen and tied it all in with my literacy work in the spring when they were at a point where they could write longer pieces.

Okay, first off, I had no idea that there was a Ghost in the Shell movie in the works and that makes me excited. However, I don't care much for Scarlett Johansen and I'm worried that she's being typecast as the female technological hybrid fantasy lady.

It looks like Marvel is pushing ahead on the Civil War storyline. It's going to be interesting to see how the film handles the subject matter now that the NSA et.al. has made such issues a reality.

Comic books are for men.

Polygon issues a letter from the editor regarding gamergate terrorism.

There's a new game called I am Bread. In it, you play a slice of bread. Of course it is white bread so how hard can it be?

It appears that lots of YouTube "let's play" and review videos do not increase game sales.

Colin has been aggressively pushing me to play Alien: Isolation. I will not because I'm too much of a scaredy cat. I seriously can't do it. So here's a review of the game as a horror simulator.

Jason Jones posted a three part review of the new Tomb Raider game earlier this month. I recommend reading it because his criticism is frequently well thought out and of a high quality. Part 1 here. I hope he plays The Last of Us soon.

Random videos:

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Saturday, October 18, 2014

10/18/14 Today's Inquiries

Why yes, I am writing this at work.


The links:

Oh come on! Who let a healthcare worker potentially exposed to ebola on a cruise ship? Really, though, how does this happen?

Well, at least our new ebola czar was the head of Al Gore's Florida recount effort. He was played by Kevin Spacey in the Recount movie. Life is stranger than fiction.

Which has also been leading people to link some Poe. Of course consumption isn't quite the same as ebola.

Companies spend a lot of time making sure their employees have a hard time getting new jobs.
Take Jerry Smith for example (not his real name, because he fears it would affect his future job prospects): He's an expert on speech recognition, but he can't use his deep knowledge of this technology at work anymore because he had signed a noncompete agreement with his former employer, promising not to work in the industry for two years after leaving the firm.
Schools still haven't recovered from the great recession.


Kids frequently face interrogation by police without a lawyer or any legal aid. While I was not surprised to learn that teens don't really have a firm grasp on their rights, the article shows its a much bigger problem than I'd imagined.

More evidence that America hates black people. And again, the libertarian right ought to be reaching out to blacks and joining them in their fight against racist incarceration. Obviously they're intellectually bankrupt.

The Whiteness Project.
The Whiteness Project is a multiplatform investigation into how Americans who identify as “white” experience their ethnicity.
Bill Gates says inequality matters. Also, reviews Picketty.

Arnold Kling is exactly right when he says:
The way I read this, we really cannot get back to the rule of law if we have too-big-to-fail banks. That is what I will be arguing in two weeks. These institutions will be given special treatment, particularly in a crisis. In 2008, AIG was eviscerated in order to provide a liquidity injection to Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, and others. Does anyone think that the decisions would have come out the same if the Treasury Secretary had been a proud alumnus of AIG rather than of Goldman Sachs?
As evidence of the above, we get proof that our Treasury Secretary lied to Congress about TARP. It might be several years late but the truth is finally coming out about just how corrupt the 2008 bailouts were.

The solution to this problem is eminent domain but very few localities are brave enough to fight that fight.

You can't make this up:
The good people of Alaska want to talk about the issues, not some esoteric inside-the-Beltway process story about whether their representative in Congress murdered somebody.
Jonathan Chait discovers the real reason the GOP hates Obamacare.

The collective suicide of right wing talk radio. The free market is pretty much pricing these guys out of business. No, it's clearly censorship by the Obama administration, wake up sheeple!

Pokemon goes full on creep with it's Halloween manga.

You got your robots in my literature. No, you got your literature in my robots.

Friday, October 17, 2014

10/17/14 Today's Inquiries

It's a foggy day in the mountains. And another light link day. I'm not sure what's happening. I'll try to do better.


The Links:

Obama may name an Ebola Czar. Or you know, the republicans could have approved a surgeon general sometime in the last 2 years.

Will this election be a referendum on Ebola? So, basically the republicans will get to play the race card one more time and call for travel bans and closed borders and blame big government for being ineffective.



Thanks to safety net programs, poverty level were half of what they would have been last year without them.

Silicon Valley and wage theft. It ain't pretty. Silicon Valley looks more like Wall St. every day.
Let me repeat that: $3 billion in stolen wages; no admission of guilt, no fine. The only punishment is an agreement to submit to periodic checkups on compliance with antitrust law as regards to illegal wage-fixing cartels.
How much slack is in the labor market?
And the fact that these disparate slack estimates—which were constructed using a variety of underlying data sources—are currently so close to one another is fairly strong evidence that the unemployment rate has nearly reached its long-run level.
I’d be interested in any observations about what happened when you looked for jobs,” Ms. Yellen told current and former participants of the group’s programs. “Is it that you just couldn’t find things that were available, that the job market seemed weak, or is it particularly that your skills or things that you felt you needed to do in order to qualify for jobs that were there?

More coverage of right-wing extremist gamers from the mainstream media. Also, disco.

Could the gaming industry end gamergate terrorism?

Although most Americans still commute by car, shifts toward biking and walking are happening in various metros throughout the US.

Your need for coffee may be genetic.

Research confirms cats are selfish, unfeeling, environmentally harmful hell-beasts.

Thursday, October 16, 2014

10/16/14 Today's Inquiries

Sugar free oatmeal? What the hell is this crap? Gonna be a long day and a short link list.


The Links:

The New England Journal of Medicine takes a look at the first 9 months of Ebola in west Africa.

More bad coverage of the hospital where Ebola spread. It now appears that they didn't issue proper protective gear to their nursing staff for the first 2 days of Duncan's treatment.

Cutting the federal health budget and CDC funding was a bipartisan effort. Of course the trouble all started in 2001 and has only continued because of GOP budget suicide pacts but hey, bipartisan.

Luckily, for 35.99 plus shipping you can have your very own Ebola protective kit. But you can only use it once and the decontamination kit is sold separately.

Is free public wifi a public health hazard? Not for the silly radiation reason but because your information is totally insecure.

America is becoming more federalist. Good, state level authorities are doing such a great job on a variety of crises.

Obama knew arming the rebels in Syria was a bad idea and he did it anyway because everyone (in the media and congress and whatever) wanted him to.

Sure, China may now be the world's biggest economy but it's still behind in GDP per capita. A country of 1billion plus people with the GPD per capita of, say, the Netherlands would be amazing though.

Invitation Homes, you know, the hedge fund owned real estate grabbing company that bought 40% of the homes at auction in many major metro areas, is a very poor landlord. Conversely, they make a great slumlord.

Good news women! For every study telling you how to get ahead in the world, there's another study contradicting it.

Kyle Wagner thinks Gamergate is the future of culture wars in America. So, terrorism then?

Doctors need a better way to measure pain. Real time brain scans seem to be the way forward. Very true! I'd say that 80% of the patients we see rate their pain as a 10/10 when presented with a 1-10 scale. The rest say 8 or 9. Typically an 8/10 is associated with childbirth and kidney stones and 10/10 is some kind of active trauma or other major condition.

How have various fruits and vegetables changed as a result of human cultivation?


Shared because it's just so random that I had to:
All due respect, there is no way only one client gets a hand-job at a massage parlor. For you to chalk this up to “one unfortunate incident” is deeply concerning.
Also, image searches for massage parlors turn up some pretty racy stuff.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

10/15/14 Today's Inquiries

Pumpkin smoothies.


The Links:

The CDC says Ebola should be as easy as MRSA for US hospitals. Well, since we haven't really been effective at preventing MRSA infections, I'm not super confident...

That infected nurse in Texas? Yeah, she said there were no protocols at her hospital.

Which is probably why a second healthcare worker at that hospital has tested positive for Ebola. When someone who wasn't in contact with Duncan tests positive, then you have something to worry about.

A brief history of racist moral panic's relationship with cleanliness and disease.

The Chinese police are going all Mayor Bloomberg on the protesters in Hong Kong.

Meanwhile, protestors are taking over seemingly random locations throughout St. Louis which is different strategy than a single central space. The even showed up at the Rams vs 49ers game with banners.

Police pleasantly surprised to learn the man they shot was armed.
LEXINGTON, KY—Following a pedestrian stop Monday night during which they fired their weapons on a suspicious individual, patrol officers for the Fayette County Police Department were pleasantly surprised to discover the man they shot was armed, sources confirmed.
Utah State University is under threat of a massacre if they allow Anita Sarkeesian to give a speech at their Center for Women and Gender. Sarkeesian has backed out because police wouldn't act to stop ammosexuals from bringing guns into the event.

An argument that maximizing happiness does not maximize welfare. Well yeah, a Big Mac makes me pretty happy but consuming them constantly doesn't do much for my wellbeing. However, the post focuses on rural happiness vs wellbeing in the US. What about places like Denmark that are happy and well?

Is economics a science? Noah Smith weighs in.

Jimmy Johns has a noncompete clause in its employment contract which technically make sit illegal for your sandwich maker to quit or have a second job and go to work at a competing restaurant. It seems these kinds of clauses are very common in low-skill positions. I'd like to see it challenged in court. I'd also really like a Italian Night Club on wheat.
American businesses are paying out a historically low proportion of their income in the form of wages and salaries. But the Jimmy John’s employment agreement is one small piece of evidence that workers, especially those without advanced skills, are also facing various practices and procedures that leave them worse off, even apart from what their official hourly pay might be. Collectively they tilt the playing field toward the owners of businesses and away from the workers who staff them.
Job polarization in the UK labor force.

Paying for college with a minimum wage job in 1979 vs 2014. Guess what? You can't.

Suburban ghost towns left over from the Irish housing bubble. Obviously they should should not have been forced by the democrats to make all those loans to black people.

Sadly, it's not looking too good for Alison Lundergan Grimes. I listened to her debate with Mitch and she didn't do too great of a job. To be fair, the questions were really, really stupid. "Mrs. Grimes, how will you convince Kentuckyians that you won't support Obama?""Mrs. Grimes. Did you vote for Obama?" Here, have a look:


If you're on the GOP web site and get a 404-error, this is the page you get.

This man's weird trick could transform Medicine.

Atheists are the most prolific tweeters.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

10/14/14 Today's Inquiries

Early to rise, early to shine.


The links:

So, let's start your day off bright! In one year, the life expectancy in the US dropped by 12 years.

U of Minnesota expert thinks ebola is a "black swan" event.
Lesson No. 1: “There is now clear evidence that an infectious disease such as Ebola virus disease can threaten the stability of a country’s or region’s government, economy, and social fabric,” Osterholm and his colleagues write.

Francis Collins, head of the NIH, says we'd have an ebola vaccine by now if it weren't for all those budget cuts. Republicans can kill.

Charities are gifting surveillance gear to major metro police departments. I don't get it. Why don't they just use all that civil asset forfeiture money?

Infrastructure investment is a no-brainer. Then we have no brains!

Results of a survey show Americans know almost nothing about their economy.

Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren ticket in 2016? Oh, I can only hope.

US public schools are better than they've ever been. Yeah, but they aren't making anybody any money and that's why they need reform.

The value of a great teacher? Maybe not so high.
Further investigation, however, reveals that the quasi- experiment is invalid: Teacher switching is correlated with changes in students’ prior grade scores that bias the key coefficient toward a find- ing of no bias. Estimates that adjust for changes in students’ prior achievement find evidence of moderate bias in VA scores, in the middle of the range suggested by Rothstein (2009). The association between VA and long-run outcomes is not robust and quite sensitive to controls. 
More classy behavior by young tech bros as they kick neighborhood kids off a soccer field. Also, since when did public parks start charging fees to use public spaces? Oh, when they only wanted the rich people to use the park. Got it.


Some historical context for Hong Kong. Wait, you mean the legacy of colonial ownership and a century of western oppression still matter to China?

Fun with mercenaries.
Some called it G.I. Joe Fantasy Camp, and for good reason. In the piney woods of north Mississippi, professionals and wannabes alike would come to the 60-acre compound of an outfit called SCG International to play war games, fire live weapons, conduct mock interrogations, and run around like kids, zinging paintball rounds across creeks and seeking cover in open fields. 
But this was serious business, too. During SCG’s heyday, between 2008 and 2012, the U.S. government and local law-enforcement agencies paid a lot of money to get people trained so they could function capably in war zones, shoot-outs, and other dicey situations.
Liveblogging the conquest of England.

Monday, October 13, 2014

10/13/14 Today's Inquiries

Happy Columbus Day!


The Links:

Paul Krugman made waves this week with his Rolling Stone essay, "In Defense of Obama." Krugman isn't one to shy away from criticizing the president but I wouldn't exactly call him the president's "most notable critics" since he is usually in the position of arguing in favor of Obama's policies. I fall into this category:
There's a different story on the left, where you now find a significant number of critics decrying Obama as, to quote Cornel West, someone who ''posed as a progressive and turned out to be counterfeit.'' They're outraged that Wall Street hasn't been punished, that income inequality remains so high, that ''neoliberal'' economic policies are still in place. All of this seems to rest on the belief that if only Obama had put his eloquence behind a radical economic agenda, he could somehow have gotten that agenda past all the political barriers that have con- strained even his much more modest efforts. It's hard to take such claims seriously.
Does the US really "soak the rich"? Yeah, no.

Justin Wolfers notes that the federal budget is back to normal. Don't worry, there's still a chance that we'll get a republican supermajority and president in 2016. That'll re-fuck the budge real quick.

How's that whole war on ISIS thing going? Hmm, not well it appears. Good, I was starting to think we might never have to send ground troops.

The campaign to dismantle the post office is kind of a textbook case for what the right is doing to all major governmental institutions. De-fund it. Strap it with unnecessary and expensive financial burdens. Force it to reduce services and close branches. Then decry the inefficient and poorly run government program. It's already starting with Social Security as rural offices throughout the country are being closed.

Dispatches from the oil boom.
At 9 p.m. on that August night, when I arrived for my first shift as a cocktail waitress at Whispers, one of the two strip clubs in downtown Williston, I didn’t expect a 25-year-old man to get beaten to death outside the joint. Then again, I didn’t really expect most of the things I encountered reporting on the oil boom in western North Dakota this past summer.
How does economics impact the choice of parenting styles?
Given that the spread of higher education is unlikely to reverse, our theory predicts that authoritarian parenting will continue its current decline; a return to the tough methods advocated by the Bible is unlikely. Regarding permissive versus authoritative parenting, the evolution of the return to education is what matters. If the march towards higher inequality continues, the current era will mark the beginning of a sustained trend towards ever pushier parenting. If, on the other hand, today’s inequality trends prove to be an aberration and we return to the less unequal times of the 1970s, future children (and their parents) will be able to enjoy a relaxed childhood once more.
Sara Kliff asks what's wrong with Texas? After all, three other hospitals were able to treat Ebola without incident.

It's been yet another bad week for women in technology. The 2014 Women in Computing Grace Hooper Celebration featured a male allies panel that went off the rails.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella had his own advice for female tech workers. Apparently he sees 'not asking for a raise' and 'faith in the system' as some kind of female superpowers. Yikes!

Since D&D allows for almost any kind of behavior, it's no surprise that the designers and "theorists" behind it aren't very concerned about what happens to female players.

Do New Atheists have a woman problem?

Selfies in Mecca. New media takes the hajj.

VICE decided to send a reporter to interview all the people named Hitler.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

10/11/14 Today's Inquiry

I thought I'd do a little bit of a long form piece today; hope you don't mind.

It's no secret that I enjoy video games. Certainly anyone on my friends list on Steam sees my name pop up frequently. The hours I put in to games probably place me squarely into the "hardcore" designation although my tastes have changed over the years and I don't think most hardcore gamers would call me that. Having played games most of my adolescent and adult life, I can say with some certainty that video games are getting really, really, really, good. Like, literature quality good. Not Shakespeare or Austen good but Hemingway and Harper Lee good. Or at the very least Suzanne Collins good.



The reason I bring all this up is my recent enjoyment of video game criticism. As games have continually improved and gained complexity, the response of the public and journalists has had to find ways to account for those changes. A recent example would be a game like Bioshock Infinite. It very clearly weaves in social and political themes in a way which matters to the story, characters, and - this is the crucial part - players. The game is about a year and a half old and reviewers found themselves in a tough position. Yes, they needed to write about the visual quality and gameplay mechanics and control scheme and level design and all that jazz but they were also compelled to review the story. Reviewing the story meant interacting with the ideas within including rampant racism, classism, and sexism in the game's culture. Ryan McCaffrey at IGN wrote in his review that
Infinite deserves plenty of credit in its moment-to-moment storytelling too. Serious themes abound in Columbia’s alternate-reality 1912. Racism, sexism, nationalism, and religion are all put directly in front of you, whether you like it or not. It makes a point simply by confronting you with these uncomfortable issues and forcing you to at least think about them. And though Infinite never gets preachy, it certainly offers political commentary, chiming in with obvious nods to the “99% vs. 1%” debate -- even if, unlike in the original BioShock, Infinite slyly submits that both sides of the coin have their demons, and neither can claim the moral high ground in Columbia. To that end, Infinite skips out on any significant moral choices or multiple endings from the previous BioShocks. I didn’t miss them, though, as its story arc is both definitive and impactful while riding its own singular track.
His comment was par for the course in reviews at the time. What stood out to me then was how infrequently games required this level of discussion. Bioshock Infinite was special because, even in it's failings, it addressed real world problems. Games rarely did that. Often the moral complexity of a game came from making choices whose ethics were constructed within the game's fictional universe and had little application outside the game (I'm looking at you KOTOR and Mass Effect). A great game, film, book, whatever, requires more than passive enjoyment and spectacle and Bioshock Infinite demanded a complex and problematic interaction with the player.

Then something interesting happened. It seemed like every few weeks a game would come out that pushed those boundaries. You had Remember Me and The Last of Us. You had the various Telltale studios adventure games. You had a whole spate of independent games which were all, well, weighty. Within a very short period of time studios, players, and journalists went from a simplistic kind of interaction to a very complicated one. The fallout is still being felt now in the industry and many people are reacting very poorly. Go google Gamergate and catch up on the poor state of "gamer" culture if you're at all interested.

So let's fast forward to this past month and two major releases, Destiny and Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor. The response to these two games indicates, I think, a big shift in video games. Basically, I think that video games are now best understood as art. Not just one game or another but video games in general are at a point where they demand criticism of the content and experience rather than just the mechanics and gameplay. Both games are what the industry calls AAA. They're produced with multi-million dollar budgets, have huge advertising campaigns, earn millions of dollars, and are released widely to a global audience. Typically a AAA game is not fertile ground for discussions of politics, power, gender, race, or anything of importance (cough, Call of Duty, cough). Yet, the critical response to both Destiny and Shadow of Mordor shows that the audience and industry are now in the art business.



Destiny came out first of the two to much fanfare. It's made by Bungie, the studio behind the massively successful Halo franchise, and promised to build on that success. If you're interested in an in depth look at the game, check out this review. The short version is that you're one of humanity's last remaining people and you have to fight against impossible odds to, well, save the universe. It's different, though, because you're always online and the game includes many MMORPG elements. You gain levels and equipment to progress your character. There are factions within the game that you can complete missions for to improve your reputation and gain access to more gear. You're always online with millions of other people playing the game. So far, it all seems kind of standard but something interesting happened as people began to play Destiny. They started to ask themselves "why am I playing this game?" That question is the crucial distinction which pushes the game into the category of art.

Within literary criticism there is a school of thought which focuses on the interaction between the reader and the text. It's been call many things: reader response, literary exploration, transactional theory. To summarize it as succinctly as possible, the importance of a work of art comes from the value and meaning created when the reader interacts with a story. People playing Destiny suddenly seems to be asking exactly that kind of question. Was there any meaning to the experience? Did they find any value in their interaction with the game?

Here are a few examples of that criticism. Ben Kuchera, a reviewer at Polygon, was very critical of the "loot cave" exploit that was recent patched out of the game.
Loot caves don't seem that fun to me.
The basics are simple. You find an area where you can farm enemies, you stand there for a while, and you kill everything you see. Every now and again you move in to pick up your loot.
These so-called loot caves are big business for Destiny; I've already heard from a few players who have rushed to their consoles to take advantage of the latest one before it's patched out of the game. I only have to pull up our real-time traffic tools to see that readers are more interested in loot caves than damned near anything else going on in gaming right now.
Kuchera is taking a step back and asking whether or not there's value and meaning in the experience of a game that encourages mindless repetition. I don't think this kind of criticism would have even crossed the minds of reviewers and players three or four years ago. People would have been more than happy to rank up and get gear the easy way. Now, many players and journalists are beginning to have a problem with mindless gameplay. He goes on to write,
Players aren't having fun, but they feel like they're getting ahead, and that sense of satisfaction and progression is beating out how the game is designed to be played. All the complex systems and currencies and ranks are thrown out the window when these caves are active in favor of players lining up to shoot into a cave.
A few days later, Bungie changed the way loot worked in the game so players had less of an incentive to grind caves. The caves aren't all that has people scratching their heads about the meaning of a game like Destiny. There was a recent event in the game called the Iron Banner which promised more loot and better equipment bonuses to players who had earned the highest level gear. Unfortunately it didn't exactly turn out that way:
feedback thread about Iron Banner is likewise filled with complaints. "The level advantages are nonexistent and there is no gear benefit to my character besides aesthetics at 30," one player writes. "It's pretty much a let down, mostly because it feels like the regular crucible, which itself is terribly unbalanced by shotguns, fusion rifles, and auto rifles."
Here we see the flip side. Instead of a journalist asking for meaning, we find players wondering why they're playing. The event is supposedly a way to reward players who have committed time and effort to the game yet it seemed to matter very little whether a player was brand new or highly leveled. Again, that's a search for value and meaning on the part of the player. The game ostensibly had a mechanic to reward players for hard work thereby giving the players some kind of value for all their play time. When the game failed to deliver, players were upset and justifiably mad. The relationship established between the gamer and the game matters now and that's the dividing line between art and mere entertainment.



Switching to Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor, we find a completely different kind of criticism at work. In literary criticism, critics who approach a text and look at the larger structure of power, race, gender, and class are often lumped together under the "Structuralist" category. Basically, they are examining the ways in which all of these larger themes play out in relation to the character and story. A feminist would examine how gender factors into characters' lives while a Marxist would seek to understand the role of class and wealth. I'm particularly fond of colonialism as a lens through which to view world literature since so much of the planet was dominated by a small island in the North Sea.

Shadow of Mordor has players taking control of their hero, Talion, who has to wage unceasing war against the Orcs (Uruks) and other evil minions of the Dark Lord Sauron. The reviews of the game were largely positive and one much touted feature was the "Nemesis system" which evolved various enemies based on the player's previous encounters with that enemy. If you hacked off an Orc's arm he would come back later with an ax prosthesis embedded in it and seek out revenge against you. But, the Nemesis system also allows for some problematic choices:
But as I watched my character revenge the death of his wife and son by furiously lunging a blade in and out and into a lifeless Uruk corpse, scaring away the few Uruks that survived his wrath, it hit me: I'm pretending to be a murderer and a torturer, a man who dabbles in terrorism and slavery to somehow right a personal wrongdoing. I'm the Jack Bauer of Mordor.
And like watching Jack Bauer wreak havoc on the threats against America at all cost, I perversely enjoyed almost every moment of it — until a graphic beheading broke whatever mental barrier I have that says, "What the hell is happening here?"
That's Chris Plante writing at The Verge. Plante is going right into structuralist territory by pointing out that the game is designed to allow you to be, well, a terrorist. You enslave and torture countless Orcs and seek to rule your enemy through fear. And even in the seemingly black and white universe of LOTR this kind of depravity is problematic to many players, including Mr. Plante. He is, frankly, shocked by the concepts behind this game and how it encourages you to act. That's not a distinction which many people worried about when playing, say, Skyrim just a few years before even though that game is very violent and allows for all sorts of depravity.

Similarly, Zach Gage noted a big problem with the game's stealth tutorial. There's no difference between sneaking up on your wife to kiss her and sneaking up on an Orc to slit his throat. Gage writes,
Aside from the obvious "women as learning objects that are later murdered" issue, there’s another issue at play here, and it’s one of craft.  Designers shouldn’t make kissing and murdering feel the same. At the very least they shouldn’t do so when you’re trying to make that kiss part of  an emotionally connecting moment that binds you to an NPC.
Gage is also participating in structuralist criticism here. He's identifying the ways in which real world patriarchy and male privilege have allowed the game's designers to ham-fistedly equivocate kissing your wife and killing your enemy. It's a real world power structure which infects the games mechanics and the story. This is not criticism of entertainment or mere pulp; this is criticism of art.

Video games no longer exist in the vacuum of entertainment and spectacle. Even big titles which are probably only meant to entertain and provide spectacle are being subjected to artistic criticism which focuses on far more than the game itself. Players are also demanding games that take their status in our culture seriously. The actions of our virtual avatars are being held to ethical standards which wouldn't have been imaginable a few years ago. The industry is responding because players are demanding games which provide meaningful and valuable experiences. In short: video games are getting really, really, really good.