Category: news

Thursday, 29 November 2012

07:34 – Front page article in the newspaper this morning about a young local couple that are in the running for Parents of the Year. They’re both 20 years old. He was playing video games at 5:00 a.m. when their 2-week-old baby disturbed him. So he did what any father would do; picked her up by the neck and punched her to death. The woman, like all mothers, paid close attention to her new baby. Around 2:00 in the afternoon, she finally got around to checking on the baby and found her dead. Before calling 911, the two of them discussed their options. Among those were hiding the body, claiming the baby had been kidnapped, and fleeing to the mountains. He’s charged with first-degree murder; she with accessory after the fact. No word on what’s happened to their 15-month-old son, who presumably is in the care of social services.

Work continues on the new science kits.


11:20 – It seems that the Bank of England has finally realized that the Big Four UK banks are sitting on a boatload of PIIGS sovereign, bank, and corporate debt, something like $250 billion total. Because they don’t mark to market, these banks are carrying that $250 billion at book value on their P&L statements, when in reality it’s worth significantly less. Sir Mervyn King, the outgoing Governor of the BoE suggests that these four banks require recapitalization to the tune of $50 billion or so. I don’t think that’s going to be enough. In the long run, $250 billion is closer to the correct number.

And, speaking of the long run, the BoE has an interesting graphic in its latest Financial Stability Report. Based on CDS premiums, they estimate a 5-year probability of default for various EU countries. Greece, of course, has a 5-year probability of default of > 100% (I know, but that’s what the numbers say…), so it isn’t even present on the graphic. Portugal is currently around 60%, Ireland and Spain about 40%, Italy around 30%, and France 15%. I think these numbers are low, because they don’t take into account the domino effect; when Greece finally collapses, investors’ attention immediately shifts to the next weakest country, causing it to collapse, and then on and on until the whole row of dominoes falls. My gut reaction is that the probability of France defaulting within five years is probably in the 80% to 90% range, with the others correspondingly higher. There’s only so long that the inevitable collapse of the euro can be staved off with smoke and mirrors. I have to admit that Merkel is doing a good job of that so far, but the tools she has available are about used up.


15:45 – As I knew it would when the latest Greek deal was announced a couple of days ago, it’s falling apart already. The IMF is really getting tired of empty promises and bogus economic forecasts. As should be obvious to anyone, Greece has absolutely zero chance of ever paying back that $400 billion mountain of debt. If the EC/IMF/ECB were using sane accounting practices, they’d already have written off all of it. As things stand now, all of the Greek debt held by the EC/ECB is effectively uncollectable. The IMF, recognizing that even as senior creditor, it is unlikely to be able to collect more than a small fraction of what is owed to it, even if the eurozone debt-holders get nothing, the IMF is determined not to throw good money after bad. And Holland and Finland feel pretty much the same way. They know that the money they previously lent is lost, and they’re not about to take any more of a hit by lending still more.

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Saturday, 17 November 2012

08:40 – The stupidity of many unskilled and semi-skilled workers never ceases to amaze me. I suppose it shouldn’t. If they were smart, they probably wouldn’t be unskilled or semi-skilled.

In the latest example of this phenomenon, the morning paper reports that Hostess has been driven out of business by the recalcitrant bakers’ union, destroying more than 18,000 jobs. Even the Teamsters are pissed at the bakers’ union, whose stupid stubbornness also cost a lot of Teamsters their jobs. And some moronic WalMart employees are going on strike because they don’t want to work on Thanksgiving and Black Friday. Geez, they knew when they took the job that WalMart is open on holidays. Why are they complaining now? I hope WalMart fires every one of them. It’s not like they’ll be hard to replace.


10:33 – As usual for a Saturday, I’m doing laundry. Our washer, a Sears Kenmore Elite (part # 110.24832200, in case I ever need to find that again…) has been having some agitator problems. Two or three weeks ago, I decided to do something about that. Barbara wanted to replace the machine, but it’s only nine years old. So I did an Internet search and found a bunch of hits on replacing the agitator dogs in a Whirlpool/Kenmore washer, including some YouTube videos. I was about to order an agitator repair kit, but I couldn’t find the model number on the machine. For the last couple weekends I’ve been so busy that I just let it slip. This morning, I finally located the model number and ordered an agitator repair kit for $29 including shipping. Much cheaper than paying for a service call, let alone buying a new washer. It should take me five or 10 minutes to do the repair once the kit shows up.

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Wednesday, 14 November 2012

07:51 – The MDR-1 test kit for Colin showed up yesterday. It contains two tiny little brushes to do cheek swabs. The instructions said that food can interfere with the test, so we decided to do the cheek swabs first thing this morning, before Colin had eaten.

So, Colin was lying on the love seat in the den while Barbara was sitting on the sofa opening the envelopes that contain the brushes. I sat down beside him. His ears went flat as he watched Barbara opening the brush envelopes. I could tell exactly what Colin was thinking: “You’re going to stick those in my mouth and use them to obtain specimens of my squamous epithelial cheek cells, aren’t you?” I told him that was exactly what we were going to do. He cooperated pretty well. I’ll send the swabs off today for testing. My guess is that Colin doesn’t have the MDR-1 mutation, or if he does it’s heterozygous. But it’s worth $70 to find out for sure.

The paper this morning reported a horrible accident in Yadkinville, which is just down the road from us. A three-month-old baby was killed by the family dog, which apparently mistook a multi-colored stocking cap she was wearing for a ball and bit her head repeatedly. What surprised me was that the paper reported that the police had investigated and ruled the incident an unpreventable accident. Nowadays, it seems that nothing is ever an accident. There’s always someone to blame. But apparently the authorities recognized that no one was at fault here and that the family was going through enough already without criminal charges being filed.


09:50 – Riots have broken out along the southern tier of the eurozone. Riots as in Molotov cocktails and rioters throwing bricks at police, who are responding with rubber bullets. (Those, incidentally, are no joke; they can seriously injure or even kill people.) Greece is really at the tipping point. Even moderate, formerly middle class people are now talking about revolution. As one commented, what do they have to lose? As another said, all it’ll take is a spark. And they’re going to get that spark as it becomes clear that what Greece has agreed to will not be enough to secure any kind of long- or even medium-term funding.

I was amused by the list of demands made by the European Trades Union Convention, nearly all of which are utterly impossible to meet, for both political and economic reasons. Here they are:

• Economic governance at the service of sustainable growth and quality jobs,
• Economic and social justice through redistribution policies, taxation and social protection,
• Employment guarantees for young people,
• An ambitious European industrial policy steered towards a green, low-carbon economy and forward-looking sectors with employment opportunities and growth,
• A more intense fight against social and wage dumping,
• Pooling of debt through Euro-bonds,
• Effective implementation of a financial transaction tax to tackle speculation and enable investment policies,
• Harmonisation of the tax base with a minimum rate for companies across Europe,
• A determined effort to fight tax evasion and fraud,
• Respect for collective bargaining and social dialogue,
• Respect for fundamental social and trade union rights.


16:14 – I’ve spent a little bit of time visiting some of the prepper sites that have been linked to in the comments recently, and there’s something I really don’t understand. A lot of these folks seem to be overly-concerned with the shelf-life of stored foods. I mean, are they really storing 25- to 50-year supplies of food? If not, why do they care about the difference? Or perhaps they’re stocking grains and other foods by the ton, figuring that maybe their great-great-grandchildren might have some use for them.

I also think it’s interesting that they take stated shelf-lives as gospel. For example, we just bought some canned chicken chunks at Costco. They have a best-by date three years from now. I promise you, they’ll be fine a lot longer than that. After 10 or 20 years, they might show some darkening, but they’ll still be perfectly edible and will have probably 95% of the nutrition that they have now. Heck, they’ve found 4,000 year old Hostess Twinkies in Egyptian tombs, and they were still edible.

I also wonder about some of their choices of specific foods. Do they eat this stuff now, or are they figuring that it’ll be better than nothing if they get really hungry? I suppose cost is part of this. People decide what they can afford and how much food they want to store and then buy whatever that multiplier dictates. Still, I think that’s a stupid way to go about it. We buy stuff that we eat anyway. We just buy extra. So what if the canned and dry stuff we eat is a year old? If nothing else, it provides a buffer in case anything we buy is contaminated with salmonella or something. In terms of flavor and nutrition, year-old stuff is fine. Two-year-old stuff is fine. Geez, five-year-old stuff would almost certainly be just as good as new stuff. Sterile is sterile. Preserved is preserved.

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Sunday, 11 November 2012

07:46 – I’m still trying to figure out what an affair with Paula Broadwell has to do with the suitability of David Petraeus to serve as CIA director. I have no idea if Petraeus is a good, bad, or indifferent CIA director, but I can’t imagine what bearing having sex with Paula Broadwell could possibly have on his suitability.

These things happen. He’s 60 years old and has been married for 37 years. She’s a very attractive woman who just turned 40. They have a great deal in common, including graduating from West Point and serving in the US military. They’re both serious runners and physical fitness enthusiasts. Both are experts on counter-terrorism. She’s writing his biography. They’ve apparently spent a great deal of time together. That they ended up in bed should come as a surprise to no one.

In a sane world, this wouldn’t have even made the news. Petraeus and Broadwell would both be doing a great deal of groveling to their respective spouses. One or both of them might have ended up in divorce court. But it would have remained private. Why should this be anyone’s business other than the four people involved? Making a media circus of this is simply uncivilized.


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Tuesday, 16 October 2012

07:33 – I see that other drugs sold by NECC are now suspected of harming patients to whom they were administered.

Yesterday, I was making up a liter of 0.5% aqueous eosin Y stain. I tapped out about 5 grams of the stain into a tared beaker sitting on the scale. I actually ended up with 5.23 grams in the beaker. Close enough. I added 800 mL or so of hot water to the beaker, stirred to dissolve the powder, transferred the solution to a rinsed-out one liter soda bottle, and brought the volume up to one liter. Because fungus tends to grow in a plain eosin Y solution, I added a small spatula spoon of thymol crystals as a preservative, capped the bottle, swirled to dissolve the thymol, and set the bottle aside.

As I was doing all that, it occurred to me that that stain solution, not intended for human consumption and made up without using aseptic procedures and with no attempt to maintain sterility, was probably actually safer for human consumption than the products made by NECC. At least I added a preservative to prevent fungus growth. How pathetic is that?

If the news reports are to be believed, NECC produced products that they marketed as suitable for injection into humans, and they did so without following even basic aseptic precautions. If that’s in fact true, the owners and managers of that business should be facing serious prison time. So far, 15 people have died as a direct result of being injected with those products, and some 15,000 others are at risk. That may not qualify legally as first-degree murder, but it must certainly qualify as reckless homicide.


12:01 – I just spotted Heather, Amy’s step-mom, while I was out walking Colin. I told Heather that Barbara and I really didn’t want any magazines, but we wanted to support Amy. I asked if we could just donate cash to the school fundraiser, and Heather said sure. So I handed her a $20 bill.

I actually almost handed Amy some cash when she rang our doorbell selling magazines. Fortunately, I remembered what happened with Jasmine. On her birthday, maybe her 15th or 16th, I tried to give Jas $20 to buy herself some iTunes tracks or something. She thanked me, but said she wasn’t allowed to accept money from men. Ruh-roh. It never even occurred to me that that might be a problem. I talked to Kim later. She said she trusted me and had no problem with me giving Jas cash for her birthday, but Mary, Jas’s grandmother, had a big problem with any man, including family members, doing so. And, sad to say, I think Mary is right. What a world we live in.


16:33 – I just made up a liter of methyl cellulose solution. Well, actually, it’s still a suspension, but it’ll soon be a solution. Methyl cellulose has an interesting property. It’s soluble in cold water, but insoluble in hot water.

You might think I could make up a solution by stirring methyl cellulose powder into cold water. Unfortunately, that doesn’t work. Methyl cellulose has high surface tension, which means water has a hard time wetting it. Trying to stir the powder into cold water produces globules of methyl cellulose that have slimy wet outer surfaces and dry methyl cellulose powder inside. It makes a real mess. So the trick is to stir the methyl cellulose powder into very hot water. The hot water doesn’t dissolve the powder, but stirring disperses it into a suspension of fine powder. Cooling that liquid suspension in an ice bath or the freezer allows the methyl cellulose to go into solution without clumping. So I have a liter sitting in the freezer as I write this.

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Saturday, 13 October 2012

08:49 – I just watched the original video posted by Amanda Todd, the 15-year-old Canadian girl who killed herself after being tortured on Facebook and physically assaulted, all because as a seventh grader she made the mistake of flashing her boobs on a webcam video.

Apparently no one–not her family, not her friends, not her teachers, no one–was able to help this girl. When I read the news story, I went over to Google Images to see what the girl looked like. That’s where this image came from. And among the top image results was one that was truly nauseating: a post from 4chan asking if anyone had the picture of Amanda’s boobs. Jesus.


14:55 – While I was walking Colin earlier today, I stopped to speak with one of the neighbors. He asked me who I thought was likely to win the coming election. I told him that unless something changes drastically, I expect Romney to win in a landslide. I’ll be surprised if Obama wins 221 electoral votes, let alone 271. And I suspect that’s what’s going to happen for the same reason that Obama won last time. Few people actually supported Obama’s ideas, to the extent he had any. They were voting for Obama as not-Bush, and this time I suspect people will vote for Romney as not-Obama.

People understand that things are bad in this country and that Obama hasn’t done anything to make them better. I think people will vote for a change, even though many are aware they’re really just voting for the same-old same-old. Still, given only two realistic choices, I think they’ll pick the not-Obama one.

North Carolina is supposedly a “swing state”, but I don’t sense that locally. I see many fewer Obama signs now than I saw four years ago, and if Obama loses North Carolina’s cities he has no chance to win the state. Rural North Carolina will vote overwhelmingly Republican. I suspect the same is true in the other so-called swing states as well. Obama’s liberal constituency, blacks, labor union members, and so on will vote for Obama, no matter what. The religious right and most of those who are well off will vote for Romney, no matter what. But I think those in the middle, the ones who don’t particularly want to vote for either candidate, will vote for Romney simply because he’s not-Obama. We’ll see.

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Saturday, 6 October 2012

09:00 – I see that Obama apparently ordered his minions to declare a surprising decline in unemployment to aid his campaign. Looking at the actual report makes it clear that these numbers have been massaged and spun to make Obama look good. In reality they are, as everyone expected, worse month-on-month and year-on-year. Of course, Obama is counting on the fact that the media won’t bother to look behind the headline number. The real number, the one that matters, is non-government, non-farm employment, which you’ll never see reported because it makes clear just how bad things are and that they’re getting worse with every report.

We’re working hard on a new batch of biology kits, but I’m afraid we’re going to run dry before the new batch is ready. We’re also down to about half a dozen chemistry kits, although we have another 15 of those that just need to be boxed up. Barbara is getting ready to head over to parents’ house, where the clean-up continues. They’re getting a bunch of stuff ready to be picked up Monday by Good Will. Once that’s finished they can start throwing a lot of stuff away, and then finally get started on cleaning the house itself. I’ll be working on more biology kit stuff.


11:45 – Not even close: The craziest things found in the refrigerator

They really need to visit our house. Compared to some of the stuff Barbara has stumbled on in our refrigerators, these folks are complete amateurs. Okay, I’ll grant you that the sheep’s brain would get an honorable mention here.


13:36 – This guy nails it: Obama did not ‘underperform’: we saw the real man

I almost sprayed Coke out my nose when I read the claim of Obama as an “intellectual giant”. Intellectual midget, more like. Although we’ve had some reasonably bright presidents, there’s been exactly one US president with a valid claim to that title: Tom Jefferson. None of the others have come remotely close.

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Saturday, 25 August 2012

10:41 – Barbara just headed over to meet her sister and parents at one of the retirement facilities on the short list. Barbara’s mom is doing much better. The doctor prescribed antibiotics for the UTI and Xanax for her panic attacks. The combination has worked very well. Barbara says her mom is now back to normal and is actually excited about moving to an independent living facility. Frankly, I hope they like the one they’re visiting today enough to sign up for it. Barbara’s parents really need to be in such a facility, and it’d be best to get things rolling before anything else happens.

Yesterday was a first. We’ve sold kits to customers in nearly all the 50 states, but yesterday we sold the first one to a customer in Puerto Rico. It started with a query email asking if we could sell kits to someone in Puerto Rico. I replied that I thought so but I wasn’t sure, and asked the woman to send me her address so that I could try running a dummy postage label and make sure the USPS would accept the package. She replied that she had three possible shipping addresses. The first was her home address, but she said they’d had problems in their neighborhood with the mailman leaving a package on the porch and someone stealing it. So that was out. Her second address was her work address, which was the US Federal Courthouse. I could just imagine what might happen if we shipped a box full of chemical bottles to a federal building, so that was obviously out. Fortunately, she has a PO box, which the USPS happily delivers to, so that’s where we shipped it.

We also added yet another country to our list of disappointed would-be customers. I got a query asking if we could ship a biology kit to Switzerland, and was forced to tell the man that we couldn’t. That makes more than 20 countries now.

We’re full speed ahead on building forensic science kits. My original goal was to be shipping them by August 28th, which was originally the date the book was to be published, but it looks like that may slip a bit. We’re accepting pre-orders on the web site, where we say that the kits will ship in “late August”, and I’m determined to start shipping on or before 31 August to meet that promise. We still have a lot of work remaining, but we should have at least enough kits finished by the 31st to ship outstanding pre-orders, with at least a few in reserve.


13:51 – Wow. NYPD cops got into a shootout with a man who’d just murdered another man by shooting him five times. The two NYPD cops fired 17 shots and managed to hit 10 people, of whom nine were innocent bystanders. NYPD says there’s nothing else the cops could have done. Really? I thought cops were trained to avoid firing their weapons when there were innocent bystanders in the line of fire unless the criminal was about to fire on those bystanders. I wasn’t there, and I realize that at times it may be unavoidable to fire when there’s risk of hitting an innocent bystander, but hitting nine(!) innocent bystanders in an eight-second shootout seems a bit excessive. Assuming each cop fired roughly half of the 17 rounds, that’s about one round per second each. That’s not quite Timed Fire, but it’s certainly leisurely. Fortunately, none of the innocent bystanders who were shot suffered life-threatening injuries.

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Friday, 24 August 2012

07:58 – Big article on the front page of the paper this morning about that moron politician’s comments about women who are raped being unlikely to get pregnant. The article throws lots of numbers around. The problem is, all of those numbers are so soft that they’re pretty much useless. No one knows how many forcible rapes actually occur, or even how to define the term “forcible rape”. No one knows how many pregnancies result. And the one number all of the parties seem to take as a given seems ridiculously high to me: that a woman who has sexual intercourse, forced or voluntary, has a 5% chance of becoming pregnant.

So I did a little thought experiment. The population of Winston-Salem is roughly a quarter million, 50% of whom are female, or roughly 125,000. Assume that one third of those women are sexually active, or roughly 42,000, and assume that each of them has sexual intercourse once a week. Obviously, the frequency varies. Women in their 20’s may average having intercourse several times a week, ones in their 30’s once or twice a week, ones in their 40’s once a month, and so on. But once a week on average seems reasonable. That means sexual intercourse occurs in Winston-Salem 42,000 times a week, or 6,000 times a day. By the assumptions made in the article, 300 babies a day would be conceived in Winston-Salem.

Obviously, that’s not the case, and it’s because the assumptions made in that article are simplistic. First, most women in their prime child-bearing years use birth control, often pills or a patch, so they’re very unlikely to be impregnated during intercourse, forced or voluntary. Second, the age of the woman is a huge factor. Women’s fertility peaks in the decade between their late teens and late 20’s, and then begins to decline rapidly. Third, of course, although most pregnant women continue having intercourse during their pregnancies, any woman who is already pregnant has zero chance of being impregnated.

It makes a lot more sense to look at the big picture. US women, on average, bear about 2 children over the whole course of their child-bearing years. Although there are obviously exceptions at both ends, call that ages 14 to 44. During that time, these women have sexual intercourse hundreds to thousands of times. Again, call it an average of once a week, or about 1,500 times over those 30 years. So, 1,500 intercourses result in two pregnancies, or a rate of 2/1,500 or about 0.133%. Not 5%.


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Monday, 23 July 2012

10:24 – The eurozone train wreck continues, with Spanish benchmark 10-year bond yields now at 7.6% and climbing, and Italian yields well over 6%. Even more concerning is that Spain’s efforts to make it look as though the market is still supporting their debt auctions by offering only small face amounts at short maturities have failed miserably. Spanish short-term debt yields are now over 6%, a strong indication that Spain is about to lose all access to market funding. In effect, it already has. Right now, only speculators willing to risk their money for short periods at very high yields are buying Spanish debt. The market as a whole is much too risk-averse to put money into Spanish bonds, or indeed leave it in Spanish banks. That giant sucking sound you hear is billions of euros a day leaving Spain. And Italy isn’t doing much better. They’ve just announced that they may not be able to start the new school year this autumn because they don’t have the money to do so.


Meanwhile, Barbara and I are still building science kits. We just added 30 biology kits to inventory, and are most of the way through building 60 more chemistry kits. After that, we’ll build the first batch of 30 forensic science kits, and then start immediately on new batches of biology and chemistry kits.


13:05 – Wow. The NCAA let Penn State off with a slap on the wrist. What would have been an appropriate NCAA penalty for a university guilty of covering up institutionalized child rape under the auspices of the athletic program? How about expulsion from the NCAA? Not just football, but all sports. Permanently. The entire Penn State athletic program should have been eradicated and the corpse left to rot as a warning to others.


14:11 – As usual, Pat Condell gets right to the heart of the matter. American Dhimmi

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