Que sera, sera, whatever will be, will be, but first I need more coffee.

Year: 2008 (Page 18 of 18)

Respect Mah Authoritah

I tend to be a contrarian. It’s my nature and sometimes to my disadvantage. For a long time I was a global warming skeptic for two reasons: 1) my contrary nature and skeptical attitude towards the media 2) I fell for the disinformation campaign promulgated by the likes of ExxonMobil. It wasn’t until I saw the before and after pictures of glaciers (all retreating) from around the world that my contrarian position began to melt.

The problem I had was the way the media portrayed global warming, for the most part they do it badly. They used the consensus as a bludgeon to quell dissent. To me this scientific consensus smacked of argument from authority. Granted a thousand climate scientists agreeing on the evidence carries more weigh than a thousand preachers agreeing that the world is going to come to an end realsoonnow. To me it doesn’t matter if a thousand people agree one one thing. They could still be wrong. It is the evidence that matters.

I misunderstood argument from authority as being all bad. Mainly because it’s carryover from when I argued with Creationists who used the Bible (which translation?) as their ultimate authority. It’s based on trust. if a dozen climate scientists agree their research agrees and that the climate is warming I can trust their science. But if a dozen engineers agree that evolution wasn’t possible and that God must have created all living things, I can’t trust their reasoning because though they may be expert engineers they aren’t experts in biology nor have they done any paleontology.

No authority is absolute. Science is always changing. There are things we don’t know. Uncertainty is built into the very fabric of the way we observe the Universe. Is a photon a wave or is it a particle? When we get into the very messy realm of history where experiments are difficult to do, we must rely on the inductive capabilities of the scientists to gather data and to build a coherent but sometimes incomplete picture. Generals are always working with incomplete information during a battle, but they still must make decisions on the best knowledge available. Scientist too make conclusions on the best data and theories available and they are testable.

Carbon 14 and Global Warming

So here’s my basic physical reasoning about humans causing global warming. Carbon 14 has a half life of about 5700 years and after about 40,000 years it becomes useless for dating things. Fossil fuels are hundreds of millions of years old. All the C14 should basically be undetectable, so by measuring the ratio of carbon isotopes in the atmosphere over a period of a hundred years, we should be able to detect the clear signal that we are responsible for the increase in carbon. It’s not that simple.

Carbon 14 can be found in coal and oil. Some scientists think that it could be due to natural radioactive decay or organisms living at those depths. Though how the C14 would get into the organisms isn’t explained. So I’ll go for radioactive decay of uranium. It also depends on where the fossil fuels are gotten from. Some have very low proportions of carbon-14 as expected, others have more. However we should be able to determine the minimum and maximum ratios expected and compare them to the atmosphere ratios. Is the top of range still much lower than atmospheric C14? I suspect it would be. We might still be able to tell. Finally, another problem arises with the atmosphere.

Back in the 1950’s we started exploding atomic bombs in the atmosphere. This created a spike of C14. It has been decreasing since then. Prior to the 1950’s we did detect that C14 ratios were decreasing. The thing to do is to look at the ratios of carbon in ice cores and sediment cores. Although my physical reasoning is good there are a lot of other factors that need to be looked at, so though we know the rate at which carbon 14 decays we may not have enough data to use it as a reliable fingerprint.

Carbon 13 is another stable isotope of carbon. There is less of it. Most plants prefer plain old carbon 12 to carbon 13. Corn however will metabolize C13, so it’s signature in our food supply is unmistakable. We could even do isotopic analysis of our hair to determine how much corn is in our diet. It’s a lot. I’ve already written a post on carbon 13. There have been studies that have shown the ratios of C12 to C13 changes during periods of cooling and warming in sediment cores.

Basically, I wanted Carbon 14 to be the smoking gun. It could be but I need to do more research to answer that question. On the face of it it sure seems like it. Of course global warming deniers go to great lengths to protect their cherished beliefs the same way creationists continue ignoring the evidence of evolution. There are still debates within the scientific community over global warming. It’s influence on Hurricanes is hotly disputed, but the evidence is pointing in that direction. Of course, there are many lines of evidence (a.k.a. “smoking guns”) that point to humans as the culprit responsible for global warming, but some humans like global warming deniers are immensely resistant to reason and logic and evidence.

Insectivore Once Removed

As humans reach the carrying limit of the planet, we are going down the food chain exploiting protein resources. The one resource that we have not exploited, at least not in the West, is insects. I’m sure if I were starving I’d eat grasshoppers and worms. I’d prefer not to. There are all sorts of arguments for eating bugs, nutritious and full of protein.

I read this short blog post today about using insects to replace fish meal. Why didn’t anyone think of this before? I have no problem feeding grasshoppers to pigs or chicken. Especially when the alternative is feeding them the leftover bits of pigs and chickens. I’m against high density feedlots. Of course we’d need to study how that’d affect the taste of the meat, but I would imagine there wouldn’t be much of a downside. Using insects as feed keeps us from eating directly down the food chain. There are people who advocate eating insects. This I find a reasonable compromise.

Toxoplasma neoconii

When did I enter this alternate evil universe where people like Dick Cheney and Britney Spears can run amok? No matter. I have been tracking the progress of the epidemic known as toxoplasma neoconii. It is a variant of the brain parasite toxoplasma gondii. Bill Kristol seems to have the most severe case I’ve seen yet. It’s latest victim seems to be Mike Huckabee. He’s proposing a constitutional amendment to make the US Constitution more in line with God. On the surface that sounds totally insane, but when you dig a little deeper you soon discover that it is totally insane.

I really ought to expand this entry and explain it more thoroughly. I might but probably won’t.

Is it safe?

2007 is over with but will the insanity continue? I don’t know. I don’t feel comfortable writing about personal stuff. After all this is a public blog. If it didn’t involve the naming of names, I’d probably go ahead and do it. On the plus side there are a lot of annoying people I no longer have to be around though there are a few non-annoying people I will miss. I suppose I could rant and rave about public issues. That’s fair game. I just finished reading The Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney and if your outrage meter isn’t pegged or broken it will be if you read this book. Anyway, Happy F*#king New Year!

If you’ve seen Marathon Man with Dustin Hoffman you’ll understand the question: Is it safe?

Time for my rant about the current crop of Republicans in power or were recently in power.

Well my outrage meter finally pegged. In fact it broke. It’s a lot like one of those Bugs Bunny cartoons where you see the steam gauge go Sproing! I was a retard to vote for Bush in 2000. I knew that invading Iraq was for the oil even before we went in. Bush lost my support for the Iraqi invasion when the Baghdad Museum was looted and 7,000 years of Civilization disappeared. Though it later turned out to be an inside job, but it hasn’t changed my position. It was indicative that the Bush administration had no post-war plan. My jaw dropped. Well they did have a post-war plan and it is an abomination. Then the Bush administration worked their magic on post-Katrina New Orleans. It too is unconscionable. And you can only sit back in awe and disgust what does it take for America to say: No, no, bad Bush. Bad Cheney. Naughty Cheney. Oh look Inhofe is foaming at the mouth again!

Well I can categorically state that the Republicans are a plague upon America. With their mix of religious conservatives and big business interests they have created a toxin that is destroying the America we knew and loved. You are asking yourself what finally caused my Sproing! moment? For some people that moment happened long ago. I was in the middle of reading The Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney. As someone who has a deep love for science and understand how it works, to see it being undermined and destroyed angers me to the core of my being.

Liberals misuse science, the media often reports science badly, but the conservatives win the prize for the monumental scale of their abuse. Exploiting scientific uncertainty is their mantra. Sound science and junk science are their buzzwords. Among their biggest victories is to delay any action on global warming. Not to mention lead-tainted and date-rape drug-laced toys; poisoned dog and cat food; and the continued use of the frog deforming pesticide atrazine. Ah but their good deeds don’t stop there. Sadly the all blame for this cannot be placed at the cloven hooves of Dick Cheney and the rest of the Bush administration. Nor the obstructionist Republicans in Congress. They are the culmination. It started in the early 70’s but didn’t really take off until the Republicans took over Congress. I’ll have more to say later, probably in another entry. I don’t have time at the moment to flesh out the details of this rant.

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