http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,426485,00.html
Please read the article and see if you can point out the massive flaws in testing.
"MALINTENT, the brainchild of the cutting-edge Human Factors division in Homeland Security's directorate for Science and Technology, searches your body for non-verbal cues that predict whether you mean harm to your fellow passengers."
"If you're rushed or stressed, you may send out signals of anxiety, but FAST isn't fooled. It's already good enough to tell the difference between a harried traveler and a terrorist. Even if you sweat heavily by nature, FAST won't mistake you for a baddie."
"While the 144 test subjects thought they were merely passing through an entrance way, they actually passed through a series of sensors that screened them for bad intentions.
Homeland Security also selected a group of 23 attendees to be civilian "accomplices" in their test. They were each given a "disruptive device" to carry through the portal — and, unlike the other attendees, were conscious that they were on a mission.""
"While FAST's batting average is classified, Undersecretary for Science and Technology Adm. Jay Cohen declared the experiment a "home run.""
So, it can tell whether or not you are stressed or mean actual harm. So why did they declare it a success on people WHO DID NOT MEAN ACTUAL HARM?!
No I get it, it's difficult to find a test on those who mean harm. But wait, aren't there prisons in every state in the union? Violence happens there all the time, they can run the machine and correlate with violent incidents following the testing.
It doesn't just take engineers to build a machine like this, it takes psychiatrists to determine if your testing has any validity. Maybe they did, I don't know, but if I can spot such a clear flaw, I hate to think what actual terrorists might think.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Friday, August 29, 2008
Adventures in Houston, The World's Biggest Small Town
A few weeks ago, my father shared with me an article featuring Houston, declaring it to be on the fast track to becoming one of the world's great cities.
Inspired, I have since made journeys into America's third largest city, Rice Village, the Museum District, Main Street, even the Spanish Renaissance style Houston Public Library.
If Houston wants to be a great city it will have to create a compelling reason for people to go out of their way to visit.
Now, if you live here, it is nice and has places to go. The Art museum is worthy and I've been all around the world, the Museum of Natural History is a fine way to spend the afternoon, Memorial park is beautiful, the Houston Public Library is lovely.
However, the city doesn't have much of a flavor aesthetically. I mean, Nacgodoches has more flavor, and that's not a slam on Nacgodoches. Also, it is spread out. Like, really spread out, this is not a walker's city and the public transportation consists of buses and a toy train (a very nice toy train, mind you, just doesn't go super far, there's only one line).
Point being, this city is not very distinctive. There are highlights of originality, but they are few. It is the world's biggest small town. Like most small towns in America, it is clean, safe, more or less upright, and there are a thousand more just like it.
It will take more than a rah rah attitude to make people want to see Houston. On a side note, boasting of a thriving night life doesn't mean a tinker's curse, all you need for a night life is liquor, women, and music, and, last time I checked, you can find all three pretty much worldwide.
All of that being said, Houston does have something that the only three cities in America bigger than it have. A future. New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago are expensive and socialist, and are driving business away. People are draining from these cities to places like Houston, where the price of a tiny house or apartment in NY, LA, or Chicago can buy a big house with land around it, or a luxury apartment with more than one room that costs less than $2600 a month. If you want to know the future you can ask Austin, and even San Antonio.
The future of America is working towards the center and the south. Factories are opening there, here. Industry is thriving and the cost of living is fantastic. What we lack in distinctiveness we possess in abundance of the necessities of life, work that creates value, and the economic freedom to make that possible.
Inspired, I have since made journeys into America's third largest city, Rice Village, the Museum District, Main Street, even the Spanish Renaissance style Houston Public Library.
If Houston wants to be a great city it will have to create a compelling reason for people to go out of their way to visit.
Now, if you live here, it is nice and has places to go. The Art museum is worthy and I've been all around the world, the Museum of Natural History is a fine way to spend the afternoon, Memorial park is beautiful, the Houston Public Library is lovely.
However, the city doesn't have much of a flavor aesthetically. I mean, Nacgodoches has more flavor, and that's not a slam on Nacgodoches. Also, it is spread out. Like, really spread out, this is not a walker's city and the public transportation consists of buses and a toy train (a very nice toy train, mind you, just doesn't go super far, there's only one line).
Point being, this city is not very distinctive. There are highlights of originality, but they are few. It is the world's biggest small town. Like most small towns in America, it is clean, safe, more or less upright, and there are a thousand more just like it.
It will take more than a rah rah attitude to make people want to see Houston. On a side note, boasting of a thriving night life doesn't mean a tinker's curse, all you need for a night life is liquor, women, and music, and, last time I checked, you can find all three pretty much worldwide.
All of that being said, Houston does have something that the only three cities in America bigger than it have. A future. New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago are expensive and socialist, and are driving business away. People are draining from these cities to places like Houston, where the price of a tiny house or apartment in NY, LA, or Chicago can buy a big house with land around it, or a luxury apartment with more than one room that costs less than $2600 a month. If you want to know the future you can ask Austin, and even San Antonio.
The future of America is working towards the center and the south. Factories are opening there, here. Industry is thriving and the cost of living is fantastic. What we lack in distinctiveness we possess in abundance of the necessities of life, work that creates value, and the economic freedom to make that possible.
Thursday, August 28, 2008
A Most Unusual Economics Class: First Day
I am taking a macroeconomics class in order to fulfill a prerequisite for my Masters in Business Education degree.
Little did I suspect what a delightful cherry taking a macroeconomics class at a large Texas community college could be. The names, locations, and events have been slightly fictionalized.
"Paying full price for a textbook, sheeyit....", our professor intoned in his Texas country black accent, before informing us that buying the required textbook was unnecessary, any economics book would do, "this shit hasn't changed since the eighteenth century."
A graduate of Texas Lutheran and the University of Texas at San Antonio, our professor owned his arrogance, "you'd be arrogant if you was smart too."
We received the assignment for the final almost immediately. He requested that we watch a total of ten free documentaries one can find online, and write a report of four pages. I suspect libertarian sympathies, due to a combination of what looks like conspiratorially minded recommended movies and a pro free market bias.
He also appeared to be socially intelligent, in that a discussion class with about thirty people does not usually work, however the vibe was relaxed enough that a discussion did happen. I found particularly poignant his response to the statement, "I never use the automatic tellers at Kroger because they take away jobs."
Pause,
Response: "Who here wants to be a checker at Kroger? Show of hands?"
Needless to say, no hands raised, we're awfully charitable about ensuring people stay in jobs we would never want to do personally.
Another student also raised the excellent point that those machines represent jobs as well, manufacturing, maintenance, and so forth.
It set me thinking, the point of labor is to add value to other human beings, if the job adds no value it is, pardon the term, masturbatory. It is infertile, with no more meaning than digging a hole and filling it in.
We must avoid the Luddite deviancy, we think we are preserving human dignity while we are in process of destroying it.
It puts me in mind of a film I saw listed on Netflix, where a group of workers take over a factory in Argentina in the hopes of reopening it and "restoring their dignity". If the factory wasn't making money, it is because it was not providing what consumers needed. If no one needs what you are making, forcing them to give you money for it is identical to the definition of thievery, providing no value and yet receiving value yourself.
No one in their right mind is immune to empathy for the suffering of someone out of work, but are we doing them any favor by depriving their lives of meaning? A rejoinder is that it is better them having them starve. But is anyone truly starving in America? And why not just feed them instead of demanding they perform meaningless work for their wages?
Little did I suspect what a delightful cherry taking a macroeconomics class at a large Texas community college could be. The names, locations, and events have been slightly fictionalized.
"Paying full price for a textbook, sheeyit....", our professor intoned in his Texas country black accent, before informing us that buying the required textbook was unnecessary, any economics book would do, "this shit hasn't changed since the eighteenth century."
A graduate of Texas Lutheran and the University of Texas at San Antonio, our professor owned his arrogance, "you'd be arrogant if you was smart too."
We received the assignment for the final almost immediately. He requested that we watch a total of ten free documentaries one can find online, and write a report of four pages. I suspect libertarian sympathies, due to a combination of what looks like conspiratorially minded recommended movies and a pro free market bias.
He also appeared to be socially intelligent, in that a discussion class with about thirty people does not usually work, however the vibe was relaxed enough that a discussion did happen. I found particularly poignant his response to the statement, "I never use the automatic tellers at Kroger because they take away jobs."
Pause,
Response: "Who here wants to be a checker at Kroger? Show of hands?"
Needless to say, no hands raised, we're awfully charitable about ensuring people stay in jobs we would never want to do personally.
Another student also raised the excellent point that those machines represent jobs as well, manufacturing, maintenance, and so forth.
It set me thinking, the point of labor is to add value to other human beings, if the job adds no value it is, pardon the term, masturbatory. It is infertile, with no more meaning than digging a hole and filling it in.
We must avoid the Luddite deviancy, we think we are preserving human dignity while we are in process of destroying it.
It puts me in mind of a film I saw listed on Netflix, where a group of workers take over a factory in Argentina in the hopes of reopening it and "restoring their dignity". If the factory wasn't making money, it is because it was not providing what consumers needed. If no one needs what you are making, forcing them to give you money for it is identical to the definition of thievery, providing no value and yet receiving value yourself.
No one in their right mind is immune to empathy for the suffering of someone out of work, but are we doing them any favor by depriving their lives of meaning? A rejoinder is that it is better them having them starve. But is anyone truly starving in America? And why not just feed them instead of demanding they perform meaningless work for their wages?
Saturday, August 23, 2008
The Vatican, The Guggenheim, Art, and Communication
Thanks to my mother and my background of her home-schooling me, I received contact with and an understanding of art at a young age. Art is fundamentally communication, especially the communication of emotion. So it must be judged two ways, technically, and philosophically.
The technical side, is clearly, the "technique" of communication, the actual method and presentation. The technique is good if it makes the communication of the idea clear or striking, which is the philosophical side. The philosophical side is to be judged on the greatness of the idea.
As an example of good art, the Vatican is almost universally fantastic, the art is clear enough that pilgrims worldwide experience the power of the Christian idea in a way that is clear enough to be understood by men from every conceivable ethnic background, level of education, and economic status without explanation. The primary idea, in my mind, is one grandeur, majesty.
On these criteria, the Guggenheim and everything I saw there was a monumental failure. Most of the artworks failed to communicate without explanation and the ideas behind them suffered from an extreme poverty. Poorly packaged savage misandry mostly, it seemed.
Whence the success? Self appointed elites qualified by their own hubris. Great art is understood by both great and mean, albeit on differing levels. Great art is not contingent on a lack of understanding by the unwashed, breathing in the rarefied air of "true understanding".
This emperor has no clothes.
The technical side, is clearly, the "technique" of communication, the actual method and presentation. The technique is good if it makes the communication of the idea clear or striking, which is the philosophical side. The philosophical side is to be judged on the greatness of the idea.
As an example of good art, the Vatican is almost universally fantastic, the art is clear enough that pilgrims worldwide experience the power of the Christian idea in a way that is clear enough to be understood by men from every conceivable ethnic background, level of education, and economic status without explanation. The primary idea, in my mind, is one grandeur, majesty.
On these criteria, the Guggenheim and everything I saw there was a monumental failure. Most of the artworks failed to communicate without explanation and the ideas behind them suffered from an extreme poverty. Poorly packaged savage misandry mostly, it seemed.
Whence the success? Self appointed elites qualified by their own hubris. Great art is understood by both great and mean, albeit on differing levels. Great art is not contingent on a lack of understanding by the unwashed, breathing in the rarefied air of "true understanding".
This emperor has no clothes.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Hungary, the Sudetenland, Fiume, and Georgia
I believe that the best parallel for the Russo-Georgian conflict is not the Soviet invasion of Hungary or even the German seizing of the Sudetenland.
It is my understanding that in Western political philosophy, in order to be considered the legitimate government, that government must provide the services of government, primarily security against agressive neighbors and internal criminals. Georgia has not done so in South Ossetia or Abkhazia for years. These were de facto independent countries, as I'm sure you are aware. Their peace was interrupted by Georgia for the sake of a kind of irrendentism.
This is more like d'Annunzio's occuption of Fiume in the twenties. Not a perfect analogy, but I have failed to see any concrete good provided by either the occupation of Fiume or the Georgian attempted occupation of South Ossetia.
The way I see it, the Georgians took a gamble that Russia would not get involved and lost, the same way d'Annunzio assumed that the Allies would not get involved and that Italy would annex Fiume.
The Russians are not pure as the driven snow, but the Georgians knew that Russia had assumed obligations to South Ossetia and Abkhazia prior to the conflict, and have no right to be surprised by the Russian response. Awaiting further information, I also believe the Russians are within their rights to defend these satellite states, having undertaken security obligations to these countries beforehand.
It is my understanding that in Western political philosophy, in order to be considered the legitimate government, that government must provide the services of government, primarily security against agressive neighbors and internal criminals. Georgia has not done so in South Ossetia or Abkhazia for years. These were de facto independent countries, as I'm sure you are aware. Their peace was interrupted by Georgia for the sake of a kind of irrendentism.
This is more like d'Annunzio's occuption of Fiume in the twenties. Not a perfect analogy, but I have failed to see any concrete good provided by either the occupation of Fiume or the Georgian attempted occupation of South Ossetia.
The way I see it, the Georgians took a gamble that Russia would not get involved and lost, the same way d'Annunzio assumed that the Allies would not get involved and that Italy would annex Fiume.
The Russians are not pure as the driven snow, but the Georgians knew that Russia had assumed obligations to South Ossetia and Abkhazia prior to the conflict, and have no right to be surprised by the Russian response. Awaiting further information, I also believe the Russians are within their rights to defend these satellite states, having undertaken security obligations to these countries beforehand.
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Joss Whedon: Merchant of Death
Warning: Contains spoilers
Just got through watching Dr. Horrible's Sing-a-Long Blog again, check it out on fancast.com.
Apparently it ain't Whedon until somebody beloved dies.
Buffy, Angel, Firefly (you had to kill Wash, sure, the one guy that don't have it comin', can't have him walking around), and even this latest wonderful entry in his spreadsheet of excellence.
Watch it, love it, hate it, watch it again.
Just got through watching Dr. Horrible's Sing-a-Long Blog again, check it out on fancast.com.
Apparently it ain't Whedon until somebody beloved dies.
Buffy, Angel, Firefly (you had to kill Wash, sure, the one guy that don't have it comin', can't have him walking around), and even this latest wonderful entry in his spreadsheet of excellence.
Watch it, love it, hate it, watch it again.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Bobby Jindal, Corporal Punishment, and Prison
" [J]ustice without cruelty pleases people more than remiss mercy." -Gracian, A Pocket Mirror for Heroes, Currency/Doubleday 1996, p. 28
"The only thing that prisons demonstrably cure is heterosexuality." -John D. MacDonald, The Long Lavender Look
Recently read that the Governor of Louisiana, Bobby Jindal has signed a bill mandating chemical castration (and allowing for physical castration in some instances) for certain categories sex offenders, in addition to their prison sentences.
How is it that the death penalty is cruel and unusual, but castration is just fine? And on that note, why is flogging so cruel and unusual, but years of confinement with all the horrors that that entails in America and most other countries is seen as humane?
Instead of sending someone to face years of abuse, malnutrition, lost time, and corrupting company, why not offer criminals, at least in some categories (non violent offenders like thieves for example), the option of receiving their penalty through corporal punishment? It will hurt strongly enough to make an impression, and yet, after a recovery period that probably won't exceed two months, a man can go back to work and not be separated from family and other institutions that might provide him a measure of healthy support in remaking his life.
And, if someone has committed a crime of sufficient gravity that trusting him in the world at large is not reasonably feasible, like the future castrates of Louisiana, keeping them in a much reduced prison population might have more beneficent effects. Of course the death penalty might be more just and, in the end, merciful, but since that is not an option, I believe that confinement is obviously more reasonable in those cases.
In response to the criticism that corrections is not about retribution, but rehabilitating the criminal to socially acceptable behavior, do you think prisons are doing that now?
"The only thing that prisons demonstrably cure is heterosexuality." -John D. MacDonald, The Long Lavender Look
Recently read that the Governor of Louisiana, Bobby Jindal has signed a bill mandating chemical castration (and allowing for physical castration in some instances) for certain categories sex offenders, in addition to their prison sentences.
How is it that the death penalty is cruel and unusual, but castration is just fine? And on that note, why is flogging so cruel and unusual, but years of confinement with all the horrors that that entails in America and most other countries is seen as humane?
Instead of sending someone to face years of abuse, malnutrition, lost time, and corrupting company, why not offer criminals, at least in some categories (non violent offenders like thieves for example), the option of receiving their penalty through corporal punishment? It will hurt strongly enough to make an impression, and yet, after a recovery period that probably won't exceed two months, a man can go back to work and not be separated from family and other institutions that might provide him a measure of healthy support in remaking his life.
And, if someone has committed a crime of sufficient gravity that trusting him in the world at large is not reasonably feasible, like the future castrates of Louisiana, keeping them in a much reduced prison population might have more beneficent effects. Of course the death penalty might be more just and, in the end, merciful, but since that is not an option, I believe that confinement is obviously more reasonable in those cases.
In response to the criticism that corrections is not about retribution, but rehabilitating the criminal to socially acceptable behavior, do you think prisons are doing that now?
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