April 09, 2014
— Open Blogger There have been a lot of downer stories lately, so how about something uplifting?
This week is the Masters Championship at Augusta. (That's a golf tournament, you haters!) I've never been (iirc some of our morons have), but from everything I've heard, it's quite a celebration. Many (most?) of the former champions return each year and a select few guests get to meet them.
One of the returning champions is Billy Casper, who is one of the most accomplished pro golfers of all-time. Unfortunately for him, his career was at its peak during the era of the Big Three (Palmer, Player, and Nicklaus), so he didn't get as much acclaim as he might have otherwise.
I've been lucky enough to get to know Billy (and his terrific wife, Shirley) a little since moving to Utah, and he really is an impressive (and fun) person. If you ever have a chance to watch the interview Feherty did with Billy last year, do so. Feherty, who is generally a very snarky guy, was clearly moved by the experience.
In any event, here is a nice story about Billy's visit with a wounded G.I. during Vietnam:
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— Ace National discussion on knives.
Several video reports at Hot Air, but I'll steal this print report.
[N]ot all of the 20 injured were cut by the knife, though most were. Some suffered scrapes and cuts in the mayhem that ensued at Franklin Regional High School on Wednesday morning. Stevens says it doesnÂ’t appear any students suffered life-threatening injuries.While Stevens said all the injured are between 14 and 17 years old, hospital officials told CBS Pittsburgh the patients they were taking in from the incident range from 15 to 60 years old.
Some further attacks may have been avoided by a cool-thinking student who pulled the fire alarm when he realized the school was being attacked by a maniac, which caused people to begin evacuating. That probably seems pretty obvious to anyone reading about the situation from the comfort of his home or office, but the obvious is often missed in panic situations.
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— Ace This is getting re-goshdarn-diculous.
On my tombstone, under my self-written epigraph "Sorry I'm late," will be a tribute to me: People around him said interesting things.
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08:02 AM
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— Open Blogger Hopefully this holds you over until the boss gets into work.
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07:37 AM
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— Open Blogger
- Pro-Business Or Pro-Market
- Shady Pal Of Bob Menendez Under Fraud Investigation Rakes In 20 Million In Medicare Payments
- Unpacking Progressivity
- Free Speech Vs. The Collective
- The WH War On Math
- Untaxed Corporate Profits Overseas Top 2 Trillion
- Al Sharpton Claims Allegations He Was An FBI Rat Are Racist
- On Asymmetric Stupidity
- Leland Yee Pleads Not Guilty
- Last Man Standing
- The Rise Of The Anti-Tech Left In California
- Smart Guns Are Dumb
- My Heart Breaks For This Man
- The Ultimate Warrior Is Dead
Follow me on twitter.
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05:15 AM
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— Gabriel Malor Good morning, HUMP DAY.
Here's a long read by Seymour Hersh in the London Review of Books that a reader sent on Syria, CBW, and the red line.
Moviegeeks, here's an interesting three-part piece on the future of film, particularly the tentpole strategy.
Lawgeeks, Judge Facciola denied another warrant application for seizure and search of email.
In last night's special election in Arlington County, Virginia, an unlikely union between the GOP and the Greens has given the county its first non-Democrat board member in 15 years: " the result is likely to be viewed by many as a voter rebuke of the County BoardÂ’s major capital spending projects."
AoSHQ Weekly Podcast
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April 08, 2014
— Maetenloch more...
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— Ace So here is some stuff I've collected from the various corners of the web, all the way from Hot Air to Hot Air's Archives.
I don't know why we're talking about this but there is some concern that Jeb "Act of Love" Bush will be, or won't be, our nominee in 2016.
He recently claimed that illegal border crossings were just a Crazy Little Thing Called Love, causing many conservatives to ask in turn, What's Love Got to Do With It?
Charles Krauthammer notes that we're not just talking about one family that crossed the border, but 11 million illegal migrants. And that's a Whole Lotta Love for the American fisc to start being responsible for.
On that, Kausfiles offered a strange but oddly plausible theory: Bush decided to Keep Talkin' 'Bout Love not to advance his own bid (which won't happen), but to say something so outrageously out of sync with GOP primary voters that it makes his protogé Marco Rubio's position on immigration seem palatable, by comparison.
If the full Rollercoaster of Love offends you, would you accept instead a Lovin' Spoonful?
Karl Rove warns Jeb Bush that maybe he ought to stop needlessly offending the base lest he become a Victim of Love.
Steve Hayes looks at Jeb Bush's prefatory statement -- in which he declared that he didn't care if this was going to be on tape or not -- and concludes that Jeb Bush is definitely thinking seriously about running for President, hoping to ride The Power of Love to the White House.
And, by the way, the Executive Director of the Virginia GOP just called for the party to purge itself of all "nativists," by which he means anyone who doesn't support Comprehensive Immigration Amnesty.
You know, I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That).
Today the President was pumping out the verbal fog (Love Is Like Oxygen), attempting to gin up his base, depressed and anxious (possibly feeling a case of Tainted Love) by declaring it Equal Pay Day, demanding that we end the gap between women's and men's pay. Raising women's wages up to the top floors, much like Love in an Elevator.
Ed Henry wondered why, at the White House itself, women made 88 cents on each man's dollar. Jay Carney then did what he does best, which is babbling aimlessly for five minutes and asking unmarried female voters to Let Me Put My Love In You.
Even CNN had to say, respectfully, To Sir With Love, that's just stupid.
Oh, and somewhere, a Congressman got trapped in his Chains of Love. You're seeing the leaked security footage of his kissy-necky embrace because he's a Republican.
Well, that's what I got. I ain't got no more.
I'm All Out of Love.
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03:48 PM
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— Ace You can read all the "game changing" type hype at the article.
Here's how it works, supposedly:
The [Navy Research Labs] process begins by extracting carbon dioxide and hydrogen from seawater.As seawater passes through a specially built cell, it is subjected to a small electric current.
This causes the seawater to exchange hydrogen ions produced at the anode with sodium ions.
As a result, the seawater is acidified.
Meanwhile, at the cathode, the water is reduced to hydrogen gas and sodium hydroxide is formed.
The end product is hydrogen and carbon dioxide gas, and the sodium hydroxide is added to the leftover seawater to neutralize its acidity.
In the next step, the hydrogen and carbon dioxide are passed into a heated reaction chamber with an iron catalyst.
The gases combine and form long-chained unsaturated hydrocarbons with methane as a by-product.
The unsaturated hydrocarbons are then made to form longer hydrocarbon molecules containing six to nine carbon atoms.
Using a nickel-supported catalyst, these are then converted into jet fuel.
Hydrocarbons -- fossil fuel molecules -- are basically just chains or rings of carbon atoms, say 6 to 18 carbon atoms long, each carbon atom in turn connected to 2-3 hydrogen atoms.
Ummm... it seems so game-changing as to be paradigm-shifting -- suddenly we have as much high-power jet fuel as we have gallons of ocean -- that it's hard, bordering on impossible, to believe.
Here's the harder to believe part: This process would be almost carbon dioxide neutral. It's true, of course, that upon burning the jet fuel, you'd turn it into carbon dioxide and water atoms (as you do whenever you burn a fossil fuel).
However, in this process, the carbon in the fuel is being extracted from sea water in the first place. That carbon dioxide gas is just atmospheric carbon dioxide, dissolved into liquid.
So while you are liberating carbon dioxide gas at the end of the process, it's just carbon dioxide gas you previously sucked out of the hydrosphere in the first place.
More or less a neutral, one carbon dioxide atom liberated for each carbon dioxide atom consumed process. I'm sure that you'd add some carbon dioxide, as you'd have to burn some energy to catalyze this whole process. (I suppose you could avoid that by setting up nuclear reactors that did nothing but provide electricity for this jetfuel-from-seawater process.)
I don't particularly care about that. I guess maybe that makes me extra-special-skeptical -- I know that any energy source claiming to be nearly carbon-neutral is going to get extra hype and lots of funding.
But who knows. I don't.
via @rdbrewer4.
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— Ace HBO is apparently so high on Mike Judge's new comedy, Silicon Valley, that they're letting you watch the first episode for free on YouTube.
Instapundit must not have actually watched it, or else he would have noted the fierce attack on modern-day college occurring near the beginning of the show.
The character who delivers this diatribe at a TED talk is called "Peter Gregory," who is obviously based on tech titan Peter Thiel. Thiel, famously, is a strident critic of what college has become, and actually offers people $100,000 if they will quit college to pursue their tangible, possibly-useful dream. (I assume Thiel has to first approve of your dream before you get the money. So, you know, don't just quit college and then show up at his door with your hand out.)
In the show, the Thiel-analogue is noted to have made just exactly this offer himself, and then gives that TED talk rant at about 8:25 in the below link.
There are two things about this that are interesting for conservatives, who have long suspected Judge of having conservative (or libertarian, or at least liberal-skeptical) positions:
1. This Thiel analogue is the more attractive character of the two tech titans depicted. The Thiel analogue is helpful towards the heroes, wheres the Thiel analogue's rival seems to want to cheat the hero out of his invention.
The rival tech titan is a Blazing Douchebag who smugly propounds upon his devotion to "social justice." The Thiel analogue hasn't revealed his politics, but Peter Thiel himself is a conservative-leaning libertarian.
2. Mike Judge permits someone in the audience to talk back to the Thiel analogue, and say that his ideas are "dangerous," but that guy is a rumpled old hippie, and he is humiliated in verbal sparring by the Thiel analogue. He's left only to sputter "Fascist," impotently, as he leaves the auditorium.
This is probably the most mainstream reference to the idea of a growing Bubble in Higher Education and the current wretechedness of the college system (particularly when one factors in costs and benefits).
Worth a watch. Skip to 8:25, as I say, and watch the minute long second exchange.
I watched the show earlier today on YouTube. Overall, it's pretty good. It's plainly a Mike Judge production, with his sense of humor and sensibility obvious in the script.
Oh, being a Mike Judge production, and being on HBO, you should know there is some objectionable material here, all of the adult potty mouth sort. Though the minute I'm recommending is clean.
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