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WikiLeaks Emails Show Dr. Oz Puts Business First

Posted by on Apr 21, 2015 in Science and Society | Comments Off on WikiLeaks Emails Show Dr. Oz Puts Business First

Dr. Oz has recently had the kind of difficulty that popularity brings - he got criticized on the floor of Congress and then got some political theater in the form of a letter to Columbia University asking that he be removed because of his promotion of suspect alternative medicine and even homeopathy treatments.

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Eyes Are On The James Webb Space Telescope As Hubble’s 25th Anniversary Approaches

Posted by on Apr 16, 2015 in Aerospace | Comments Off on Eyes Are On The James Webb Space Telescope As Hubble’s 25th Anniversary Approaches

With the 25th anniversary of the Hubble Space Telescope next week, people are again thinking about its big successor. The very first month that this part of Science 2.0, the communications portal, went live, in January of 2007, we had an update on the James Webb Space Telescope and it was already way behind schedule. 

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The Victorian Era Got Juvenile Crime Right

Posted by on Apr 15, 2015 in Science and Society | Comments Off on The Victorian Era Got Juvenile Crime Right

To modern cultural sensibilities, "Victorian" means 'repressed' because it seemed overly formal to people that want to wear flip-flops into the office, yet they clearly got some things right.(1)

The name derives from the reign of Queen Victoria in the United Kingdom in the latter half of the 19th century, a time when England ruled the western world culturally and every region militarily. The Victorian Era brought with it with the creation of a paid police force(2) rather than the local constable system that had been around since the Tudors. (3) 

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Why Protest Clean Multi-Cultural White-Collar Astronomy Jobs?

Posted by on Apr 14, 2015 in Science and Society | Comments Off on Why Protest Clean Multi-Cultural White-Collar Astronomy Jobs?

Having once lived in the Pittsburgh metropolitan area, on occasion I would drive to those old gigantic relics of steel mills.

They were behemoths and so were the buildings that housed them. They looked like they could block out the sun. In John Ford's "The Quiet Man", a native of Ireland asked John Wayne's character what they feed men in Pittsburgh that makes them so big and Wayne replied, "Steel, and pig-iron furnaces so hot a man forgets his fear of hell". In the early 1950s it was a job for hard men.

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Why Don’t All Farmers Grow Organic Food?

Posted by on Apr 13, 2015 in Psychology | Comments Off on Why Don’t All Farmers Grow Organic Food?

Organic food is a gigantic profitable Big Ag enterprise ensconced in a health halo that glows so brightly the bulk of consumers believe it not only has no pesticides but actually contains no chemicals of any kind.

My concern about the science literacy of Whole Foods shoppers aside, from a purely practical point of view, if I were a farmer and walked into a store and saw berries for $8 a pack and hamburger for $10 a pound that has no difference but process I'd immediately ask why I am competing with giants over razor thin margins when I could segue into an area where price is basically no object.

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Biofuel Subsidy Pitfall: Carbon-Emitting Conversion Of Millions Of Acres Of Grassland

Posted by on Apr 10, 2015 in Energy | Comments Off on Biofuel Subsidy Pitfall: Carbon-Emitting Conversion Of Millions Of Acres Of Grassland

In 2005, environmentalists got what they and former Vice-President Al Gore had lobbied for since the late 1980s; federal subsidies to commercialize biofuels. Mr. Gore later admitted that he was just endorsing biofuels to get corn belt votes for his presidential run and few academic scientists had publicly disagreed because, well, they voted for him.

The result of the last corporate subsidy effort: Corn and soy growers have been happy, to be sure, but poor people got rising food costs and biofuels remain even more of a net penalty to the environment than regular gasoline.

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Is Meaningful Choice In Video Games The Future?

Posted by on Apr 9, 2015 in Psychology | Comments Off on Is Meaningful Choice In Video Games The Future?

"Dragon Age: Inquisition", which came out in late 2014, was not a video game I anticipated much. I had played both previous versions and their add-on content but unlike Mass Effect, by the same company, only the first Dragon Age had much re-playability and, unlike Mass Effect, they wanted you to play a new character each time. There wasn't much point in getting attached to a character. But the milieu, swords and sorcery, was intriguing to an old D&D player, and I knew they would have something most games lack - a story where choice matters.

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Dutch Height – A Lot Has Changed In 200 Years

Posted by on Apr 9, 2015 in Evolution | Comments Off on Dutch Height – A Lot Has Changed In 200 Years

For being a fellow of above average height (<6'2" now - age will do that) traveling to Holland can be a strange experience. It seems like everyone is around my height. The men are tall, the women are tall. 

Netherlands has the tallest people in the world. Yet they used to be the shortest.  While everyone got taller during that time, Dutch average height went up 8 inches in two centuries.

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Goodbye A. Excelsus, Hello Again Brontosaurus?

Posted by on Apr 8, 2015 in Paleontology | Comments Off on Goodbye A. Excelsus, Hello Again Brontosaurus?

Goodbye A. Excelsus, Hello Again Brontosaurus?

A new analysis of the long-necked dinosaur family tree says Apatosaurus excelsus is oh so wrong and Brontosaurus is oh so right.

Just like a hundred plus years ago.

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Flakka – Chemical Cousin Of Bath Salts Is Legal, Cheap And Dangerous

Posted by on Apr 7, 2015 in Pharmacology | Comments Off on Flakka – Chemical Cousin Of Bath Salts Is Legal, Cheap And Dangerous

Flakka – Chemical Cousin Of Bath Salts Is Legal, Cheap And Dangerous

Flakka - "gravel" - is all the rage with amateur druggies in Florida and Texas and wherever else people who have watched a lot of "Breaking Bad" do home chemistry. It is made from alpha-PVP, which is a chemical cousin of cathinone, found in bath salts.

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