Planting democracy in Iraq; a private DCX?

View 765 Saturday, March 09, 2013

I have a lot of mail but no time, and my day has been devoured by locusts, but I thought this mail might be amusing:

The government builds a chicken plant 

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

A useful cautionary tale which, I think illustrates both our inability to "help" other countries and the weakness of our own when it comes to building ANY private enterprise.

http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2013/03/09/the_biggest_blunder_america_ever_made_100603.html

"

In my act of the play, the U.S. spent some $2.2 million dollars to build a huge facility in the boondocks. Ignoring the stark reality that Iraqis had raised and sold chickens locally for some 2,000 years, the U.S. decided to finance the construction of a central processing facility, have the Iraqis running the plant purchase local chickens, pluck them and slice them up with complex machinery brought in from Chicago, package the breasts and wings in plastic wrap, and then truck it all to local grocery stores. Perhaps it was the desert heat, but this made sense at the time, and the plan was supported by the Army, the State Department, and the White House.

Elegant in conception, at least to us, it failed to account for a few simple things, like a lack of regular electricity, or logistics systems to bring the chickens to and from the plant, or working capital, or… um… grocery stores. As a result, the gleaming $2.2 million plant processed no chickens. To use a few of the catchwords of that moment, it transformed nothing, empowered no one, stabilized and economically uplifted not a single Iraqi. It just sat there empty, dark, and unused in the middle of the desert. Like the chickens, we were plucked.

In keeping with the madness of the times, however, the simple fact that the plant failed to meet any of its real-world goals did not mean the project wasn’t a success. In fact, the factory was a hit with the U.S. media. After all, for every propaganda-driven visit to the plant, my group stocked the place with hastily purchased chickens, geared up the machinery, and put on a dog-and-pony, er, chicken-and-rooster, show.

In the dark humor of that moment, we christened the place the Potemkin Chicken Factory. In between media and VIP visits, it sat in the dark, only to rise with the rooster’s cry each morning some camera crew came out for a visit. Our factory was thus considered a great success. Robert Ford, then at the Baghdad Embassy and now America’s rugged shadow ambassador to Syria <http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/syria/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink> , said his visit was the best day out he enjoyed in Iraq. General Ray Odierno, then commanding all U.S. forces in Iraq, sent bloggers and camp followers to view the victory project. Some of the propaganda, which proclaimed that "teaching Iraqis methods to flourish on their own gives them the ability to provide their own stability without needing to rely on Americans," is still online (including this charming image of American-Iraqi mentorship, a particular favorite of mine)."

Respectfully,

Brian P.

Hardly surprising of course; but we have all seen that chicken plant on the 6 o’clock news, more than once. This is called bringing democracy to the middle east. A policy of incompetent empire in action.

A follow up question.

A great part of the reason for the fiasco chronicled below in Iraq and also in the book "Little America " ( http://www.amazon.com/Little-America-War-Within-Afghanistan/dp/0307957144) is because we assumed that we could rebuild those countries as we did Germany and Japan after WWII.

Those events should be in your living memory. So question: Why did we succeed back then and so abjectly fail now? What’s the difference? Iraq and Afghanistan were every bit as prostrate as Germany and Japan were.

Respectfully ,

Brian P .

To begin with, we began training specialists in military government as early as 1943. We had also defeated Germany and Japan. The German economic miracle helped a lot, as did the Japanese customs of obedience and respect for law. Mostly, though, we sent competent proconsuls. Lucius Clay and Douglas MacArthur had their faults, but they understood the mission, they had the power to fulfill it, and competent advisors. We had Bremer.

That is the short answer. It would take a while to go through the details.

[B adds:

and we did not have an organization of left over Nazi’s and Japanese Imperialists sent by other countries to cause as much trouble as possible once the Axis were defeated.

which was certainly a factor.  In Japan the emperor ordered cooperation.  In Germany everyone was ready to denounce the Nazi’s. But in both cases we had proconsuls who knew what they were doing. Roland adds

How quickly we forget.

The date of this essay may be of interest, as well:

<http://www.hegemonist.com/hegemony/2003/07/how_quickly_we_.html>

How quickly we forget.

One of the most puzzling things about our adventure in Iraq has been the seeming near-total ignorance of anyone in government – including Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, who’s old enough to remember the events in question – of the methods we used to restore order in the last two countries which we occupied for any length of time.

I speak, of course, of Germany and Japan after their defeat in the Second World War.

Of the two, postwar Germany seems the closer analogy; a secular uni-party totalitarian state, a tyrant who met his self-inflicted end out of the public eye (to this day, there are those who claim that Hitler escaped to South America, or Antarctica, or what-have-you), a fearsome secret police apparatus, legions of petty bureaucrats who made their livelihood by serving the regime in one form or another, and a wrecked public infrastructure. The situation was complicated by legions of displaced persons (‘DPs’) comprised variously of unhoused civilians, freed POWs, and of course the survivors of the concentration camps.

Yet there were Civil Affairs units moving forward with the various armies as they advanced, setting up registration centers, issuing officially-recognized ID cards and scrip, and generally keeping order while the front lines advanced. And once Admiral Doenitz, Hitler’s successor, signed the instrument of surrender . . .

 

Roland Dobbins

The entire essay is worth your time.

Our Republic is founded on the principle that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. Competent Empires have a different formula based on local leadership. Incompetent empires have no principle other than force.]

 

 

 

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Dr Pournelle

SpaceX is gonna build your DCX.

SpaceX’s Grasshopper flies again

Grasshopper, the reusable launch vehicle (RLV) technology demonstrator developed by SpaceX, made its fourth flight on Thursday, according to government records. The list of flights performed under experimental permits issued by the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation <http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/ast/launch_license/permitted_launches/historical_launch/> now includes a flight on Thursday, March 7, by Grasshopper from SpaceX’s test site near McGregor, Texas. The entry offers no technical details about the flight other than it was a vertical takeoff and landing flight.

SpaceX developed Grasshopper to test technologies it plans to incorporate into a future reusable version of the Falcon 9. The vehicle is a Falcon 9 first stage with a single Merlin engine and fitted with landing legs. The vehicle last flew in December <http://www.newspacejournal.com/2012/12/24/grasshopper-hops-ever-higher/> , flying to an altitude of 40 meters and staying airborne for 29 seconds. SpaceX previously flew Grasshopper in September and November.

A SpaceX spokesperson did not respond to a request for information about the flight on Friday afternoon. In December, the company waited nearly a week after the successful test flight before releasing videos of the flight and other information.

–New Space Journal <http://www.newspacejournal.com/2013/03/08/spacexs-grasshopper-flies-again/>

Live long and prosper

h lynn keith

The specifications for SSX of which DCX was a scale model put savability up at the top of the requirements. Savable and reusable. Savable means multiple engines, with the capability to land safely with one engine out. (In practice that might mean two out, one shut down to balance the engine that went out.) I had a brief conversation with Musk on single stage to orbit vs. having a reusable first stage or perhaps a zero stage to gain altitude but not necessarily velocity. He, along with many in the modern rocket community, liked multiple recoverable stages. That adds operations complexity. Both concepts need some X projects.

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Rand Paul, Drones, Sizzling Saboteurs, and small pocket knives

View 765 Thursday, March 07, 2013

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I have considerable mail discussing Senator Rand Paul’s filibuster on use of drones against United States citizens on American soil. Here is a typical email:

Rand Paul and drones

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

It appears Rand Paul has catapulted himself to national prominence by asking the very kinds of questions I’ve been asking here. He’s also gained some fans both among liberals and among conservative Republicans for doing so .

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/03/rand-paul-filibuster/

I salute him. I don’t agree with everything he or his father believe, but sometimes a thing is done well.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

Not everyone approved. The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page today had

Calm down, Senator. Mr. Holder is right, even if he doesn’t explain the law very well. The U.S. government cannot randomly target American citizens on U.S. soil or anywhere else. What it can do under the laws of war is target an "enemy combatant" anywhere at anytime, including on U.S. soil. This includes a U.S. citizen who is also an enemy combatant. The President can designate such a combatant if he belongs to an entity—a government, say, or a terrorist network like al Qaeda—that has taken up arms against the United States as part of an internationally recognized armed conflict. That does not include Hanoi Jane.

Such a conflict exists between the U.S. and al Qaeda, so Mr. Holder is right that the U.S. could have targeted (say) U.S. citizen Anwar al-Awlaki had he continued to live in Virginia. The U.S. killed him in Yemen before he could kill more Americans. But under the law Awlaki was no different than the Nazis who came ashore on Long Island in World War II, were captured and executed.

Of course this is all wrong. The saboteurs who came ashore on Long Island included two United States citizens who had convinced the Germans they had changed sides. One of them defected almost immediately and turned himself in to the FBI. All eight were arrested and tried before a military tirbunal, and sentenced to death. The six German nationals were executed in August 1942 (having come ashore in June of 1942). The two Americans were sentenced to what amounted to life imprisonment, later commuted to time served and deportation to the American Zone in occupied Germany. No one was executed without trial.

The WSJ was taken to task by the Huffington Post and other similar publications for “slamming” Senator Paul, but oddly enough, his concerns were taken seriously by many in the general press. Senator Paul’s action got the response he wanted:

Attorney General Eric Holder responds to Sen. Rand Paul’s 13-hour filibuster with one word: no

‘"Does the President have the authority to use a weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in combat on American soil?" The answer to that question is no,’ Holder wrote.

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/paul-13-hour-filibuster-word-reply-article-1.1282182#ixzz2MuD1myCQ

And this from the Washington Post:

 

 

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Eugene Robinson

Opinion Writer

Rand Paul makes the right call with filibuster

By Eugene Robinson, Thursday, March 7, 1:39 PM

Rand Paul was right. There, I said it.

The Republican senator from Kentucky, whom I’ve ridiculed as an archconservative kook — because that’s basically what he is — was right to call attention to the growing use of drone aircraft in “targeted killings” by staging a nearly 13-hour filibuster on the Senate floor.

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Meanwhile the White House has suspended White House tours because of the sequester, but the Easter Egg Roll will go on as planned. No bunny inspectors have been furloughed. God reigns, and the government at Washington still lives. Carry on.

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Dear Jerry Pournelle:

My Swiss Army knife is one of my most intermittently useful items. I don’t use it often, but when I need it I am glad that I carry it in my backpack at all times. It has screwdrivers (straight and Phillips), two bottle openers, a corkscrew, tweezers, a small scissors, a magnifying glass… and two blades; one razor sharp, 1+9/16 inches long; and a duller blade, 2+6/16 inches long.

I carry my Swiss Army knife in my backpack at all times, except when I fly, when I must leave it at home. (And of course it is while travelling that I find myself needing a portable multi-tool! As usual, Murphy’s Law applies.) I was hoping to be spared the Theatrical Security Authority’s jihad against portable multi-tools; but alas, 2+6/16 = 2.375, which is 0.015 inches too long even for the TSA’s new rules. That’s 0.015 inches of terrorism; just as bottled water is now officially an explosive.

I understand your reader’s piling on to the TSA; it certainly deserves criticism, or even abolition; but please lay off when they uncharacteristically show the slightest trace of common sense.

Sincerely,

Nathaniel Hellerstein

I hadn’t realized that my readers were piling on the TSA. I have long been on record as saying that much of what TSA does is Kabuki Theatre Security, intended to inconvenience passengers while giving them an impression of added security, and their new rules don’t bother me. I long carried a pocket knife and now I’ll get my old Swiss Army knife out and carry it again, and I will feel neither safer nor more endangered when aboard an airplane. I am concerned that they didn’t strengthen the cabin doors enough, but I am also certain that passengers, now that they are no longer afraid of arrest and imprisonment by their own government for interfering with hijackers, can handle terrorists armed with knives. I’d prefer that the airline issue framing hammers to passengers willing to carry them, but a camera on a shoulder strap makes a pretty good weapon against a small knife. As do many other things we routinely carry.

I heard on the radio that now terrorists will threaten a baby with a pocket knife and everyone will cave in, with the cabin attendants pleading with the flight crew to open the cockpit door. I can’t think that threatening a baby with a Swiss Army Knife is more horrifying than threatening a child’s eyes with a ball point pen. Stand up, stab out one eye to demonstrate you mean business and go on from there. I am sure readers can write their own scenarios.

For that matter, I am sure that most readers can think of ways to bring down an airplane providing that you don’t mind the certainty of being killed in the process. Perfect safety on an airplane is an illusion, and we all know it.

As for me, now where did I put that old Swiss Army knife? And a grindstone. I need a good power grindstone and a lot of water.

 

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Proscription, plain talk about the Holocaust, Security Kabuki, Correlation and Causation, North Korea, and other matters.

Mail 765 Wednesday, March 06, 2013

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Drone Strikes On US Soil Possible

Jerry,

The Obama administration just keeps getting more interesting, with the US Attorney General telling Congress that drone strikes could be ordered against Americans on American soil. http://www.cnn.com/2013/03/05/politics/obama-drones-cia/index.html?hpt=us_c1

Will it read your Miranda rights first? Or is this strictly a shoot first and ask questions later thing?

Kevin L. Keegan

Senator Rand Paul (R, Kentucky) has been conducting a one-man filibuster to draw attention to this. He says his goal is to get a statement from the President on the subject. Proscription lists were a major part of the downfall of the Roman Republic, and the cause of the death of Cicero, whose head was displayed in the Forum.

[Apologies: I earlier said ‘conscription’ which is an entirely different discussion. Mr. Heinlein always said that a nation that needed conscripts to defend it wasn’t worth defending. Machiavelli believed that Republics that did not employ conscription probably would not survive. Having the children of rich and poor alike involved in war affects whether or not a republic goes to war. The US ‘solution’ to this for most of its lifetime was to keep the Marines a voluntary organization and employ the Marines when it was an operation short of war. The Corps was kept rather small.  Marines and the Navy belonged to the President, but if you needed to involve the Army that was the Department of War and required Congressional action.  Conscription was needed in preparation for actual wars, as in the leadup to WW II. But it’s another discussion.

Senator Paul was discussing drones and proscription lists, and unlike most filibusters, what I heard in random trips to the live broadcast was relevant to the subject.]

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Auschwitz – This is fascinating

How’s this for controversy…

The following is a copy of an article written by Spanish writer Sebastian Vilar Rodriguez and published in a Spanish newspaper on Jan. 15, 2008. It doesn’t take much imagination to extrapolate the message to the rest of Europe – and possibly to the rest of the world.

REMEMBER AS YOU READ — IT WAS IN A SPANISH PAPER

Date: Tue. 15 January 2008

ALL EUROPEAN LIFE DIED IN AUSCHWITZ By Sebastian Vilar Rodrigez

I walked down the street in Barcelona , and suddenly discovered a terrible truth – Europe died in Auschwitz … We killed six million Jews and replaced them with 20 million Muslims. In Auschwitz we burned a culture, thought, creativity, talent. We destroyed the chosen people, truly chosen, because they produced great and wonderful people who changed the world.

The contribution of these people is felt in all areas of life: science, art, international trade, and above all, as the conscience of the world. These are the people we burned.

And under the pretense of tolerance, and because we wanted to prove to ourselves that we were cured of the disease of racism, we opened our gates to 20 million Muslims, who brought us stupidity and ignorance, religious extremism and lack of tolerance, crime and poverty, due to an unwillingness to work and support their families with pride.

They have blown up our trains and turned our beautiful Spanish cities into the third world, drowning in filth and crime.

Shut up in the apartments they receive free from the government, they plan the murder and destruction of their naive hosts.

And thus, in our misery, we have exchanged culture for fanatical hatred, creative skill for destructive skill, intelligence for backwardness and superstition.

We have exchanged the pursuit of peace of the Jews of Europe and their talent for a better future for their children, their determined clinging to life because life is holy, for those who pursue death, for people consumed by the desire for death for themselves and others, for our children and theirs.

What a terrible mistake was made by miserable Europe.

The Global Islamic population is approximately 1,200,000,000; that is ONE BILLION TWO HUNDRED MILLION or 20% of the world’s population. They have received the following NobelPrizes:

Literature:

1988 – Najib Mahfooz

Peace:

1978 – Mohamed Anwar El-Sadat

1990 – Elias James Corey

1994 – Yaser Arafat:

1999 – Ahmed Zewai

Economics:

(zero)

Physics:

(zero)

Medicine:

1960 – Peter Brian Medawar

1998 – Ferid Mourad

TOTAL: 7 SEVEN

The Global Jewish population is approximately 14,000,000; that is FOURTEEN MILLION or about 0.02% of the world’s population. They have received the following Nobel Prizes:

Literature:

1910 – Paul Heyse

1927 – Henri Bergson

1958 – Boris Pasternak

1966 – Shmuel Yosef Agnon

1966 – Nelly Sachs

1976 – Saul Bellow

1978 – Isaac Bashevis Singer

1981 – Elias Canetti

1987 – Joseph Brodsky

1991 – Nadine Gordimer World

Peace:

1911 – Alfred Fried

1911 – Tobias Mi chae l Carel Asser

1968 – Rene Cassin

1973 – Henry Kissinger

1978 – Menachem Begin

1986 – Elie Wiesel

1994 – Shimon Peres

1994 – Yitzhak Rabin

Physics:

1905 – Adolph Von Baeyer

1906 – Henri Moissan

1907 – Albert Abraham Michelson

1908 – Gabriel Lippmann

1910 – Otto Wallach

1915 – Richard Willstaetter

1918 – Fritz Haber

1921 – Albert Einstein

1922 – Niels Bohr

1925 – James Franck

1925 – Gustav Hertz

1943 – Gustav Stern

1943 – George Charles de Hevesy

1944 – Isidor Issac Rabi

1952 – Felix Bloch

1954 – Max Born

1958 – Igor Tamm

1959 – Emilio Segre

1960 – Donald A. Glaser

1961 – Robert Hofstadter

1961 – Melvin Calvin

1962 – Lev Davidovich Landau

1962 – Max Ferdinand Perutz

1965 – Richard Phillips Feynman

1965 – Julian Schwinger

1969 – Murray Gell-Mann

1971 – Dennis Gabor

1972 – William Howard Stein

1973 – Brian David Josephson

1975 – Benjamin Mottleson

1976 – Burton Richter

1977 – Ilya Prigogine

1978 – Arno Allan Penzias

1978 – Peter L Kapitza

1979 – Stephen Weinberg

1979 – Sheldon Glashow

1979 – Herbert Charles Brown

1980 – Paul Berg

1980 – Walter Gilbert

1981 – Roald Hoffmann

1982 – Aaron Klug

1985 – Albert A. Hauptman

1985 – Jerome Karle

1986 – Dudley R. Herschbach

1988 – Robert Huber

1988 – Leon Lederman

1988 – Melvin Schwartz

1988 – Jack Steinberger

1989 – Sidney Altman

1990 – Jerome Friedman

1992 – Rudolph Marcus

1995 – Martin Perl

2000 – Alan J. Heeger

Economics:

1970 – Paul Anthony Samuelson

1971 – Simon Kuznets

1972 – Kenneth Joseph Arrow

1975 – Leonid Kantorovich

1976 – Milton Friedman

1978 – Herbert A. Simon

1980 – Lawrence Robert Klein

1985 – Franco Modigliani

1987 – Robert M. Solow

1990 – Harry Markowitz

1990 – Merton Miller

1992 – Gary Becker

1993 – Robert Fogel

Medicine:

1908 – Elie Metchnikoff

1908 – Paul Erlich

1914 – Robert Barany

1922 – Otto Meyerhof

1930 – Karl Landsteiner

1931 – Otto Warburg

1936 – Otto Loewi

1944 – Joseph Erlanger

1944 – Herbert Spencer Gasser

1945 – Ernst Boris Chain

1946 – Hermann Joseph Muller

1950 – Tadeus Reichstein

1952 – Selman Abraham Waksman

1953 – Hans Krebs

1953 – Fritz Albert Lipmann

1958 – Joshua Lederberg

1959 – Arthur Kornberg

1964 – Konrad Bloch

1965 – Francois Jacob

1965 – Andre Lwoff

1967 – George Wald

1968 – Marshall W. Nirenberg

1969 – Salvador Luria

1970 – Julius Axelrod

1970 – Sir Bernard Katz

1972 – Gerald Maurice Edelman

1975 – Howard Martin Temin

1976 – Baruch S. Blumberg

1977 – Roselyn Sussman Yalow

1978 – Daniel Nathans

1980 – Baruj Benacerraf

1984 – Cesar Milstein

1985 – Mi chae l Stuart Brown

1985 – Joseph L. Goldstein

1986 – Stanley Cohen [& Rita Levi-Montalcini]

1988 – Gertrude Elion

1989 – Harold Varmus

1991 – Erwin Neher

1991 – Bert Sakmann

1993 – Richard J. Roberts

1993 – Phillip Sharp

1994 – Alfred Gilman

1995 – Edward B. Lewis

1996 – Lu RoseIacovino

TOTAL: 129!

The Jews are NOT promoting brain washing children in military training camps, teaching them how to blow themselves up and cause maximum deaths of Jews and other non Muslims. The Jews don’t hijack planes, nor kill athletes at the Olympics, or blow themselves up in German restaurants. There is NOT one single Jew who has destroyed a church. There is NOTa single Jew who protests by killing people.

The Jews don’t traffic slaves, nor have leaders calling for Jihad and death to all the Infidels.

Perhaps they should consider investing more in standard education and less in blaming the Jews for all their problems.

Muslims must ask ‘what can they do for humankind’ before they demand that humankind respects them.

Regardless of your feelings about the crisis between Israel and the Palestinians and Arab neighbors, even if you believe there is more culpability on Israel’s part, the following two sentences really says it all:

"If the Arabs put down their weapons today, there would be no more violence. If the Jews put down their weapons today, there would be no more Israel ." Benjamin Netanyahu

General Eisenhower warned us it is a matter of history that when the Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces, General Dwight Eisenhower, found the victims of the death camps he ordered all possible photographs to be taken, and for the German people from surrounding villages to be ushered through the camps and even made to bury the dead. He did this because he said in words to this effect:

‘Get it all on record now – get the films – get the witnesses – because somewhere down the road of history someone will get up and say that this never happened’

Recently, the UK debated whether to remove The Holocaust from its school curriculum because it ‘offends’ the Muslim population which claims it never occurred. It is not removed as of yet. However, this is a frightening portent of the fear that is gripping the world and how easily each country is giving into it.

It is now more than 60 years after the Second World War in Europe ended. This e-mail is being sent as a memorial chain, in memory of the 6 million Jews, 20 million Russians, 10 million Christians, and 1,900 Catholic priests who were murdered, raped, burned, starved, beaten, experimented on and humiliated while the German people looked the other way.

Now, more than ever, with Iran , among others, claiming the Holocaust to be ‘a myth,’ it is imperative to make sure the world never forgets.

This e-mail is intended to reach 400 million people. Be a link in the memorial chain and help distribute this around the world.

How many years will it be before the attack on the World Trade Center ‘NEVER HAPPENED’ because it offends some Muslim in the United States? Do not just delete this message; it will take only a minute to pass this along.

I was not fully in favor of building the Holocaust Museum on the Washington Mall, but now I wonder if there will not be pressure to close it.

 

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Hello Jerry,

I thought you might enjoy this piece of security theatre reported in the Washington Post:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/travel/new-tsa-rules-allowing-small-knives-on-planes-draw-fire-from-some-sept-11-family-members/2013/03/06/2bd2e188-86be-11e2-a80b-3edc779b676f_story.html

The best part of the article:

………Burlingame suspects the TSA decided to allow folding knives because they are hard to spot. She said the agency’s employees “have a difficult time seeing these knives on X-ray screening, which lowers their performance testing rates.”

Stay well,

J

P.S. please don’t publish my name/email with this article as I fly a lot and would prefer not to incur the wrath of the TSA.

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The TSA says it cannot hire new gropers to harass travelers at the airports and will have fewer gropers working at any given time; therefore, we will have delays at airports while we wait to be groped.  This is all blamed on the "sequester crisis" that was Obama’s brainchild, but this President blames the GOP.  However, we note — once again — more activities at TSA that do not pass the common sense test. 

<.>

The U.S. Transportation Security Administration will let people carry small pocketknives onto passenger planes for the first time since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, along with golf clubs, hockey sticks and plastic Wiffle Ball-style bats.

</>

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-03-05/tsa-will-permit-knives-golf-clubs-on-u-s-planes.html

I don’t think I need to delve too deeply into that point; I’ll say that I think it may become a fund raiser for TSA.  What I mean is, allowing these items increases the likelihood of an "incident", which will result in much crying by certain sections of the general public.  The mother figure or father figure bureaucrats will come in and request more funding to deal with the new bogey men. 

<.>

The impending sequester did not prevent the Transportation Security Administration (TSA)  from acting in late February to seal a $50-million deal to purchase new uniforms for its agents–uniforms that will be partly manufactured in Mexico.

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http://cnsnews.com/news/article/tsa-sealed-50-million-sequester-eve-deal-buy-new-uniforms

So the TSA managed to arrange a bailout for the Mexican gropers’ garment industry to save the TSA from unfashionable uniforms.  But, I realize that point will not mean much to most people; so let’s add some context and put this into perspective, shall we?

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Under their new collective bargaining agreement, Transportation Security Administration officers get to spend more taxpayer money on their uniforms every year than a United States Marine Corps lieutenant can spend in a lifetime.

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http://washingtonexaminer.com/tsa-uniform-perks-more-expensive-than-marine-corps/article/2513111

One has to ask just what leverage the employees at TSA have to secure such nonsensical agreements?  I took a course in labor relations — specifically on bargaining and negotiation — and I’m wondering what these employees offer that warrants such an expense by the management?  After all, we’re talking about people who could not get a job at Starbucks or Walmart, that have no law enforcement training, and are, basically, unskilled workers who grope people and rummage through their undergarments while harassing a number of people they may meet in the course of the day.  What value could they possibly bring that we cannot just hire someone else with fewer benefits and lower salaries? 

While writing this email, another thought struck me.  We have unions for several federal entities; what would happen if we had unions in the military? 😉

—–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

: Probably not funny, but…

I suppose there is a logical reason that TSA settled on 2.36 inches as the dividing point for allowable and unallowable carry-on knives. However, NBC didn’t report why this precise-to-two-decimal-places measurement was chosen, and that makes it seem rather silly. You or your knife-savvy readers may be able to explain — is this just a conversion from metric length (where the metric number is nice and round)? Or an industry standard blade in some respect?

It’s not the most helpful newswriting, that’s for sure.

–Mike

http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/tsa-allow-passengers-carry-small-knives-planes-1C8700194

According to the TSA, passengers will be able to carry-on knives that are less than 2.36 inches long and less than one-half inch wide. Larger knives, and those with locking blades and molding handles, will continue to be prohibited, as will razor blades and box cutters.

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We have a number of comments on correlation and causation. Here are some of them:

correlation

From the time (long ago!) when I studied at the Helsinki University of Technology (now part of the Aalto University) I remember an even better (because simpler) example of point 3 in ‘The Causes of Correlation’: At least in Finland, there’s a clear correlation between ice cream consumption and deaths through drowning, with both peaking in summer. So which causes which? Neither; what happens is that warm weather makes people eat more ice cream and also go swimming and boating much more, increasing their opportunities to drown.

Frej Wasastjerna

Correlation and causation

Dr. Pournelle,

Thanks for publishing the essay on statistics, and to the author. I’m convinced (again) that I should have spent more time on the subject in school.

Perhaps apropos:

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/03/climate-change-volcanoes/

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamestaylor/2013/03/06/as-carbon-dioxide-levels-continue-to-rise-global-temperatures-are-not-following-suit/

http://arstechnica.com/science/2013/02/ice-age-chicken-and-egg-did-warming-precede-carbon-dioxide-rise/

I think that the lesson I might take is that global temperatures seem to correlate more with volcanic activity than to anthropogenic release of CO2. But it would be very important to pay attention to the details of the case studies before making such a conclusion.

-d

Subject: Postscript on correlation

This is too good.  By sheer coincidence today’s Dilbert (6 Mar 2013) addresses the problem of causation vs. correlation:

http://www.dilbert.com/

Mike Flynn

Here is a paper by Brian Joiner on lurking variables in correlation, anent the comment that to develop a causal hypothesis from a correlation, one needs information from outside the correlation.

http://www.claremontmckenna.edu/pages/faculty/MONeill/Math152/Handouts/Joiner.pdf

Mike Flynn

Correlation and Causation

In the strict logical sense, correlation does not imply causation. I admit that in general parlance the word "imply" has a looser meaning than that.

To use correlation as a starting point for causation, one needs two things; the correlation (finding of which can be done statistically) and a plausible mechanism by which the causation could be achieved. Ideally, the proposed mechanism should be testable. Testability is not the case for the correlation between CO2 and global warming, at least in a practical sense and at current CO2 levels. IMHO neither is the case for the correlation between saturated fat intake and cardiovascular disease. Testing this in humans is impractical due to ethical considerations and far too high time cost, and there is no plausible mechanism so the hypothesis (high fat ruins your heart) fails on both grounds.

I’ve used an imperfect and somewhat silly/OTT example of the "correlation implies causation" fallacy: There is a strong correlation between the number of men in American shopping malls (at least in the northern parts) wearing white-and-red suits, big belts, big boots, fat suits underneath the red, long white wigs and fake beards – and the amount of snowfall outside. Do the men in red suits cause the snow?

Regards

Ian Campbell

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The Professors’ Big Stage – NYTimes.com

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/06/opinion/friedman-the-professors-big-stage.html?hp&_r=0

Tom Friedman’s NYT article on Massively Open Online Courses. Friedman tends to always be very excited by technology and the changes it affords us. Some quotes I like from the article:

Institutions of higher learning must move, as the historian Walter Russell Mead puts it, from a model of “time served” to a model of “stuff learned.” Because increasingly the world does not care what you know. Everything is on Google. The world only cares, and will only pay for, what you can do with what you know.

and

We have to get beyond the current system of information and delivery — the professorial “sage on the stage” and students taking notes, followed by a superficial assessment, to one in which students are asked and empowered to master more basic material online at their own pace, and the classroom becomes a place where the application of that knowledge can be honed through lab experiments and discussions with the professor.

and my favorite…

We demand that plumbers and kindergarten teachers be certified to do what they do, but there is no requirement that college professors know how to teach.

Having matriculated at a post-secondary school that is chartered as a research institution I can attest to the fact that a goodly portion of the professors I encountered could not teach.

John Harlow

The original California higher education master plan – I worked on it as a consultant – understood this and mandated that the California State Colleges be teaching institutions and not be able to grant advanced degrees. The University of California would have a limited number of campuses – Berkeley, UCLA, Santa Barbara, and Santa Cruz – and be primarily graduate schools although they would have limited undergraduate classes. Naturally the professor unions got the State Golleges first the right to give master’s, then PhD, then call themselves Universities… With the result that few of them can teach well, and they are generally lousy at research also. The big name UC campuses do have good grad schools but as they begin offering ethnicity and diversity higher degrees they sink into the muck of having undergraduate classes taught by uninterested grad students, and research degrees in subjects that have no market. And the beat goes on.

One can get a decent education without the awful classes with their crippling debts, but the universities still have the credentials monopolies.

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"North Korea is a major threat because of the massed artillery along the border. The location of most of the guns is well known and plotted by both US and South Korean gunners and pilots."

A couple of sentences, while both true, are juxtaposed in such a way that would seem the threat of the artillery is mitigated by the knowledge of their location for counter-battery/attack. This would be foolhardy to accept at face value. The NK artillery placement is sophisticated with all of the locations hardened and dug in – mostly in tunnels with multiple firing positions (not to mention deceptive false positions/guns). The guns can be run out, fired, and retired back into to the tunnels and behind blast doors. Don’t get me wrong, I’m in no way indicating that these positions are impervious to US & SK counter activities. However, there is no possible way to stop a NK first strike, nor any way to successfully insure a 100% neutralization of the NK artillery/rocket/mortar capability quickly (i.e. initial counter-battery/attack). At best, incremental reduction of the NK capabilities would require some hours, maybe as long as 96 (my own semi-educated guess). In the meantime, significant death and destruction will be dealt civilians and infrastructure to Seoul and surrounding areas. Make no mistake, the NKs will lose the complete military exchange but the first sentence of the above quote stands.

s/f

Couv

David Couvillon

Colonel, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, Retired.; Former Governor of Wasit Province, Iraq; Righter of Wrongs; Wrong most of the time; Distinguished Expert, TV remote control; Chef de Hot Dog Excellance; Avoider of Yard Work

Of course, which is why deterrence is the strategy; when the time comes one expects China and South Korea to arrange the denouement. It’s not really a US affair.

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Re: _Stalin’s Curse: Battling for Communism in War and Cold War_.

On Mar 4, 2013, at 9:11 PM, Roland Dobbins wrote:

> <http://www.amazon.com/Stalins-Curse-Battling-Communism-Cold/dp/0307269159>

Kindle link:

<http://www.amazon.com/Stalins-Curse-Battling-Communism-ebook/dp/B00BG73FTE/>

Roland Dobbins

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NORKS, a few words on education, and more on Correlation and Causation

View 765 Tuesday, March 05, 2013

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Sometimes I remember the strangest things. More than fifty years ago there was a Western radio drama, Gunsmoke, starring William Conrad as Matt Dillon and Parley Bear as Chester. In one of the episodes young would-be gunfighter came to town. He announced that he was going to kill Matt Dillon in a fair fight so as to gain his reputation and make a lot of money hiring out in a range war. Dillon didn’t take him seriously, but the kid kept insisting, and finally as Dillon was coming out of the Longbranch he shouted some threat. There was gunfire. Dillon said “Sorry kid, this time I believed you.”

Norks threaten to repudiate Korean War ceasefire on 11 Mar 2013, shut down hotline at Panmunjom.

<http://apnews.myway.com/article/20130305/DA4QTUEG2.html>

Roland Dobbins

North Korea is a major threat because of the massed artillery along the border. The location of most of the guns is well known and plotted by both US and South Korean gunners and pilots.

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Carpenter Avenue School, the local public school in Studio City, is well known as an exceptionally good school, and was even before it became a charter school. Given the general level of competence of schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District, Carpenter certainly is exceptional, although we didn’t think it sufficiently so for our kids even though it’s only two blocks away. We sent our boys to St. Francis, but that’s another story.

The big story is that parents are gaming the system to get their children into Carpenter, falsifying their addresses so as to appear to be in the school’s district, and thus flooding the system so that people who do live in Studio City can’t get their kids in the school. The local talk radio hosts are making much of this and debating whether the parents doing this should be ashamed of themselves.

Given that the entire LA Unified School District is a fraud, taking between $7 and $8 thousand dollars per student and achieving a dropout rate greater than 40% and an illiteracy rate approaching 50%; that LAUSD permitted a teacher caught on video feeding his pupils cookies frosted with his own semen to retire rather than be fired and continues to pay his pension as he awaits trial in jail, that in ten years LAUSD has fired fewer than 50 teachers for incompetence, and is generally awful, one could make the case that the school system is a fraud, a giant con game, and questioning the ethics of those who chose to con the con men is a joke.

Of course Los Angeles isn’t alone here. The 1983 National Commission on Education concluded that “If a foreign government had imposed this system of education on the United States, we would rightly deem it an act of war.” The national school system hasn’t improved since that time. Most state budgets spend more on education than on anything else, and with a few exceptions it’s all pretty well fraudulent. If someone offered you $750,000 a year to educate 100 students, do you think you could manage to do that? Most of us certainly could, providing each student with a fully loaded iPad in the bargain. But of course that’s idle speculation. We aren’t going to reform the school system. The only chance your kids have is for you to game the system, or avoid it altogether.

Begin by making sure they can read before the go to school. By read I mean be able to read nonsense words. Any kid who can read can read “’Twas brillig and the slithy toves did gyre and gimbel in the wabe, all mimsy were the borogroves, and the mome raths outgrabe.” Not many five or six year olds will have the foggiest notion of what the means unless you have been reading to them from Alice (or they have been reading it themselves: six year old kids can in fact read Alice, but be prepared for a lot of pesky questions about what’s going on). Any kid (of any age) who can’t read that sentence can’t read. They may be “reading at grade level” but that usually does not mean they can read. If you can read English you can read long words you do not understand (or which cannot be understood, such as deamy and precognosis). Those who can’t read those words can’t read English, and you might be astonished at how many twelve year old children can’t read them.

Many studies have shown that if you can’t read by the beginning of fourth grade, you are not likely to have any career in the technical subjects; you’ll just get too far behind before you get into high school. I suppose that is disputable – surely one can find examples for whom it was not true – but it’s true enough, given that the remedy is simple. For generations English upper and middle class children were taught to read at age 4 by nannies or their parents, and most English public schools expected the kids to be able to read when they arrived. I don’t think those kids were particularly better protoplasm than ours. But I’ve said this often enough before. If you want to know more, http://www.jerrypournelle.com/OldReading.html.

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Our small discussion of correlation and causation yesterday impelled Mike Flynn, who thinks a lot about this sort of thing – he’s a quality control expert, which means he is very much concerned with advanced studies in statistical inference – to write a short essay. It may tell you more about causation and correlation than you really wanted to know, but those who actually have to deal with such matters ought to know this sort of thing at this level:

The Causes of Correlation

Regarding recent comments on correlation and causation, a few observations:

1. If X causes Y, then X and Y will be correlated IF a wide enough range of X is examined. Otherwise, it is possible for X and Y to appear uncorrelated.

2. If Y causes X, there will likewise be a correlation, if a wide enough range of Y is examined; but researchers may be fooled into supposing that it is X that causes Y.

Example: in the famous case of the Storks of Oldenburg, an excellent correlation obtained between the population of Oldenburg, Germany, during the 1930s and the number of storks observed each year. Do storks bring babies? No, babies bring storks: as the town grew, more houses were built, resulting in more chimneys, and the European stork likes to build its nest in chimneys. So, more nesting places.

3. If Z causes both X and Y, there will be a correlation between X and Y even though there is no causal connection whatsoever.

Example: in a chemical reaction low process yields (Y) was correlated with high pressure in the vessel (X). The suggestion to increase yields by lowering the pressure was met with scorn because: there was an impurity in the raw material (Z) that interfered with the reaction and lowered yields AND also caused frothing in the vessel. The standard operation procedure instructed the operator to combat frothing by increasing the pressure to hold down the foam. So low yields and high pressure were associated, but manipulating one would not change the other. Both were effects, not causes in this context.

4. If X and Y are both on a trend or cycle during the same time period, the respective time series will correlate even if there is no causal connection.

Examples:

* Columbia river salmon runs go up and down in roughly eleven year cycles. So do sunspots on the sun. Do sunspots cause salmon? Do salmon cause sunspots? Is there a lurking Z that makes salmon eager to spawn AND causes the sun to boil?

* An example I used to use in training classes. The % of women participating in the labor force (X) has been increasing smoothly since the 1880s. The % of foreign cars sold domestically (Y) was increasing from 1955 to 1990. The correlation between X and Y was in the high 90% range. Does this mean that we can save Detroit by getting women back in the kitchens? Or only that two trends will always correlate?

* If global temperatures are increasing and atmospheric CO2 is increasing during the same time frame, they will correlate.

5. Coincidence. There was a longstanding correlation between the size of the universe and the size of my suits. Space was expanding, and so was I. But if I lost weight, would the universe begin to contract? Hemlines and stock prices is another classic example.

Example: Science Can Tell If You’re A Racist Just By Looking At You http://wmbriggs.com/blog/?p=7407

6. The Unabomber Effect in Multiple Correlation. When the Unabomber taught math at Berkeley he said that given seven independent variables (X1,…, X7) you can fit any finite set of data (Y). It’s only a matter of finding the right coefficients. (It might not survive new data; but then you simply re-analyze and come up with a new set of coefficients and, presto, you get another fit.) This could become an enormous problem with Big Data and automated data mining and adjustment.

Actually it is already an enormous problem with Big Data and automated data mining. But you know that. Statistical dragnets can find a lot of interesting correlations. Treat them like hypotheses to be tested and you may learn something. And every now and then an unexpected correlation does lead to some real discoveries, which is why keeping careful case histories is so important to medicine.

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