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Monday  July 6, 2009

This is a "military coup"?

*http://tinyurl.com/may4n2 

*

"The leftist Zelaya was ousted in a military-led coup the same day he planned to follow through with a referendum that the courts and the congress had ruled illegal and that the military said it would not support. Lawmakers voted to strip Zelaya of his powers and named Micheletti as provisional president.

The provisional government maintains that the military action against Zelaya was backed by a court order and that arrest warrants have been issued against him for violating the constitution."

I'm having a hard time understanding why the international community as a whole is so upset about this and having an even harder time understanding why they seem to be almost desperate in characterizing this as a "military coup." According to all reports both the legislative and judicial branches voted to kick Zelaya out for violating the constitution. Which on the surface appears to be the truth. The military kicked him out of the country at the behest of the courts and appears to still be taking orders from the civilian government. Perhaps some procedural issues might have been skipped?

I must admit my snarky side feels the reason everyone is upset is that they don't like the idea of a government that takes its constitution *seriously*. :)

Arondell Hoch

==========

Printed Media Failing?

Dear Jerry,

I've been wondering why the printed media is failing all over the place. Certainly it is pretty plain why the newspapers are failing. It doesn't take much to notice that they're doing political indoctrination. Americans don't take too well to that and it is showing with the sharp drop in newspaper subscriptions and purchases.

But also magazines used to be wildly popular for a long time. What happened there? I suspect that it's nothing more than a combination of three things:

1) Too much competition. Where there used to be one, two or three there is often five to ten now. Especially in the mindless category such as supermarket checkout line stuff.

2) Far too high a price - since they aren't doing well they're still trying to use the old technique of paying for publishing with the cover prices and making their profits from falling advertising dollars. Obviously that has a certain failure point as advertisers are running away from the increasing costs and failing effect of such advertising.

3) Increasing use of old materials instead of correct reporting/writing etc. And this is probably the main reason I can see.

What do you think?

Tom Kunich

=============

Subject: Trooping the Colour

Hi Jerry.

As a follow-up on Petronius' observations on the Trooping the Colour, previous years have not necessarily been incident free. I remembered this incident from when I was a kid, and was able to look it up:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/
stories/june/13/newsid_2512000/2512333.stm 

...which further highlights Petronius' point, the trust put by the Queen in the troops. Note that previous incidents seen to have come from the crowds, not the troops.

Cheers,

Mike Casey

Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

===========

Hope you had a great Fourth. I have to limit my reading your site

because you and your correspondents continue to come up with interesting subjects that drain my time.

A couple of quick comments on current topics.

Census: The grandfather of the census (excluding Biblical references) was the domesday book, which was interesting in a couple of ways. First, the purpose was to find out what could be taxed and how much of it there was, and secondly, the recording was verified by twelve upstanding men from each area, who were to judge the accuracy and report the same. That eventually gave rise to the twelve juror system. It is not out of the question that the results of a current census would be used in a similar fashion to justify taxation.

Return to the moon. I find the bringing of politics in by one correspondent a little odd, since the President who informed the public that we were going there was Kennedy, from a family of Democrats. I realize that times change, but I am much more inclined to assign responsibility of the current mess to the excesses of NASA than to any administration.

I do remember, when the Apollo missions were going on, the news media kept cutting back coverage with each mission. After the last mission, I distinctly remember thinking that we wouldn't be back to the moon in person for many many years, and perhaps forever. I hope that my gut feeling of the time was wrong.

Power spikes. In the past I spent way too much time on usenet, debating whole house surge suppressors with a character called w_tom. I'll have to admit that even though I have had fantastic results protecting computer systems with Isobars, and the units from Best Power (I distributed at one point), I was on the short end of the argument most of the time. Whole house surge suppressors are relatively cheap and in most cases are a far better solution than individual UPSs or surge strips. The only area where I felt comfortable winning the debates was when a direct or near lightning strike had occurred. In such cases, individual protection works better.

A link that gives me some concern, as I have had similar thoughts myself-

<http://www.infowars.com/celente-predicts
-revolution-food-riots-tax-rebellions-by-2012/

===========

Inferno

Good Morning Jerry-

I'm not in the habit of sending emails such as this one to authors and pundits. However, I wanted to drop you a line to tell you that I (started and) finished Inferno yesterday, and it was easily the best piece of literature I've read since reading Starship Troopers and 1984 many years ago. It's a shame it took me 33 years to find this book! I have Escape From Hell in my TBR pipeline, and I look forward to reading it as well.

I plan to send Niven a similar email :)

Thank you for the good work you produce. I read your blog regularly, and it's comforting to see there's some sanity left in this world.

Respectfully, Andy Orlando

Thanks for the kind words.

===========

Some of us knew this all along, of course.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/
wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/01/
AR2000070104217.html?hpid=topnews 

 Roland Dobbins

===========

Your website sucks

Man, you gotta do something. Your website is so 90's.

Install a wiki and a forum. There are so many free packages to choose from and I'm sure you can find someone to install it for you for free.

I'm guessing its because you are OLD and INCAPABLE of moving forward. This is the 21st century man, get a move on it.

Signed anonymous, of course. And sent, I presume,  from an anonymizing web site. It ended up in junk mail, and I am not sure how I happened to notice it, but it made me curious: why would someone take the trouble to send this? Leaving out whether or not I am old and incapable, I certainly do not have the time to maintain a free forum web site, nor do I see any real need for one: it's not as if there are not plenty of such sites out there.

I like to think that my selectivity is what makes the mail here more interesting. I try to keep the redundancy low and relevancy high. Ah, well. So long as the subscriptions keep coming in -- thanks to those who have renewed despite the economic gloom -- I'll keep this going more or less as it is. I may try a new home page design with the end of getting more people to have a look at VIEW and MAIL, but for just now I have a great deal of work to do, and that's low on the list.

And see below

====================d

 

 

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Tuesday,  July 7, 2009

String theory possibly useful for something, after all?

http://esciencenews.com/articles/
2009/07/06/physical.reality.string.
theory.demonstrated

--- Roland Dobbins

Interesting. It's the first I have heard of connecting string theory to reality. Of course it's not a test of a falsifiable prediction, but it's at least an analogy with observations.

===========

Note the emphasis on revenue-generation, instead of compliance with the law.

Note the emphasis on revenue-generation, instead of compliance with the law. In all these traffic-camera schemes create a perverse incentive to the states employing them, the interests of the state - i.e., in this failed age we inhabit, said interests apparently consisting solely of the making of money - are only served when the citizenry break the law.

<http://www.wtol.com/
Global/story.asp?S=10641049

The next phase will undoubtedly involve some sort of inducement such as re-zoning certain stretches of road for lower speed limits, while failing to post signs reflecting the change (remember, ignorance of the law isn't considered a valid defense). And now that the cameras will be used to check for valid auto insurance - never mind all the false positives the system will generate due to database errors and so forth - I'm sure the laws will be altered to make auto insurance more expensive/difficult to obtain, so as to increase the pool of violators who can be caught on camera and fined.

-- Roland Dobbins

There used to be lots of cartoons about small town motorcycle cops hiding behind billboards to catch speeders as they came into a whistle stop town. At one time I was Deputy Marshal of Carnation in the state of Washington; my fried Don Arnett was Marshal and he got the Mayor to deputize me. One of the things we were expected to do was to write at least one traffic ticket an evening, which was about enough to cover our pay. I did it for a lark, of course (and got some of the scenes for Red Heroin out of it).

Towns and small cities have often chosen traffic laws and parking tickets as revenue enhancements that don't raise taxes...

===========

Dark age 

Jerry,

How to know that you're entering a Dark Age:

As Mr. Heinlein said, "Vox populi, vox Dei" is usually translated as "My God! How did we get into this mess?"

Hence, the transition to a Dark age entails (this appears to be a necessary and sufficient condition, but may not be unique):

> "Come home with your shields, or on them" falls into disdain. Note that this applies to both the standing army and the militia (in the traditional sense). People who are not willing to take up arms in protection of their own lives (witness Virginia Tech), much less their property, their neighbors, or their personal liberty, are cattle, or prey, for whoever comes by with a weapon. Note: that's not an opinion; that's a definition. I'm certainly not the historian you are, and I've never gotten around to reading Gibbon, but what I have read (see above) confirms that Rome was pretty much disarmed before the Barbarians arrived. (Again, Mr. Heinlein: "Later, this custom declined. So did Rome.")

> "Bread and circuses" becomes the norm, rather than the exception. Any form of labor -- including intellectual labor -- which can be considered "too hard" is pursued by a decreasing minority, which eventually collapses under the weight of the non-productive majority. One reason, again not necessarily unique, is when the rewards for the extra labor become disproportionate to the effort.

> Barbarians are at the gates wanting to take the bread and circuses for themselves, or to deny them to others because they can't enjoy them. In the long run, this always involves the Barbarians taking the remaining bread by force from the cowed populace, leaving the survivors to starve.

IF the United States is and is to remain unique in history, the fact that 50% or so of the populace remains committed to the founder's principles must act to break this sequence of events. Historically, it has been insufficient for this to be accomplished purely through the polls, once a majority is able to vote for bread and circuses paid by the minority.

Anon

Well, 'tis not so dark as that. Yet.

==========

Subject: NSA plans massive, 65MW, $2bn data center in Utah

http://www.theregister.co.uk/
2009/07/03/new_nsa_data_center/ 

Tracy Walters, CISSP

That ought to get us into space. A data center in Utah.

 

OOPS! Thanks to reader Newbury

N.S.A not N.A.S.A   but don't feel bad. I mis-read the headline when I first saw it on The Register too!.

 Geoff

===========

Swedish example 

Dear Doctor Pournelle,

There's been a lot of talk over the past year about America becoming more like Sweden, that we can learn a lot from Sweden about everything from how to run health care to how to get rid of "bad banks", and so on.

Want to know one way the Swedes manage to do so much so economically (although taking 70 per cent of national income for government DOES help out a bit)?

Turns out that, very quietly, the Swedes have been running the world's first (that I know of) modern experiment in Unilateral Disarmament!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_armed_forces 

"At present Sweden can mobilize a force consisting of two mechanized battalions and some auxiliary companies after 90 days of mobilization." (N.B. A battalion is usually around 600 to 800 solders or marines.)

"Full mobilization is assumed to take one year (although no mobilization readiness exists).."

"...after rapid draw-downs in the mid-to-late 1990s, there are now more admirals and generals in the Swedish Armed Forces force than there are ships and artillery pieces, respectively, for them to command."

I am simply gobsmacked at those clever Swedes. How stunningly obvious. Yes, we just need to be more like them!

I doubt this is actually news to the pundits that push for the USA to be more like Sweden. It is, in all likelihood, one of the ways in which they would like the USA to be more like Sweden.

By the way, the number of military age male Muslims resident in Sweden is about five times the manpower of two battalions (and some auxiliary companies). As is also the birthrate of their community as compared to that of native Swedes.

I simply cannot wait to see how this experiment turns out! We do live in such Interesting Times!

Petronius

=========

Behavioral Geneticist Celebrates Twins, Scorns PC Science

Caught this in the New Scientist

http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/325/5936/27 

Behavioral Geneticist Celebrates Twins, Scorns PC Science Constance Holden

Twins researcher Thomas Bouchard spoke with Science at the Behavior Genetics Association meeting last month; his comments have been edited for clarity and brevity. Last month, the Behavior Genetics Association held its annual meeting in Minneapolis, home of the world-famous Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart. Attendees took the occasion to honor psychologist Thomas Bouchard, the man who started it all. Bouchard, 71, is retiring after 40 years at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, and has moved to Steamboat Springs, Colorado.

Bouchard spoke with Science at the meeting; his comments have been edited for clarity and brevity.

Q: What got you into twin studies?

TB: I was teaching the psychology of individual differences, and in 1979, two different people put a copy in my mailbox of a story about twins reared apart and their similarities when they met. [These were the "Jim twins," Jim Springer and Jim Lewis, who had been separated at birth and reunited at age 39. Both married women named Linda, divorced, and remarried women named Betty. They named their sons James Allan and James Alan, respectively, and both had dogs named Toy.] They sounded interesting, so I asked a few of my colleagues to help me study them. We ended up studying twins reared apart—126 pairs including 74 pairs of identical twins—for 20 years. [The twin study wound down in 2000.] I found that I loved working with twins. They're still amazing and a major mystery to me.

Q: What were attitudes toward behavioral genetics in the early years of your career?

TB: In graduate school at UC [the University of California] Berkeley, I was reading a book edited by psychiatrist D. D. Jackson on the etiology of schizophrenia. The first chapter, by a geneticist, was on twin studies. Then Jackson refuted it all with just the kind of crap you hear now against twin studies. He said families are the cause of schizophrenia. I remember saying in a graduate seminar, "Most of this stuff [in Jackson's argument] is junk"—I crawled out of the seminar room a bloody pulp. The reaction [from seminar members] was my first absolutely clear-cut demonstration that psychologists believed correlation is causation, ... and many still do.

In the '70s, when I was teaching research by [IQ researcher Arthur] Jensen and [twin researcher Francis] Galton, people picketed me, called me a racist, tried to get me fired. The progressive student association sent members in to ask hostile questions. ... So I put a tape recorder on the podium and said: "I'm going to tape my lectures." I never heard from them again. They knew what they were saying was nonsense and I would be able to prove it. <snip>

Twin studies are a key data source in determining what is and is not inherited.

============

On Web Design

Dr. Pournelle,

It was three lines of messaging from someone who used his thumbs. Very little effort, and motivated by vandalism, I suppose. I never understood crank phone calls or insults shouted out car windows, either, but this kind of thing is fairly common for anyone with a publicized e-mail address. Don't print the next one, or the terrorists have won!

-d

Nah. Actually the message was in trash and it's only by chance that I saw it at all, and idle curiosity drove me to wonder why someone would bother. I never have time simply to devil people about things.

At some point I probably should do a web redesign, but if I do, the changes will be nominal. Many have written to comment favorably on how fast this place loads, and while a few seem to prefer a white background, many like my "parchment" and some like it a lot. As to chronological vs. blogological order, I don't intend to change that. This is a day book. Similarly, I don't intend to change my practice of only publishing selected mail with comments, and not allowing open comments from others. I seldom edit mail.

This site takes more of my time and attention than perhaps shows, but I don't think of too many ways to improve that with technology. Most of the time is taken reading and writing, and I can't automate any of that.

Thanks to subscribers I can afford to take the time for this.

=============

Nasa's Future

From July 2(catching up)

And if the regulations get too bad, the race to space will move to....Costa Rica, a place which appreciates the gringo dollar and will not burden it's deliverers with paperwork.

Moreover, it's closer to the equator!

Geoff

-- Please let me know if anything I say offends you. I may wish to offend you again in the future.

Tux says: "Be regular. Eat cron flakes."

===========

speed traps

Now that the state is broke, I expect the local cops to re-discover speed traps. Yuk.

I watched the Sunnyvale cops ignore two hispanics in two different cars run a red right right in front of them. If my wife had not stopped they would have creamed us. It was near a bunch of bars, they were probably drunk. A few weeks earlier, I get pulled over, a middle aged white guy in a minivan, for not signaling a lane change on El Camino. I've noticed similar pull overs in the past weeks. Seems to me, they are going for the easy, non-dangerous collars.

Phil Tharp Vreelin Eng. Inc.

As I said above it's a time honored practice, and heck, I'd rather soak the speeders than pay more taxes myself...  I think I am kidding but not a lot.

At one time I would have said that laws were to be obeyed, but there are so many laws now that it's pretty well impossible to obey the all. You have to sort of pick and choose and hope the cops aren't watching...

And of course the police will always choose to stop those who aren't likely to give them problems. It was not always like that. When I was young the local sheriff and his men understood that their purpose was to keep the peace. But that was in another country.

 

For a PDF copy of A Step Farther Out:

 

 

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Wednesday, July 8, 2009

GAO report on contract guards at Federal facilities et al

Dear Jerry:

This big lead off story this morning was the fact that GAO inspectors were able to smuggle bomb components past the contract guards at several government buildings. I was in the security business for more than 20 years and I started as a Captain inspecting guard posts. IMO contract guards should NEVER be used to protect any sensitive facility, government or private. This is a military function, plain and simple, requiring that kind of social commitment. What the GAO discovered was a lack of required training (with records faked in one case) and unmotivated personnel who were unable and sometimes unwilling to simply pay attention to their duties. Standing a post is one of the most boring jobs in the world and this is how people fall down on the job and get into trouble; they have no sense of mission. It's simply a job. I am sure the ongoing Congressional hearing today will be replete with expressions of shock and outrage, but this is simply posturing. The problem, as always, is lack of money and personnel to ensure that the post orders are obeyed and the standards for training upheld. Actually the GAO report is very timely. Usually there has to be some sort of tragedy involving a loss of life or major destruction or both to get this kind of attention. Maybe something will be done to finally correct the poor security corporate culture but I am not hopeful. I'm also glad I got out of the business.

On another note, I see this morning that James T. Davis has been demoted from the dubious honor of being the first soldier killed in the Vietnam War. Davis was an Army Security Agency intercept operator killed in an ambush while working from a jeep on the ground. They named a Field Station after him. ASA always cited this to newbies as an example of how dangerous the jobs could be, but the truth is that we only lost 34 people KIA the entire war. We were among the most protected of soldiers because of the high costs of training and security clearance. The new honorees are a couple of guys killed while they were watching a movie in their quarters. Not that anyone really cares -- dead is dead --but there just seems something wrong about replacing Davis, who was actually doing something to support combat operations. ASA had soldiers in every unit, including Special Forces, so some were at high risk. But because of the way Davis was killed an entire aviation battalion was created to perform RDF missions in support of combat operations, along with two or three specialized companies. I was in one of them. It was boring work for the most part, but essential. We saved thousands of American and allied lives and received Unit Citations and Battle Stars. We had a strong sense of mission; that it was important work.

Sincerely,

Francis Hamit

=========

Subject: For everyone who's ever had their stuff mistreated by an airline...

Hi Jerry.

Subject line says it all. Big airline vs musicians. Last chapter has yet to be written:

http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/9012503.html 

and

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5YGc4zOqozo 

Cheers,

Mike Casey

Ouch!

=========

You write, of Sarah Palin:

<<I doubt that democracy has been well served by driving her from public life. I also doubt that this will be the last such incident. >>

I have no such doubts. I think it a good sign for the health of our democracy that someone with her lack of competence should find greener pastures in the private sector. As for this not being the last such incident; I hope so. As Give-'Em-Hell Harry Truman said, if you can't stand the heat, then stay out of the kitchen.

You compare Palin to Andrew Jackson. I think that is a disservice to Old Hickory. Like Palin, Jackson had faults; but unlike her, he had ability and a track record.

Sarah Palin wouldn't have been happy in Washington. Politics is not for beautiful people; it tends to put lines in people's faces and grey in their hair. Note Hillary Clinton. (For a more extreme example, consider Golda Meir.) Palin would be much happier in show-biz, but she can't stand Hollywood, so she'll have to settle for second best; punditry.

- paradoctor

I have a different view: if the only people we allow to become political figures are those so hardened that they can slough off the kind of treatment Palin has received -- can you imagine Letterman surviving making a similar joke about one of Obama's children? -- we will have only national leaders who can and will slough off such remarks. And if we routinely use "ethics inquiries" as part of the political tool box, we may later wish we had not. If you make the kitchen hot enough, only those who can stand a very great deal of heat will ever be eligible. That would eliminate about half the people who have become major American leaders.

As to track records, Palin had at least as great a track record as our current President. Her joke about being mayor of a small town having some similarity to being a community organizer had substance. I do not think her experience in foreign affairs was very great, but neither is that of Obama. Of course Biden has more experience than the other three candidates put together. I expect that gives great comfort.

Regarding her preferences, you must know her a lot better than I do. All I know is what I see on TV.

Perhaps it is as well that we have hardened veterans as our only viable candidates. Other nations have gone that route.  Some have regretted that. Perhaps it will work out well for us.

============

From another conference:

I know that Iran doesn't have the bite that Michael Jackson's nature & nurture problems have but this seemed to me of general interest and quite convincing (if one can set aside that well-informed Israelis are always saying persuasively clever things about the Middle East that need checking for the "what's-in-it-for-Israel?" factor).

http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/
heres-the-real-message-behind-irans
-disputed-election-20090706-daej.html 

Here's the real message behind Iran's disputed election a.. Ehud Ya'ari b.. July 7, 2009 WHAT we have witnessed in Iran in recent weeks is a military coup conducted through the ballot boxes. Policymakers and analysts have been talking for a long time about the possibilities and prospects of a change of regime in Iran. Well, I have news for everybody - change of regime in Iran has taken place.

The re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for a second term as Iran's President represents the emergence of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corp as a military dictatorship - pushing aside the clerics and mullahs. It's a new Iran in many ways. It's an Iran in which the Supreme Leader, despite what you will read in most of the Western press, is not the real victor in the election. He manipulated the elections in such a way as to have Ahmadinejad re-elected. Now, however, the Supreme Leader works for Ahmadinejad, rather than the other way around.

It's a new Iran because it's no longer the Islamic Revolution regime as we have known it since Khomeini took over in 1979. Ahmadinejad's Government is already 60 per cent Revolutionary Guard, and the Iranian parliament is 40 to 50 per cent ex-Revolutionary Guard officers. This election sees the takeover by this group and their allies completed.<snip>

I have insufficient expertise on these matters to know if this is something I have not thought of, or mad ravings. I post it here as something to think about and for others who know more to comment on.

 

 

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Thursday, July 9, 2009

GAO Report

Francis Hamit points out the news story about GAO inspectors being able to smuggle bomb components past the contract guards at government buildings. I'm sure he's right about the degree of commitment required to genuinely secure them from such an attack. However, I'm convinced the GAO's asanine demonstration does even more to prove they have a poor idea of what the security mission ought to be.

While there have been people who wanted to bomb government buildings, in the one spectacular success the explosives were OUTSIDE the building in Oklahoma City. (And I read about a previous instance years before where the fertilizer-based bomb outside a building was found in time.)

A more useful goal of Federal building security is to keep out personal weapons. It'd be foolish to suppose they're posting a 100% track record or anything like it, but I do know things are found in the screening process. They make it correspondingly difficult for someone to create a Virginia Tech kind of incident.

One thing for sure -- the GAO deserves no back-pats for making the prospect of bombing federal buildings appear so invitingly easy. What a disgraceful piece of grandstanding this is.

--Mike Glyer

There was no screening at all for entry into the Capitol for more than two hundred years, and the number of firearms incidents was very small, even in the period when Porto Rico independence rebels were shooting up Blair House. I have no real answers to any of this, but I think expensive security theater and kabuki plays do at least as much harm as good. The purpose of TSA is, so far as I can tell, to make the American People understand we are subjects, not citizens. That certainly seems to be its major accomplishment. Stronger cabin doors and new rules of engagement have prevented more 9/11 like conversions of jets into cruise missiles in my judgment more effectively than TSA.

============

Vietnam vs. "The Big Show"

Dear Jerry:

I went from Vietnam to Germany when I was in the Army Security Agency, from being a company level clerk to a General Staff NCO. That gives me some perspective on what you said about it being cheaper to fight land wars in Asia. I guess that was the operative theory of the time. Certainly it was impressed on me by my new First Sergeant that being a Vietnam Veteran bought me nothing in Frankfurt. He strongly encouraged me to shave the cavalry mustache that marked me as one (I did. I'm not stupid.) I wore the ribbons, of course and my job put me in Class A uniform most days, but I didn't have a whole lot of company. Vietnam was just this noisy sideshow to the forthcoming Main Event, which, thankfully never happened; the invasion of Western Europe by the USSR. We had the grim calculus down. Six hours by tank from the border. There were rumored to be nuclear mines under the Fulda Gap. And Vietnam made us unpopular with the local radicals, who would march by our Kascerne from time to time to show their displeasure.

A lot of first term soldiers in ASA were avoiding service in Vietnam. At least one I knew was doing so against his will. He kept trying to transfer to one of our units there, not just from patriotism but because he wanted some kind of war record to burnish a future political career. He claimed his mother was exerting influence through a Senator she knew too well. It may well have been true; he was the only "mission critical" clerk in the HQ. His job was the same done by dozens of others. Others had joined ASA because they had been assured by recruiting officers that ASA was not in Vietnam -- and officially that was true. It was called "Radio Research", a term which I think deceived no one. Actually there was about 30% of our rapidly growing organization over there and it was easy for anyone to go who wanted to. Clerks were always in short supply; so much so that in 1970 we were sent draftees straight out of Basic to train "on the job" at our HQ. The first experiments with integrating non-WAC females also started then. They got to wear the same MI brass as the rest of us; a symbolic gesture that made all the difference.

For those who came from Army families, like me, the open disdain for and avoidance of service in Vietnam, a hot war zone, was, well, just depressing. You make jokes about how if officers can't handle troops, they are sent to Intelligence, and if they can't handle that, then Public Relations, but in Frankfurt this joke and the attitude behind it eroded our standards. Those guys were dumped on us and thought they were in charge! We were supposed to draw from the upper ten percent of the IQ pool for enlisted recruits. The operational jobs were highly technical and required knowledge of topics like advanced physics. (I first heard the term "laser radar" there. Officially, at that time, this was science fiction. We had people training to do it. ). So we had a situation where the enlisted were smart and many of the officers were too stupid to pour sand out of a boot. And we coped with that. It was a comedy of manners. I had one who spent most of his time buying antiques to ship home for resale. It kept him away from the office and let us get on with the job, so we were careful not to draw attention to his side business.

The problem was that all of the non-technical jobs, including cooks and drivers were also filled from this high IQ pool. That produced a lot of frustration and discontent. There's another old service joke about being appointed "Laundry and Morale Officer" but that described the job I had running the unit newspaper and dealing with the press. I was in the entertainment business, but also dealing with Psychological Operations and mostly playing defense on that last. As you might imagine, an Army haircut made you a marked man. It was not as much of a problem in Germany as the USA, but there was a lot of social pressure and peer pressure. A lot of prejudice against American in general (We were, after all, an occupying army) and soldiers in particular. After the Moon Landing we were big heroes for about two weeks, but things soon got back to normal. A young single soldier who can't get a date with a decent girl is a morale danger, to himself and others.

Even though we were allegedly in another war there than Vietnam, that one kept coming back to haunt us. Someone was sponsoring "FTA" coffeehouses close to our bases in Germany and underground newspapers would appear on those bases with material that simply undermined the Cold War mission. Vietnam was viral; there was no way of avoiding these issues. We had no authorization for anything we did but we cobbled together unit newspapers, Command Information columns and other measures. So the truth was that we were fighting the Vietnam War there in Germany as well in rice paddies of Vietnam. We had serious problems with our own mission against the Soviets because of it, including one mutiny I know of. Part of the cause was a clash of cultures, between the Old Army and the New, between 'lifers' and first term soldiers who were being fed anti-military memes of the "Colonel Blimp' variety, and lot of very frustrated high IQ soldiers who had little range for their many talents. The social dynamics were also complicated by the evolving racial situation and the unrest at home.

It took the Army ten to fifteen years to recover and readjust and if there had been a war in Europe in that time , I am not sure we could have handled it. So the Vietnam War may have been brilliant strategic geo-politics, but if you were anywhere near the ground truths it was just scary. Because we were not ready. Fortunately it turned out that neither were they.

Sincerely,

Francis Hamit

Wars are always scary. One can second guess history only with caution. We can never know. Had we not done active containment, would the USSR have been able to make war feed war and continue to expand? There's a lot of evidence that they could and would.

They were running a pretty good bluff, weren't they? The Walker Family spy ring had given them all our codes. One Christmas Eve the Fulda Gap post got a "Happy Christmas" from the opposite Soviet unit on a teletype they weren't supposed to be able to touch -- in the clear. Thing went all the way to Meade and there was Hell to pay, but we knew they were reading our mail and fixed that. On the contigency plans I had the dubious honor of being the Platoon Sergeant of the stay-behinds. (I had not volunteered, so I guess this was a compliment of sorts.) We were supposed to take all the classified paper down to the reflecting pool behind the Farben building and soak it with POL and burn it. A few flaws in this plan: No real elevators and it took three days to drain that pool. Thermite grenades, on a test, burned through the Mosler file cabinet safes all the way down and left the rest of the files intact. No oxygen. We generated tons of classified paper every week. In Nam my courier runs were usually about 800 lbs in locked mailbags. I had two thermite grenades if we went down. No courier ever did. Here's an odd fact; on Frankfurt we used to go drinking, some of us, with the troops from the Soviet Liaison Mission. Them we liked. Same business and all.

So I am very happy to have missed that party. The huge volume of files was one of the driver for getting computers; it wasn't all about cracking codes; most of it was just storing files, 90 percent of which never got read or analysed anyway for lack of manpower. The Farben Building is now the Humanities Building for the University of Frankfurt. We had to move to Augsburg to get better security.

Speaking of bad officers, I've just read Tracy Kidder's "My Detachment" which is about his ASA experience as a lieutenant. I've always thought Kidder a terrific writer, and he was about a year ahead of me at Iowa . Until I read the book I had no idea he'd been in "Nam , much less ASA. He certainly didn't advertise the fact. Seems he was against the war but didn't have the guts to stand up and say so. Another East Coast elitist. James Crumbly was also ASA as well as the Workshop but he wrote a novel about it, "One To Count Cadence" which was pretty good. Kidder's book just pisses me off. Typical of my generation, I'm afraid. Wanting to have it both ways.

I may have to write a book of my own. I hate to think that people will read Kidder's book and think that was the whole story. Of course his seems to have sunk like a stone. Maybe no one cares.

Best,

Francis

Recalling the invasion of Poland, and Prague Spring, I am not convinced that it was bluff at all. Without NATO, would the Russians have been on the Rhine? The Grand Strategy of Containment was a decision above my pay grade, but Possony was convinced that if we were ever going to prevail, there had to be containment; and if your strategy is containment, once in a while you have to do some containing.

We got out of the Seventy Years War without anyone using nukes. I would not have predicted that in 1960.

=================

On the Swedish Experiment

Jerry, the below is from a friend of mine concerning the letter you published yesterday.

David Couvillon Colonel of Marines; Former Governor of Wasit Province, Iraq; Righter of Wrongs; Wrong most of the time; Distinguished Expert, TV remote control; Chef de Hot Dog Excellance; Collector of Hot Sauce; Avoider of Yard Work 

----------

Well, being part of the experiment I am not as enthusiastic...

As for the military part the truth is that during the Cold War every brigade could mobilize a battalion combat team within 24 hours and the rest of the unit within 72 hrs.

But, that was then.

The the evertlasting peace struck our politicians hard and national security went out the window and was replaced by national economy, and guess what part of the state that had to shrink...?

Since our brilliant politicians have decided that there will no threats within some 10 years most of our units have been put in the sad "ready states" that you can see on the Wikipedia link.

Also, right now we're in a transition phase. Conscription is being scrapped and replaced by voluntary services with standing units (much like in the USA).

The Home Guard battalions that are mentioned are more or less the only national defence we have at the moment. But, note: They are NOT actively serving. They have to be mobilized, but that is about as quick as it was in the "good old days".

The Navy and the Air Force have some minimal units for Territorial Integrity. At the moment all the Army has to show is one Light Infantry Company on 10 days NTM to reinforce our ongoing ops in Kosovo or Afghanistan. They are labeled the "STRATEGIC RESERVE". I don't know if I should laugh or cry bitterly...

Around year 2000 everything went to bits...and since then we have been working in an environment that I usually describe as being on the wrong side in Manoeuvre Warfare...the side that experiences the "System Shock".

It all makes me so sad. This is one of the reasons why I go on international missions repeatedly. To get away from the chaos...and do some MILITARY work like trying to identify CoG and CC, CV and CR and then coordinate a plan to disrupt the enemy.

This almost felt like a debriefing session....

Regards, 

I believe the Swedish Lifeguards regiment is the oldest regiment in Europe. Their battle banners include Lutzen...

==========

New wonder material, one-atom thick, has scientists abuzz 

It's called "graphene", and it may be a lifeline for Moores Law to get a new lease on life: Not to mention possibly being a step towards the Unobtainium needed to build space elevator cable.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/
20090708/sc_mcclatchy/3268145 

"Imagine a carbon sheet that's only one atom thick but is stronger than diamond and conducts electricity 100 times faster than the silicon in computer chips.

That's graphene, the latest wonder material coming out of science laboratories around the world. It's creating tremendous buzz among physicists, chemists and electronic engineers.

"It is the thinnest known material in the universe, and the strongest ever measured," Andre Geim , a physicist at the University of Manchester, England , wrote in the June 19 issue of the journal Science."

Petronius

 

 

 

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Friday,  July 10, 2009

McNamara

On your little remembrance of McNamara - I had forgotten, but was reminded while reading a Harold Coyle book today, that McNamara also gave us the 'up or out' careers in the current military culture of the US. Essentially, get promoted or leave the service. While an efficient method of manpower management, during peacetime this has been an anathema for warriors and a godsend to 'game players' and politicians in the officer corps and senior enlisted ranks. Even worse, during long wars (nee - Vietnam & GWOT) it gives way to 'ticket punching' of moving officers through billets that make them attractive to promotion boards (even during the short Desert Storm, I was sickened by the observation of officers scrambling and backbiting to get combat billets, or scamming some nefarious reason to 'get to the front,' in order to get a combat badge (Army) or combat action ribbon (USMC)).

Good men and women are forced into "Peter Principle" promotions where their worth to the service is marginal or worse, however if they had stayed at their previous level they'd have been wholly worthwhile (and experienced) to the overall mission. Then they're forced out (with some level of shame) - and not even offered an opportunity to revert to a rank/position they could be or great use.

I'll give one example, which is certainly insignificant in history but indelible in the lives of the Marine involved and myself. Lance Corporal A was a big, slow, ill-educated Marine from a very small backwater town (Sicily Island, LA). He was a gunner on a mortar team and I was first his squad leader then later his Platoon Commander. But he was a GREAT gunner and an enthusiastic Marine. He never failed to carry out his duties with a cheerful attitude and really know how to give instruction on mortar gunnery. However, he wasn't a leader and would never be one, promoting him would be a disservice to those whom he would have to lead. He was in his niche in the Corps and he loved doing what he did, even as others came and went on the promotion ladder. At serving 8 years (which is 2 years longer than a LCpl should be allowed to serve - what can I say, I gamed the system for the guy for a while), Mother Corps finally caught up with him and forced him out. I had to tell the Marine and he was heartbroken. He begged and pleaded to be allowed to stay and even volunteered to serve with no pay (his heart was big!). LCpl A would have gladly served 20 years as a Lance Corporal and the Marine Corps would have had a great Marine for all those 20. I daresay that the services can't operate if everyone is like LCpl A - there have to be leaders. But, give me a sprinkling of LCpl A's throughout a battalion a their proper level of worth and I'd take on all comers!

s/f Couv

David Couvillon Colonel of Marines; Former Governor of Wasit Province, Iraq; Righter of Wrongs; Wrong most of the time; Distinguished Expert, TV remote control; Chef de Hot Dog Excellance; Collector of Hot Sauce; Avoider of Yard Work

I had forgotten that this came from him. I can recall in 1950 or so an old sergeant who was proud of having found a home in the army, and intended to stay in forever, promoted or not. He wasn't the only one. And of course in the Indian Wars there were one-troop posts commanded by ancient captains. And I suspect most of us have known people like your Lance Corporal.

This discussion continues next week (linked list)

===================w

 

Scientists claim ‘fountain of youth’ is on Easter Island.

http://rawstory.com/08/news/2009/07/08/scientists-claim-fountain-of-youth-is-on-easter-island/

---- Roland Dobbins

Works on old mice, too. Probably a bit too late for me.

=============

Iran Revolutionary Guard

Jerry P:

Your posting on Wednesday in reference to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, whomever the author, is probably spot on. There have been numerous reports of the Revolutionary Guard and its incorporation into the fabric of economic activity in Iran. Given a financial supply, there is no reason for the military to rely upon the civil authority or religious authority for sanction. It is the machine for a military takeover and no one can stop them. The military threat was noted by Eisenhower in his speech, and we should note his wisdom. Given the other parts are optional, the events in most countries of the third world demonstrate that Iran is most likely directed in the direction of a military dictatorship. Of course, that doesn't mean that they are going to be our enemies or friends, either one. It means that the Russians and other neighbors will have to consider a new look on their borders, that will depend upon who is in charge of the Guard.

CBS

=========

Federal Building Security

On the recent hubbub over federal building security -- true story:

February 2008, the day before the Missouri Presidential Primary. I went downtown to the Board of Election Commissioners to get my Election Judge training and credential. They asked who I was, snapped my picture, printed it directly onto a plastic clip-on badge with my name. They took my word as to who I was, no paper I.D. required.

Afterward I took thirty minutes to walk over to one of the two federal office buildings on the other side of downtown where I thought the people who administer Savings Bonds worked (they're not there any more, but I didn't know that), as I had a question about an old bond. I also needed a bathroom pretty badly by the time I got there since I had left home five hours previously. The uniformed guards x-rayed my backpack -- I made a point of stating that I was waiving my Fourth Amendment right against unnecessary search to maintain that I still retained that right -- and they asked for I.D. I presented my U. S. Passport, as it proves both identity and citizenship, and I had thought I might need it at the Election Board.

"Do you have a state I.D. card?"

"Yes, but the passport proves my identity."

"We're supposed to ask for a state I.D. card or driver's license." (This is a Federal Building, remember.)

I handed my state I.D. card over. "This is expired," he said

"It's still *me*. **I** haven't expired."

He blinked, looked at it again. "You got anything else?"

"A community college I.D., but it's expired, too, because I'm not taking classes right now." He looked at it, still hesitant to let me enter.

"Here: I got this at the Board of Election Commissioners literally half an hour ago," and gave him the Election Judge clip-on badge, with only my name, picture, and the words "Election Judge" on it, no date or other information, the badge given me upon my word alone.

They looked at it, then finally let me in. I grabbed it all back, asked where the men's room was, then took off at what was no doubt a suspiciously fast pace but I didn't care at this point, I had to *GO*, but they hassled me no further. If fact, they were very polite and helpful after I came back to ask where the Savings Bond office was, to the point of trying to find out to which other federal building I needed to go. (Kansas City as it turns out, as apparently there is no longer a Savings Bond office in St. Louis.)

David K. M. Klaus

Kabuki

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Saturday, July 11, 2009

Subject: NASA, Japan (nearly) finish topographic map of Earth

http://www.theregister.co.uk/
2009/06/30/nasa_japan_release
_99_complete_topographic_map/ 

This is a huge achievement.

Tracy Walters, CISSP

===========

Photo Essay: 20 of the Freakiest Custom Bikes on the Road, 

Jerry

For your relaxation and enjoyment:

http://matadorlife.com/photo-essay-
20-of-the-freakiest-bikes-on-the-road/ 

I remember hacking my 3-speed Schwinn to look like a Continental when I was a kid, but this stuff looks like real fun.

Ed

==========

The Great Ethanol Scam.

http://www.businessweek.com/print/
lifestyle/content/may2009/bw
20090514_058678.htm

-- Roland Dobbins

==========

Teen Girl Falls In Open Manhole While Texting

http://wcbstv.com/local/
texting.manhole.raw.2.1081403.html 

Didn't her mother ever tell her to look where she is going? Naw. Of course it's the bureaucracy's fault.

 

 

 

 

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Sunday,  July 12, 2009     

To Run Better, Start by Ditching Your Nikes,

Jerry

"People have been running barefoot for millions of years and it has only been since 1972 that people have been wearing shoes with thick, synthetic heels," said Daniel Lieberman, a professor of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University.

"Strong evidence shows that thickly cushioned running shoes have done nothing to prevent injury in the 30-odd years since Nike founder Bill Bowerman invented them, researchers say. Some smaller, earlier studies suggest that running in shoes may increase the risk of ankle sprains, plantar fasciitis and other injuries. Runners who wear cheap running shoes have fewer injuries than those wearing expensive trainers. Meanwhile, injuries plague 20 to 80 percent of regular runners every year." <snip> " Of running shoes: "If this were a drug, it would be yanked off the market." <snip> So, many runners have been shucking off the high-tech trainers in favor of naked feet - or minimalist footwear:

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/07/barefoot/ 

Hmm. One of those things looks like a foot glove. Running gloves, anyone?

Ed

Interesting. I never thought of any of this before, and I certainly have no views on the matter.

========

Teen Girl Falls In Open Manhole While Texting

http://wcbstv.com/local/texting.manhole.raw.2.1081403.html 

Didn't her mother ever tell her to look where she is going? Naw. Of course it's the bureaucracy's fault.

===========

The Decay Of Critical Military Thinking And Writing, 

Jerry

It seems that the Aussies are not immune to Pournelle's Law, and someone has noticed:

http://www.ausairpower.net/APA-2009-03.html 

The Decay Of Critical Military Thinking And Writing, A Paper by Air Commodore Ted Bushell AM (Retd)

Executive Summary

Since the end of WWII, and particularly over the past few decades, Australia has witnessed a marked decline in the good governance of its government bureaucracies.

Those bureaucracies, in turn, have developed an adversity to employing experts in the fields of activity for which they are responsible, resulting in a dysfunctional bureaucratic/expertise interface at the working level, with the bureaucrats not understanding what they are managing and so not realising the adverse effects of their decisions.

This dysfunctionality is seen most clearly in our health and education systems, but it is pervasive. At the heart of this general loss of competency lies the erosion of the quality of Australia's basic ability to think and communicate in a clear and logical manner; that is, the failure of our education system at all levels.

Australia's defence forces have not escaped this trend. However, within the Services, this core problem has been aggravated by the series of ill-considered structural and functional changes that led to a dramatic downsizing and de-skilling of our Services. The combined effects of eroding public education standards and the government-imposed and bureaucratic implemented changes are seen clearly in the poor standard of professional military thinking and writing coming from the Services, particularly RAAF, the most highly technical of the three Services.

Unless those trends are reversed, and the RAAF regains the high standards of professional military thinking and writing that it had established and maintained over decades of peace and war, Australia can look forward only to continuing poor air power decisions which carry the risk of Australia's irrelevance in air power capabilities over future decades.<snip>

Ed

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