Glendale Dentists, Aspirin, and Folic Acid

View 734 Wednesday, July 25, 2012

I got bogged down in details and a sudden lack of energy. I’m getting back in gear again.

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I was talking to a friend today who is a bit worried that her husband is showing some signs of what might be Parkinson’s, but the doctors aren’t sure. That got me to thinking. I have anecdotal evidence – anecdotal, nothing provable – from some physician friends that vitamin D deficiencies can bring on symptoms like Parkinson’s.

Of course you can overdose on D, but a vitamin D supplement costs not much, and indeed is generally packaged with calcium if you’re taking calcium supplements. A good multi-vitamin contains D, and everyone probably ought to have a daily multi-vitamin given the screwy eating habits that most Americans have.

That got me thinking about the huge pile of pills I take every day. I have a lot of them, and I seem to be able to keep going even though I’m getting damn near eighty – and I see a lot of people much younger than me who seem to act and feel older. Of course I am pretty sure that much of the stuff I take is probably making expensive urine – but something keeps me going, even after my 50,000 rad treatment.

Many years ago I had a dentist friend in Glendale who told me about another dentist in Glendale who had the theory that his patients who took aspirin regularly had fewer strokes and heart attacks. That of course is anecdotal evidence par excellence, which is what I said when I wrote about it in the 1970’s. The medical profession did not take these Glendale dentists seriously, but eventually big Med did pay attention and did some real studies. Now we know more about aspirin and heart attacks and strokes. I suppose my experience in that has made me a little less convinced that the medical establishment knows quite as much as it is convinced it knows.

I also know that the FDA was overly cautious about the amount of folic acid – folate – that women ought to be taking before and just after conception, and what they recommended was just enough to prevent pernicious anemia. The result was at least one case of a damaged baby which may or may not be traceable to folate deficiency at time of impregnation. The stuff is cheap, and it’s hard to overdose on it, and my advice to any woman contemplating pregnancy is to make sure they get enough folic acid, and by enough I mean multiples of the recommended dosage. But that’s just my suggestion, and you do what you want to do.

I am often asked what I take, and I’ve always been a bit reluctant to write about it. I’m not in the business of giving that kind of advice, and I don’t claim any expertise, just a lot of collected anecdotes. I can say that I’d rather have expensive urine than some of the problems I have seen. I do recommend that you look into not just conventional vitamin supplements with anti-oxidants – my sometime Tomorrow Show companion Durk Pearson has written a lot about that , and the Life Extension Foundation has a big literature about their “Life Extension Formula” – and Jim Baen did enough research into the stuff called SAMe to convince me that I should pay for it even though it ain’t all that cheap. And CoQ10 is worth looking. Phosphydital Serine is another. Greg Benford has me on some stuff that is supposed to stimulate stem cell generation. And I could go one with more which would convince you that I’m probably out of my mind. But the whole mess doesn’t cost me that much each month, and I do think that some of what’s in the witches’ brew is helping.

And that’s probably enough rambling on that.

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They’re rioting in Anaheim. In theory the riots are supposed to be protests about the Anaheim police, but most of the rioters don’t live in Anaheim, and the stores that get looted have nothing to do with the police. Somehow we can spend billions to rebuild Afghanistan – a task that Alexander the Great wouldn’t undertake even though he certainly did rebuild the Persian and Egyptian civilizations – but we cannot protect the freedom of a Starbucks franchise owner to have a store near Disneyland.

I do not believe any country on earth could invade the United States. No one can take a drink from the Mississippi without out let and leave. Yet the United States has millions of illegal aliens and we seem unable to do anything about that. Our army is busy ensuring that the Mayor of Kabul’s writ runs through Afghanistan. We aren’t very good at that, and many Afghani’s prefer the Taliban to Kabul. Pakistan has always been more afraid of India than of Afghanistan, and someone in the State Department must know this, but I am not sure that those who control our foreign policy know it. Bush sent the most incompetent proconsul Iraq had seen in two thousand years. We’re leaving that ‘nation’ in a state of chaos. When we went into Iraq I asked what we would do to build a ‘nation’ out of three provinces of the Turkish Empire. They were three provinces for a good reason. The monarchy imposed by the West on “Iraq” came from Mecca and were given Iraq and Jordan because the Hashemites – hereditary Protectors of Mecca – had received promises during World War One. Faisal was proclaimed King of Syria, but that didn’t work, so he became King of Iraq. That lasted until the Baathists overthrew him and after a bit of turmoil Saddam Hussein emerged. He held the three provinces together. Now the President of Iraq has put out a warrant to arrest the Vice President who has taken refuge in the Kurdish province where Bagdad’s writ doesn’t run.

No one can invade us, but I am subjected to ridiculous procedures in order to board an airplane. It’s a strange world.

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A Tale of Two Massacres

View 734 Tuesday, July 24, 2012

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I am a bit behind and just catching up. There are many things to write about, many of them topical news. I generally try to stay away from breaking news, but I think we know enough about one recent incident; I doubt any new relevant facts will emerge. I mentioned the Colorado murders yesterday http://www.jerrypournelle.com/jerrypournelle.c/chaosmanor/ and I agree with Hansen on the matter. And we certainly aren’t going to learn more of interest about the Fort Hood murders.

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A reader asks why The Fort Hood murderer has not yet faced trial.

Article 118 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice says:

“Any person subject to this chapter who, without justification or excuse, unlawfully kills a human being, when he—”

(1) has a premeditated design to kill;

(2) intends to kill or inflict great bodily harm;

(3) is engaged in an act that is inherently dangerous to another and evinces a wanton disregard of human life; or

(4) is engaged in the perpetration or attempted perpetration of burglary, sodomy, rape, robbery, or aggravated arson; is guilty of murder, and shall suffer such punishment as a court-martial may direct, except that if found guilty under clause (1) or (4), he shall suffer death or imprisonment for life as a court-martial may direct.

= = =

According to all the sources I pay attention to, there were plenty of witnesses to the murders, 13 people were killed, and Major Nidal Malik Hasan was apprehended in the act. This took place on a US military institution so the question of jurisdiction does not apply. Murder has been covered by military justice codes for most of the life of the republic; I am from the days when the Articles of War were read to the troops on Sunday mornings, and murder was certainly in the Articles, and as many of the Articles ended, “shall suffer death or such other penalty as a Court Martial shall decide.” (I probably ought to omit the quotes since this is from memory but it’s close enough.)

The Army has the full authority to end this matter. It took place on November 5, 2009, and it only takes an order from the Commander in Chief to end the matter. Apparently President Obama has not so directed the Commandant of Fort Hood to end the matter. I do not think I have ever heard the President’s explanation.

I am told that he promises swift justice for the Colorado Movie House murderer although in fact he has no jurisdiction in that matter, it not having happened on a military post. But perhaps that was not taught at Harvard? We have no way of knowing. But every time Mr. Obama discusses the Colorado murders it might be well to ask him why he doesn’t let the Army deal with Major Nidal Malik Hasan.

My guess is that if the current federal government gets involved in the Colorado massacre we will not see justice for a long, long time. And Major Nadal Malik Hasan will outlive me.

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More after lunch

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A Proper Job

View 734 Monday, July 23, 2012

1430 EDT Atlanta Airport Delta Crown Room

We’re here and comfortable. This is a public wireless network access. I think I have a way to get a more secure access, but since I don’t intend to do much here I’ll chance using this one for now.

All’s well, we have a long way to go but we’re in competent hands.

The TSA people in Chattanooga are the best I have ever experienced. Nothing is going to make that a pleasant experience, but at least these people are helpful.

Cicero was put on the proscription list to be killed on sight by Marc Antony over the objections of Octavius Caesar and Lepidus. Antony insisted and although Octavius had inherited the Army, Antony commanded it, and Lepidus paid for much of it. Antony insisted, Lepidus supported him, and Octavious acceded. Cicero was tracked down by a squad of soldiers while in transit. Before he got out of his carriage, Cicero, once savior of Rome from the Cataline rebellion, Consul who held the power of the Ultimate Decree and who returned that power to the Senate and People when the crisis was over, told the soldier who would be his executioner: “Young man there is nothing proper about what you are about to do, but I do hope you will do a proper job of it.”

I can say that the Chattanooga TSA did a proper job of what they did, and I did not tell them that story.

Uncle Timmy drove us to the airport and shepherded us through. LibertyCon takes great care of teir guests, and there is everything proper about what they do. I’ll get home fairly late tonight.

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I can’t write an essay on the Colorado Killer working on this laptop in the Crown Room.  I refer you to Hansen http://pjmedia.com/victordavishanson/the-demons-of-the-modern-rampage-killer/?singlepage=true which is quite good, and his conclusion proper. The chap in Colorado deserves a fair trial and then hanging. I can’t think the trial needs to be more than an hour long, although I am convinced that he will long outlive me and for that matter most of those he wounded. He will get better medical care than just about any of my readers and most of those I know including me.

Niven comments that he could be taken to a proper operating facility and shot in the head in a way that does not damage the spine, then taken apart for his parts. My comment was that if sold on eBay that would make a fortune. His liver might bring a lot all by itself. Niven nodded sadly. “That is the problem.” But of course competition from China may bring down the prices that can be obtained for freshly killed criminal parts, and of course they don’t have to worry about the costs the trials.

Of course thinking like this – it used to be called Prudence – is long out of fashion. Now virtue begins and ends with intentions, and not understanding consequences is no vice, merely unfortunate. I didn’t realise that not teaching children to sound out words would leave many of them illiterate! I meant for them to read better! iT’S NOT MY FAULT!!

But now I am rambling. I’ll see if I can get back to an Internet connection.

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2430 Tuesday AM  I am home without incident, and about to go to bed. All the files have been transferred, my computer systems are working properly, and I learned some Road Warrior lessons. I’ll make a quick pass through the mail, but mostly I am off to sleep.

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A lite bag for the road

Mail 734 Sunday, July 22, 2012

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Democracy Is A Terrible Form Of Government – After Action Report?

Mr. Pournelle,

First, the obligatory (though heart-felt and most definitely sincere) chit-chat about reading you since the early 80’s, still interested in your work, can’t wait to read your next blog, etc, etc.

I followed the events at Libertycon as closely as a man on a family camping trip with no 3G signal can, which is to say not well at all. I was hoping to see some summaries or post-mortems on some of the panels I would have liked to have attended, had I not been on said camping trip. Concerning the "Democracy/Terrible" panel, will there be any sort of video/audio/text of how it went down? I’m extremely interested in what the panel had to say on the topic as it dovetails exactly with a good deal of my research on what it would take, philosophically/culturally/politically, to take our current society from what we have to a popular and effective monarchy.

Keep up the great work.

Scott McGlasson

I fear I wasn’t able to make notes at the panel, and my memory isn’t up to reproducing it. The formal panel title had the question, doesn’t science fiction tell us something better. We all of us answered ‘No’, which might have left us with little to talk about, but of course we found plenty. I pointed out that the Convention of 1787 might accurately be labeled a conspiracy to suppress democracy; that was certainly the goal of many of its members. Making the world safe for life, liberty, and property, even against the vote of a majority, was a major goal. The Constitution was intended to make the federal government just strong enough to survive and protect the nation against foreign powers, but not to interfere in the lives of most of the citizens; and the final sovereignty was reserved to the states and to the people, and in case that wasn’t obvious from the limited grants of power in the document itself, it was made part of the Bill of Rights.

Really, though, it’s not possible to summarize an hour of question and answer exchanges, from that panel or from the one on education this morning. And of course no one is going to answer the fundamental questions in an hour anyway. The people who attended seemed to think it was worth their time, and that’s about the best I can do. Thanks for the kind words.

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Sacred Cows

Regarding alternatives to relativity:

It is a well-known conclusion in logic that scientific theories are underdetermined. That is, through any finite set of facts one may draw multiple theories to explain them. Facts are like the stars in the sky; theories are like the constellations we imagine to navigate our way through them. Hence the multiple quantum theories to explain quantum mechanics: Copenhagen, multiple-worlds, Bohm’s standing wave, Cramer’s transactional theory, et al. It is why the "crucial experiment" is impossible. If theory A predicts consequence Z, verifying Z does not prove A, the fallacy of asserting the consequent; and while verifying not-Z may (or may not) falsify A, it certainly does not validate B. There may be other alternatives to A. There is no Pr(Z), there is only Pr(Z|A), Pr(Z|B), Pr(Z|C), etc. We can only say that an observation Z is improbable given a model A.

The classic example was the Copernican v. the Tychonic model of the world. Both made the same predictions about the empirical facts — stellar positions, eclipses, sunrise/set, phases of Venus, etc. They were computationally equivalent. The Tychonic/Ursine model was better in some regards, such as the orbit of Mars. The Keplerian model was better than both in being mathematically simpler and dispensing with Copernicus’ epicycles. But heliocentrism became regarded as true-to-life mainly because assuming the Newtonian model of universal gravitation the observations made better sense.

MikeF

Thank you for the succinct summary.

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Online Physics Lectures

Dr Pournelle, once again, I have come across some interesting material on the web, for your on-line lecture collection, Milton Friedland does 10 tv shows:

http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/archives/020820.html#more

I was lucky enough to come across this collection of tv shows from 30 years ago with economist and libertarian Milton Friedman hosting. 10 parts – 10 hours. I believe they were originally aired (believe it or not) on PBS. What makes it truly interesting is the formatting, where one half of each show is devoted to practical and historical examples of theory while the the other half is a moderated discussion with reps from government, academia, and business. It is something to see Thomas Sowell, Frances Fox Piven, and Donald Rumsfeld commenting from way back then. Could be yesterday.

I didn’t realize how much I miss Milton Friedman until I went through this series. Apparently, 2012 is the 100th anniversary of his birth.

I hope these links are new and prove useful and entertaining for you and your readers.

Free To Choose 1980 Vol. 1 – The Power of the Market <http://vimeo.com/26727003> …"

One of the things I pointed out in the education panel this morning is that it is no thoroughly possible to get a very good education without going to the schools, and without incurring a life long crippling debt by taking out huge student loans which mostly serve to drive up the price of education – that is, as usual in economic systems, if you put more money into some institution it will absorb the money and the prices will rise. Make student loans easier to get, adding more money, and higher education prices will rise to absorb all that money. You can only escape by going on line and getting an education without paying the exorbitant fees now demanded. Not only home schooling for grammar and high school, but much of so-called higher education including much of what is considered university level. We still have no way to giving credentials to those who learned outside the hideously overpriced monsters we have created, but I think the American people may find a way. Or perhaps it is only a science fiction idea.

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And in a lighter vein

So papa, how did you like the iPad we got you?

ROFL, LMAO

Subject: next birthday

http://www.snotr.com/video/8965/

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I got this long ago and it got lost in the shuffle; it is still relevant.

Wisconsin election

Hi Jerry,

I have lived here in the People’s Republic of Madison for 13 years and sometimes have to get out of town just to retain my sanity.

Regarding the email you received about 119% turnout. I suspect the author was either being sarcastic or was referring to the fact that turnout in this election, along with Walker’s victory margin, exceeded that from the 2010 Fall gubernatorial election.

A lesser known reform from last year was passage of a Voter ID requirement for elections. That is currently suspended by order of David Flanagan, a Dane County (Madison) circuit court judge who signed the petition to recall Governor Walker. The case is currently on appeal and one hopes it will be overturned before the general election in November.

There were also 4 Republican Wisconsin state senators under recall on Tuesday. 3 of them won by large margins and the fourth apparently lost by about 800 votes. There were reports of buses full of union members from Detroit and Chicago traveling to Wisconsin on Tuesday to same-day register and vote. The defeated senator’s district is just north of the Illinois state line from Chicago so it’s conceivable that this may have turned the tide.

Thanks for your keen insights!

Wayne

A word to the wise and all that….

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