Official Octogenarian

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

 

 

I have spent the day a bit under the weather, but cheered up by the visit of my son Frank who came from Texas to spend the day with me,  This was my 80ths birthday, something I had not expected to see after hearing the words Brain Cancer some years ago, but here I am.

Thanks to all who have wished me well.  I’ll try to get back on track shortly.

 

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On Public Education; DC/X anniversary meeting

View 785 Tuesday, August 06, 2013

“Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

President Barrack Obama, January 231, 2009

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This exchange was in last night’s mail:

Childless Taxpayers Funding Schools

It is a common misconception that it is somehow unfair for childless people to pay taxes that fund schools. In fact, everyone who pays school taxes is simply re-paying the cost of their own education, with interest, after inflation, and generally in proportion to how much they benefited from that education.

Thanks,

Jim Melendy

 

With my reply:

Even those who went to private or religious schools? And why should it be federal? The old notion of local school boards which also controlled the school taxes made the best education system in the world at one time.

I’ve been thinking about this since. My answer was correct but insufficient.

First, there is in the “repayment” hypothesis the assumption that the education provided was worth paying for. Now some schools have alumni who clearly think the school was worth the investment. Most of them, though, were like my Christian Brothers College high school in Memphis, which gets substantial alumni support, are private schools whose pupils are there not only voluntarily, but at considerable expense. I do not know if any of the Memphis public high schools that existed when I was there in the 1940’s still exist, but I doubt that many of them get much alumni support; and I am fairly certain that few 21st Century public schools have grateful alumni associations. I suspect there are many advocates of certain LA public schools who would gladly help raze them to the ground.

One reason these schools are so awful is the subject of yesterday’s entry, the “mainstreaming” of severely handicapped students. If the justification of tax supported public schools is that they provide an education and are now collecting, with interest, for services rendered, then it’s pretty clear that requiring the paying customers to endure constant interruptions and absorption of teacher time by severely handicapped pupils who have been mainstreamed is theft.

Comes now the question of whose responsibility it is to do something for the severely handicapped. That is not an investment question. Perhaps it should be: perhaps the question ought to be, what education can we provide these children that will help them earn at least some of the money needed for their support? But if that is the question, it’s pretty clear that the answer will be training in skills appropriate to the handicap, and that is going to be quite different from what is taught to the general student body.

As to whose obligation it is, historically it has been the children’s parents with charity as first backup and the local community — parish or county – as secondary backup. It is certainly not part of the powers and duties of the Federal Government as detailed in the Constitution of 1789 as Amended.

Now it can be argued that the communities don’t do enough. They don’t meet the needs, and therefore it is up to the general government to be generous – not with its own money, of course, but with money forcibly extracted by the tax collector backup up by the BATF and Federal executioners if needed. Of course it is easy to be ‘charitable’ with other people’s money. It is easy enough for A and B to work together to determine what C must give to destitute D. That does not justify anyone having charitable feelings about the matter of course.

But the hidden question is, what has this done for the handicapped? Some benefit by mainstreaming. Indeed it might be shown that it is beneficial to the rest of the class to have some examples of handicapped people among them, so as to learn proper ways of treating them. Education is more than just book learning. But there are limits to that, and just about everyone who studies the situation objectively agrees, it’s easy enough to so saturate a class with mainstreamed pupils who really ought not be there as to detract from the education of everyone else in the class. This means that most of the students are not getting the education they need, and it is not a long leap to suspect that this will result in higher costs of training for employers, and over time a general lessening of productivity. And with lower productivity there are fewer resources to be applied to the good of the handicapped. It may be a great favor to those mainstreamed, but it is not necessarily a great favor to the next generation of students, handicapped or not.

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We had a good walk today. Sable is a happy dog despite the limp. Every day is a gift.

And it’s lunch time.

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Re: telegraph wire material

You mentioned copper telegraph wires, if you look it up, I think you’ll find that most of the mileage in 1859 was composed of galvanized iron wire. Even back then, copper was too dear to be hanging thousands of miles of it out where anyone could make off with it. Just a bit of trivia on a slow day….

And the sun watchers are now saying that we’re due to experience a flip in the sun’s magnetic polarity Real Soon Now.

Stan

Stan Schaefer

Yes, I expect that’s right on reflection.  I vaguely recall that as late as 1940 the Manhattan Project was briefly stalled by shortages of copper for the centrifuge wiring, and silver from the mint was drawn into wire and loaned to the project; at least I have heard this.  Copper in 1859 would have been too dear.  Thanks.

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: DC-X 20th Anniversary Conference in NM August 16-18

We’re coming up fast on the 20th anniversary of DC-X’s first flight later this month, and some of the people involved have organized a conference in New Mexico to mark the occasion. I’ve volunteered to help out with the conference, and that’s what I’m writing to you about today.

Much of the original DC-X team will be there, to be honored and to talk about how they did it, techniques used and lessons learned. There will also be a look at some of the many things that came of DC-X’s success, plus a Reusable Spaceplane X-Vehicles workshop looking to what should come next, as well as a tour of the New Mexico Spaceport.

This is a one-of-a-kind event. It’s very unlikely that all these people will ever be in one place at the same time again. If you have a deep interest in where "new space" came from, where it is now, and where it should go next, this event is more than worth a trip to New Mexico in August.

Conference agenda and details at http://dc-xspacequest.org/

thanks for your time

Henry Vanderbilt

founder

Space Access Society

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Star Wars, Bambi, NSA, and other matters

Mail 7845 Monday, August 05, 2013

“Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

President Barrack Obama, January 21, 2009

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Childless Taxpayers Funding Schools

It is a common misconception that it is somehow unfair for childless people to pay taxes that fund schools. In fact, everyone who pays school taxes is simply re-paying the cost of their own education, with interest, after inflation, and generally in proportion to how much they benefited from that education.

Thanks,

Jim Melendy

Even those who went to private or religious schools? And why should it be federal? The old notion of local school boards which also controlled the school taxes made the best education system in the world at one time.

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NSA Intel Goes Domestic

Jerry,

The DEA has been using a mix of data from a massive (subpoenaed) domestic phone and internet taps database, informant tips, overseas law-enforcement partner info, *and overseas NSA intercepts* to support domestic law enforcement. This setup is called SOD, for Special Operations Division.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/08/05/us-dea-sod-idUSBRE97409R20130805

Two problems:

The Reuters story says that SOD’s role in providing evidence is being deliberately hidden when cases come to court, by policy. Alternate explanations for how the investigators got that info are being invented and provided to the defense and prosecution. Apparently, we don’t need genuine Due Process anymore, as long as we can convincingly simulate it.

Also, the Reuters story fails to note an additional implication. As we’ve seen elsewhere, NSA "overseas" intercepts can include domestic traffic up to two additional jumps away from a connection one of whose ends is an actual overseas party. IE, DEA SOD may well be tapping deeply into the NSA domestic phone metadata (and content? There have been numerous hints, and it is technically feasible) database, then using the domestic surveillance results for prosecutions in which the defense is denied knowledge of the true source of evidence against them.

Other Federal agencies are reportedly now pushing for access to the NSA domestic database. The DEA may well already have it. How long until access trickles down to the Fawn Squad and the Bunny Inspectors? Not, on the evidence, nearly as long as you might think.

And so it begins.

ever more transparently

Porkypine

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Star Wars…

Since another reader brought up the subject of Star Wars, channeling Ted Kennedy, I must ask: Haven’t at least two nations – the United States and China – public ally demonstrated successful shoot downs of dummy warheads and/or satellites? How many (or what percentage) of the USA’s GSL and spy satellites would need to be disabled and/or destroyed before our military was largely blinded? And wouldn’t achieving that be a very effective execution of Star Wars?

Charles Brumbelow

Space will be a definite theater of war for the next world war. Defense of space assets is important to war prevention.

Modern view of SDI

Dr. Pournelle,

I’m 34, and most people in my generation were raised with exactly your correspondent’s view (and Sen. Kennedy’s) of SDI. I have heard rebuttals like yours before, but I would like to know more -particularly details that I could use in conversation. It is difficult to find information about SDI that is not mixed with the contemporaneous liberal political reaction to it.

By the way, I became a fan of yours through the Mote in God’s Eye (and The Gripping Hand), which I came to through being a fan of Niven’s other works. I have since read much of your bibliography, and it’s fascinating to see the difference between Niven, Pournelle, and Niven/Pournelle books – you have complementary strengths. I have recommended Mote and Gripping Hand many times, and they have always been well received.

Thank you!

Matthew Picioccio

Dean Ing and I covered part of this a long time ago in Mutual Assured Survival. Ben Bova also did a book called Assured Survival although that phrase was first used by me and then by President Reagan. There are numerous unclassified reports of successful ABM tests. Also look up Excalibur. And if you can get Google to work, try Homing Overlay. Google seems to stop working when I look up SDI papers, including my own books. I am sure it is a coincidence.

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About Star Wars

Dr. Pournelle

"Two things in America go by the name “Star Wars”. One of them is a childish fantasy of magical warfare, spectacular but incoherent, whose obvious flaws are thinly disguised by pseudoscience. The other one involves wookies." –paradoctor@aol.com

When President Reagan announced the Strategic Defense Initiative, aka Star Wars, I was a lieutenant, and I was seated in the Officers’ Club slurping down beers with my buddies at a table with a view of the O Club bar’s TV. Except for the slurping, we watched the President’s televised speech in silence. When he announced that he would abandon MAD for UAS (Unilaterally Assured Survival), we leaped to our feet and slapped high fives around the table.

SDI gave us the chance to do what we had sworn to do: defend the United States. None of us cared to hold a gun to the heads of the Russia people with the threat that if they shot we would.

Some of my buddies worked on kinetic kill (missile interception of incoming ICBMs). Some worked on directed energy kill. Later, I worked on launch vehicles to put their platforms in space. The work was not spectacular, but it was coherent. I do not recall any flaws, obvious or otherwise, but I do recall numerous technical and management difficulties that we overcame. None of us did pseudoscience.

‘Man who says thing cannot be done should not interrupt man doing it.’

Surprised and pleased to see that aol still runs. I thought they had gone the way of the dodo.

Live long and prosper

h lynn keith

In my original report to President Reagan I pointed out that the Constitution provided for the common defense, not the common destruction, and if it were technically possible the United States had a constitutional obligation to defend the American people.

My friends at SAC were cheering after Reagan’s Star Wars speech.

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Dr. Pournelle,

Star Wars humor:

Chewbacca decided to retire from spaceflight. Needing employment, he considered opening a restaurant, but hair net problems aside, being called a ‘wookie cookie’ didn’t appeal to his ego. Therefore, he sought a partnership with Norm Abram from PBS, and the two will open, when Norm finishes the building, an extraterrestrial sex shop selling masturbatory aids for aliens. They will call it "The New Wookie Yankshop."

jomath

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Deer

An emailer writes: "There’s a lot of deer in the woods after all."

You betcha, and that’s the problem. The deer do just fine keeping their numbers up without squeamish dogooders and well-meaning Aunt Nellies saving the poor sick babies. Deer are herd animals, who evolved to keep their species alive through fecundity; now that humans have killed all the predators, deer expand without limit. Trying to save baby deer is like trying to save a cup of pond scum.

"What about hunters," you might ask. And the problem there has the same root. People think deer are cute, so they pass laws making hunting illegal.

Then you might ask "how can the government have the power to pass laws like that", and that is one that nobody has a good answer for.

Well, that is certainly a reasonable but likely to be unpopular view…

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Terror threat

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

Is it unduly cynical of me to read this and immediately think "Security theater?"

http://hotair.com/archives/2013/08/05/embassy-closures-extended-until-saturday/

Also, it appears that Newt Gingrich is at least willing to contemplate the idea that neoconservatism was a fallacy.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/aug/4/newt-gingrich-rethinks-neoconservative-views/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS

That’s about 2 years after I came to the same conclusion, and about 50 years after you did :). So long as McCain keeps pushing for intervention my own relationship with the Republican party grows ever more strained.

Respectfully ,

Brian P.

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View 784

You write "In 1859 the only long insulated wires in the world were telegraph lines."

I assume that you mean that the wires were insulated from the poles by glass spacers rather than that the wire was wrapped in insulation as is common in commercial wiring? Ezra Cornell was a clever guy but I don’t think he was as clever as all that….

Tim of Angle

Yes, of course. The original telegraph wires were bare copper, although they had cloth insulation in leadins. The point is that there were plenty of fence wires where there were no fires, but any long lines insulated from ground generated a good bit of electrical potential.

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One reason many are afraid of inoculations:

Subj: CDC Admits 98 Million Americans Received Polio Vaccine Contaminated With Cancer Virus

http://tinyurl.com/pnhu4zr

Removed from the CDC website – this is cached copy:

http://tinyurl.com/p6ta9an

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THE LAST CUP OF BRANDY

The Doolittle Raiders last meeting.

Verified. The item below is from CNN, April 4, 2013, by Bob Greene.

http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/14/opinion/greene-doolittle-raiders

There are additional pictures and video at the web site.

Most have never even heard of them; it’s not PC and might "offend" someone to know there were men that were this patriotic.

This is something that has been lost in the dust of time! To all I send my thanks for their service.

Skol

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Stand your ground

Jerry,

you wrote that "I think the requirement to retreat before employing deadly force is reasonable so long as you are not in your own home. Or perhaps it is not."

Here is why this is not (necessarily) a good idea. Several years ago I lived in South Carolina, and I took (and passed) a concealed carry class. According to SC law, every aspect of the class has to be approved by the state police. The instructor spent a good deal of time talking about legal repercussions. He also pointed out that Stand Your Ground arises partly because of court cases where a duty to retreat was taken too far. He mentioned one case where a shop keeper retreated from a robber in to a back room. He shot the robber, who then sued him, claiming the shop keeper did not meet the duty to retreat because there was a small window high up on the wall that he could have theoretically used to flee further. Presumably, had he asked the robber to give him time to get a stepladder or pile some boxes up so he could reach this window, he would not have had to shoot.

Rick C

RE: Stand your ground

No legal wording will protect you from fugghead prosecutors out to make headlines

Jerry Pournelle

Absolutely true. It’s been probably 6 years so I don’t have the details fresh any more but the way I remember it, this was a case of the robber had a better lawyer. A reasonable person wouldn’t conclude that a small window that may have been 6 or 7 feet off the ground was a reasonable escape hatch and that failing to go through it meant you didn’t meet your duty to retreat.

This, of course, is the problem with phrasing the law as "Stand your ground." These laws simply state that if you have a legal reason for being somewhere, such as a place of work, you don’t have a duty to retreat, exactly as if you were at home, where you also generally don’t have such a duty. The instructor’s point is that a sharp lawyer, or a fugghead prosecutor, can try to twist the wording of the law to go after you this way, or the way the state went after Zimmerman.

Rick

Zimmerman had no path to retreat when he fired the shot. He was prevented from retreating by Martin. The Stand Your Ground law had no influence on the jury verdict. I doubt it influenced Zimmerman’s actions. He may have been a busybody, but he had some reason to do so. We have no way of knowing who said what to whom, but it is not unreasonable to assume that Martin decided he was going to stand his ground. The question is who struck the first blow. Given the discrepancy in the sizes and known past patterns of behavior it is not likely that Zimmerman assaulted Martin.

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Subj: Is MIT killing its Hacker Culture?

http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20130730122632843

>>[T]there has been a persistent undercurrent of concern over the past

>>several years that MIT’s hacking tradition is being vitiated by a

>>perceived increasing tendency to interpret hacking as a criminal

>>activity. Some of the concern stems from incidents in 2006–2008 where

>>students engaging in “unauthorized access” to various areas of campus

>>ended up in Cambridge District Court, charged with breaking and

>>entering with intent to commit a felony. … How can we prevent a

>>robust hacking tradition from becoming a casualty of the Aaron Swartz

>>tragedy? … Where does MIT draw the line between risk-avoidance, so

>>as to protect its more parochial interests, and risk-assumption, to

>>promote those things in which it is interested?<<

It would be a tragedy if MIT were to eviscerate itself, but there’s a larger issue: To what extent has America’s past superiority in technology rested on a permissive Hacker Culture that would appall the political masters of authoritarian regimes like China’s? Will that superiority evaporate as our own regime becomes more authoritarian — as research funding, for example, gets channeled more effectively away from dissenters from "consensus" positions and toward those proficient mainly in toadying to self-perpetuating cliques of peer reviewers?

Rod Montgomery==monty@starfief.com

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First burger made of TEST-TUBE MEAT to be eaten on August 5

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/07/29/test_tube_burger_to_be_eaten/

Just the beginning, of course.

What will the vegetarians-out-of-conscience do now?

Ed

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Subject: LA Schools Out of Money? Hardly

The LA schools are buying an iPad for every single student. The initial purchase will be $30million. I don’t want to hear that there is not enough money for education ever again.

http://www.theverge.com/2013/7/26/4559066/free-apple-ipad-school-children-la-district

Dwayne Phillips

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Mainstreaming Special-Ed

View 785 Monday, August 05, 2013

“Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency.”

President Barrack Obama, January 21, 2009

 

Sable is recovering from her sprained hip and wants to take our usual walk, limp and all. She remains a happy dog, and has fun sitting with us in the evenings, as well as exploiting our indulgent feelings by begging at meal times. Plenty of spirit. But every day is a blessing.

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I have never thought to see this:

Washington Post to be sold to Jeff Bezos

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/washington-post-to-be-sold-to-jeff-bezos/2013/08/05/ca537c9e-fe0c-11e2-9711-3708310f6f4d_story.html

I need to think on this one. It could be important to the future of the country.

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‘Mainstreaming’ Special-Ed Students Needs Debate

By

· MIRIAM KURTZIG FREEDMAN

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323309404578613532497541300.html

She is correct in identifying this as a major subject for education decisions. The debate has to start with just what is the purpose of public education? Why should taxpayers pay for the public education establishment with its unions, inefficiencies, often corruption? Of course those with children would like to have others help pay the expenses of educating them, but what do those who have no children get from the enormous public school and higher education establishments which generally eat about half the state taxes, as well as comprise a not insignificant part of their federal taxes as well.

And if part of that answer is education as an investment, and part is “fairness” to the disabled, what are the costs? Include among the costs the well established fact that putting handicapped, particularly severely handicapped, students in normal school classes – mainstreaming them – severely impacts on the education achievements of the dull normal, normal, bright normal, and gifted students in the classroom since the teacher must spend a disproportionate time on keeping the disabled from falling behind.

The first thing to note is that this has been federalized. Since the Constitution has nothing to say about education, and little to say about disabilities, it is easily argued that the federal government should have no say in the matter: it is to be left to the states, and in fact leaving it to the states can produce by experimentation and example better solutions than those of a bunch of Washington bureaucrats some with education degrees but few with much actual experience of what goes on in the classrooms.

Before 1975, more than a million students with disabilities were excluded from schools and some 3.5 million did not receive appropriate services. That year, Congress passed the Education for All Handicapped Children Act, now called the Individuals With Disabilities Act of 1990. Students identified as disabled have since been guaranteed access to what the law calls a "free appropriate public education," and their parents have the right to participate in (and dispute) the school’s development of an annual "individualized education program" for their child. No other group of students or parents enjoys such rights.

Today, six million students with disabilities (about 14% of all students) have the right to a free appropriate public education and an individualized education program. Between 70% and 80% of these students have mild or moderate disabilities, including learning disabilities, speech or language impairments, social and emotional disabilities, and other conditions, such as ADHD. Only 20% to 30% have more severe disabilities, such as cognitive impairments, multihandicapping conditions, deafness or blindness.

Back before the federal government got involved in education – back when “Federal Aid to Education” was only a liberal dream, not a crushing reality — there were different approaches in different places. Some counties had special ed schools; it was sort of up to the parents to get their children to them. But back before and during World War II, different places simply did the best they could.

We had a couple of crippled children in my Capleville grade school. I don’t recall much special about them. They sat in the seats nearest the door, and walked with wooden crutches, their legs in braces; at least one was a polio survivor.  There was generally at least one in every class, and I never saw any cases of bullying of them. Everyone knew polio was still out there, and you could be next.

Our school had two grades to the room, and above 20 pupils to the grade. Numbers varied because this was the only school for miles around. We had no blind pupils, and I am not sure what provision if any was made for their education. As to mentally handicapped, they were either ‘mainstreamed’ at Capleville or their parents found other means – home schooling, transporting them to a Memphis school for the retarded, institutionalizing – for taking care of them. But not all of them. When I was in 5-6 grade – about 48 desks, not quite all of them filled – we had a 15 year old girl among us. She was quiet, well behaved, pleasant and actually rather well liked, and not as noticeably dull as you would think given that she was among 10 year olds. She could read. She didn’t comprehend what she was reading, and on one occasion read the picture captions in the history text book along with the text itself, making no distinction – words was words, and she could read words just fine even if she didn’t know what they meant. When a few in the class giggled or tried to correct her, the teacher rather gently instructed the class to be quiet. We learned a lesson in kindness, and I don’t think I was much the worse for less of the teacher’s attention – but then I had started history with Hillyer when I was 6, and had read Van Loon before I got to 5th grade, and there was little in the text that I needed to learn, and nothing the teacher was going to teach me. The teacher left me pretty well to my own devices, which consisted of reading library books, some young adult novels like Blueberry Mountain, all the Jack London I could find, and various other stuff available to a 9 year old out in the middle of the countryside. I couldn’t haul a Britannica volume into class – that would have been too conspicuous – and comic books were forbidden, but so long as I looked busy and didn’t cause disruptions I was pretty well left to my own devices. On reflection, I was treated just about the same as Maria the 15 year old trapped in 5th grade, and we both learned about the same amount from the classroom. Which was probably about the best result that could have been expected.

So: I open the subject for discussion. I start with the proposition that the first thing to do is to repeal the Individuals with Disabilities and the Education for all Handicapped Children Acts. The matter should be returned to the states. Given the massive state education bureaucracies that probably will do little good, but it may make some experimentation possible. Surely there are a few places where the sentiment favors the proposition that schools are places for learning, and those who aren’t learning – either because they will not, or because they cannot – should be somewhere else. The remedy to the problems of the handicapped are not to cripple those more fortunate, and indeed that is counterproductive. It is a lot easier to divide a large pie than a small one, and without an educated work force you will not get large pies. While we are at it in this debate, it may be time to open the question of differential education: as production gets more complicated and demands more mental resources, nations which don’t develop their intellectual capital won’t have any big pies to distribute. As to what happens to those who used to contribute to the economy but whose jobs have been automated forever, that’s another discussion and one of great importance.

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It’s time to go write something, so I’ll leave this for another day, and yes, I am aware that is two items I owe you: the rest of the autism and inoculation story, which is important but complex and has implications for both public policy and science resource investment; and a continuation of the education entitlement concept. Obviously to assert that every child is entitled to a world class pre-university prep education is to say that no one is entitled to it, because if everyone is to have an equal education the standards must be kept really low. Nor can everyone be entitled to a shot at a world class university prep education: at some point they have to be weeded out so that the ones who may benefit from it can be taught. We’ve been through this before, but it’s time to look in detail.

I await suggestion and discussion.

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It’s unfair to leave the story of Maria without giving the surprising ending. Recall this was in World War II. After the United States entered the war and sent an expedition to North Africa, the Army took increasing numbers of prisoners of war. Some were German, but most of the earliest prisoners were Italian. It happens that Memphis was surrounded by small farms. Many of these grew vegetables, which were trucked into Memphis markets – there were still mom and pop corner grocery stores, weekend farmers markets, and such as well as Kroger, A&P, and other “Supermarket” chains. The small vegetable gardens located 10 to 20 miles from the city were known as “truck gardens” because the farmers used to pack their harvests into trucks and take them to the city to sell directly to stores or in the farmers markets. Most truck gardeners were Italian. Maria was the only daughter of Italian (second generation American) truck gardeners. The US didn’t have any prison camps, but it was clear that most of the Italian POW’s had no enthusiasm for war against the United States, and within weeks it became the common practice to parole Italian POW’s to American farmers as low paid farm hands, thus solving the problems of the labor shortage brought on by the war, and the logistics of feeding thousands of POW’s who were no threat to the United States. The program worked brilliantly.

One of the POW’s was paroled to Maria’s home. Romance ensued resulting in marriage. At the end of the war he stayed in the US – he had his sponsors – and eventually inherited the farm. Maria’s parents were delighted: she had a husband. Maria was delighted. She had a husband. The young caporal was delighted. He inherited the farm, became an American citizen, and last I heard had three perfectly normal children as well as a wife of good disposition who adored him. She could even read although she didn’t really understand what she was reading. But then she didn’t have to.

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