More on reading; a bit of the absurd

View 766 Friday, March 15, 2013

The Ides of March

Birthday of the late Stefan T. Possony

clip_image002

Yesterday I wrote a lot about reading and the modern education system. If you haven’t read that you should go back and read it, else what comes next won’t make much sense.

Also yesterday I mentioned that as we came back from our medical appointments, the car died. I had AAAS tow it to the local Shell Station where I trust the mechanics, and we came home. Today it is as good as new. I had the fuel pump replaced and the annual servicing done, and my old Explorer runs like new again. It’s an ancient car now – 1998 – but as my mechanic said, they don’t build them like that any more. It’s built like a tank, gets awful gas mileage but it’s reliable and should be good for years to come; and I don’t drive much so gas mileage isn’t a big factor. Keeping it serviced isn’t cheap, but a lot cheaper than getting a new car would be. As to the medical situation, most of it is over. Roberta and I and Sable all need more exercise, and we’ll just have to see to it that we get it. But all’s more or less well, and tonight I got the printer working that makes labels for my wife’s reading instruction program disk, so that problem is solved too.

[I got my Explorer after I wiped out my Bronco II in Death Valley driving home from a COMDEX.  Those who have been reading this page for decades know all about that, but for those who don’t, the Death Valley Adventure – I had to walk out – is told here. http://www.jerrypournelle.com/chaosreports/deathvalley.html and here http://www.jerrypournelle.com/pictures/death.html ]

Some of today was bizarre, and sometimes I feel as if I have slipped over into an absurd alternate universe. In one supposedly professional writers conference I was “given a time out” – her words – by the moderator for posting a comment to the answer to a question I had asked, and no, I don’t intend to explain any further except that I thought I was in a professional association, not a nursery school to be treated like a delinquent child. As I said, theater of the absurd. But I am slowly catching up with my life again.

clip_image002[1]

Dr. Pournelle,

When our daughter was in kindergarten, she read Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. Yes, she understood it with the help of her Parental Dictionaries and a bit of phonetic guidance with things like wingardia leviosa. My sainted mother-in-law took the place of an English nanny.

At the end the school year, her masters-level allegedly educated kindergarten teacher reported to us that, perhaps, with hard work, she might be "ready to read" by the end of first grade.

Thankfully, the "teacher" was gone by next Fall. I shudder to think she’s still teaching somewhere.

Charles Krug

The notion of “reading readiness” is one of the worst blights of the modern colleges of education. It is easy enough to show that English middle and upper class children routinely learned to read in nursery school, and unless you believe that the ruling classes have better protoplasm than you and I, then you must conclude that the secret was that the Nannies who taught the kids to read were able to do it because they believed it could be done. But teachers in the US learn in their first year of education school that you can’t teach the kids to read until they are ‘ready’ so it is not the teacher’s fault if the kids remain illiterate after a year or two or three of reading instruction. It is a ghastly theory, and one reason that Head Start does not in fact give much of a Head Start: if Head Start taught the kids to read in pre-school you would sure as anything be able to see improvements over the kids who hadn’t been to Head Start. But it will not happen.

The only way you can be sure your kids can read is if you teach them yourself. The best way to do that is through a systematic approach.

phonics and reading Jerry,

Roberta or one of your advisors may have some idea about our little "problem".

We have read to our son since before he was old enough to sit up, and he pretty much "taught himself" in the sense that we did not do anything more than read to him daily before bedtime and insist that he sit down with us during book time. We did get some of those phonics based series but read him a variety of books. At 22 months old, he excitedly took me around his daycare room to everywhere people’s names were printed, and he read out loud every name on every photo board, the printed class roster, etc. I thought that was interesting since he had also started reading out loud road signs while driving around, so we started giving him a chance to read the books himself instead of us always reading to him. He could get through most hop on pop type books on his own at around age 25 months and read through 2 complete learn to read book systems in just a few months. For almost a year, he would constantly point at any word he hadn’t seen yet and ask "what’s that?" Fast forward another 3 years, and he remembers just about every individual word he reads/hears with almost no repetition. He reads just as well upside down 10 ft away from the book as he does with the book right in front of him, something I discovered while reading to our 3 yr old daughter when he started reading ahead of us while sitting on the bed across the room.

My "problem" as you’ve probably guessed, is that new or longer words stump him a lot of the time because we did not insist on him learning and using phonics to begin with. He was doing so well pretty much all by himself and we didn’t want to ruin his enthusiasm by making it hard work. We have been working with him on "sounding the words out" whenever he encounters a new word, but he is resistant because if he can get us to say it once, that’s all it takes for him to remember it.

So, any ideas on how to progress? Should we force him to learn and actually use phonics, or sit back and let him figure it out? He isn’t even 5 yet and we’re a bit stumped on how much to press him on this, because kids don’t usually read on their own as early as he did and we don’t want to mess with success.

Our daughter wanted to "play dumb" while reading with us so we had a heck of a time getting her to even try to read, but we enrolled her into a preschool a couple days a week (we pronounced it "daycare" at first) and working with a teacher and other kids has really gotten her interested. She just turned 3 and has shown no interest in simply memorizing words so she is learning phonics out of necessity. In a few years, I wonder which of them will be reading better and with more comprehension.

I asked my wife about this. I have seen it before. It’s the lack of systematic training – one technique in Roberta’s reading program is “uncover – discover” – that produces the proper result. Smart kids like to guess and are often rewarded for guessing correctly. That encourages bad reading habits. They must learn to attack the words, and NOT GUESS. Guessing will be right often enough that it’s rewarding but deceiving; systematic attack with uncover-discover works every time, and trains good habits. Bright kids eventually unlearn the bad habits, but it’s better that they never form bad habits in the first place. For more see

http://www.jerrypournelle.com/OldReading.html

The longer you allow bad habits, the harder it is to lose them.

clip_image002[2]

Much is Thereby Explained

Jerry

I read your view on Whole Word reading instruction with great interest, as it suddenly exploded in my head in a blinding light the reason for our present financial situation: the Whole Number method. All these folks were taught to *guess at the number and that was good enough.

Mike Flynn

I wish that were a joke. Ah well.

clip_image002[3]

Two interesting links from long time friend and reader Ed:

Beautiful Time-Lapse Videos Show Comet Flying Near Crescent Moon:

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/03/pan-starrs-time-lapse/

Set it to full screen. It’s not long

Ed

New nuke could POWER WORLD UNTIL 2083 .

Jerry

“The Waste Annihilating Molten Salt Reactor (WAMSR) is based on designs first dreamt up in the 1950s for reactors that used liquid rather than solid fuels. Two graduate students at MIT have now upgraded those designs so that the reactors can be fueled by nuclear waste, and also designed a safety system that will automatically shut the reactor down without power or human intervention.”

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/03/14/nuclear_reactor_salt/

“Most conventional nuclear reactors – in the US at least – are light-water reactors, but this design has a number of disadvantages. The reactors only use about 3 per cent of the potential energy stored in the uranium pellets that power them, and the resultant waste still contains enough energy to be radioactive for hundreds of thousands of years. The average US plant produces 20 tons of such waste a year.” <snip>

“The design is much more fuel-efficient than light-water reactors – using 98 per cent of the potential energy in uranium pellets – and a WAMSR unit would produce just three kilos of waste a year that would be radioactive for only hundreds of years rather than hundreds of thousands.” <snip>

“As a safety feature, WAMSR’s liquid-fuel pipes are connected to a drain plug of salt that has been frozen solid. If humans aren’t around and the power to the plant fails, the plug melts and the nuclear fuel drains into a holding tanks, cools, and solidifies over the space of a few days.”

Sounds good. We’ll have to see how it plays out.

Ed

I would love for it to be true, but I haven’t seen enough about this to have a right to an opinion.

 

clip_image002[4]

I’ll try to do a full mail bag shortly. It’s late and this absurd day is over. But I was digging about in old View columns, and found an interesting illusion that may be worth your time:

http://www.jerrypournelle.com/archives2/archives2view/view385.html#Illusion

 

There is a lot of really good stuff back in those old archives of this place.  If you have nothing else to do some time you might find it interesting to go spelunking through them

clip_image002[5]

clip_image002[6]

clip_image004

clip_image002[7]

Notes on the schools; what comes after phonics

View 766 Thursday, March 14, 2013

HABEMUS PAPEM

It is Thursday and I seem to be falling further behind. My apologies. We have more medical appointments this afternoon. Nothing terribly serious.

clip_image002

I am in a tearing hurry. I thought I had posted a reference to this essay by my friend Sarah Hoyt, but apparently I did not. A reader has reminded me:

What Sarah Hoyt wrote about what a school system attempted to do with her children is chilling. I am very grateful I was taught with phonics and encouraged when I demonstrated a smartass precociousness!

My sister was taught with Whole Language. She had a much harder time reading than I did, and she is an extremely well-educated and extremely smart lady. In many, many ways she has been way more successful in her career than I have been.

I asked her about her experience with Whole Language. This is her reply:

"I found myself limited most of my life until I decided to teach myself phonics. This has greatly increased both my reading skills and my desire to read!"

Regards, Charles Adams, Bellevue, NE

<http://accordingtohoyt.com/2013/03/11/malice-or-incompetence/>

"Malice or Incompetence?

Recently I came across a news article estimating that 80% of NYC graduates cannot read and write and are functionally illiterate. I’d bet those numbers are not far off across the country, and it wasn’t a surprise…

….Right here, let me tell you that if your kid is in school, chances are he or she is being taught to "guess" words, aka, "whole word." If you ask him if they use whole word, they’ll act shocked and say oh, no, they use phonics "in combination" with other methods. They told me all of this too, at the time. However, the entire lesson plan is geared towards guessing words, sometimes working from the meaning. (I.e. Terribly and Therapy are the same word at a glance because they begin and end with the same letters, so you’re supposed to "guess" one of them, and then work out which it is by the meaning of the rest of the sentence. [This was referred to, ten years ago, as the "whole language" method.])

Do I need to tell you that in a language that is largely phonetic – yes, I know all the exceptions, but it’s easier to work to the right word from a mispronounced version than it is to do it from "meaning" or "guess" – this is NOT only the way NOT to teach reading but is, ultimately the way to teach kids not to read. By turning words into ideograms, which they were never meant to be, you make reading too difficult for all but the most dedicated strivers.

I’m surprised the literacy rate is 20% I’m surprised it’s not 5%, and I wonder how many of those kids read well enough to read for pleasure…."

I intended to post a reference to this yesterday. Her essay is worth your attention. There are also comments, far too many for most to go through. One of them is mine, which I am reprinting below.

I must be off again.

clip_image003

For those concerned about reading: I recommend that every parent be certain their children can read before being sent to any school public or private. By read I mean be able to read essentially any English word, and I recommend you test by showing them nonsense words like deamy and cromagnanimous. Those won’t be “easy” but any five year old who can read can say them. Once children can read then their speaking vocabulary is their reading vocabulary, and they can read the rest of the words but won’t necessarily know what they mean. And they will get some wrong. I mispronounced covetousness until after I had my PhD because I never heard anyone else say it. But I knew what it meant from very early on because when I was about ten I heard about Dr. Faustus and looked him up in the encyclopedia. But that’s another story. The important point is that if kids can’t read phonetic nonsense words it is time to panic.

English middle and upper class children traditionally learned to read at age 4 in nursery, taught by nannies, and a nanny who couldn’t teach the kids to read wouldn’t keep that job very long. English protoplasm isn’t any better than American.

For those who haven’t the foggiest about how to do this, start with HOP ON POP and some of the other Seuss books which are quite phonetic, but to be sure you’d be better off with a systematic program. My wife developed a system when she was teacher of last resort in the LA county juvenile justice system, and we computerized it in early Windows days. It runs on any Windows system (alas the Mac version was for power chip Macs and won’t work on modern Macs).

You can find the program here:
http://www.jerrypournelle.com/OldReading.html

It is hokey, and not at all cool. It just works. It’s an insurance policy. Most kids if given reasonable instruction (not told to guess but told NOT to guess) will learn to read; but Mrs. Pournelle’s program is 70 lessons, about half an hour each, and when done (you have to get through each lesson to go on to the next) it is DONE. After that its just do some reading. Lots of reading. I am about to put the California 6th Grade Reader of 1914 on Kindle — about 2 weeks now — and that’s age appropriate up to about 12 or 14, all old public domain stories and poems. Kids often like poems. By the shores of Gitchee Gummi by the shining big sea waters… and so forth.

Relying on someone in a school, public or private, to teach your children to read is a bad mistake. At worst test them yourself: at the end of first grade they ought to be able to read Longfellow, and some will like him. Or Stevenson’s Child’s Garden of Verses. If they can’t read The Pleasant Land of Counterpane at the end of first grade, PANIC.

Enough. Sarah, we’ve discussed this stuff before, but apparently it’s getting worse out there now. There’s no excuse for kids getting a bad education, but they won’t get it from most of the public schools which exist to pay union rates to teachers with tenure. Some teachers will break their hearts trying to do more, but many give up early on. Don’t chance it.

For God’s sake be sure your kids can read.

clip_image002[1]

On the one hand, I remember my parents telling stories of how my first-grade teacher asked us all to bring a book from home to read in class, and I brought "Tom Swift and his Ultrasonic Cycloplane", and she told them not to let me bring in books because I was obviously just making up the words instead of actually *reading*.

On the other hand…okay, so let’s say that you’ve got enough pronunciation skill and "sound of doubt" ability to pronounce "illiterate". How do you know what the word *means*? Is there a way to know what the word means without having someone tell you, at some point, that that specific combination of letters is a word that means "unable to read"?

You can’t play sports without learning to catch a ball. But pronunciation is no more the whole of reading than catching a ball is the whole of playing sports.

— M

I include this letter not to make fun of the writer but because it illustrates a point often made by reading teachers.

The theory of “whole word” reading comes from a study by professors of education, who observed the eye motions of accomplished readers and those of slow readers.  They found that the fast readers did not stop at each word and “sound it out”, while the slow readers did.  They drew the conclusion that phonics was a drag.

What they did not do was give both groups text rich in words they had never seen before. Had they done so they would have seen that the fast readers did in fact stop at unfamiliar words and mentally “sound them out".”  If it turned out to be a word they had heard and used they did this quite rapidly and went on with reading; if it were a word they had never heard before they did pause.  Some would try to infer it from context. Some would simply go on reading without understanding. That depended on the instructions they had bee given – read as fast as possible vs. understand as well as you can – and in part because of previous instruction and habits.  But proper studies show that fast readers do learn “whole words” after a while, as you and I do, but they have the ability to pause and ‘sound out’ words when they have to.  And of course those taught to guess get some right and some not right and appear to be reading fast but there are understanding problems.

Of course reading with understanding requires efforts to expand vocabulary – which is why “reading at grade level” with censored works of limited vocabulary is so dreary. 

About 2,000 words are sufficient to read and speak the English language, but if you want to enjoy literature you need the ability to read and understand more..  At some point reading ability is in fact dependent on IQ. At lower levels this isn’t really true. All kids from “dull normal” up can learn to read and write the basic 1500 to 2000 words required for reasonable communication. Some dull normals will never go beyond that. Some will, and in fact expanding their vocabulary may be good for them and expand mental horizons.  All this seems like basic common sense, and it is, but there is very little common sense, or even uncommon sense, among the conclusions of professors of education, many of whom have never actually taught a single student to read in their lives.  I don’t say this as a canard.  When my wife was working on her reading system we met such professors. They were convinced they understood the situation and didn’t need to waste their time teaching normal children to read. They could leave that to their students.  They were working on something more important.

 

English is over 90% phonetic.  Some words, like though the rough cough plough me through, have to be memorized; but most of the words commonly used are thoroughly phonetic.  Good reading programs understand this and deal with it. Whole word instruction simply assumes that all the words have to learned as if they were Chinese ideographs, because some must be. And I better stop before I get upset and ramble on for hours, which I can.

 

The important point is that if kids can’t read – if they have to rely on guessing – they will never be good readers.  Yes you may have to be told what illiterate means if you never saw the word before. On the other hand if you know literate and you know something of the rules of English words – say by 7th grade – you will probably see the word, sound it out, and understand what it means.  Now true  that’s a guess and can lead to mistakes. I could tell stories of some of the mistakes I made because words sound alike. Also knowing how to read the word bitch can get you in trouble in some social situations. I could tell you stories. But if you cannot read a word – which is to say pronounce it – you must show it to someone to learn both how to pronounce it and to define it. That slows learning something awful.  With modern computer equipment perhaps this requirement will change, but I would not bet my child’s future on that.  Teach them to read. It will take a couple of hundred hours – fewer if you use a systematic program like my wife’s – and it’s a cheap insurance policy.  Illiterates in the US are not likely to succeed.  There are exceptions but illiteracy is a serous handicap.

 

clip_image002[3]

We got back from our medical appointments and the car drove nicely to the local grocery store where it promptly died.  It is 95 out there and that may have something to do with it. I don’t know. AAA towed us to our local friendly mechanic and he got us home.  A trying day all around.  I’ll see what I can do later tonight or tomorrow.

clip_image002[4]

clip_image002[5]

clip_image005

clip_image003[1]

Solar winds, ex parte Milligan, TSA stories, and many other interesting things…

Mail 766 Monday, March 11, 2013

clip_image002

NASA warns ‘something unexpected is happening to the Sun’ in year that is supposed to be the peak the sunspot cycle

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2290289/NASA-warns-unexpected-happening-Sun-year-supposed-peak-sunspot-cycle.html

The solar wind’s energy source has been discovered:

http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2013/08mar_solarwind/

And the probe with the data? "After all these years, Wind is still sending us excellent data," says Szabo, the mission’s project scientist, “and it still has 60 years’ worth of fuel left in its tanks.”

And then there is the next one: “Solar Probe Plus, scheduled for launch in 2018, will plunge so far into the sun’s atmosphere that the sun will appear as much as 23 times wider than it does in the skies of Earth. At closest approach, about 7 million km from the sun’s surface, Solar Probe Plus must withstand temperatures greater than 1400 deg. C and survive blasts of radiation at levels not experienced by any previous spacecraft. The mission’s goal is to sample the sun’s plasma and magnetic field at the very source of the solar wind.”

"With Solar Probe Plus we’ll be able to conduct specific tests of the ion cyclotron theory using sensors far more advanced than the ones on the Wind spacecraft," says Kasper. "This should give us a much deeper understanding of the solar wind’s energy source."

Ed

Maunder Minimum approaching

This is a year old but I managed to miss it (possibly by milliseconds) when I was working on it last January.

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/01/25/first-estimate-of-solar-cycle-25-amplitudesmallest-in-over-300-years/

The expected peak sunspot level of the next solar cycle is a monthly average of Wolf Number (SSN) of 7.

Note that since the SSN is calculated to have a minimum value of 11 (10 x number of sunspot groups + number of observed distinct spots), this means that a "typical" peak month will have at least 10 spotless days.

These are definitely Maunder Minimum – Little Ice Age numbers.

Jim

And we continue to learn more about the energy economy of the solar system, while pretending that our current models of earth’s energy exchanges are accurate.

clip_image002[1]

Dr. Pournelle, this is my favorite example of security nonsense.

In November of last year I was going to fly to LA and, among other things, meet a model there for some photography. She’s a big comic book fan and so we planned some shoots around comic book characters and concepts. As part of this, I put a plastic but semi-realistic toy gun in my luggage. While turning it in to the airline, I informed them there was a plastic toy gun in the luggage and they should so inform the TSA so they could confirm it was harmless. Naturally a half hour later I was paged to report to the front and was told that I had to be escorted into the TSA area so they could speak with me about my luggage. Once back there I was informed that I couldn’t fly unless I either got rid of the toy or cleared it so they could see there were no real cartridges in the "weapon." I pointed out that it wouldn’t matter, it was not going to be in the cabin, so I’d have no access, I couldn’t fire it by telekinesis and if the nonexistant cartridges did fire in a plastic chamber before a plastic barrel, they’d break both and have no noticable forward thrust to be dangerous. The guards and the policeman on site agreed with all of this, but it couldn’t be resolved without a set of tools so we could take the thing apart and verify there was nothing in there other than a spring. I’d have thought the x-ray machines could have told them that. All concerned knew it was nonsense, so why were we trapped into that waste of time?

A couple said that they’d be interested in seeing the shots afterwards. Naturally, once I got to LA the model called in sick…Good thing I had other projects planned.

I’m not convinced it is possible to be hard enough on the TSA, much less "piling on."

Graves

Domesticated Dogs

Hi Jerry,

I didn’t think it was "piling on" to ask why TSA picked 2.36 inches, I just wanted to know.

However, if there is going to be a TSA pile-on I’d be happy to make time to join it. Not so much because I have been selected several times for pat-down screenings, but because at the Minneapolis airport the TSO thought it would be funny to begin by explaining, "I’m going to give you a full-body massage," an innuendo that made it even more unpleasant than usual.

On a more worthwhile topic, I always enjoy reading discussions about dogs on Chaos Manor, so I am sending along this news item —

http://news.yahoo.com/dogs-domesticated-33-000-years-ago-skull-suggests-220437160.html

A canine skull found in the Altai Mountains of Siberia is more closely related to modern domestic dogs than to wolves, a new DNA analysis reveals.

The findings could indicate that dogs were domesticated <http://www.livescience.com/20480-dog-domestication-mystery.html> around 33,000 years ago. The point at which wolves went from wild to man’s best friend is hotly contested, though dogs were well-established in human societies by about 10,000 years ago. Dogs and humans were buried together in Germany about 14,000 years ago, a strong hint of domestication, but genetic studies have pinpointed the origin of dog domestication in both China and the Middle East.

–Mike

I fly every week (and opt-out from the body scanners), and am absolutely sure that the recent policy changes make no material impact on airplane security. Someone at the TSA probably made the judgment that if an incident occurs, it would be better if the policy allowed it, than if the security screenings failed (which of course, they do for items like this).

Now that may seem cynical, but I believe it also is designed to protect the traveling public from even more onerous screening requirements. Now if something happens, they just re-introduce the ban. If something had happened with the ban in place, the searches and restrictions would have reached untenable levels due to political and media pressure to ‘do something’.

Not everyone in the TSA is an idiot – many good people are trapped by a flawed system under immense political pressure to have impossible perfect security. Congress shoulders far more blame than the TSA. =

clip_image002[2]

Americans on American soil

Dear Dr. Pournelle,

I’ve seen the stuff going around the blogosphere claiming that the president reserves the right to kill Americans on American soil. Here is, so far as I can tell, the actual position:

http://hotair.com/archives/2013/03/05/eric-holder-yes-in-extraordinary-circumstances-the-president-can-order-americans-killed-on-americans-soil/

"

As members of this administration have previously indicated, the US government has not carried out drone strikes in the United States and has no intention of doing so. As a policy matter moreover, we reject the use of military force where well-established law enforcement authorities in this country provide the best means for incapacitating a terrorist threat. We have a long history of using the criminal justice system to incapacitate individuals located in our country who pose a threat to the United States and its interests abroad. Hundreds of individuals have been arrested and convicted of terrorism-related offenses in our federal courts.

The question you have posed is therefore entirely hypothetical, unlikely to occur, and one we hope no president will ever have to confront. It is possible, I suppose, to imagine an extraordinary circumstance in which it would be necessary and appropriate under the Constitution and applicable laws of the United States for the President to authorize the military to use lethal force within the territory of the United States. For example, the president could conceivably have no choice but to authorize the military to use such force if necessary to protect the homeland in the circumstances like a catastrophic attack like the ones suffered on December 7, 1941, and September 11, 2001."

So, if I’m reading this right, what he’s saying is that the President can order American fighters to shoot down another hijacked airliner even if it still has American civilians aboard.

That’s not exactly controversial, is it? The President has had the power to act in emergencies since Washington suppressed the Whiskey Rebellion. Congress has the power to not fund his actions (Lincoln didn’t have to ask them to authorize him to reassert the lawful authority of the US in 1861, but he DID have to ask them for money, volunteers, conscription et al) and Congress has the power to impeach him if he exceeds his authority.

So I think this is a tempest in a teapot, where conservatives are trying to find a club to beat the President with. There are sufficient legitimate clubs to beat him with, so there is no need to resort to imaginary ones.

Still, it does raise a question. Assasssination of military targets is legitimate in wartime. I don’t think anyone is going to argue shooting down Yamamoto was any violation of the laws of war. Problem: Our enemies in the war on terror don’t wear uniforms. Often, we are dependent for targeting on the same intelligence agencies which reassured us Saddam had weapons of mass destruction. You can see why I would not find this reassuring.

The other problem is that the war on terror is never going to end. "Terror" is not one single organization that can be brought to terms on the battleship Missouri. It’s a tactic used by many different groups, and it’s one we’re going to have to deal with for the foreseeable future.

Which means war powers and wartime emergencies are not adequate for combatting terror. Terror is now part of the normal world. Which means we need normal peacetime protocols for dealing with it.

Which means we need some way to apply Magna Carta’s principles to drone strikes.

The question I have … and this is serious, not rhetorical .. is how do we do this and maintain a free society? The closest historical analog I can think of is the Protestant hunting of Jesuit priests as infiltrators back in the days of Elizabeth. I’m not convinced that’s necessarily a model we want to follow, but I’m at a loss to think of a better one at this time.

Respectfully,

Brian P.

I would have thought that interception of an enemy admiral in time of war was not controversial; but execution of American citizens without trial certainly is. Ex parte Milligan settled that, or I would have thought so. There is a difference between actions against terrorists, citizens or not, when they are are not subject to arrest and detention; but on American soil while the courts of law still exist and the authorities retain power, the army is not permitted to try and execute citizens even when taken in actions against the United States. Arrest and detain, yes, but not execute. This goes to the heart of the power of the state. We may have an inherent right to pass an ultimate decree, but that has not been done here. The Nazi saboteurs landed on Long Island in WW II were executed (at least some of them were) after trial by a military tribunal, but they were not shot down like dogs on the court house steps.

Inter armes, silent leges; but that is not the case in America in this year of grace 2013.

clip_image003

Chickens

Jerry,

Your post on the gleaming chicken processing plant in Iraq reminded me of the TV series "The Walltons" where Ike Godsey decided to buy all those refrigerators for the folks on Walton Mountain, none of whom had electricity at the time. That brilliant move resulted in John Walton re-mortgaging his home he had just paid off to bail out Ike and Cora Beth. Classic…

Regards,

Gnawbone Jack

Jack Collingsworth

clip_image002[3]

HMS Friday: The Legend of Hugh Williams.

<http://thescuttlefish.com/2010/12/hms-friday-the-legend-of-hugh-williams/>

Roland Dobbins

A very strange story indeed. And of course we want to find things like this…

And within an hour of posting this, I got

Jerry: The Hugh Williams Shipwreck Coincidence tale doesn’t stand up to scrutiny: July 16, 2012

<http://open.salon.com/blog/rick_spilman/2012/07/16/the_unsinkable_hugh_williams_truth_behind_the_legend>

LTM

which I suspected from the start; but people want to believe stories like this. That includes me.  Ah well.

 

clip_image002[4]

TSA exposé…

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/confessions_of_tsa_agent_we_re_bunch_OhxHeGd0RR9UVGzfypjnLO

Charles Brumbelow

clip_image002[5]

Frack the Chinese

Dear Jerry –

From http://www.cnbc.com/id/100531212?__source=xfinity|mod&ticket=ST-100688-wOANG9T1fBrrjnhpFfM7pb52ESm2kQELAvA-20&rememberMe=null

"With oil production at a twenty year high and predictions of a manufacturing renaissance for the U.S. economy, one of the world’s largest investment banks has detailed how the "shale revolution" will negatively affect emerging markets such as China."

If true, it’s still a ways off, but it’s an interesting projection.

As for the title, I just couldn’t help myself. No biscuit for me.

Regards,

Jim Martin

Energy is the key ‘element’ in modern world history.

clip_image002[6]

Sowell: ‘And public alarm is what can get budget cuts restored.’

<http://washingtonexaminer.com/will-obama-turn-the-united-states-into-the-worlds-largest-banana-republic/article/2523217>

Roland Dobbins

clip_image002[7]

‘Like Martel’s campaigns before them, the Crusades were defensive actions designed to stave off Muslim aggression.’

<http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/03/we_might_be_muslim_today_if.html>

Roland Dobbins

The siege of Vienna in 1529 was a major turning point in history. It could have gone the other way. Fletcher Pratt calls it “The failure to compete the crescent,” and makes it one of the key battles that changed history. Another was Las Navas de Teloso, in 1212. Those not familiar with Pratt’s Battles That Changed History are unfortunate; it is one of the best summary histories of Western Civilization that I know of.

clip_image003[1]

Lengthy but interesting…

…report considering psychiatric medicines and school violence. Includes a number of references to specific situations.

http://www.fromthetrenchesworldreport.com/psychiatric-meds-prescription-for-murder/37091/

Charles Brumbelow

clip_image002[8]

Army tuition assistance suspended

To they whom joined for the college money:

<.>

The Army announced Friday it is suspending its tuition assistance program for soldiers newly enrolling in classes due to sequestration and other budgetary pressures.

“This suspension is necessary given the significant budget execution challenges caused by the combined effects of a possible year-long continuing resolution and sequestration,” Paul Prince, an army personnel spokesman at the Pentagon, wrote in an email to Stars and Stripes. “The Army understands the impacts of this action and will re-evaluate should the budgetary situation improve.”

The Army’s announcement follows a similar move by the Marine Corps.

The Army’s tuition assistance program was available for troops to complete a high school diploma, certificate program or college or master’s degree. Under the program, the Army paid 100 percent of the tuition and authorized fees charged by a school up to established limits of $250 per semester hour or credit hour or up to $4,500 per fiscal year.

</>

http://www.stripes.com/news/army-suspends-tuition-assistance-program-for-troops-1.210999

—–

Most Respectfully,

Joshua Jordan, KSC

Percussa Resurgo

Of course one could argue that given the economy we do not need more incentives to fill a volunteer military – at least in the army. Career navy enlisted may be a bit harder to come by. It depends…

clip_image002[9]

Sunstone.

<http://www.gadling.com/2013/03/07/fabled-sunstone-discovered-in-english-shipwreck/>

Roland Dobbins

clip_image002[10]

Interesting UAV drone RPA article

Jerry,

This article is from last year and it focuses more on RAF Reaper flying than USAF, but it’s a pretty good read and given the political discussion of the week, it’s timely.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/defence/9552547/The-air-force-men-who-fly-drones-in-Afghanistan-by-remote-control.html

Sean

clip_image003[2]

– near-term reliable fusion

Jerry,

I haven’t seen this in your blog, and think it is a reliable competent group (skunk works) that seems to be on to a better way to get to fusion affordably in the near term.

http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2013-02/fusion-power-could-happen-sooner-you-think

r/Spike

One can hope, but I do not think we are much closer to economically useful fusion energy than we were thirty years ago.

clip_image002[11]

Holocaust Memorial Museum is not on the National Mall

Jerry:

It has been many years since I visited the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, but I don’t remember it being on the National Mall. Rather it is on 14th Street south of Independence Avenue, which is the southern boundary of the Mall in that area as I read Google Maps (see below) and the Wikipedia article about the Mall. That article describes the Museum as a nearby attraction.

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

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Mall> Emacs!

Best regards,

–Harry M.

Indeed. I have visited the Holocaust museum but long enough ago that my memories are confused on the location.

In your March 6, 2013 mail you reprinted an e-mail from someone that includes what purports to be a long article published in a Spanish newspaper in 2008 by one Sebastian Villar Rodriguez.

One thing that should make you immediately suspicious is that there is no source given for the article despite the claim of an exact date of publication. Almost always claims of this type are false in my experience.

The simplest search will pull up tons of claims regarding this article over the past decade.

This one may or may not be the original from 2004. I don’t remember enough Spanish from high school (it was a long time ago) to say much about it.

http://www.gentiuno.com/articulo.asp?articulo=1865

I have not found any earlier posts about it.

The e-mail you posted includes other statements that have circulated in other e-mails for some years.

Researching the truth and original sources for the myriad claims are left as an exercise for the reader (as they used to tell us in school.)

Best regards,

–Harry M.

The lists of accomplishments have circulated for many years because so far as I know they are true. It may well be that the source is not; I found the subject matter worth thinking about. Since I do not know who Sebastian Villar Rodriguez is I wouldn’t regard him as an authority to begin with. Sometime it is not the source but the subject matter that I find worth contemplating.

And do note that I do not necessarily approve every statement made in mail. I publish what I think is owrth thinking about, or is amusing, or which just struck my fancy at the time. And I very much invite people to do their own research.

clip_image002[12]

clip_image005

clip_image002[13]

Apologies

View 766 Monday, March 11, 2013

 

We’ve been a bit under the weather this weekend and have a doctors appointment this afternoon. My apologies to subscribers.  I’ll get something up tonight.