chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Why vertical farms are a crock.
chadmalik's comments
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Why vertical farms are a crock.
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Why vertical farms are a crock.
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Why vertical farms are a crock.
Ultimately though agriculture itself is a non-sustainable process. That is why the fertile crescent, cradle of civilization, is now a desert. We should start creating food forests, this is a very promising sustainable way to feed people and all of the unemployment we experience can be solved by transitioning a larger % of our population to food production as a job, just like our grandparents used to do it.
The desertification caused by agriculture and our increasingly desperate use of technology to cover up the fundamental flaws in how we feed ourselves is increasing rapidly. The water table in many places around the planet is being depleted faster than it can restore itself. These issues are NOT going away and they are far more important than coupons for cupcakes and the like.
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Microbes ate BP oil deep-water plume
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Android Is As Open As The Clenched Fist I’d Like To Punch The Carriers With
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Ultralight startups: little capital, just computer
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Steve Jobs "never had any designs. He has not designed a single project"
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Steve Jobs "never had any designs. He has not designed a single project"
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Scott Adams: Phone
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Scott Adams: Phone
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Author Simon Singh Puts Up a Fight in the War on Science
However, I have a problem with laymen needing to sit down and accept whatever scientists say for the simple fact that science is not some pristine incorruptible institution dedicated only to truth. Scientists are PEOPLE and are subject to the same political issues, careerism, bias to not make funders angry, etc. that everyone else is.
Science is subject to a lot of influence from the people holding the purse strings, which are often industry. Take the recent story that came out of Harvard Medical School about how pharma has been influencing the ways that drugs are being prescribed: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2009/jan/15/drug-co... - should we non-scientists not question scientists, physicians, and other "authorities" when this type of thing is happening?
It is a GOOD thing when people question what scientists say. What is needed are better ways for scientists and non-scientists to engage in dialogue, and more often. Believe it ot not there might be a few things scientists can learn from the non-scientists.
I think that a lot of this gets discussed by regular people on broadcast channels (talk radio, cable news) that are really terrible mediums for communicating complex ideas. It would be nice if TV and radio weren't so cluttered with advertising, which makes it almost impossible to do more than make short statements. The exceptions that are good for communiating ideas through broadcast (such as Michio Kaku's radio show) prove the rule by being commercial-free.
Another note, scientists have to understand how political discourse and beliefs work. The domain is NOT based on rational inquiry and peer review. There is no "correct answer" as to whether Social Security should be privatized or if the US should withdraw its troops from Afghanistan. The work of George Lakoff is a must-read on this topic; we form much of our political beliefs based on non-rational moral frameworks that stem from our childhood and our ideas about the family (strict father vs. nurturant parent morality), and mapping our ideas about how the family should work onto the "nation as family" morality.
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Your real tax rate: 40%
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Your real tax rate: 40%
You're kidding right? Replacing income tax with a national sales tax would immediately create a massive black market that didn't exist.
Its always humorous to me when people claim that a national sales tax would allow the IRS to be done away with. Uh, think it through. the sales tax would need to be around 25% to replace our income taxes. So you don't think people would be trying to dodge that? And the IRS wouldn't be going around checking retailers to make sure they were paying the tax? LOL...you think the IRS is intrusive now, wait until they are trying to track EVERY SINGLE TRANSACTION. Now there's some big government for you!
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Rebranding Carrots as Junk Food
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: The first step is to start
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: SF man selling jellyfish as household pets
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Schwarzenegger: Public Pensions and Our Fiscal Future
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/02/03/eveningnews/main67...
Enron also pulled power out of states like California, causing emergency conditions to worsen.
"Sorry California," an Enron trader says. "I'm bringing all our power out of state today. I moved out six — over six hundred megawatts."
The "shut downs" and "pull outs" triggered sky high power prices.
"We're just making money hand over fist!" one voice is heard saying on the tape.
And when states complained, the guys at Enron seemed to have a response.
"Get a f clue," one says. "Yeah," another chimes in. "Leave us alone. Let us make a little bit of money."
"Exactly," says another trader.
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Schwarzenegger: Public Pensions and Our Fiscal Future
And what about Arnold's refusal to tax offshore drilling the same way red states like Alaska do?
Yes there need to be cuts in spending but refusing to raise a single tax is simply absurd. Both things need to happen to balance the budget.
The real problem is the need to have a 2/3 majority to pass a budget in the legislature. That is simply absurd.
chadmalik | 15 years ago | on: Schwarzenegger: Public Pensions and Our Fiscal Future
Bottom line the world is running out of hydrocarbons. Things that look "energy efficient" to you today won't look so efficient in 50 or so years. Peak oil already happened in the United States, Hubert's peak is reasonably well accepted, and the idea that shipping food thousands of miles is a long term sustainable strategy for feeding humanity or that the entire world can live like the people in Silicon Valley and New York City is laughable.
That is my last comment on HN - mods, please prove my point by voting it down.