Apr 052019
 

There is a lot of evidence of bee-keeping out here in rural Utah. You see a lot of mobile beehives parked around certain farms, the bees pollinating the plants; locally produced honey is available for sale *everywhere.* Heck, the local print shop in Tremonton has a section among the printer paper and envelopes for one brand of locally produced honey products. So bees are important.

But bees are also a pest. You get a beehive in your house, you want it *gone.* There are two approaches to that:

1) Kill it. Either hire someone or wrap yourself in bubblewrap and hose the hive down with Raid; or, if you’re feeling frisky and are none too damn bright, burn it with fire.

2) Call a local beekeeper. They are often looking to expand their “work force,” especially with the collapse in bee populations over the last couple decades. Bee keepers will often come and, for free, remove the hives.

Option #2 is obviously the preferred one. You win… you get rid of the problem for free. The bee keeper wins – they get a new presumably healthy hive for little cost. The bees win…. they ain’t dead. So, who would possibly have a problem with this setup?

Oh, look, it’s a politician.

Bee Removal To Be Illegal In Texas.

Rep. Theresa “Terry” Meza (D.) of Irving, Texas has authored House Bill 4212 that would make the process of bee removal illegal. Unless of course the person removing the bees has undergone 160 hours of both class room and field training in beekeeping and removals. That amounts to over 3 college semester classes worth of training! A normal college class of 3 semester credit hours is around 45-48 contact hours. This nonsense will make almost all bee keeping removal services illegal overnight! If this bill passes, nobody will be able to legally remove and relocate bees after January 1, 2020 until after they go through 160 hours of training and licensing.

There is currently no agency, organization or authority that is set up to train such licensed bee removers in Texas. The legislation would place licensing and training specifics under the authority of the Texas Department of Agriculture.

Additionally, the “licensed” bee remover must obtain $600,000 in liability insurance. If that wasn’t enough, the bee remover must also have $300,000 in workman’s comp before being able to legally remove bees. Oh and you have to pay a yearly licensing fee and whatever fees are associated with your 160 hours of classroom and field training.

Brilliant! Something humans have been doing for thousands of years, now made prohibitively expensive. *Why* these changes are desired does not seem to be in the text of the bill.

https://capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/86R/billtext/pdf/HB04212I.pdf

 Posted by at 7:51 am
Mar 292019
 

This is interesting:

Scientists Find Fossilized Fish That May Have Been Blasted by Debris From Asteroid That Ended the Dinosaur Age

When the asteroid hit the Yucatan 66 million years ago, it sent a tsunami of seawater up into North Dakota (not quite *that* impressive… the Western Interior Seaway stretched from the gulf of Mexico into Canada at the time).  sent earthquakes up as far as North Dakota that caused seawater from the Western Interior Seaway to slosh well inland. With the seawater went sea creatures; the sea water and critters ended up in local fresh water, mixing with fresh water fish. And the fish ended up breathing the tiny little glass spherules blasted into the atmosphere in their bajillions by the impact; the glass lodged in their gills in their final moments of life.

Edited for accuracy

 Posted by at 6:37 pm
Mar 262019
 

This is a little animation that Pixar has recently put out. It covers old ground… a little kitten and a tough dog become friends. It’s surprisingly touching, but it’s also touched with some surprising darkness and horrible things. The pitbull is mistreated (in a scene that you would think is a bit shocking in a Disney production until you remember all the horrible things that Disney keeps putting in all their movies) in the way you might expect out of Tijuanafied San Francisco. The kitten is the star of the show; it is shown going bonkers in just exactly the way that kittens do. And it displays fear in just the way that kittens do.

 

 Posted by at 1:55 am
Mar 122019
 

Woolly mammoth cells brought back to life in shocking scientific achievement

The headline, shockingly enough, is a tad overblown. The cells weren’t brought back to life, but “showed signs of biological activity” after nuclei were transferred into mouse cells. The DNA, as might be expected, was chopped to bits by freezing and the passage of time, but cells can continue to survive- at least for a while – even if the DNA is trashed. However, trashed DNA does not replicate, so more work will need to be done before a living mammoth can be cloned.

From the actual report:

The 28,000-year-old remains of a woolly mammoth, named ‘Yuka’, were found in Siberian permafrost. Here we recovered the less-damaged nucleus-like structures from the remains and visualised their dynamics in living mouse oocytes after nuclear transfer. Proteomic analyses demonstrated the presence of nuclear components in the remains. Nucleus-like structures found in the tissue homogenate were histone- and lamin-positive by immunostaining. In the reconstructed oocytes, the mammoth nuclei showed the spindle assembly, histone incorporation and partial nuclear formation; however, the full activation of nuclei for cleavage was not confirmed. DNA damage levels, which varied among the nuclei, were comparable to those of frozen-thawed mouse sperm and were reduced in some reconstructed oocytes. Our work provides a platform to evaluate the biological activities of nuclei in extinct animal species.

 

 

 Posted by at 3:48 pm
Mar 102019
 

Human intelligence is a spectrum, from people lacking in the most basic functionality on up to people so smart that they are virtually incomprehensible to regular smart folk. And there is precisely zero morality attached to any level of that spectrum… it’s neither “right” nor “wrong” to be either dumb or smart. It is, of course, generally more *useful* to be smart than to be dumb. There is also evidence of statistically measurable differences in that spectrum between different populations; one of the more interesting (to me, anyway) variations is the much argued about “variability hypothesis.” This holds that the *average* IQ of men is 100… and the average IQ of women is *also* 100. The difference, though is that women *tend* to cluster around the mean, while mens scores are more spread out. This means that there are more very smart men than very smart women… and more very dumb men than very dumb women. Like so:

 

This is one of those things that just *sounds* right… when you think of someone doing something profoundly stupid, chances are good you’ll think of some drunk guy saying “hold my beer” just before he sets himself on fire and blows himself to bits.

But it doesn’t say that there are *no* very dumb women. And just to prove the point…

It takes a special kind of stupid to climb over zoo barriers to go take a selfie with a predator that can shred you. I have little to no sympathy for the woman here, but I do feel bad for both the zoo (likely to get hit with lawsuits and other legal issues) and the jaguar. Unfortunately, animals that attack humans often are made to suffer for it, even though what they did was *entirely* predictable.

“Did something dangerously stupid” immediately makes me think it was a guy. “Did something dangerously stupid while taking a selfie,” makes me think it was a gal.

The weird thing is that it often seems to me that lower-IQ people who *know* they’re not that smart generally don’t behave stupidly. If you want truly stupid behavior, look to people who really aught to know better.

 Posted by at 5:02 pm
Feb 262019
 

The makers of Star Trek: Discovery got themselves sued over allegedly stealing a small video game makers concept and design for a tardigrade-based FTL propulsion system. A few days ago STD ran a new episode that featured some cartoonishly evil new alien race what looks like this:

From what I can see in this one still, it’s a humanoid with black shiny skin, long clawed fingers, no obvious eyes, tentacles hanging from the face, undefined lower extremities and it reportedly lives under water (or under some liquid… dunno, haven;t seen the episode, just going off reports).

A random YouTube recommendation tonight brought me to this image from 2014. It’s a humanoid with black shiny skin, long clawed fingers, no obvious eyes, tentacles hanging from the face, undefined lower extremities and it lives under water.

 

 

 Posted by at 3:04 am
Feb 252019
 

Another fake hate crime to add to the pile:

Jackson gay rights leader accused of burning down own home

And why?

… Joly was disappointed the Jackson Pride Parade and Festival, held five days before the blaze, hadn’t received more attention or protests.

Brilliant. Five pets died in the blaze. Given my immediately previous post, go ahead and guess how sympathetic I am to the perp here.

 Posted by at 1:25 pm
Feb 252019
 

So at the same time Venezuela enters either a death spiral or the beginnings of a civil war, Americas very own Bernie Sanders, backed up by a complicit media such as the NY Times, enters the fray and continues to argue that what America needs to do is follow in Venezuelas dying footsteps.

As may be expected, I’m not a fan of this. As has been pointed out ad nauseum, I have a number of cats (that number is 4, as it happens). Why do I have cats? Because I *like* cats. I like their personalities and their company. What I *didn’t* get cats for was as a convenient food source for when the socialists take over the US and I’m forced to consume my pets to stave off malnutrition for another week.

If you find someone *actually* flacking for Nazism, it is fair to assume that they are cool with the idea of genociding Da Joooz, and it’s fair to pre-judge them for that. Similarly, if you see someone proposing socialism, it’s fair to pre-judge them for doing what socialists have always done. Personally, when I see a socialist, I see someone who wants to kill and grill my cats. I leave it as an exercise for the student to determine my feelings about someone who would murder my critters on the altar of their ideology.

I’m not terribly good at providing a proper emotionally satisfying rant. I leave that to the professionals. Fortunately, Razorfist has produced an informative and entertaining rant on just this topic. I wholeheartedly recommend giving it a listen.

 Posted by at 12:53 pm
Jan 282019
 

The title of this post is hardly a new sentiment. Still, add this one to the list:

Would Human Extinction Be a Tragedy?

Written by Todd May, a professor of philosophy at Clemson University, this opinion piece argues that because humans screw up the ecosystem and the climate, and farm animals for their tasty, tasty meat, we are a plague on this Earth and all the other critters would be better off without us. This line of argument is not new, and at a *certain* level makes some *small* amount of sense. But it is manifestly wrong, ultimately.

Go to that op-ed, and hit Ctrl-F. That will bring up a little box in which you can type terms to search for within the text of the piece. Do a search for words such as “space,” “asteroid colony,” “Mars,” “terraform,” “Oort cloud.” Guess what: you won’t find them.  And that is why geniuses like professor May are dead wrong in their conclusions. Yes, humans mess things up on earth. But Earth is not the sum total of the universe. The universe is a *vast* assortment of resources that, as far as we can tell, are going completely unused. Even if you think it’s a tragic evil to turn a chicken into nuggets, it’s unlikely (though not impossible) that you will find it tragic to turn a dead asteroid into a  series of O’Neill colonies with the effective surface area of a continent. We can pummel dead Mars with a few thousand dead comets, sprinkle it with bacteria and algae and lichen and seeds, and make that dead world bloom. We could even terraform the *Moon* with some effort, and, eventually, plant fusion engines on an asteroid out in the Oort cloud, accelerate it to a good fraction of lightspeed and plow it into Venus, blowing that planet up and creating a dandy asteroid belt ripe for plunder. We can create so much life that the eventual and inevitable loss of the earth and all life on it will be minor blip, of no greater consequence than a brushfire burning out a termite mound in Africa somewhere. We can build habitats around red dwarf stars: a million times the surface area of Earth around stars that will last ten thousand times longer than the Sun.

*Humans* can do this. Not deer, not bunnies, not cats, not dogs, not chimps or whales or ducks or cows or pigs. HUMANS. A failure to understand this is common among the human extinction promoting idiot class.

And I found this line especially entertaining:

To be sure, nature itself is hardly a Valhalla of peace and harmony.

If you are going to culturally appropriate religious concepts such as “Valhalla,” perhaps you should spend a few seconds actually learning about them. Valhalla ain’t about peace and harmony, buddy. It’s about daily slaughter, followed by partying and consuming vast quantities of things like fresh boar.

The good professor does not call for actually wiping out humanity. What he does seem to call for is the cessation of breeding. Not having kids, in his view, is no great tragedy and imposes no suffering, and would lead to the end of humanity and the end of humans endless evils perpetrated on the critters. But here again we see a failure in logic. His goal is *already* underway: the western world – the world of high-tech and relatively clean environments, of enough free time and freedom to ponder the philosophical ramifications of humans disappearing – is already well  under replacement rates. We are selecting ourselves for extinction. But the species as a whole is not. The west will disappear and simply be replaced by people who don’t think twice about having a whole bunch of kids, environment be damned. If and when our replacements cultures evolve to be similar to ours in terms of philosophical navel-gazing, they are unlikely to be as suicidal as we were as they will have our recent example of smart idiocy to look and laugh at.

 Posted by at 11:36 am