…is cutting back to three days a week, with a lot of layoffs and pay reductions. Same thing with Saginaw and Bay City. The Flint Journal has been around for many decades, going back to the nineteenth century, before the auto industry existed, but it looks like it’s on its last legs, as Michigan’s economy continues to swirl down the drain. A good friend of mine from college is an editor there. Hope she has a parachute.
Why Jon Stewart Attacked Jim Cramer
Pethokoukis explains. This really appears to be part of a government/media war on investors.
[Update a while later]
More thoughts on the matter from Mark Hemingway:
Anyone who has tuned into his show and seen Cramer strutting around a soundstage that looks like the helm of the Starship Enterprise as envisioned by the Teletubbies’ set designer and pushing buttons that make wacky sound effects could tell you that Cramer is to stock-picking what The Daily Show is to TV news: something not to be taken too seriously.
Ouch.
I Hate When That Happens
Five ways to destroy the world with science experiments.
I don’t know if there is such a thing as forbidden knowledge, but there should certainly be rules about how it’s attained.
Treacher Twitters
Joe Trippi
You don’t speak for me.
How The Web Has Changed Science
Actually, quite a bit, but not as much as it could in the future:
Scientists have therefore proved resourceful in using the web to further their research. They have, however, tended to lag when it comes to employing the latest web-based social-networking tools to open up scientific discourse and encourage more effective collaboration.
Journalists are now used to having their every article commented on by dozens of readers. Indeed, many bloggers develop and refine their essays on the basis of such input. Yet despite several attempts to encourage a similarly open sytem of peer review of scientific research published on the web, most researchers still limit such reviews to a few anonymous experts. When Nature, one of the world’s most respected scientific journals, experimented with open peer review in 2006, the results were disappointing. Only 5% of the authors it spoke to agreed to have their article posted for review on the web—and their instinct turned out to be right, as almost half of the papers that were then posted attracted no comments.
Actually, I think that climate science has gotten a lot of review, peer and otherwise, on the web.
Plummeting Polls
Here’s good news. The president’s popularity is no longer in the stratosphere, and his policies are particularly unpopular:
When Gallup asked whether we should be spending more or less in the economic stimulus, by close to 3-to-1 margin voters said it is better to have spent less than to have spent more. When asked whether we are adding too much to the deficit or spending too little to improve the economy, by close to a 3-to-2 margin voters said that we are adding too much to the deficit.
Support for the stimulus package is dropping from narrow majority support to below that. There is no sense that the stimulus package itself will work quickly, and according to a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC poll, close to 60% said it would make only a marginal difference in the next two to four years. Rasmussen data shows that people now actually oppose Mr. Obama’s budget, 46% to 41%. Three-quarters take this position because it will lead to too much spending. And by 2-to-1, voters reject House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s call for a second stimulus package.
Good. I hope that the Maine Mushheads and Arlen Spector end up regretting their stimulus support.
[Update a few minutes later]
Jen Rubin has a related piece over at PJM on the end of the honeymoon, but I thought that this comment really stood out in terms of incandescent asininity. And note that it doesn’t even have much to do with the topic: it’s an all-purpose turd for any punchbowl:
To all Republicans and Conservatives:
Please leave. Please just pack your stuff, your bibles, your guns, your racism, your intolerance, your greed, and your ignorance and leave. Africa is a great place for you, or perhaps South or Central America. I mean, isn’t that your dream scenario? Low taxes, all business, who cares if your surroundings are crap as long as you are getting paid?
You people must go. You live in a fantasy world devoid of any rational thought outside your own myopia. You think you “work so hard”. Most of you are completely full of **it. The only reason you haven’t lost your jobs (yet) or your home, is because thus far, you are lucky. You didn’t make any “wise” or omnipotent decisions that separate you from “all the losers who are losing their homes”. The housing market is over inflated everywhere. You didn’t, “stay within your means any more than anyone else”. You are so completely narcissistic that you think you are still safe because you are smarter, or work harder, or are somehow intrinsically better. You aren’t. You are greedy, ingnorant, and very “un-American”.
It doesn’t get any smarter after that.
[Update a couple minutes later]
Maybe this explains the fall in the polls. Frank J. says that Barack Obama is simply too awesome:
Before you grab the pitchforks and label me an apostate, hear me out. Now I am an enlightened individual who fully understands and appreciates President Obama (pbuh), but can we expect the same from other countries with non-Obama leaders? Those people have never produced a person like Obama, not to mention elected him, so it is natural for them to be scared and intimidated by someone so beyond their understanding. To them, meeting Obama must be like encountering Jesus riding a dinosaur — both reassuring and intimidating at the same time. It’s natural they’ll be confused.
Just look at the British reaction to Obama’s meeting with Gordon Brown. They seem to think their prime minister was snubbed by not getting the special reception they had become accustomed to when the troglodyte Bush was dictator. Many British reporters were also angry how Obama seemed hesitant to answer many questions. Such nonsense shows that the British are still stuck in pre-Obama thinking. Of course the unrefined Bush would make a big deal of meeting foreign leaders; to that simpleton, it must have been like being visited by advanced aliens. It would be silly for Obama, though, to act like it is an honor to meet with other countries’ non-Obama leaders, or for him to hold the pretense that speaking with them would give him knowledge he did not already possess. He is Obama; the British should not worry if Obama is listening, because he already understands their needs better than they do. As for the British press, they must learn to be more like the American press, which already knows there is no reason to question Obama. Obama is aware of what we need to know and when we need to know it, so there is no reason for the formality of questions. We simply must sit and wait for his wisdom, but the British have yet to come to that understanding. Also, it wouldn’t hurt if in the future they brought offerings of gold and silver.
It’s a trenchant analysis.
More from Jen Rubin, on Barack Obama’s liberal petri dish:
that’s apparently what the country is from Obama’s perspective – a liberal petri dish to grow the New Deal II. But the economy is not a political science lab experiment for most elected leaders and certainly not for voters who simply want things to get better. So why doesn’t the administration listen to these worried Democrats, the Republicans (who are still offering bipartisan solutions), and the “soured” punditocracy which is increasingly frustrated with the president?
This reminds me of the old joke from the Soviet Union. A teacher is instructing her students in Marxism, and one of them raises his hand and asks, “Is it true that Karl Marx was a scientist?”
“Oh, yes,” the teacher replied. “He was the greatest scientist in the history of mankind.”
“Well, then why didn’t he try this crap on rats first?”
Not-So-Big Love
Some thoughts from Orson Scott Card on HBO and anti-Mormon bigotry.
A random thought: will Ender’s Game ever be made into a movie?
A Great Weekend Coming Up
Today (the second Friday the 13th in a row) is Iowahawk Day. And tomorrow is Steak and BJ Day (Valentine’s Day for men). And unlike Valentine’s Day, it doesn’t require much in the way of planning or dinner reservations. What’s not to like?
[Update a few minutes later]
It gets better and better. In addition to Steak and BJ Day, tomorrow is Pi Day as well. So have a slice with your steak. And BJ.
Modeling Crowds
Here’s an interesting story at The Economist on the current state of the art of simulating large numbers of individuals. I wonder if they could use it to figure out more efficient ways to get people on and off of planes?