Is The Tabar Lucky Or Good?

From the Economist….

PIRATES do not win every encounter. On the evening of Tuesday November 18th an Indian warship attacked and destroyed a suspected Somali pirate boat in the Gulf of Aden, after the men on board had, reportedly, threatened to blow up the Indian craft. The pirates were said to be armed with guns and rocket-grenade launchers, and some escaped on speed boats. On the same day, however, other pirates in the Gulf of Aden did manage to grab a cargo ship carrying grain to Iran.

One thing the qoute above does not make clear is that the ship the Indians sunk was a mother ship that the Pirates where using to extend their range. The Danger Room has more on the Indian ship that blew up the pirate mother ship …..

This is the Tabar’s third pirate fight in a little more than a week. On November 11th, the frigate received a “frantic distress call from Saudi Arabian chemical and oil carrier NCC Tihama,” the Times of India reports. “Tihamas’ call said two to three high-speed boats, with several armed men, were trying to hijack the ship.”

The post goes on to relate how they received another distress call while they were in the process of rescuing the Saudis.

By my reckoning the INS Tabar has done more to combat pirates then the rest of the international anti piracy fleet put together. Is this because they are doing something right or did they just get lucky?

Edit: The Christian Science Monitor points out that this fight is more personal for Indian then most of the other nations that have ships in the area. They say….

While warships from eight different countries, including India, have deployed to the Gulf of Aden to combat piracy, the issue is particularly important for India.

The nation of 1.1 billion people provides one-sixth of the world’s maritime workers and every month it sends 30 Indian-owned vessels carrying oil and other goods valued at $100 billion through the Gulf of Aden.

Indian shipping firms say they are losing $450,000 a month on cost overruns and delays due to piracy.

“India cannot wait to take action until the Somali pirates hit the coast of Bombay [Mumbai],” says Mr. Bhaskar. “They must be quarantined in their own waters before they cause more damage.”

For most western nations, these attacks are no big deal because they don’t ship much through the Gulf of Aden. Most of the ships the pirates have seized have been going to Asia, Africa, or the Middle East. Maybe India cares more about stopping the pirates then the other nations do.

To Weird To Be True?

From Physorg….

As their first meal, the sea slugs suck out the cellular contents of their algal prey and retain the green chloroplasts in cells lining their digestive gut. With this special type of symbiosis, the sea slugs never need to eat again; instead, they survive for months on sunlight and air – just like a plant – by carrying out photosynthesis.

Rumpho-Kennedy’s work, recently published in the “Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA,” explains the possibility that when the sea slug feeds on its algal prey it not only acquires chloroplasts, but also algal nuclear DNA.

How Bush Saved Georgia

From the Times….

The scene was the Kremlin on August 12, when Sarkozy flew in to persuade Moscow to call off its invasion of Georgia.

Putin: “I am going to hang Saakashvili by the balls.”
Sarkozy: “Hang him?”
Putin: “Why not? The Americans hanged Saddam Hussein.”
Sarkozy “Yes but do you want to end up like Bush?”
Putin, after a long pause: “Ah, you have scored a point there.”

Putin will be lucky to end his political career as popular as Bush is as he is leaving office. But the fool thinks he can save Russia. That is more futile than trying to bring democracy to the Middle East.

Health Care Costs To Rise Because Of Lawyers

From Derek Lowe….

There was a legal ruling last week in California that we’re going to hear a lot more of in this business. Conte v. Wyeth. This case involved metaclopramide, which was sold by Wyeth as Reglan before going off-patent in 1982. The plaintiff had been prescribed the generic version of the drug, was affected by a rare and serious neurological side effect (tardive dyskinesia, familiar to people who’ve worked with CNS drugs) and sued.

But as you can see from the name of the case, this wasn’t a suit against her physician, or against the generic manufacturer. It was a suit against Wyeth, the original producer of the drug, and that’s where things have gotten innovative.

It stuff like this this gives rise to the phrase “First, let’s kill all the lawyers.” But the real problem here is the First District Court of Appeals in San Francisco (is that a shocker or what?). This case should have been laughed out of court.

Everyone Has To Start Somewhere Part 2

I came across an account written by a guy who was butchering a pig for the first time. I can’t relate for his love of pigs because I never cared for them myself. But I still feel his pain. From Homesteading Hickory Hills….

With the water getting hot, it was finally time to do the dreaded killing. I stepped into the pen with a .22 revolver and a bucket of corn. I poured the corn on the ground and, with heart pumping hard, took a step back and waited for the opportunity to take my shot… hoping that I could actually muster the courage to take it when the moment came. Pearl and Babe swarmed around the feed, jostling each other. Mel managed to distract Babe with some pears. I took aim at the animal I had raised, aimed as carefully as I could, apologized inside, and squeezed the trigger. Everything I had read said to use a .22 bullet, and one guy swore by hollow point ones. The thing I most feared about the whole process of butchering came to pass: the bullet, although exactly where I was told to place it, was not enough. *&%$#@

Mel ran to grab the shotgun while I stared in horror at my beautiful hog. She was certainly stunned, and just stood there. There was no way I was going to attempt to wrestle her down though. Mel handed me the shotgun, and I loaded a slug into it. The only thing worse than killing a hog is half-killing a hog. Damned luck. Poor pig. I aimed again.

That was from Part 1. Part 2 is here and Part 3 is here.

I admire his honesty in writing about the experience. There are some things that have happened to me while raising animals that I don’t know that I will ever want to write about. Then again, I have heard about and seen a lot worse things than what he writes about.

This Is Getting Ridiculous

From Danger Room….

Somali pirates have nabbed their biggest prize yet — a Saudi-owned supertanker, about as big as an aircraft carrier.* The ocean-going hijackers managed to pull off this latest assault, on the Sirius Star, despite a swarm of international warships now working to ward off such strikes.

“Our presence in the region is helping deter and disrupt criminal attacks off the Somali coast, but the situation with the Sirius Star clearly indicates the pirates’ ability to adapt their tactics and methods of attack,” U.S. Vice Adm. Bill Gortney, Commander, Combined Maritime Forces, said in a statement. “Typically, pirates attack within 200 miles of the shoreline and go after smaller prey,” the L.A. Times observes.

This is getting absurd. Don’t sit around telling me you are helping to deter pirate attacks when a bunch of them just nabbed a super tanker. Just a year ago that would have been unthinkable. They are not treating this seriously at all.

Professional Begging

The airline industry goes bankrupt all the time. But we still have air travel. Why should we assume that bankruptcy means the end of the car industry?

My solution would be for the shareholders to be wiped out. All the secured debt holders to be given equity in proportion to how much money they were owed and all the unsecured to take a hike. After all that is done the Government should take over a portion of the pension obligations seeing as how the government has guaranteed them anyway. After all that is done, you would probably have a car industry that could survive on its own.

The worst possible solution (and the one that will probably happen) will be for the car industry to receive just enough money to keep on being a walking dead man.

(h/t Naked Capitalism)