A video demonstration of the failure of technology under stress

The two videos shown below are meant to glorify the skill of Dick Schaffert. And we must confess that his skill can not be dismissed. But we think that the real lesson is all about how unreliable technology is when you need it. Watch the videos and make up your own mind.

Here is part one….

And here is part two…..

If all that was too confusing for you, you can read this. And from the Federation of American Scientists you can read this account of the history of Crusaders in action (including more details on Schafferts fight).

Rant of the Week: 4/8/07-4/14/07

An opinion piece in the New York Times by Austan Goolsbee has rallied various free market types to the defense of sup prime lenders. It is strange to see the New York Times rallying free market types. But I suppose they could not break the mold completely because the Dr. Goolsbee piece was very poorly reasoned.

Dr. Goolsbee piece was so poorly reasoned that the Ape Man was going to write a rant about it. But it is time to go to press and Ape Man is still not done, so we shall have to link to Tanta having her say on the issue instead.

A portrait of Insanity..

The Tatterdemalion is crazy. It is prerequisite in order to be a contributor to the Ethereal Voice. But on her sewing site, Tatterdemalion mostly reviews books and writes “how to” articles so her basic insanity does not come out as clearly as it might. Her most recent post goes a long way towards rectifying that….

Even those who care nothing for sewing might find it interesting to find out more about one of the editors of the Ethereal Voice.

Why you should worry about black stem rust fungus….

This from The New Scientist…..

An infection is coming, and almost no one has heard about it. This infection isn’t going to give you flu, or TB. In fact, it isn’t interested in you at all. It is after the wheat plants that feed more people than any other single food source on the planet. And because of cutbacks in international research, we aren’t prepared. The famines that were banished by the advent of disease-resistant crops in the Green Revolution of the 1960s could return, Borlaug told New Scientist.

The disease is Ug99, a virulent strain of black stem rust fungus (Puccinia graminis), discovered in Uganda in 1999. Since the Green Revolution, farmers everywhere have grown wheat varieties that resist stem rust, but Ug99 has evolved to take advantage of those varieties, and almost no wheat crops anywhere are resistant to it.

The strain has spread slowly across east Africa, but in January this year spores blew across to Yemen, and north into Sudan (see Map). Scientists who have tracked similar airborne spores in this part of the world say it will now blow into Egypt, Turkey and the Middle East, and on to India, lands where a billion people depend on wheat.

Of course to make matters worse, wheat stocks are low….

The threat couldn’t have come at a worse time. Consumption has outstripped production in six of the last seven years, and stocks are at their lowest since 1972. Wheat prices jumped 14 per cent last year.

The whole article is well worth reading.

We are going to be short gas this summer…..

This from the R-Squared Energy Blog…..

I don’t think I have ever seen the forecasters miss the estimate this badly. They were forecasting a 300,000 barrel decline in gasoline stocks, and instead got a 5 million barrel decline. For the first time in a long time, inventories are now in the lower half of the normal range.

Read the whole post for the details on this. But I have not seen any really good answers for why there has been a stronger than expected drop in stocks. The quick answer seems to be that the refineries are only operating at 87 percent capacity. This is a lower than people had expected. The question is why…..

Poem of the Week: 4/1/07-4/7/07

You will not understand why I chose The Future by Leonard Cohen to be this week’s poem of the week unless you read this week’s essay. The Future is quite different then most of the poems that are normally chosen. Part of the difference lies in the fact that it is a popular song that has been part of the soundtrack to a couple of different movies. But that is not all of the difference…..

In connection with the essay of the week, it is worth noting that Cohen has generally been more popular in Europe then in the US.

Below is a video clip of Cohen singing (if that is the word for what he does) “The Future.” But I would advise you to read the poem (and maybe the essay of the week as well) before listening to it.