Archive for 2010

CHANGE: Faith In Government Erodes.

About 45 percent think government is a threat to personal liberty. Only 3 percent of those polled said the government did not need major reform. The recession and the cumulative impact of TARP, the auto bailout, the stimulus plan, and the health-care legislation on public psychology have been “substantial.” In one survey, 50 percent now say they would prefer a smaller government with fewer services, and 39 percent a larger government with more services. The number preferring smaller government has risen dramatically since President Obama took office. The belief that government is doing too many things that are better left to individuals and businesses has also risen.

Well, I certainly feel that way.

INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY: Departing Senators Larding Up On Pork For The Trip Home. “That ‘must-pass’ quality has turned the bill into a magnet for earmarks for lawmakers from both parties, including several senators who lost their bids for re-election or are otherwise leaving office. They’re seizing their last chance to send money back home, stuffing the bill with 543 earmarks worth about $882 million.” Reward your cronies, set up your retirement, or comeback — all at taxpayer expense!

BULKHEADS BREAKING ON THE TITANIC? Some of the nautical metaphors are mixed here, but yeah.

REPUBLICANS FOR PORK? Anyone who votes for this should be treated as a pariah.

NUCLEAR SURVIVAL: Get Indoors And Stay There:

The advice is based on recent scientific analyses showing that a nuclear attack is much more survivable if you immediately shield yourself from the lethal radiation that follows a blast, a simple tactic seen as saving hundreds of thousands of lives. Even staying in a car, the studies show, would reduce casualties by more than 50 percent; hunkering down in a basement would be better by far.

But a problem for the Obama administration is how to spread the word without seeming alarmist about a subject that few politicians care to consider, let alone discuss. So officials are proceeding gingerly in a campaign to educate the public.

“We have to get past the mental block that says it’s too terrible to think about,” W. Craig Fugate, administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said in an interview. “We have to be ready to deal with it” and help people learn how to “best protect themselves.”

Officials say they are moving aggressively to conduct drills, prepare communication guides and raise awareness among emergency planners of how to educate the public.

They told me if I voted Republican, we’d be plunged deep into a scary 1950s-style pre-nuclear-war “duck and cover” posture. And they were right!

This is old news, though. Even back in the 1960s there were Civil Defense debates on whether to give warning in case of an attack, based on studies that showed more people would be sheltered by where they happened to be than would benefit from a warning, since many people would immediately either try to flee, or to return to their homes, winding up in more exposed positions when the bomb went off. And although heavily mocked by antinuclear activists in the 1980s, the duck-and-cover advice from the 1950s was pretty good, considering, and would have saved many lives if it had been followed in the event of a nuclear attack.

But I love this:

Administration officials argue that the cold war created an unrealistic sense of fatalism about a terrorist nuclear attack. “It’s more survivable than most people think,” said an official deeply involved in the planning, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “The key is avoiding nuclear fallout.” . . . White House officials say they are aware of the issue’s political delicacy but are nonetheless moving ahead briskly.

Entirely true, and I applaud them for pursuing this policy. I find that my law students — effectively post-Cold War generation — know next to nothing about nuclear weapons, fallout, and basic civil-defense stuff that most people knew back when I was a kid. So education is warranted. But is this the kind of change that Obama voters were expecting?

I doubt it, but once again InstaPundit was ahead of the curve. And so was Stanley Kurtz, who wrote back in 2006 that “We’ll be back to duck and cover if we don’t stop Iran first…” And here we are!

UPDATE: Rushing anti-radiation drugs to market? “Judging by the timeline for the anti-radiation drug program, U.S. officials see a rapidly escalating CBRN threat against the homeland over the next five years.” You’ll also want some iodine pills. And there’s some evidence that very large doses of Vitamin E have a protective effect, as I recall.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Reader C.J. Burch emails: “We’ve elected LBJ.” That’s silly. For that analogy to hold, we’d have to be involved in a foreign war that we’re not willing to win, but not willing to give up in, while dumping huge amounts of money into social programs that will wind up costing vastly more than predicted. And there’d have to be some sort of daisy-girl ad raising the nuclear threat but blaming some poor innocent small-government Republican.

MORE: A cogent objection from Rand Simberg: “Nonsense. LBJ knew how to wrangle Congress. He wasn’t led around by the nose by the Speaker and Majority Leader.”

And Jim Bennett writes:

Mocking duck and cover drills was always a display of ignorance. Duck and cover was taken from a straightforward analysis of casualties at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the big conventional explosions like the Halifax harbor explosions. Of course if you’re at ground zero they are useless, but a great many people on the periphery were killed or blinded by glass shards or other splinters driven by the blast waves. Many of them would have been avoided by simple duck-and-cover procedures.

Well, yes. But the Venn diagram for “antinuclear activist” and “deep ignorance” always featured near-100% overlap. . . .

MORE STILL: “Did Obama and his people get a burst of Lileksian nostalgia? . . . It’s all of a piece with ‘we could absorb a terrorist attack’. What they’re telling you is that you’re going to get nuked, there’s nothing they can do about it, they have no intention of trying to do anything substantive about it, and the best thing for you to do is to learn to be a contortionist — it’s hard to bend over far enough to kiss your ass goodbye. . . . A strong America might well absorb a terrorist hit with little damage, even a nuclear one. A weak America, especially an America with weaklings in its highest offices, might very well feel it had something to prove, and that could be very dangerous to miscalculators — and more so to their innocent bystanders.”

STILL MORE: Reader D.K. Kittel writes:

Regarding your post on government recommendations for nuclear survival:

I am quite impressed to see anyone on the left actually studying and contemplating how best to handle a disaster and how best to release this valuable information.

It wasn’t too many years ago the newly formed Department of Homeland Security under then Secretary Ridge released a memo that stated how best to handle a disaster. That memo had numerous items listed included important things like keeping water and food supplies sufficient for at least 72 hours since that was the earliest you should expect help from the Federal Government.

Unfortunately that memo also included the, very accurate and potentially life saving I might add, information about keeping duct tape and plastic on hand (which online also referenced nuclear fallout I think)

It was pilloried by those on the left and it became the joke of the year. Everyone from Senator Reid to most liberal Congressmen and The Daily Show on down to Letterman and Leno ripped into this recommendation for days if not weeks. Oh they had some fun.

Unfortunately instead of helping to improve and support public safety and responsibility they chose to make political points.

A year and a half later Katrina hit. Hardly anyone in the primarily liberal districts hardest hit had ever heard the first 10 or so items on that list (if I recall it was 15 or so). They certainly didn’t have food or water stocks and how were they to know help would take at least 72 hours! If only the Government had let them know!!! Wait, they did but the left chose politics rather then reinforce the factual information in that memo. Lives could have been saved.

So to see Democrats putting public safety over scoring political points is quite a pleasant (if not a little tardy and a bit hypocritical) surprise.

Indeed. Meanwhile, Joe Hultquist writes:

I was in Switzerland in October, and we stayed in a downstairs apartment in a very nice Swiss couple’s home. We had access to their basement and laundry room, and to get there required walking by a room that had two doors for one opening. The inner door was pretty standard, but the outer door was approximately six inches thick, and made of solid concrete and steel. The same type of closure was mounted as an inside shutter for the only window, and there was a hand-cranked blower with a high-efficiency air filter in line. The room had reinforced concrete walls and ceiling. The owner told me that, in that canton, all new homes were required to have such a room until around 1991, after the fall of the Soviet Union. Some cantons still require them, and even inspect them on an annual basis. We encountered an example of that while visiting some friends in Uster.

One only needs to spend a little time in Switzerland to realize just how well prepared they are for invasion, military threats and even nuclear attack. No wonder they haven’t been successfully invaded since the Romans occupied their land. And that, of course, predated the Confederation Helvetica. The message is clear: don’t mess with the Swiss.

Yes, the Swiss are off their game a bit these days, but they’re still way ahead of us. And another reader writes about fire dangers:

Incredibly, the word “fire” does not appear a single time in the NYT article. Color me skeptical of the “survivability” of a nuclear attack, at least in Southern California. . . . My guess is that if even a single “small” nuclear bomb went off just about anywhere in coastal Southern California, there’s a decent chance that *every* forest, city, town, and man made structure from Ensenada to Santa Barbara would burn to the ground in the following days, weeks, and months. Hundreds of thousands dead *by fire*, not blast or fallout, with many millions more displaced. Our “plan” for survival = GTFO.

Well, a terrorist bomb will likely be a surface-burst (or in a port, a water-burst if it’s smuggled on a ship, a plausible scenario) which will reduce the fire-setting role of the flash. But, yeah, if you read the report (and I skimmed it last night) they seem to be thinking mostly about NY or DC. Note, too, that sheltering for even a few hours can make a big difference. Following the old “rule of 7” the radiation is 1/10 its peak 7 hours later. (And 1/10 again — that is 1/100 at 7 x 7 hours — two days, basically). Also, of course, sometimes you’re just screwed, which is why nuclear attacks on one’s town are to be avoided if at all possible.

Here, by the way, are the shelter-in-place FAQs from Ready.gov.

JENNIFER RUBIN: Does Obama Support 6000 Earmarks?

Blogger Guy Benson reminds us that Obama not so long ago spoke out on the subject of earmarks. In 2009 Obama grudgingly signed a $410 billion omnibus spending bill filled with earmarks but vowed, “This piece of legislation must mark an end to the old way of doing business and the beginning of a new era of responsibility and accountability that the American people have every right to expect and demand.”

If he was serious then, wouldn’t it behoove the president, as he makes a play to recapture independent voters, to issue a veto threat? Otherwise, the Republicans will surely claim the high ground on the issue of fiscal discipline and try now or in January to nix the pork.

Indeed.

THINGS THAT DON’T SUCK: I’ve had this Universal Package Opener for a couple of years now, and it’s great. We use it almost every day, it seems.

INSTAVISION: I talk with Peter Suderman about ObamaCare, Waivers, the Courts and the Law of Unintended Consequences. Plus, why today’s legislation is like buggy software.

UPDATE: Programmer Jody Green says I’m way too optimistic with my software analogy:

I have written software for over 35 years and these bills are not like buggy software. These bills are written knowing that the user interface is flawed because they never tested it with real users but this is of no consequence. These little user interface flaws only distract from the primary purpose of the software and that is to be a Trojan Horse providing a back door to accomplish the real objective. The buggier the software the quicker you will need new software to fix the problems of the original only moving you closer to the real purpose. This is just as sophisticated as the Stuxnet although it’s target is the United States of America. Be afraid. Be very afraid.

Well, that’s encouraging.

TOM ANDERSON EMAILS WITH AN ENERGY-SAVING SUGGESTION:

Since the cold snap is affecting almost everybody, this inside dryer vent is something I have used for over 10 years to pump more heat and humidity into the house in winter. You just disconnect your dryer vent from the outside exhaust and plug it into the top of the house vent. The water in the vent keeps lint from blowing into the house. As a bonus you are not using your dryer to pump the warm air in your home air outside.

This may take the sting out of the single digit temperatures and the amazon link may make a little money for the InstaEmpire.

Interesting. Am I missing a downside somewhere?

UPDATE: Reader Paula Riggs writes:

If you’ll permit me a word of caution…. Not too long ago I tried a indoor vent based on the same principle. My utility room resembled a sauna, which resulted in my very quickly growing a mega-resistant mildew on the walls. However, said utility room resides in Oregon, which means that during winter, our atmosphere is already pretty saturated.

And reader Michael Smith notes this:

“Never use this product with a gas clothes dryer.”

Pretty big downside if you have a gas dryer.

Well, yes.

MORE: Reader Tim Shuck emails:

This is another resurrection from the 1970s, which is when my wife and I tried it. No, water vapor in the vent does not keep lint from blowing into the house, which dust on the exterior vent cover amply demonstrates from ‘normal’ use. You also don’t need to be in Oregon to see the effects of over-saturation. We live in central Iowa, with very dry winter weather, and though not quite to the level of a sauna, the room (actually the whole basement) smelled like, well, a damp and musty basement after we did this.

If you really want the benefits of energy saving/ moisture addition from clothes drying, go back a few decades more and do like my mother did in our farmhouse: hang laundry from a line stretched from the kitchen to the dining room. No lint, added moisture, no electricity or natural gas use, and no fire hazard.

Yeah, we did that when I was a kid, too, though usually on a rickety laundry rack like this one. Fun times, fun times. . . .

MORE STILL: Reader Alexander Szewczak emails:

+1 on the laundry rack! For drying we use two laundry racks and we hang dress shirts and pants on hangers in a (mostly) empty closet with the sliding door left open. Works like a charm in New England (especially in the winter!). Everything dries overnight, and is either ready to fold (drying rack) or ready to transfer directly on hangers into your bedroom closet in the morning. Dress shirts don’t need to be ironed, and dress pants are surprisingly wrinkle free by morning. Shirts last *much* longer when you don’t dry them in a drier, FYI.

Indeed. On the other hand, beware of cats.

BACK TO THE FUTURE. Does this mean we’re in a “pessimism bubble” at the moment? I hope so, but I’m not optimistic . . . .

HOW CANCER CELLS DUPE THE BODY’S IMMUNE SYSTEM: “It seems individual cancer cells send out the same distress signals as wounds, tricking immune cells into helping them grow into tumours. The finding suggests that anti-inflammatory drugs could help to combat or prevent cancer.”

ROGER SIMON: Separated At Birth: Harry Reid And Hugo Chavez. “You don’t have to be Orwell to see the similarities here. Goodbye, democracy. Hello, autocracy. In Reid’s case, it’s like giving the middle finger to the American people. What was the point in having that election November 2?”