George Rebane
- North Korea's currency confiscation
- ebooks and your gizmo count
- Associated Press verdict on Climategate
- Federal employees' pay explodes during recession
- 'That's What We Do, We're Americans'
Last week the dear thugs ruling North Korea pulled a sudden currency exchange issuing new won for the old. But there was a catch, you could only turn in old won to the tune of $180, the rest was literally confiscated by the government. This, of course, wiped out the savings of untold families and reinforced the shadow or black market economy that keeps things from a wholesale uprising (here). Britain intends to test this same path. U.K. Treasury chief Alistair Darling announced his intention to confiscate 50% of all bankers’ bonuses above about $40K.
I’m not a fan of ebooks (Kindle, Nook, …) because they are crippled gizmos adding to our out-the-door gizmo count without providing any more functions that a new lightweight laptop (or even a netbook in a pinch) can deliver. Web based magazines are now approaching the user friendliness of pulp magazines and allow you to do even more things like search, hyperlink, copy text/pictures, annotate, etc. Take a look at the Winter 2009 edition of h+, the magazine that covers transhuman and Singularity subjects. Clicking on the ‘view the digital edition’ link (here) takes you to an interactive magazine format (here) that I believe is the harbinger of things to come as the transition from print to electronic format continues.
(Gizmo count is the total number of different things and gizmos you have to load up with as you leave the house in the morning. For me it comprises such things as pens, pad, iPhone, ear piece, Swiss Army pocket knife, keys, wallet, Casio Exlim camera, laptop, notebook, reading glasses, book(s), etc. Anything I can do to lower my gizmo count gets my immediate attention.)
Associated Press just announced on its mobile net that it has had five reporters review a million words of Climategate emails, and rendered a verdict (here). There is nothing there that compromises the science or conclusions of a global warming caused by humans. That it contradicts the opinions of technical specialists not funded by pre-purposed governments, should not worry you as a layman on this issue. Given the quality of the profession today, it is a relief that after “an exhaustive review” these five steel-trap like minds have settled the matter.
USA Today confirms (here) that federal employee pay has skyrocketed during the recession. RR readers are not surprised. That's not exacty true, some of our more liberal readership has vehemetly denied this little bamboozle for some months now. Please fasten your seatbelts for the following -
- "When the recession started, the Transportation Department had only one person earning a salary of $170,000 or more. Eighteen months later, 1,690 employees had salaries above $170,000."
- "Federal employees making salaries of $100,000 or more jumped from 14% to 19% of civil servants during the recession's first 18 months — and that's before overtime pay and bonuses are counted."
- "The highest-paid federal employees are doing best of all on salary increases. Defense Department civilian employees earning $150,000 or more increased from 1,868 in December 2007 to 10,100 in June 2009, the most recent figure available."
- "The growth in six-figure salaries has pushed the average federal worker's pay to $71,206, compared with $40,331 in the private sector."
And finally, this little slide show will choke you up a little. 'That's What We Do, We're Americans'
Where is the moral fiber?
George Rebane
Where indeed? In responding to my Christmas post, a reader emailed me about a grocery store incident in which a man, with daughter watching, helped himself to some mixed nuts from a bin. She reminded him that that was stealing, and he reminded her that it wasn’t stealing at all since he was a regular customer of that store. There was more to the conversation, but that was the gist of it.
In her email she asked where is the moral fiber today that permits us to ignore or define away stealing. This may be a question of our age, and it applies to a broader category of social infractions.
We are now an enforced, non-assimilating, multi-cultural society. A mono-cultural society teaches its young rules of social behavior much of which need not be codified into law since they are understood by almost all the population. And if that culture also teaches the existence of an omniscient and omnipotent god, then correct social behavior stands on the divine dictates of morality. You don’t mess with a god who knows your heart and can hold you to account if you persist in going against the rules he has laid down.
But in a multi-cultural society, where behavior is enforced by the state’s ‘power of the bayonet’, things are very different, especially if the state religion turns out to be secular humanism. The secular humanist worships complex combinations of atoms. And since the constituent atoms are the fundamental material elements of this universe, they cannot represent any absolute good or bad, no matter in what combinations they may occur. What can one say in an absolute sense about the progress of one particular dynamic path of such a collection of atoms versus, say, another dynamic path? Can one such path be intrinsically ‘better’ than any other?
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