aads

123-124/366: Slack! [Uncertain Principles]

One of our Christmas presents for the kids was a slackline kit, which they wanted set up pretty much the instant I got home. So I put it up over the weekend, and on consecutive days got these pictures:

The slackline strung between two trees in the back yard.

The slackline strung between two trees in the back yard.

SteelyKid's feet bouncing above the slackline.

SteelyKid’s feet bouncing above the slackline.

(I of course also have a bunch of photos where you can see the kids’ entire bodies, but for the umpteenth time, I’m trying not to have this be the Cute Kid Photo of the Day…)

Those two seem like they go together, and that catches us up through Sunday. I will try to get back to regular daily posting; we’ll see how that goes…



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1TztPBz

One of our Christmas presents for the kids was a slackline kit, which they wanted set up pretty much the instant I got home. So I put it up over the weekend, and on consecutive days got these pictures:

The slackline strung between two trees in the back yard.

The slackline strung between two trees in the back yard.

SteelyKid's feet bouncing above the slackline.

SteelyKid’s feet bouncing above the slackline.

(I of course also have a bunch of photos where you can see the kids’ entire bodies, but for the umpteenth time, I’m trying not to have this be the Cute Kid Photo of the Day…)

Those two seem like they go together, and that catches us up through Sunday. I will try to get back to regular daily posting; we’ll see how that goes…



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1TztPBz

Dr. Lipson versus Dr. Brownstein: Science versus antivaccine misinformation and fear mongering in my own back yard [Respectful Insolence]

It always irritates me when I discover a new antivaccine crank in my state; so you can imagine how irritated I become when I discover one right in my very city (OK, metropolitan area). When that happens, it becomes a bit more personal than my usual mission to refute antivaccine misinformation. So I was most alarmed when I discovered just such a beast because a former ScienceBlogs colleague now writing for Forbes, Dr. Peter Lipson, took the time to deconstruct a very ill-informed piece of antivaccine propaganda. The offending post appeared on the blog of a “holistic” physician named Dr. David Brownstein, and in it he complained about new vaccine requirements at a summer camp. Apparently, Dr. Brownstein was not at all pleased at being publicly taken to task for spreading antivaccine misinformation, leading him to write a deceptively titled post using a title that I’ve seen antivaccinationists use, in one form or other, many times during the eleven years I’ve been in the blog biz. Yes, Dr. Brownstein entitled his post The Great Vaccine Debate, but in reality it was more or less a heapin’ helpin’ of the “toxin gambit,” anti-big pharma ranting, and a whole lot of tone trolling complaining about how Dr. Lipson had been so very, very mean to him, because Dr. Lipson called Dr. Brownstein’s arguments “bullshit.” Specifically, he referred to them as “total bullshit. It’s not even good bullshit, but bullshit that has long been known to be, well, bullshit.”

Oh, dear. Poor Dr. Brownstein. Did Dr. Lipson hurt his widdle feelings? Too bad for Dr. Brownstein that his arguments are indeed bullshit—in both of his posts. If Dr. Brownstein wants to vie for the title of the “Dr. Bob” Sears of southeast Michigan, he needs to have a thicker skin and be better prepared to defend his statements; unfortunately for him, his arguments and responses to Dr. Lipson’s spot-on criticism can only be described as pathetic. Let’s just put it this way. Respect is earned, and Dr. Brownstein clearly failed to earn Dr. Lipson’s respect.

In any case, perhaps it was incorrect to say that Dr. Lipson’s post at Forbes led me to “discover” Dr. Brownstein. I actually have heard of him before. Indeed, I had placed his blog in my folder of woo as potential subject some day and forgotten about him. So I’m happy that Dr. Lipson’s little tussle with him brought him back to my attention. First, a little background is in order. This is what set Dr. Brownstein off:

As a child, I attended sleepover camp as many Jewish children did. Camp Tamarack is the largest (or one of the largest) Fresh Air Society camps in the U.S. Some of my favorite memories from my childhood occurred at Camp Tamarack. I still have many Tamarack friends that I still connect with. This summer, I hosted a reunion for my Tamarack friends and it was truly a wonderful, memorable evening.

Yesterday, (12.30.15) Tamarack Camps put out a vaccine edict that mandates, “No child, camper, staff, artist in residence, volunteer, doctor, nurse, and their families will be allowed to come to camp without documentation of complete immunization according to the policy.” The immunization policy states that everyone is to have age-appropriate vaccines according to the CDC which includes:

  • DTaP, DT, Td, or Tdap
  • IPV
  • HIB
  • PCV 13
  • Rotavirus vaccine
  • Hepatitis B
  • Hepatitis A (strongly recommended)
  • MMR or serologic evidence of immunity
  • Varicella vaccine (chicken pox)
  • Menactra
  • Flu vaccine (strongly recommended)

Of course, this sounds like an eminently reasonable policy to me. After all, summer camp is not unlike school in that there are a lot of children frequently crammed into relatively small areas, such as the cabins. Sure, the kids will be off doing summer camp things, but a lot of other activities involve being in close-in quarters, particularly at night in the sleeping area, which are usually bunk beds in a large cabin. So it would make sense for camps to require the same vaccines required to enter school. Dr. Lipson explains why camps like Tamarack Camps are important to the large Jewish population in the northern suburbs of Detroit:

Dr. Brownstein practices in the heart of Michigan’s Jewish community. Among American Jews, summer camping has been an important part of childhood for nearly a century. In the early part of the 20th century, it was felt that city children would benefit greatly from exposure to nature. Jews were not allowed to attend most camps and started their own. The tradition has remained strong.

I spend a week every summer helping to keep an eye on the kids at one such camp. During the flu epidemic of 2008–09, I watched as dozens of kids came down with a new flu strain, one for which a shot had not yet been developed. It was a frightening lesson in what can happen in unvaccinated populations. Thankfully, the strain wasn’t deadly in this population. Among the hardest hit were pregnant women.

I did not know this bit of history about Jewish camps in southeast Michigan, but then I’m not Jewish. Still, it makes sense to me. In particular, though, I like the reasoning behind this new vaccine requirement at Tamarack Camps:

In the letter I received, the Tamarack-Powers-That-Be state, “Given the overriding Jewish value of Pikuach Nefesh (saving a life), that puts a premium on maintaining health, including taking preventive measures, along with the clear public health based need to protect the camp community as a whole, and those unable to receive vaccines in particular, we are requiring that all campers, staff, artists in residence, volunteers, doctors, nurses, and their families planning to attend/participate in any Tamarack Camps programs be immunized…”

As regular readers know, I’m not particularly religious (an understatement). However, this policy and the rationale for it demonstrate that in some cases religious principles can certainly be a force for promoting science-based health care. In this case, it’s a principle of promoting saving lives, and being vaccinated is a simple and effective way not only to maintain one’s own health through protection against vaccine-preventable diseases but by contributing to herd immunity that protects the vulnerable who, for whatever medical reason, cannot be vaccinated. The rant that Dr. Brownstein follows up his introduction with is indeed, as Dr. Lipson correctly characterized it, bullshit. It’s antivaccine bullshit of the lowest, easiest to refute order, and Dr. Lipson did an admirable job. Even so, before I move on to Dr. Brownstein’s counterattack, I can’t resist having a little swipe myself at things at the scraps Dr. Lipson left behind.

First up, Dr. Brownstein delivers up a hunk of burning stupid:

Perhaps Camp Tamarack is unaware that over $3 billion has been awarded by the Federal Government to children and adults injured by vaccines. Maybe Camp Tamarack can assure all who will have to be fully vaccinated to attend camp that it is safe to inject numerous doses of neurotoxins like mercury, aluminum and formaldehyde into any living being. As far as I am aware, there are zero—ZERO—safety studies on injecting a neurotoxin into a living being. I would like to see where Jewish law says it is safe to inject a neurotoxin into a baby or any living being.

So much antivaccine misinformation, so little time. I give Dr. Brownstein credit for combining the “toxins gambit,” common misinformation about the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program used by antivaccinationists as propaganda, and the claim that there are no safety studies of thimerosal. The last one is particularly amusing because thimerosal was removed from most child vaccines in 2001; the only vaccine left that has thimerosal is the flu vaccine, and even then most flu vaccines are thimerosal-free. As for safety studies of thimerosal, how about these big studies that show no link between thimerosal and neurodevelopmental disorders or autism? No doubt Dr. Brownstein will dismiss them because they were done by the CDC (antivaccinationists are very predictable that way) or will claim that they are not the “right kind” of safety study, but they were done specifically to try to detect correlations between the use of thimerosal-containing vaccines and adverse neurological outcomes. That’s a safety study in my book. I also remind Dr. Brownstein that he said that there were no safety studies on thimerosal. No, he said that there are “zero—ZERO—safety studies,” a claim he doubled down on in his second post. I just showed that there are at least three. There are, in fact, more than that that I could list, had I a mind to. On this issue, Dr. Brownstein’s claim is clearly incorrect, as it’s easy to demonstrate. If he had tried to argue the strengths and weaknesses of the existing safety studies, then there might have been a productive discussion (that is, assuming he could resist dismissing studies just because the CDC or a pharmaceutical company had anything to do with them). Heck, he could even have cited some execrable Mark Geier studies claiming to have found various dangers due to thimerosal in vaccines, but he didn’t, even though those bits of pseudoscience could easily be considered safety studies too. Unfortunately, like a five year old not liking what he hears Dr. Brownstein simply denied that there were any such studies at all.

Then he even invokes the “CDC whistleblower” manufactroversy:

Maybe Camp Tamarack should take notice that there is a whistle blower at the CDC—a senior scientist who authored research papers on childhood vaccinations—who has stated that the CDC has hidden and altered data that confirmed a link with the MMR vaccine to autism.

Um, no. Just no. This “CDC whistleblower,” a rather confused CDC scientist named William Thompson, showed nothing fo the sort. If anything, the antivaccine “reanalysis” done on his data proved Andrew Wakefield wrong yet again. There is no association between MMR and autism. Brownstein also mentions the so-called “Merck whistleblower.” Let’s just say there’s a lot less to that story than meets the eye, certainly less than antivaccine “holistic doctors” like Dr. Brownstein would like you to think. Let’s also just say that, even if everything both “whistleblowers” said were true, it would not prove that vaccines are unsafe, because there are many other studies that show them to be safe and effective.

Elsewhere, Dr. Brownstein trots out familiar (and easily refuted) antivaccine propaganda talking points, in particular the myth of the “autism” epidemic and an “epidemic” of chronic illness and how these “epidemics” supposedly correlate with the increase in vaccines in the recommended vaccine schedule. Cementing Dr. Brownstein’s status as seemingly being a Dr. Bob wannabe, Brownstein then invokes the antivaccine dog whistle of “parental rights” and “health choice” near the end of his first post. He even parrots the antivaccine myth of viral shedding in which children vaccinated with attenuated live virus vaccines are portrayed as a danger due to “viral shedding.” The truth is much different.

Amusingly, Dr. Brownstein’s response to Dr. Lipson’s critique of his collection of discredited antivaccine talking points is even more pathetic than the original post that provoked Dr. Lipson in the first place.

He begins with a straw man:

Dr. Lipson must be poorly informed here as there has not been a single flu vaccine—and the flu vaccine has been around for over 70 years–that has been shown to work for the elderly. In the best of the flu studies (which are hard to find), the efficacy for younger people is around 7-10%. That means the vaccine fails nearly all the elderly and fails around 90% of younger subjects. Dr. Lipson might want to review the research on the flu vaccine for the elderly. A 2005 study of a 33-season national data set found the “…national influenza mortality rate among seniors increased in the 1980s and 1990s as the senior vaccination coverage quadrupled.” (Arch. Int. Med. 2005;165:265-272). A 2012 systemic review found the original recommendation to vaccinate the elderly was made without data for vaccine efficacy or effectiveness. (Lancet Infect. Dis. 2012;12:36-44). Nothing much has changed since then. And, injecting the elderly with mercury? Nonsense. More about that later.

Of course, Dr. Lipson didn’t claim that the flu vaccine was great in the elderly. He simply pointed out that his elderly patients who got serious cases of the flu might not have gotten it if others around them had been immunized against the flu. Annoyingly, Dr. Brownstein didn’t include the link to PubMed entries for these studies, necessitating my manually looking them up. (Hint: it’s good form to link to studies you’re discussing to make it easy for people to look them up and compare them with how you’re characterizing them. I always do it.) For instance, this first study does seem to indicate poor vaccine efficacy in the elderly, and yes, the Lancet systematic review did note that evidence was lacking for flu vaccine efficacy in the elderly while noting that it does provide moderate protection in everyone else. Of course, one notes that Dr. Brownstein ignored a more recent study that found that flu vaccines were effective in the elderly. The point is not to argue about the flu vaccine in the elderly, however. Again, that’s a straw man, and we know that the flu vaccine’s efficacy in the elderly is not what we’d like it to be, hence efforts to design more immunogenic flu vaccines for people over 65. We know that the flu vaccine is not the best vaccine, but we do know that it is efficacious enough to recommend to most people and that vaccinating younger people does protect older people from the same strains, as Dr. Crislip explained in his review of the evidence for flu vaccine efficacy.

Next up, this is how Dr. Lipson criticized Dr. Brownstein’s argument that if Camp Tamarack hadn’t had an outbreak of vaccine-preventable disease, then there’s no point in mandating vaccines:

I call this the “seat belt” argument. I’ve never been in a serious crash, but studies clearly show that if I were, wearing a seat belt could make the difference between life and death. The same is true for vaccination. While we may not see a lot of tetanus in this country, we still need to protect ourselves. Tetanus is a particularly hideous death, and we see so little precisely because of our vaccination efforts.

Here, Dr. Brownstein engages in a little misdirection. Ignoring Dr. Lipson’s broader point about vaccine protection, he latches on to the example that Dr. Lipson chose, that of tetanus:

As far as I know, tetanus is not a communicable disease. Therefore, I am not sure why Dr. Lipson is arguing this point. How much tetanus do we see? According to the CDC, from 2001-2008, there were 233 cases of tetanus out of 322 million people. The annual incidence is 0.1 per 1,000,000 population. During this time period, among 92 subjects, out of the 233 reported cases where the vaccination status was available, 60% were vaccinated. In other words, the majority who got tetanus were vaccinated. Do we need to give routine tetanus shots to 322 million people to prevent about 30 cases of tetanus per year? Will that work? Those are questions that need to be answered. Moreover, the Td vaccine (Tetanus vaccine in multi dose vials) still contains mercury. Dr. Lipson is fine injecting mercury into people, but I am not.

Ugh. The stupid, it burns us. (No doubt Dr. Brownstein, if he sees this post, will howl with indignation that I characterized his argument as “stupid.” He can either just deal with it or stop making stupid arguments. His choice.) It apparently never occurs to him that the reason that the incidence of tetanus is so low is because of high uptake of the tetanus vaccine in the DTap and Tdap vaccines, where the “T” stands for tetanus. Tetanus incidence began falling after the vaccine was introduced in the 1930s and 1940s, with incidence having fallen by 95% and deaths by more than 99%. In any event, the reason Dr. Lipson used the tetanus vaccine as an example is to explain why just because there hasn’t been a major outbreak at a Camp Tamarack isn’t a reason not to act to protect against one. This is particularly true given the recent Disneyland measles outbreak.

Dr. Brownstein then goes on to make a rather astonishing claim, namely that the “U.S. vaccine market is projected to rise to $100 billion dollars by 2025. While this is true based on a WHO report, one thing Dr. Brownstein neglects to point out is that this is total revenue, not profit. If you look at the profitability of vaccines critically, you can see that vaccines tend to be less profitable because non-vaccine pharmaceuticals have a lower cost of goods because of fewer returns due to spoilage and distribution is a lot more expensive because they need to be shipped more carefully to avoid spoilage. But, for the sake of argument, let’s assume vaccines have, after not being very profitable in the past (which they weren’t) become wildly profitable. They’re still only around 3% of the pharmaceutical market, and they are worth the cost.

Much of the rest of Dr. Brownstein’s “rebuttal” is more of the same antivaccine talking points: the “toxins” gambit on steroids, with a particularly mind-meltingly silly variant:

Formaldehyde is a known carcinogen. Yes, it is produced in tiny amounts in the body. As with injecting anything, there is 100% absorption of formaldehyde via injection. There are reports of inflammatory diseases developing after injection of formaldehyde in vaccines. (Cutan. Med Surg. 2015 Sep-Oct;19(5):504-6)

Formaldehyde is a direct acting genotoxic compound that affects multiple gene expression pathways including those involved in DNA synthesis and repair.

The stupid, it still burns! Yes, formaldehyde is a carcinogen, but only at orders of magnitude higher and longer exposures than vaccines could ever achieve! Otherwise, it is a normal product of metabolism, and the amount of formaldehyde found in an infant’s circulation is at least five times more than an infant would encounter due to vaccines. As for that case report, it describes a man with an allergic reaction to formaldehyde causing contact dermatitis. The report goes on to note: “A review of the literature revealed 2 cases of systemic contact dermatitis from formaldehyde derived from aspartame and 1 case from a thimerosal-containing influenza vaccine. No cases caused by formaldehyde in influenza or other vaccines were found.” In other words, this phenomenon is incredibly rare, so rare that it merited a case report! I do give Dr. Brownstein credit for his mad cherry picking skillz, though.

It’s really scary to see a primary care physician with such ignorance of science and such obvious antivaccine proclivities. No antivaccine trope seems to be too pseudoscientific for him, it would seem, not the “toxins” gambit, not the ranting about thimerosal and aluminum, not the whole scale buy-in to the latest antivaccine conspiracy theory, the CDC “whistleblower,” not fear mongering about formaldehyde, not the abuse of the “science was wrong before” trope through liberal mentions of Vioxx, not outrageous conspiracy theories about big pharma. Indeed, Dr. Brownstein’s ranting about big pharma’s supposed vaccine profiteering strikes me as particularly hilarious given that a glance at the front page of his very own website reveals that he is not at all adverse to a bit of profit himself. Yes, he sells all manner of books and DVDs with titles like Drugs That Don’t Work and Natural Therapies That Do, The Miracle of Natural Hormones, The Statin Disaster, and several others. He has a supplement store that sells Celtic Sea Salt and Iodoral, and many others through his Center for Holistic Medicine. He even sells what I consider to be The One Quackery To Rule Them All, homeopathic remedies. Elsewhere, he claims he identifies “heavy metal toxicity” in over 80% of his patients using provoked urine tests, which involve administering a chelating agent before collecting urine for the test. One notes that such “challenge tests” were specifically mentioned by Choosing Wisely as a test that should not be done and has no value because it will result in seemingly elevated urine levels of heavy metals even in patients with no disease.

Sadly, after perusing Dr. Brownstein’s site, it’s hard for me not to conclude that he is antivaccine to the core. He doesn’t even put up much of a pretense of claiming to be a “vaccine safety activist” rather than “antivaccine,” particularly when posts by him having to do with vaccines buy into even the most idiotic antivaccine tropes and bear titles like:

I mean, seriously. There were times when I was having a hard time telling whether I was reading something by an actual doctor or one of the screeds over at that wretched hive of scum and antivaccine quackery, Age of Autism. That Dr. Lipson annoyed ticked Dr. Brownstein off enough for him to go on the attack is a badge of honor for Dr. Lipson, for which I congratulate him. Dr. Brownstein should also be profoundly embarrassed, as it seems as though he’s been reading from a list of spectacularly bad antivaccine arguments. Heck, he even looks to be trying to contribute to the list himself. Finally, the management of Tamarack Camps is to be commended for requiring that its campers and staff be vaccinated. It’s the right thing to do.



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1RkN02W

It always irritates me when I discover a new antivaccine crank in my state; so you can imagine how irritated I become when I discover one right in my very city (OK, metropolitan area). When that happens, it becomes a bit more personal than my usual mission to refute antivaccine misinformation. So I was most alarmed when I discovered just such a beast because a former ScienceBlogs colleague now writing for Forbes, Dr. Peter Lipson, took the time to deconstruct a very ill-informed piece of antivaccine propaganda. The offending post appeared on the blog of a “holistic” physician named Dr. David Brownstein, and in it he complained about new vaccine requirements at a summer camp. Apparently, Dr. Brownstein was not at all pleased at being publicly taken to task for spreading antivaccine misinformation, leading him to write a deceptively titled post using a title that I’ve seen antivaccinationists use, in one form or other, many times during the eleven years I’ve been in the blog biz. Yes, Dr. Brownstein entitled his post The Great Vaccine Debate, but in reality it was more or less a heapin’ helpin’ of the “toxin gambit,” anti-big pharma ranting, and a whole lot of tone trolling complaining about how Dr. Lipson had been so very, very mean to him, because Dr. Lipson called Dr. Brownstein’s arguments “bullshit.” Specifically, he referred to them as “total bullshit. It’s not even good bullshit, but bullshit that has long been known to be, well, bullshit.”

Oh, dear. Poor Dr. Brownstein. Did Dr. Lipson hurt his widdle feelings? Too bad for Dr. Brownstein that his arguments are indeed bullshit—in both of his posts. If Dr. Brownstein wants to vie for the title of the “Dr. Bob” Sears of southeast Michigan, he needs to have a thicker skin and be better prepared to defend his statements; unfortunately for him, his arguments and responses to Dr. Lipson’s spot-on criticism can only be described as pathetic. Let’s just put it this way. Respect is earned, and Dr. Brownstein clearly failed to earn Dr. Lipson’s respect.

In any case, perhaps it was incorrect to say that Dr. Lipson’s post at Forbes led me to “discover” Dr. Brownstein. I actually have heard of him before. Indeed, I had placed his blog in my folder of woo as potential subject some day and forgotten about him. So I’m happy that Dr. Lipson’s little tussle with him brought him back to my attention. First, a little background is in order. This is what set Dr. Brownstein off:

As a child, I attended sleepover camp as many Jewish children did. Camp Tamarack is the largest (or one of the largest) Fresh Air Society camps in the U.S. Some of my favorite memories from my childhood occurred at Camp Tamarack. I still have many Tamarack friends that I still connect with. This summer, I hosted a reunion for my Tamarack friends and it was truly a wonderful, memorable evening.

Yesterday, (12.30.15) Tamarack Camps put out a vaccine edict that mandates, “No child, camper, staff, artist in residence, volunteer, doctor, nurse, and their families will be allowed to come to camp without documentation of complete immunization according to the policy.” The immunization policy states that everyone is to have age-appropriate vaccines according to the CDC which includes:

  • DTaP, DT, Td, or Tdap
  • IPV
  • HIB
  • PCV 13
  • Rotavirus vaccine
  • Hepatitis B
  • Hepatitis A (strongly recommended)
  • MMR or serologic evidence of immunity
  • Varicella vaccine (chicken pox)
  • Menactra
  • Flu vaccine (strongly recommended)

Of course, this sounds like an eminently reasonable policy to me. After all, summer camp is not unlike school in that there are a lot of children frequently crammed into relatively small areas, such as the cabins. Sure, the kids will be off doing summer camp things, but a lot of other activities involve being in close-in quarters, particularly at night in the sleeping area, which are usually bunk beds in a large cabin. So it would make sense for camps to require the same vaccines required to enter school. Dr. Lipson explains why camps like Tamarack Camps are important to the large Jewish population in the northern suburbs of Detroit:

Dr. Brownstein practices in the heart of Michigan’s Jewish community. Among American Jews, summer camping has been an important part of childhood for nearly a century. In the early part of the 20th century, it was felt that city children would benefit greatly from exposure to nature. Jews were not allowed to attend most camps and started their own. The tradition has remained strong.

I spend a week every summer helping to keep an eye on the kids at one such camp. During the flu epidemic of 2008–09, I watched as dozens of kids came down with a new flu strain, one for which a shot had not yet been developed. It was a frightening lesson in what can happen in unvaccinated populations. Thankfully, the strain wasn’t deadly in this population. Among the hardest hit were pregnant women.

I did not know this bit of history about Jewish camps in southeast Michigan, but then I’m not Jewish. Still, it makes sense to me. In particular, though, I like the reasoning behind this new vaccine requirement at Tamarack Camps:

In the letter I received, the Tamarack-Powers-That-Be state, “Given the overriding Jewish value of Pikuach Nefesh (saving a life), that puts a premium on maintaining health, including taking preventive measures, along with the clear public health based need to protect the camp community as a whole, and those unable to receive vaccines in particular, we are requiring that all campers, staff, artists in residence, volunteers, doctors, nurses, and their families planning to attend/participate in any Tamarack Camps programs be immunized…”

As regular readers know, I’m not particularly religious (an understatement). However, this policy and the rationale for it demonstrate that in some cases religious principles can certainly be a force for promoting science-based health care. In this case, it’s a principle of promoting saving lives, and being vaccinated is a simple and effective way not only to maintain one’s own health through protection against vaccine-preventable diseases but by contributing to herd immunity that protects the vulnerable who, for whatever medical reason, cannot be vaccinated. The rant that Dr. Brownstein follows up his introduction with is indeed, as Dr. Lipson correctly characterized it, bullshit. It’s antivaccine bullshit of the lowest, easiest to refute order, and Dr. Lipson did an admirable job. Even so, before I move on to Dr. Brownstein’s counterattack, I can’t resist having a little swipe myself at things at the scraps Dr. Lipson left behind.

First up, Dr. Brownstein delivers up a hunk of burning stupid:

Perhaps Camp Tamarack is unaware that over $3 billion has been awarded by the Federal Government to children and adults injured by vaccines. Maybe Camp Tamarack can assure all who will have to be fully vaccinated to attend camp that it is safe to inject numerous doses of neurotoxins like mercury, aluminum and formaldehyde into any living being. As far as I am aware, there are zero—ZERO—safety studies on injecting a neurotoxin into a living being. I would like to see where Jewish law says it is safe to inject a neurotoxin into a baby or any living being.

So much antivaccine misinformation, so little time. I give Dr. Brownstein credit for combining the “toxins gambit,” common misinformation about the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program used by antivaccinationists as propaganda, and the claim that there are no safety studies of thimerosal. The last one is particularly amusing because thimerosal was removed from most child vaccines in 2001; the only vaccine left that has thimerosal is the flu vaccine, and even then most flu vaccines are thimerosal-free. As for safety studies of thimerosal, how about these big studies that show no link between thimerosal and neurodevelopmental disorders or autism? No doubt Dr. Brownstein will dismiss them because they were done by the CDC (antivaccinationists are very predictable that way) or will claim that they are not the “right kind” of safety study, but they were done specifically to try to detect correlations between the use of thimerosal-containing vaccines and adverse neurological outcomes. That’s a safety study in my book. I also remind Dr. Brownstein that he said that there were no safety studies on thimerosal. No, he said that there are “zero—ZERO—safety studies,” a claim he doubled down on in his second post. I just showed that there are at least three. There are, in fact, more than that that I could list, had I a mind to. On this issue, Dr. Brownstein’s claim is clearly incorrect, as it’s easy to demonstrate. If he had tried to argue the strengths and weaknesses of the existing safety studies, then there might have been a productive discussion (that is, assuming he could resist dismissing studies just because the CDC or a pharmaceutical company had anything to do with them). Heck, he could even have cited some execrable Mark Geier studies claiming to have found various dangers due to thimerosal in vaccines, but he didn’t, even though those bits of pseudoscience could easily be considered safety studies too. Unfortunately, like a five year old not liking what he hears Dr. Brownstein simply denied that there were any such studies at all.

Then he even invokes the “CDC whistleblower” manufactroversy:

Maybe Camp Tamarack should take notice that there is a whistle blower at the CDC—a senior scientist who authored research papers on childhood vaccinations—who has stated that the CDC has hidden and altered data that confirmed a link with the MMR vaccine to autism.

Um, no. Just no. This “CDC whistleblower,” a rather confused CDC scientist named William Thompson, showed nothing fo the sort. If anything, the antivaccine “reanalysis” done on his data proved Andrew Wakefield wrong yet again. There is no association between MMR and autism. Brownstein also mentions the so-called “Merck whistleblower.” Let’s just say there’s a lot less to that story than meets the eye, certainly less than antivaccine “holistic doctors” like Dr. Brownstein would like you to think. Let’s also just say that, even if everything both “whistleblowers” said were true, it would not prove that vaccines are unsafe, because there are many other studies that show them to be safe and effective.

Elsewhere, Dr. Brownstein trots out familiar (and easily refuted) antivaccine propaganda talking points, in particular the myth of the “autism” epidemic and an “epidemic” of chronic illness and how these “epidemics” supposedly correlate with the increase in vaccines in the recommended vaccine schedule. Cementing Dr. Brownstein’s status as seemingly being a Dr. Bob wannabe, Brownstein then invokes the antivaccine dog whistle of “parental rights” and “health choice” near the end of his first post. He even parrots the antivaccine myth of viral shedding in which children vaccinated with attenuated live virus vaccines are portrayed as a danger due to “viral shedding.” The truth is much different.

Amusingly, Dr. Brownstein’s response to Dr. Lipson’s critique of his collection of discredited antivaccine talking points is even more pathetic than the original post that provoked Dr. Lipson in the first place.

He begins with a straw man:

Dr. Lipson must be poorly informed here as there has not been a single flu vaccine—and the flu vaccine has been around for over 70 years–that has been shown to work for the elderly. In the best of the flu studies (which are hard to find), the efficacy for younger people is around 7-10%. That means the vaccine fails nearly all the elderly and fails around 90% of younger subjects. Dr. Lipson might want to review the research on the flu vaccine for the elderly. A 2005 study of a 33-season national data set found the “…national influenza mortality rate among seniors increased in the 1980s and 1990s as the senior vaccination coverage quadrupled.” (Arch. Int. Med. 2005;165:265-272). A 2012 systemic review found the original recommendation to vaccinate the elderly was made without data for vaccine efficacy or effectiveness. (Lancet Infect. Dis. 2012;12:36-44). Nothing much has changed since then. And, injecting the elderly with mercury? Nonsense. More about that later.

Of course, Dr. Lipson didn’t claim that the flu vaccine was great in the elderly. He simply pointed out that his elderly patients who got serious cases of the flu might not have gotten it if others around them had been immunized against the flu. Annoyingly, Dr. Brownstein didn’t include the link to PubMed entries for these studies, necessitating my manually looking them up. (Hint: it’s good form to link to studies you’re discussing to make it easy for people to look them up and compare them with how you’re characterizing them. I always do it.) For instance, this first study does seem to indicate poor vaccine efficacy in the elderly, and yes, the Lancet systematic review did note that evidence was lacking for flu vaccine efficacy in the elderly while noting that it does provide moderate protection in everyone else. Of course, one notes that Dr. Brownstein ignored a more recent study that found that flu vaccines were effective in the elderly. The point is not to argue about the flu vaccine in the elderly, however. Again, that’s a straw man, and we know that the flu vaccine’s efficacy in the elderly is not what we’d like it to be, hence efforts to design more immunogenic flu vaccines for people over 65. We know that the flu vaccine is not the best vaccine, but we do know that it is efficacious enough to recommend to most people and that vaccinating younger people does protect older people from the same strains, as Dr. Crislip explained in his review of the evidence for flu vaccine efficacy.

Next up, this is how Dr. Lipson criticized Dr. Brownstein’s argument that if Camp Tamarack hadn’t had an outbreak of vaccine-preventable disease, then there’s no point in mandating vaccines:

I call this the “seat belt” argument. I’ve never been in a serious crash, but studies clearly show that if I were, wearing a seat belt could make the difference between life and death. The same is true for vaccination. While we may not see a lot of tetanus in this country, we still need to protect ourselves. Tetanus is a particularly hideous death, and we see so little precisely because of our vaccination efforts.

Here, Dr. Brownstein engages in a little misdirection. Ignoring Dr. Lipson’s broader point about vaccine protection, he latches on to the example that Dr. Lipson chose, that of tetanus:

As far as I know, tetanus is not a communicable disease. Therefore, I am not sure why Dr. Lipson is arguing this point. How much tetanus do we see? According to the CDC, from 2001-2008, there were 233 cases of tetanus out of 322 million people. The annual incidence is 0.1 per 1,000,000 population. During this time period, among 92 subjects, out of the 233 reported cases where the vaccination status was available, 60% were vaccinated. In other words, the majority who got tetanus were vaccinated. Do we need to give routine tetanus shots to 322 million people to prevent about 30 cases of tetanus per year? Will that work? Those are questions that need to be answered. Moreover, the Td vaccine (Tetanus vaccine in multi dose vials) still contains mercury. Dr. Lipson is fine injecting mercury into people, but I am not.

Ugh. The stupid, it burns us. (No doubt Dr. Brownstein, if he sees this post, will howl with indignation that I characterized his argument as “stupid.” He can either just deal with it or stop making stupid arguments. His choice.) It apparently never occurs to him that the reason that the incidence of tetanus is so low is because of high uptake of the tetanus vaccine in the DTap and Tdap vaccines, where the “T” stands for tetanus. Tetanus incidence began falling after the vaccine was introduced in the 1930s and 1940s, with incidence having fallen by 95% and deaths by more than 99%. In any event, the reason Dr. Lipson used the tetanus vaccine as an example is to explain why just because there hasn’t been a major outbreak at a Camp Tamarack isn’t a reason not to act to protect against one. This is particularly true given the recent Disneyland measles outbreak.

Dr. Brownstein then goes on to make a rather astonishing claim, namely that the “U.S. vaccine market is projected to rise to $100 billion dollars by 2025. While this is true based on a WHO report, one thing Dr. Brownstein neglects to point out is that this is total revenue, not profit. If you look at the profitability of vaccines critically, you can see that vaccines tend to be less profitable because non-vaccine pharmaceuticals have a lower cost of goods because of fewer returns due to spoilage and distribution is a lot more expensive because they need to be shipped more carefully to avoid spoilage. But, for the sake of argument, let’s assume vaccines have, after not being very profitable in the past (which they weren’t) become wildly profitable. They’re still only around 3% of the pharmaceutical market, and they are worth the cost.

Much of the rest of Dr. Brownstein’s “rebuttal” is more of the same antivaccine talking points: the “toxins” gambit on steroids, with a particularly mind-meltingly silly variant:

Formaldehyde is a known carcinogen. Yes, it is produced in tiny amounts in the body. As with injecting anything, there is 100% absorption of formaldehyde via injection. There are reports of inflammatory diseases developing after injection of formaldehyde in vaccines. (Cutan. Med Surg. 2015 Sep-Oct;19(5):504-6)

Formaldehyde is a direct acting genotoxic compound that affects multiple gene expression pathways including those involved in DNA synthesis and repair.

The stupid, it still burns! Yes, formaldehyde is a carcinogen, but only at orders of magnitude higher and longer exposures than vaccines could ever achieve! Otherwise, it is a normal product of metabolism, and the amount of formaldehyde found in an infant’s circulation is at least five times more than an infant would encounter due to vaccines. As for that case report, it describes a man with an allergic reaction to formaldehyde causing contact dermatitis. The report goes on to note: “A review of the literature revealed 2 cases of systemic contact dermatitis from formaldehyde derived from aspartame and 1 case from a thimerosal-containing influenza vaccine. No cases caused by formaldehyde in influenza or other vaccines were found.” In other words, this phenomenon is incredibly rare, so rare that it merited a case report! I do give Dr. Brownstein credit for his mad cherry picking skillz, though.

It’s really scary to see a primary care physician with such ignorance of science and such obvious antivaccine proclivities. No antivaccine trope seems to be too pseudoscientific for him, it would seem, not the “toxins” gambit, not the ranting about thimerosal and aluminum, not the whole scale buy-in to the latest antivaccine conspiracy theory, the CDC “whistleblower,” not fear mongering about formaldehyde, not the abuse of the “science was wrong before” trope through liberal mentions of Vioxx, not outrageous conspiracy theories about big pharma. Indeed, Dr. Brownstein’s ranting about big pharma’s supposed vaccine profiteering strikes me as particularly hilarious given that a glance at the front page of his very own website reveals that he is not at all adverse to a bit of profit himself. Yes, he sells all manner of books and DVDs with titles like Drugs That Don’t Work and Natural Therapies That Do, The Miracle of Natural Hormones, The Statin Disaster, and several others. He has a supplement store that sells Celtic Sea Salt and Iodoral, and many others through his Center for Holistic Medicine. He even sells what I consider to be The One Quackery To Rule Them All, homeopathic remedies. Elsewhere, he claims he identifies “heavy metal toxicity” in over 80% of his patients using provoked urine tests, which involve administering a chelating agent before collecting urine for the test. One notes that such “challenge tests” were specifically mentioned by Choosing Wisely as a test that should not be done and has no value because it will result in seemingly elevated urine levels of heavy metals even in patients with no disease.

Sadly, after perusing Dr. Brownstein’s site, it’s hard for me not to conclude that he is antivaccine to the core. He doesn’t even put up much of a pretense of claiming to be a “vaccine safety activist” rather than “antivaccine,” particularly when posts by him having to do with vaccines buy into even the most idiotic antivaccine tropes and bear titles like:

I mean, seriously. There were times when I was having a hard time telling whether I was reading something by an actual doctor or one of the screeds over at that wretched hive of scum and antivaccine quackery, Age of Autism. That Dr. Lipson annoyed ticked Dr. Brownstein off enough for him to go on the attack is a badge of honor for Dr. Lipson, for which I congratulate him. Dr. Brownstein should also be profoundly embarrassed, as it seems as though he’s been reading from a list of spectacularly bad antivaccine arguments. Heck, he even looks to be trying to contribute to the list himself. Finally, the management of Tamarack Camps is to be commended for requiring that its campers and staff be vaccinated. It’s the right thing to do.



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1RkN02W

Reading Diary: Genius At Play The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway by Siobhan Roberts [Confessions of a Science Librarian]

John Horton Conway is a great mathematician, certainly one of the greatest living mathematicians. Polymathematical in his mathematical interests (game theory, geometry, group theory, topology and more, not to mention the Game of Life), he’s also one of the most eccentric, and that’s saying a lot in a field where Cedric Villani is prime eccentricity competition.

As one can imagine, the biographer of an oddball character like Conway faces certain … challenges … that most biographers don’t face. Memory, obstinacy, whimsy, the whole nine yards.

So it pleases me to say that Siobhan Roberts’ recent biography, Genius At Play The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway, rises to the occasion and gives a wonderful and quirky portrayal of a wonderful and quirky figure in the history of mathematics.

But it must be said. If the author of a book about such an unconventional

unusual, irregular, unorthodox, unfamiliar, uncommon, unwonted, out of the ordinary, atypical, singular, alternative, different; new, novel, innovative, groundbreaking, pioneering, original, unprecedented; eccentric, idiosyncratic, quirky, odd, strange, bizarre, weird, outlandish, curious; abnormal, anomalous, aberrant, extraordinary; nonconformist, Bohemian, avant-garde; informalfar out, offbeat, off the wall, wacky, madcap, oddball, zany, hippie, kooky, wacko (here)

figure faces some challenges, so does the reviewer of such a book. How to convey both the book subject’s personality and how that personality is reflected in the book itself? Because make no mistake, Roberts does a great job of mirroring Conway’s personality

the combination of characteristics or qualities that form an individual’s distinctive character.

“she had a sunny personality that was very engaging”

synonyms: character, nature, disposition, temperament, makeup, persona, psyche

“her cheerful personality”

qualities that make someone interesting or popular.

“she’s always had loads of personality”

synonyms: charisma, magnetism, strength/force of personality, character, charm, presence
“she had loads of personality” (here)

in the way she tells the story — fresh, fun, whimsical, a bit wild and offbeat. But not purposefully difficult or obtuse or overly wilful or inventively fanciful with details (like Conway also can be), I guess leaving those aspects out of the direct telling of the tales.

What I’m going to do is leave it to the book itself to tell it’s own tale. Here’s a bunch of quotes, I won’t tell you who from, from Roberts or Conway or one of the other people quoted in the book. ‘Cause where would the fun be in that.

  • p. 20: There goes somebody looking strange. Ergo it must [be] a friend of Dad’s!
  • p. 25: You know, it’s hard to think what message to send your tongue to get it to do this thing.
  • p. 51: I’m a Platonist at heart, although I know there are very great difficulties with that view.
  • p. 57: Mercifully, the hiring process for the Cambridge mathematics faculty was then loosey-goosey, somewhere between anarchic and irrational.
  • p. 64: “Had the baby?” / Yes. / “Boy or girl?” / Yes.
  • p. 74: Were my lectures anywhere near that coherent?
  • p. 75: The smitten students loved him as much for his mind as his silly high jinks, and maybe most of all for his singular hybrid of sophistication, sincerity, and lascivious showmanship.
  • p. 82: Cue the tremolo whistle that presage a duel in “The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly.” It’s a mathematicians shootout. Who’s the fastest to draw to draw a stellated icosahedron.
  • p. 97: During a trip to Montreal there was 8 inches of snow. Conway, as per usual, was wearing only his sandals.
  • p. 107: Are there any determinists present?
  • p. 124: I like to think of a huge abandoned warehouse equipped with logical devices such as AND, OR, and NOT gates.
  • p. 128: It terrifies him that another of his worst nightmares might come true, that his life will in the end be reduced to Life.
  • p. 133: You know, when you play a game, if you learn to be good at it, you find what it is you should be thinking about. That is really rather subtle. And that’s what we do in mathematics.
  • p. 139: Come again? (As the actress said to the bishop.)
  • p. 145: Which is to say, Life could calculate pi. It could calculate anything. In the broadest logical sense, Life was a metaphor for all of mathematics; it contained all of mathematics.
  • p. 181: No. Yes. I’m not sure, to tell you the truth.
  • p. 186: Conway carries the Shannon philosophy to its extreme, often forced by his lack of system to rediscover his own results.
  • p. 213: Suppose surreal numbers had been invented first and real numbers second — suppose it had gone the other way and we had all grown up learning surreal numbers.
  • p. 224: Conway’s philosophy of study, which has served him well, is to always take his investigations several steps beyond what any reasonable human being would do.
  • p. 224: No no no no no! You’re being far too REASONABLE.
  • p. 237: I arrived at the alcove armed with the “Monstrous Moonshine” paper…in hopes of getting, if not an answer, at least some elaboration about what exactly he and Norton had accomplished.
  • p. 242: Conway employs an entomologically inspired algorithm in explaining his own mating patterns.
  • p. 244: How, pray tell, does an unkempt nerdy mathematician get so lucky?
  • p. 275: It’s one of the surest signs of senility in a scientist — or a mathematician, for that matter — when after having made a reputation in one subject, he somehow feels he can make a contribution to something else.
  • p. 364: We are parasites, we mathematicians, on the proper function of the brain.
  • p. 379: But my view is we are trying to find the truth, and there are other ways of finding the truth than proofs. And this is unsettling to mathematicians.
  • p. 390: Gareth, it must be said, is as psyched about having a nerd for a father as any boy could be.

You get the idea. And you’ll have to get a hold of the book itself to figure out the context of the odder of the quotes above. Parasites. *snort*

Needless to say, this is an excellent book, one that belongs in every library’s mathematics collection, academic or public. It is also indispensable for collections in the history of science or math. It would also make an excellent addition to the personal collection of any lover of math or personality.

(Review copy provided by publisher.)

Roberts, Siobhan. Genius At Play: The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway. New York: Bloomsbury, 2015. 480pp. ISBN-13: 978-1620405932



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1Z03PAP

John Horton Conway is a great mathematician, certainly one of the greatest living mathematicians. Polymathematical in his mathematical interests (game theory, geometry, group theory, topology and more, not to mention the Game of Life), he’s also one of the most eccentric, and that’s saying a lot in a field where Cedric Villani is prime eccentricity competition.

As one can imagine, the biographer of an oddball character like Conway faces certain … challenges … that most biographers don’t face. Memory, obstinacy, whimsy, the whole nine yards.

So it pleases me to say that Siobhan Roberts’ recent biography, Genius At Play The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway, rises to the occasion and gives a wonderful and quirky portrayal of a wonderful and quirky figure in the history of mathematics.

But it must be said. If the author of a book about such an unconventional

unusual, irregular, unorthodox, unfamiliar, uncommon, unwonted, out of the ordinary, atypical, singular, alternative, different; new, novel, innovative, groundbreaking, pioneering, original, unprecedented; eccentric, idiosyncratic, quirky, odd, strange, bizarre, weird, outlandish, curious; abnormal, anomalous, aberrant, extraordinary; nonconformist, Bohemian, avant-garde; informalfar out, offbeat, off the wall, wacky, madcap, oddball, zany, hippie, kooky, wacko (here)

figure faces some challenges, so does the reviewer of such a book. How to convey both the book subject’s personality and how that personality is reflected in the book itself? Because make no mistake, Roberts does a great job of mirroring Conway’s personality

the combination of characteristics or qualities that form an individual’s distinctive character.

“she had a sunny personality that was very engaging”

synonyms: character, nature, disposition, temperament, makeup, persona, psyche

“her cheerful personality”

qualities that make someone interesting or popular.

“she’s always had loads of personality”

synonyms: charisma, magnetism, strength/force of personality, character, charm, presence
“she had loads of personality” (here)

in the way she tells the story — fresh, fun, whimsical, a bit wild and offbeat. But not purposefully difficult or obtuse or overly wilful or inventively fanciful with details (like Conway also can be), I guess leaving those aspects out of the direct telling of the tales.

What I’m going to do is leave it to the book itself to tell it’s own tale. Here’s a bunch of quotes, I won’t tell you who from, from Roberts or Conway or one of the other people quoted in the book. ‘Cause where would the fun be in that.

  • p. 20: There goes somebody looking strange. Ergo it must [be] a friend of Dad’s!
  • p. 25: You know, it’s hard to think what message to send your tongue to get it to do this thing.
  • p. 51: I’m a Platonist at heart, although I know there are very great difficulties with that view.
  • p. 57: Mercifully, the hiring process for the Cambridge mathematics faculty was then loosey-goosey, somewhere between anarchic and irrational.
  • p. 64: “Had the baby?” / Yes. / “Boy or girl?” / Yes.
  • p. 74: Were my lectures anywhere near that coherent?
  • p. 75: The smitten students loved him as much for his mind as his silly high jinks, and maybe most of all for his singular hybrid of sophistication, sincerity, and lascivious showmanship.
  • p. 82: Cue the tremolo whistle that presage a duel in “The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly.” It’s a mathematicians shootout. Who’s the fastest to draw to draw a stellated icosahedron.
  • p. 97: During a trip to Montreal there was 8 inches of snow. Conway, as per usual, was wearing only his sandals.
  • p. 107: Are there any determinists present?
  • p. 124: I like to think of a huge abandoned warehouse equipped with logical devices such as AND, OR, and NOT gates.
  • p. 128: It terrifies him that another of his worst nightmares might come true, that his life will in the end be reduced to Life.
  • p. 133: You know, when you play a game, if you learn to be good at it, you find what it is you should be thinking about. That is really rather subtle. And that’s what we do in mathematics.
  • p. 139: Come again? (As the actress said to the bishop.)
  • p. 145: Which is to say, Life could calculate pi. It could calculate anything. In the broadest logical sense, Life was a metaphor for all of mathematics; it contained all of mathematics.
  • p. 181: No. Yes. I’m not sure, to tell you the truth.
  • p. 186: Conway carries the Shannon philosophy to its extreme, often forced by his lack of system to rediscover his own results.
  • p. 213: Suppose surreal numbers had been invented first and real numbers second — suppose it had gone the other way and we had all grown up learning surreal numbers.
  • p. 224: Conway’s philosophy of study, which has served him well, is to always take his investigations several steps beyond what any reasonable human being would do.
  • p. 224: No no no no no! You’re being far too REASONABLE.
  • p. 237: I arrived at the alcove armed with the “Monstrous Moonshine” paper…in hopes of getting, if not an answer, at least some elaboration about what exactly he and Norton had accomplished.
  • p. 242: Conway employs an entomologically inspired algorithm in explaining his own mating patterns.
  • p. 244: How, pray tell, does an unkempt nerdy mathematician get so lucky?
  • p. 275: It’s one of the surest signs of senility in a scientist — or a mathematician, for that matter — when after having made a reputation in one subject, he somehow feels he can make a contribution to something else.
  • p. 364: We are parasites, we mathematicians, on the proper function of the brain.
  • p. 379: But my view is we are trying to find the truth, and there are other ways of finding the truth than proofs. And this is unsettling to mathematicians.
  • p. 390: Gareth, it must be said, is as psyched about having a nerd for a father as any boy could be.

You get the idea. And you’ll have to get a hold of the book itself to figure out the context of the odder of the quotes above. Parasites. *snort*

Needless to say, this is an excellent book, one that belongs in every library’s mathematics collection, academic or public. It is also indispensable for collections in the history of science or math. It would also make an excellent addition to the personal collection of any lover of math or personality.

(Review copy provided by publisher.)

Roberts, Siobhan. Genius At Play: The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway. New York: Bloomsbury, 2015. 480pp. ISBN-13: 978-1620405932



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1Z03PAP

2016 SkS Weekly Digest #1

SkS Highlights... Toon of the Week... El Niño Impacts... Quote of the Week... They Said What?... SkS in the News... Coming Soon on SkS... Poster of the Week... SkS Week in Review... 97 Hours of Consensus...

SkS Highlights

The strong economics of wind energy by John Abraham (Climate Consensus - the 97%, The Guardian) attracted the highest number of comments of the articles posted on SkS during the past week. 

El Niño Impacts 

What effect will a disappearing El Niño have on the 2016 Atlantic hurricane season?

Wait, you may rightly ask. Isn't the current El Niño one of the strongest on record?

Indeed it is. But, as expected, this one appears to have reached its peak in late 2015, and is expected to weaken substantially or disappear altogether by the start of the hurricane season.

Does a Weakening El Niño Mean a More Dangerous 2016 Atlantic Hurricane Season? by John Erdman, The Weather Channel, Jan 2, 2016

Toon of the Week

 2016 Toon 1

Hat tip to I Heart Climate Scientists

Quote of the Week

"I think the aspiration of the agreement in Paris does mark the beginning of the end for the fossil fuel era, but the question really is how quickly the end can come," said Supran*. "For students...it means working on the institutions we have influence over, like me at MIT, urging our administration to stop investing, for example, in coal of the past and start investing in sustainability and renewables of the future." 

*MIT graduate student and activist Geoffrey Supran.

2015: The Year Divestment Hit the Mainstream by  Zahra Hirji, InsideClimate News, Dec 31, 2015

They Said What?

The 15 Most Ridiculous Things Conservative Media Said About Climate Change In 2015 by Kevin Kalhoefer, Media Matters for America, Dec 30, 2015

SkS in the News

British peer Lord Christopher Monckton, the self-titled crown prince of climate sceptics, was one of the first to emerge from the back of the Hummer limo. In typically vaudevillian manner, Monckton played to the cameras by pointing at the University of Queensland’s John Cook — who was there to interview sceptics — calling him a “crook” in French and English. Cook is the bête noire of denialists, being the lead author of a science study finding that 97 per cent of peer reviewed studies on climate change agreed that it was mostly caused by human activity. 

The Fakery of the Paris ‘Red Carpet’ Premiere of Marc Morano’s Climate Hustle Film by Graham Readfearn. DeSmog, Dec 30, 2015

Coming Soon on SkS

  • 95% consensus of economists: hurry up and cut carbon pollution (Dana)
  • Latest data shows cooling Sun, warming Earth (MarkR)
  • Why is the largest Earth science conference still sponsored by Exxon? (Ploy Achakulwisut, Ben Scandella, Britta Voss)
  • Carbon Brief’s 15 numbers for 2015 (Carbon Brief Staff)
  • Guest Post (John Abraham)
  • 2016 SkS Weekly News Roundup#2 (John Hartz)
  • 2016 SkS Weekly Digest (John Hartz) 

Poster of the Week

 2016 Poster 1

SkS Week in Review

97 Hours of Consensus: James White

97 Hours: James White

 

James White's bio page & Quote source



from Skeptical Science http://ift.tt/1NZx181

SkS Highlights... Toon of the Week... El Niño Impacts... Quote of the Week... They Said What?... SkS in the News... Coming Soon on SkS... Poster of the Week... SkS Week in Review... 97 Hours of Consensus...

SkS Highlights

The strong economics of wind energy by John Abraham (Climate Consensus - the 97%, The Guardian) attracted the highest number of comments of the articles posted on SkS during the past week. 

El Niño Impacts 

What effect will a disappearing El Niño have on the 2016 Atlantic hurricane season?

Wait, you may rightly ask. Isn't the current El Niño one of the strongest on record?

Indeed it is. But, as expected, this one appears to have reached its peak in late 2015, and is expected to weaken substantially or disappear altogether by the start of the hurricane season.

Does a Weakening El Niño Mean a More Dangerous 2016 Atlantic Hurricane Season? by John Erdman, The Weather Channel, Jan 2, 2016

Toon of the Week

 2016 Toon 1

Hat tip to I Heart Climate Scientists

Quote of the Week

"I think the aspiration of the agreement in Paris does mark the beginning of the end for the fossil fuel era, but the question really is how quickly the end can come," said Supran*. "For students...it means working on the institutions we have influence over, like me at MIT, urging our administration to stop investing, for example, in coal of the past and start investing in sustainability and renewables of the future." 

*MIT graduate student and activist Geoffrey Supran.

2015: The Year Divestment Hit the Mainstream by  Zahra Hirji, InsideClimate News, Dec 31, 2015

They Said What?

The 15 Most Ridiculous Things Conservative Media Said About Climate Change In 2015 by Kevin Kalhoefer, Media Matters for America, Dec 30, 2015

SkS in the News

British peer Lord Christopher Monckton, the self-titled crown prince of climate sceptics, was one of the first to emerge from the back of the Hummer limo. In typically vaudevillian manner, Monckton played to the cameras by pointing at the University of Queensland’s John Cook — who was there to interview sceptics — calling him a “crook” in French and English. Cook is the bête noire of denialists, being the lead author of a science study finding that 97 per cent of peer reviewed studies on climate change agreed that it was mostly caused by human activity. 

The Fakery of the Paris ‘Red Carpet’ Premiere of Marc Morano’s Climate Hustle Film by Graham Readfearn. DeSmog, Dec 30, 2015

Coming Soon on SkS

  • 95% consensus of economists: hurry up and cut carbon pollution (Dana)
  • Latest data shows cooling Sun, warming Earth (MarkR)
  • Why is the largest Earth science conference still sponsored by Exxon? (Ploy Achakulwisut, Ben Scandella, Britta Voss)
  • Carbon Brief’s 15 numbers for 2015 (Carbon Brief Staff)
  • Guest Post (John Abraham)
  • 2016 SkS Weekly News Roundup#2 (John Hartz)
  • 2016 SkS Weekly Digest (John Hartz) 

Poster of the Week

 2016 Poster 1

SkS Week in Review

97 Hours of Consensus: James White

97 Hours: James White

 

James White's bio page & Quote source



from Skeptical Science http://ift.tt/1NZx181

Should You Buy The $50 Kindle Fire Tablet? [Greg Laden's Blog]

This is a review of the Kindle Fire with 7″ Display and Special Offers by Amazon. In short, this is a tablet/eReader that a lot of people will want, as long as certain needs are extant and certain expectations understood. I have one, and I’m very happy with it. It would take very little convincing for me to get a second one.

One of the main reasons to give serious thought to getting one of these is the fact that it will put you back a mere fifty bucks.

Don’t expect a brilliant tablet for fifty bucks. You may want a nice full blown Android tablet, or if you prefer, an iPad. That will cost you several hundred dollars, and may be worth it. The Kindle Fire reviewed here is not that.

This Kindle tablet has a processor that is slower than the faster processors, has a screen resolution about 20% lower than good quality typical tablets, and moderate but not overwhelming graphics capability. If you are going to rely on a tablet, use it all the time for all the things one might use a tablet for, get a Google Pixel C or, if you don’t have $700 bucks, the also awesome Google Nexus 9.

Don’t get the Kindle Fire with 7″ Display and Special Offers to be THE tablet in your life. But, if you read Kindle books, and you want an eReader that is tablet-like (rather than electronic paper), consider a device that is 50% as fast as something that is so fast you can’t tell how fast it is, 80% as crisp, but only 10% of the cost. Seriously, at $50, instead of $400 or $700, this is worth consideration.

I don’t actually own an up to date super tablet. Rather, I have a phablet, a super phone (one of the most powerful out there) which is huge, and acts like a tablet well enough. For watching videos and reading eBooks using the Kindle reader, I have an iPad 2, which is essentially brain dead as a tablet (since it will not run the newer operating systems in any realistic way) but works OK for these two tasks. Adding the Kindle 7″ eReader, which happens to be an Android tablet, made a lot of sense for me, especially because the iPad 2 actually doesn’t work all that well as a Kindle reader.

Upsides and downsides

The display is fine. I tend to read with larger than average font size, and in that area I don’t see any problem with the display resolution. If I had some masochistic need to read books in a tiny tiny font, I’d want a super high resolution display, but that is not me.

When I put my finger on the display, say of a web page, and scroll, I can see some jumpiness on the screen that I would find annoying if this was my main way of using the internet or doing other tablet or computer related things. But the Kindle eReader not scroll, it pages. And, by the way it pages fast, like it is supposed to, not when it feels like it, like the Kindle Reader operating on an old iPad 2 does.

This is not the ancestral unadulterated Android operating system. And, let me say, that in my opinion, your phone and your main tablet (if you have an Android tablet) should be plain vanilla Android, and not some storage-killing absurdly designed version of the Android operating system like this one. And, the Kindle tablet I’m talking about here is not that. It is an Amazonoid version of the Android operating system.

I think you can install Google Play Store on this tablet, but it does not come by default. Rather, you use the Amazon app store. The Amazon App store is roughly as annoying as the Amazon Prime Video interface, in that it never occurred to anyone at Amazon to organize things in a way that makes sense. But, you can actually get much of the software the Google Play Store has, that you would ever want, on Amazon once you dig past the games and fluff. Also, many apps on the Amazon App store are free-er or cheaper. And, if you buy stuff from Amazon generally you may occasionally be getting credits (=money) that you can use for buying things like apps.

If you like Amazon Music (I don’t use it) or audio books, or Kindle eBooks that talk, etc., then this this tablet should serve you well.

The interface is a bit different than a regular tablet. Again, if you are looking for The Tablet to do Your Stuff, the interface will be a bit annoying. But if you want a machine that handles mainly ebooks or some other Amazon products like music, movies, etc, then this interface will be excellent for you. The interface scrolls/pages up and down within a given realm of stuff, and back and forth to go between apps, books, video, music. etc. (see the picture above). Amazon related things are bigger and up top. Once again, this device is best for, and good at, interfacing with Amazon.

And yes, generally, you can install and use Android apps of various kinds, so you can have a web browser, calculator, etc. etc. You can use this as a tablet, but the best use is probably to do some tablet-like stuff along side your Amazon focused stuff.

The cameras are mediocre.

The tablet has a descent amount of storage. You can add a micro-SD card. You can not put Amazon books on the micro_SD card but you can download movies from Amazon Prime to it for watching off line. You can have some (many, most) of the apps run off the card. You can put photos and videos you take with the on board cameras there as well. The micro-SD slot will handle a 64 gig card.

One area I intend to use this device is for bird books. Bird books are too small on a phone. Tablets are too big to carry around in the bush, or on a boat. But bird books that are either apps or that are actual e-books work well on this larger-than-a-phone device, which is still easy to carry it around. I am not likely to drop the Kindle Fire into a swamp. But if I do, I’ve dropped a $50 device, not a $500 device, into a swamp.

But is it a piece of crap or a well built machine?

The tablet seems well built. Maybe it will survive being dropped in to a swamp. We’ll see!

I looked through many of the comments on the device on Amazon, to see what other people thought of it. The comments were divided mainly into two categories. Most were saying pretty much what I’m saying here, that the tablet is great for it’s specified uses, given the price. A smaller number of comments hate it, but it seems like almost all of those comments are about broken tablets. So if you get a broken one, it will be, well, broken. Send that one back!

This could be great for kids

I’m just starting to experiment with this, but it has promise. You can set up individual accounts on this Kindle so different people in your family can organize their books and stuff separately. But even more interesting, you can set up a kid version of an account, that is isolated from the rest of the system by a passcode.

I will be setting up an account for Huxley, to see if it works for him. He only barely reads so far, but there are kid’s games and learning tools that he will enjoy. The screen size of this Kindle is the same as his LeapFrog device, and he is quickly outgrowing the LeapFrog. Also, this may be a good transition into regular reading, since it can have regular books. I have mixed feelings about getting a kid reading into eBooks right away, but for some things it will be appropriate.

And that is probably why I’ll get a second Kindle Fire 7″. For the kid.

There are a few other reasons to own an Android tablet that have little to do with normal uses of tablets. Like running an Arduino Android shield. I assume the Kindle Fire will work for that, and if I ever do that I’ll let you know!

The Special Offers

Obviously this is not a $50 tablet. It is probably a couple hundred dollars worth of tablet made cheaper by the fact that Amazon wants you to be a Kindle user, and Amazon eBook reader. Then, on top of that, this version of the table throws on ads, otherwise known as “special offers” to bring the price down to fifty bucks.

So, what are these special offers? There are only two things you need to know about them. First, they only show up on the home screen when the device wakes up after being turned off. Second, you can elect to limit them to be family/kid friendly. I’ve not chosen that option and have not seen anything non-kind friendly, so that may not be necessary.

The Special Offers are easy to ignore unless you are totally paranoid and walk around saying “you are the product, you are the product” all the time. If you are already reading eBooks, and using the Internet a lot, you are already part of the Borg and this tablet will change nothing.

But, if you want to get rid of the ads or not have them to begin with, you can just pay $15.

Should you buy a Kindle Fire 7″ tablet with special offers for fifty bucks?

I’m reccomending this this Kindle Fire tablet and eReader for a lot of people, noting that the risks of being wrong are small, and there are many potential uses. If you have a need for a Kindle reader right now and aren not committed to ePaper, even better. If you lack a larger tablet or you have a tablet that sucks anyway, yet another reason. If you have a concern that your expensive eReader is going to be trashed because you are going on a long and dangerous trip or spend a lot of time in swamps, get one. If you want to experiment on your child with a tablet, this is a good way to do it cheaply. If you are hobbyist who wants an inexpensive Android tablet this may (or may not) be good. (If you take it in that direction, let me know how it goes).



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This is a review of the Kindle Fire with 7″ Display and Special Offers by Amazon. In short, this is a tablet/eReader that a lot of people will want, as long as certain needs are extant and certain expectations understood. I have one, and I’m very happy with it. It would take very little convincing for me to get a second one.

One of the main reasons to give serious thought to getting one of these is the fact that it will put you back a mere fifty bucks.

Don’t expect a brilliant tablet for fifty bucks. You may want a nice full blown Android tablet, or if you prefer, an iPad. That will cost you several hundred dollars, and may be worth it. The Kindle Fire reviewed here is not that.

This Kindle tablet has a processor that is slower than the faster processors, has a screen resolution about 20% lower than good quality typical tablets, and moderate but not overwhelming graphics capability. If you are going to rely on a tablet, use it all the time for all the things one might use a tablet for, get a Google Pixel C or, if you don’t have $700 bucks, the also awesome Google Nexus 9.

Don’t get the Kindle Fire with 7″ Display and Special Offers to be THE tablet in your life. But, if you read Kindle books, and you want an eReader that is tablet-like (rather than electronic paper), consider a device that is 50% as fast as something that is so fast you can’t tell how fast it is, 80% as crisp, but only 10% of the cost. Seriously, at $50, instead of $400 or $700, this is worth consideration.

I don’t actually own an up to date super tablet. Rather, I have a phablet, a super phone (one of the most powerful out there) which is huge, and acts like a tablet well enough. For watching videos and reading eBooks using the Kindle reader, I have an iPad 2, which is essentially brain dead as a tablet (since it will not run the newer operating systems in any realistic way) but works OK for these two tasks. Adding the Kindle 7″ eReader, which happens to be an Android tablet, made a lot of sense for me, especially because the iPad 2 actually doesn’t work all that well as a Kindle reader.

Upsides and downsides

The display is fine. I tend to read with larger than average font size, and in that area I don’t see any problem with the display resolution. If I had some masochistic need to read books in a tiny tiny font, I’d want a super high resolution display, but that is not me.

When I put my finger on the display, say of a web page, and scroll, I can see some jumpiness on the screen that I would find annoying if this was my main way of using the internet or doing other tablet or computer related things. But the Kindle eReader not scroll, it pages. And, by the way it pages fast, like it is supposed to, not when it feels like it, like the Kindle Reader operating on an old iPad 2 does.

This is not the ancestral unadulterated Android operating system. And, let me say, that in my opinion, your phone and your main tablet (if you have an Android tablet) should be plain vanilla Android, and not some storage-killing absurdly designed version of the Android operating system like this one. And, the Kindle tablet I’m talking about here is not that. It is an Amazonoid version of the Android operating system.

I think you can install Google Play Store on this tablet, but it does not come by default. Rather, you use the Amazon app store. The Amazon App store is roughly as annoying as the Amazon Prime Video interface, in that it never occurred to anyone at Amazon to organize things in a way that makes sense. But, you can actually get much of the software the Google Play Store has, that you would ever want, on Amazon once you dig past the games and fluff. Also, many apps on the Amazon App store are free-er or cheaper. And, if you buy stuff from Amazon generally you may occasionally be getting credits (=money) that you can use for buying things like apps.

If you like Amazon Music (I don’t use it) or audio books, or Kindle eBooks that talk, etc., then this this tablet should serve you well.

The interface is a bit different than a regular tablet. Again, if you are looking for The Tablet to do Your Stuff, the interface will be a bit annoying. But if you want a machine that handles mainly ebooks or some other Amazon products like music, movies, etc, then this interface will be excellent for you. The interface scrolls/pages up and down within a given realm of stuff, and back and forth to go between apps, books, video, music. etc. (see the picture above). Amazon related things are bigger and up top. Once again, this device is best for, and good at, interfacing with Amazon.

And yes, generally, you can install and use Android apps of various kinds, so you can have a web browser, calculator, etc. etc. You can use this as a tablet, but the best use is probably to do some tablet-like stuff along side your Amazon focused stuff.

The cameras are mediocre.

The tablet has a descent amount of storage. You can add a micro-SD card. You can not put Amazon books on the micro_SD card but you can download movies from Amazon Prime to it for watching off line. You can have some (many, most) of the apps run off the card. You can put photos and videos you take with the on board cameras there as well. The micro-SD slot will handle a 64 gig card.

One area I intend to use this device is for bird books. Bird books are too small on a phone. Tablets are too big to carry around in the bush, or on a boat. But bird books that are either apps or that are actual e-books work well on this larger-than-a-phone device, which is still easy to carry it around. I am not likely to drop the Kindle Fire into a swamp. But if I do, I’ve dropped a $50 device, not a $500 device, into a swamp.

But is it a piece of crap or a well built machine?

The tablet seems well built. Maybe it will survive being dropped in to a swamp. We’ll see!

I looked through many of the comments on the device on Amazon, to see what other people thought of it. The comments were divided mainly into two categories. Most were saying pretty much what I’m saying here, that the tablet is great for it’s specified uses, given the price. A smaller number of comments hate it, but it seems like almost all of those comments are about broken tablets. So if you get a broken one, it will be, well, broken. Send that one back!

This could be great for kids

I’m just starting to experiment with this, but it has promise. You can set up individual accounts on this Kindle so different people in your family can organize their books and stuff separately. But even more interesting, you can set up a kid version of an account, that is isolated from the rest of the system by a passcode.

I will be setting up an account for Huxley, to see if it works for him. He only barely reads so far, but there are kid’s games and learning tools that he will enjoy. The screen size of this Kindle is the same as his LeapFrog device, and he is quickly outgrowing the LeapFrog. Also, this may be a good transition into regular reading, since it can have regular books. I have mixed feelings about getting a kid reading into eBooks right away, but for some things it will be appropriate.

And that is probably why I’ll get a second Kindle Fire 7″. For the kid.

There are a few other reasons to own an Android tablet that have little to do with normal uses of tablets. Like running an Arduino Android shield. I assume the Kindle Fire will work for that, and if I ever do that I’ll let you know!

The Special Offers

Obviously this is not a $50 tablet. It is probably a couple hundred dollars worth of tablet made cheaper by the fact that Amazon wants you to be a Kindle user, and Amazon eBook reader. Then, on top of that, this version of the table throws on ads, otherwise known as “special offers” to bring the price down to fifty bucks.

So, what are these special offers? There are only two things you need to know about them. First, they only show up on the home screen when the device wakes up after being turned off. Second, you can elect to limit them to be family/kid friendly. I’ve not chosen that option and have not seen anything non-kind friendly, so that may not be necessary.

The Special Offers are easy to ignore unless you are totally paranoid and walk around saying “you are the product, you are the product” all the time. If you are already reading eBooks, and using the Internet a lot, you are already part of the Borg and this tablet will change nothing.

But, if you want to get rid of the ads or not have them to begin with, you can just pay $15.

Should you buy a Kindle Fire 7″ tablet with special offers for fifty bucks?

I’m reccomending this this Kindle Fire tablet and eReader for a lot of people, noting that the risks of being wrong are small, and there are many potential uses. If you have a need for a Kindle reader right now and aren not committed to ePaper, even better. If you lack a larger tablet or you have a tablet that sucks anyway, yet another reason. If you have a concern that your expensive eReader is going to be trashed because you are going on a long and dangerous trip or spend a lot of time in swamps, get one. If you want to experiment on your child with a tablet, this is a good way to do it cheaply. If you are hobbyist who wants an inexpensive Android tablet this may (or may not) be good. (If you take it in that direction, let me know how it goes).



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117-122/366: Catching Up, Renaissance Edition [Uncertain Principles]

After the trip to my parents’ for Christmas, I flew down to Charleston, SC to attend the Renaissance Weekend (though none of it fell on an actual weekend day…). This provided some much-needed stress relief, but was not great in photo-a-day terms, as it’s a strictly off the record event, so I couldn’t exactly photograph sessions I was in or anything like that. But it does provide another nice set of breakpoints to define a collection of catching-up photos, including one bonus shot to make up for the missing day in the previous set.

117/366:

The traditional thing to do when on the road is to take a shot out the hotel room window, but that was spattered with rain and facing the sun when I got in, so I couldn’t get anything useful. So here’s a photo of my hotel room, instead.

My room at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

My room at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

This included “turn-down service,” which is one of the more baffling features of high-end hotels, to me. One day, I was taking a nap when they came around, and they left a note on the door saying “We saw the ‘Do Not Disturb’ sign, so didn’t come in; let us know when you leave so we can do the turn-down service.” And, honestly, I can’t imagine why I would bother– I mean, what’s the point of coming in to make the bed I was just napping in, so I have to un-make it again when I come back to go to sleep?

118/366:

You get three crappy cell-phone photos in this set, because as noted above, I couldn’t really bring my fancy camera to the meeting. This is the crappiest:

Spoiler warning.

Spoiler warning.

I do appreciate that they made the effort to warn people. I didn’t go to the session, though, so I can’t say what they had to say about the movie (which I enjoyed, but not in a way that led to anything especially bloggable).

119/366:

The Belmond sets up an elaborate train display between the two big curving staircases in the lobby during the holidays.

Model trains at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

Model trains at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

I have no idea what they do with this space the rest of the year, but these are kind of cool. I have a similar shot with the DSLR from another day, but it’s not all that dramatically better than this one.

120/366:

On New Year’s Eve the Renaissance Weekend takes the afternoon off for “lunch on your own” prior to an earlier dinner than the other nights. I grabbed some BBQ and wandered around Charleston with my good camera for a couple hours. It’s a beautiful city, but has one significant issue:

Statue honoring the Confederate defenders of Charleston, in the Battery park.

Statue honoring the Confederate defenders of Charleston, in the Battery park.

This is a statue in the Battery, done in that tacky 19th century public art style. It’s not really my thing, but it functions as a good representation of the problem with Charleston (and pretty much any other old city in the Deep South). The inscription on this honors “The Confederate defenders of Charleston,” for managing to keep the city from being overrun (though as I noted in last year’s recap, Sherman probably could’ve put the place to the torch if he’d really wanted to).

And, you know, that raises some major issues for a Yankee like me. After all, in the strictest sense, those men were traitors, fighting in the service of a would-be nation that richly deserved to be driven down, in support of a monstrous institution that was the cause of unimaginable human misery. I’m not too thrilled about maintaining public monuments to such a reprehensible cause.

On the other hand, many of them were also ordinary folks defending their homes and families from what would have been horrific devastation had the Union actually taken the city. You can’t really fault them for that, insofar as it’s separable from the whole Confederacy thing. And what’s more, it’s at least in part thanks to their efforts that downtown Charleston is the beautiful and charming city that it is– the many buildings that pre-date the Civil War probably wouldn’t still be standing had it not been for those defenders. That’s arguably an accomplishment worth honoring; at the very least, it’s not easy to wish that they had been much less successful.

So, you know, it’s complicated. Still not sure where I ultimately come down on this, but I will say that all the locals I interacted were extremely nice. As is typical of the South, which makes it harder to hold their ugly past against them…

121/366:

To make up for the missing photo from the last batch, and also that awkward turn into heavy politics, here’s a pretty picture of a fountain:

Cool fountain in Charleston's Waterfront Park.

Cool fountain in Charleston’s Waterfront Park.

Splashy!

122/366:

On the way home, I had a long layover in the BWI airport, which was a good thing because the service in the new pseudo-pub there was amazingly slow. To lift JFK’s line about DC, it offered Northern charm and Southern efficiency. This did, however, allow me to see a cool sunset out the window of the restaurant:

The sun setting over Baltimore-Washington International Airport.

The sun setting over Baltimore-Washington International Airport.

Another crappy cell-phone photo, alas, because I didn’t feel like unpacking my camera bag to get a better shot.

And those are the photos from my trip to Charleston. There will be one more multi-image post to get things back in synch, later tonight. And then it will be back to the usual procedure, at least until the next time I take a multi-day trip out of town…



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1YZW4Aq

After the trip to my parents’ for Christmas, I flew down to Charleston, SC to attend the Renaissance Weekend (though none of it fell on an actual weekend day…). This provided some much-needed stress relief, but was not great in photo-a-day terms, as it’s a strictly off the record event, so I couldn’t exactly photograph sessions I was in or anything like that. But it does provide another nice set of breakpoints to define a collection of catching-up photos, including one bonus shot to make up for the missing day in the previous set.

117/366:

The traditional thing to do when on the road is to take a shot out the hotel room window, but that was spattered with rain and facing the sun when I got in, so I couldn’t get anything useful. So here’s a photo of my hotel room, instead.

My room at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

My room at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

This included “turn-down service,” which is one of the more baffling features of high-end hotels, to me. One day, I was taking a nap when they came around, and they left a note on the door saying “We saw the ‘Do Not Disturb’ sign, so didn’t come in; let us know when you leave so we can do the turn-down service.” And, honestly, I can’t imagine why I would bother– I mean, what’s the point of coming in to make the bed I was just napping in, so I have to un-make it again when I come back to go to sleep?

118/366:

You get three crappy cell-phone photos in this set, because as noted above, I couldn’t really bring my fancy camera to the meeting. This is the crappiest:

Spoiler warning.

Spoiler warning.

I do appreciate that they made the effort to warn people. I didn’t go to the session, though, so I can’t say what they had to say about the movie (which I enjoyed, but not in a way that led to anything especially bloggable).

119/366:

The Belmond sets up an elaborate train display between the two big curving staircases in the lobby during the holidays.

Model trains at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

Model trains at the Belmond Charleston Place hotel.

I have no idea what they do with this space the rest of the year, but these are kind of cool. I have a similar shot with the DSLR from another day, but it’s not all that dramatically better than this one.

120/366:

On New Year’s Eve the Renaissance Weekend takes the afternoon off for “lunch on your own” prior to an earlier dinner than the other nights. I grabbed some BBQ and wandered around Charleston with my good camera for a couple hours. It’s a beautiful city, but has one significant issue:

Statue honoring the Confederate defenders of Charleston, in the Battery park.

Statue honoring the Confederate defenders of Charleston, in the Battery park.

This is a statue in the Battery, done in that tacky 19th century public art style. It’s not really my thing, but it functions as a good representation of the problem with Charleston (and pretty much any other old city in the Deep South). The inscription on this honors “The Confederate defenders of Charleston,” for managing to keep the city from being overrun (though as I noted in last year’s recap, Sherman probably could’ve put the place to the torch if he’d really wanted to).

And, you know, that raises some major issues for a Yankee like me. After all, in the strictest sense, those men were traitors, fighting in the service of a would-be nation that richly deserved to be driven down, in support of a monstrous institution that was the cause of unimaginable human misery. I’m not too thrilled about maintaining public monuments to such a reprehensible cause.

On the other hand, many of them were also ordinary folks defending their homes and families from what would have been horrific devastation had the Union actually taken the city. You can’t really fault them for that, insofar as it’s separable from the whole Confederacy thing. And what’s more, it’s at least in part thanks to their efforts that downtown Charleston is the beautiful and charming city that it is– the many buildings that pre-date the Civil War probably wouldn’t still be standing had it not been for those defenders. That’s arguably an accomplishment worth honoring; at the very least, it’s not easy to wish that they had been much less successful.

So, you know, it’s complicated. Still not sure where I ultimately come down on this, but I will say that all the locals I interacted were extremely nice. As is typical of the South, which makes it harder to hold their ugly past against them…

121/366:

To make up for the missing photo from the last batch, and also that awkward turn into heavy politics, here’s a pretty picture of a fountain:

Cool fountain in Charleston's Waterfront Park.

Cool fountain in Charleston’s Waterfront Park.

Splashy!

122/366:

On the way home, I had a long layover in the BWI airport, which was a good thing because the service in the new pseudo-pub there was amazingly slow. To lift JFK’s line about DC, it offered Northern charm and Southern efficiency. This did, however, allow me to see a cool sunset out the window of the restaurant:

The sun setting over Baltimore-Washington International Airport.

The sun setting over Baltimore-Washington International Airport.

Another crappy cell-phone photo, alas, because I didn’t feel like unpacking my camera bag to get a better shot.

And those are the photos from my trip to Charleston. There will be one more multi-image post to get things back in synch, later tonight. And then it will be back to the usual procedure, at least until the next time I take a multi-day trip out of town…



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Movie Recommendations Thread [Aardvarchaeology]

John asked me to create a permanent movie recommendations forum in the shape of a comment thread. Et voilà!



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1TxP0ny

John asked me to create a permanent movie recommendations forum in the shape of a comment thread. Et voilà!



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1TxP0ny

adds 2