"Tivo-ifies the web" Paul Kedrosky

Ben Goldacre Interview

I’ve just finished Reading Ben Goldacre’s book, ‘Bad Science’, that lambasts various forms of quackery and pseudo science. Here is a New Scientist interview with him. I have also embedded a clip of Gillian McKeith a well know TV presenter in the UK, who encourages people to eat healthily, but does so in a way that is wrong and deceptive. A whole chapter of Bad Science is devoted to her.

For example, McKeith calls herself (or used to call, before the Advertising Standards Authority had a draft adjudication against her) a doctor and refers to her patients. She is neither a medical doctor, nor does she have a PhD from an accredited university. She does have an accreditation from a Nutrition institute that Goldacre managed to obtain membership for his dead cat for $100. The award hangs in his toilet.

Gillian McKeith is our latest recipient of the Smashing Telly FEBL (Fucking Entertaining Big Lie) award, which consists of being tagged FEBL

3 comments FEBL, pseudo science, science

Design Classics, The London Underground Map

There was a period, between the wars, when European refugees like Gropius stopped in Britain. This stimulated a brief flourishing of modernism resulting in the design aesthetic of London public transport, from the Routemaster bus (the only piece of British ‘architecture’ that Corbusier liked) to moderne Tube stations such as Arnos Grove.

But the pinnacle of London Transport’s modernist design was the Tube map which rearranged distances to produce a supremely navigable schematic diagram that is little changed today. (I have been looking for this documentary for ages).

26 comments architecture

Banking With Hitler

Contradicting the notion that the Swiss were alone in banking for the Nazis. There are lots of very poor documentaries about this kind of thing, don’t let that put you off.

1 comment business

A Short Film About Detroit – and a crazy idea for the recession.

Embedding disabled on this, however here is the link.

Why am I choosing to highlight this film? The US car industry is essentially bankrupt, and Detroit is already the equivalent of a failed state within a contracting economy. The median price of a house in Detroit is, staggeringly, less than $10,000. Surely, with a deep prolonged recession it is beyond hope?

The financial sector has been saved by the government, but too late to prevent significant in the ‘real economy’, there will, as a result, be a need for massive government spending to stave off the effects of unemployment. This either happens naturally through conflict or war, or via the preferable alternative of things like the New Deal.

So what should the New Deal Light, New New Deal, or Deal 2.0, or whatever look like? It will have to employ lots of people and will therefore be some kind of large scale industrial project, but it will also have to have a strategic benefit of the type that has the kind of long term return that only governments can consider. In America’s case this obviously will have to do with energy, and more specifically portable energy, and even more specifically portable energy that solves a fundamental problem with the way America uses energy. American planning inextricably revolves around cars more than any other nation on earth, this is a problem that the government can realistically help solve, and only now will it have the stomach to do so.

As Paul Kedrosky predicts, clean tech. “was just given a two-year window to gestate before the major economies worldwide turn higher and begin driving energy prices straight up.”

So my hypothetical proposal is this: nationalize GM and Ford and create a plan to subsidize switch the majority of all cars on the road to the most fuel efficient form possible, using a pragmatic combination of goal driven R&D and industrial scale production, in a realistic timeframe, using whatever means is necessary, and with the zeal of the Apollo Moon Shot.

Is this a crazy idea?

9 comments business

Milton Friedman – the Bumbling Old Man That Killed the American Dream

The events of the last 6 months are more significant than 911 and will no doubt result in more suffering. They are partially a result of the ideas of the man whose choir performs the surreal song called ‘The Corporation’, in the first video. A more apt title might be American Requiem. Two other videos are more in depth pieces by Milton Friedman: on limited government and appearing on Icelandic State Television in 1984 (oh the irony).

The United States has recently had to nationalize the majority of mortgage lending and is in the process of nationalizing large sections of the banking industry which is now rated below Namibia. US treasuries are less credit worthy than the McDonalds hamburger chain’s, the stock market has had a worse week than during the crash that brought on the Great Depression, banks have completely stopped lending to other banks and ships are sitting in docks unable to sail without letters of credit. This cancer has spread, and with banks in many other countries being nationalized to avoid collapse, the IMF said today that we risk systemic global financial meltdown. And this is the sober world of finance.

The reason why this happened is not because of subprime mortgages, Collateralized Debt Obligations or Credit Default Swaps any more than the USSR fell apart because of Boris Spassky’s inferior chess strategy or a cunning plan by Ronald Reagan. Russia fell apart because of the increasingly powerful economic engine of the West and adherence to a flawed, extremist ideology.

The emergence of China’s economic leviathan is the root cause destabilizing effect that turns leveraged debt in the form of CDOs and CDSs into nation busters, but second component, the extremist ideology came from an unlikely source, a nice old man with patrician charm.

The nice old man was Milton Friedman, part of the Chicago School of economists who dreamed up monetarism, an extreme form of laisser-faire capitalist economics, not far removed from Social Darwinism. Economics is arguably not a science and I suspect that monetarism, when treated scientifically, reveals a scientific misunderstanding in its core premise, by thinking of the economy as a closed system rather than open one. I’ve outlined this hunch on my blog and I’d love if someone better qualified than me could someday prove it, however a formal proof of its fallacy is not required to identify its problems when adopted as ideology. Monetarism’s problems started when it morphed into a self-contradictory political ideology called Libertarianism which will be defined as the period from Reagan until Monday afternoon.

Political ideology is like diet, moderation and balance are good. You can’t have unregulated capitalism or people will make money out things like slave trading. Similarly you can’t have totalitarian socialism or you end up with everything run like the DMV, with unmotivated people doing things that people don’t want, slowly, and in drab environments.

On an ideological level, there is nothing consistently libertarian about flag waving Reaganite Republicans, or there wouldn’t be an American army or flag. There is also nothing intrinsically socialist about French left-bank intellectuals or there wouldn’t be any cafes or any music, after all, there is nothing more entrepreneurial than starting a band or opening a cafe. Both extremes are self contradictory, and the truth is somewhere in the middle, to paraphrase the architecture critic, Rayner Banham: politics is about creating a well tempered society.

Libertarianism is like Joseph Heller’s Catch 22, a form of political ideology where there is no polis, no society, to be political about. As with anything with a logical flaw, its adoption has ended up revealing that flaw. In this case, a Libertarian approach to capitalism, denying the existence of government, and therefore regulation, has ended up with the government owing much of the economy. This is a far, far worse outcome than if there had been well regulated capitalism in the first place.

15 comments business, FEBL

Travels With My Beard

An English sikh having been mistaken for a muslim by a rastafarian and asked what its like “to be at the bottom of the barrel”, decides to find out what its like to be a muslim in Britain after the London terror bombings. He grows a beard to look a little bit more ‘fundamentalist’, and sets off on his travels.

Running time: 57 mins.

1 comment religion, world

YouTube Launches Full Length Video Service

Star Trek Original Series – the enterprise crew catch a virus that removes their inhibitions.

The original Star Trek is hilariously camp to look at these days – there is a world apart from this and the later versions which appeal to techy geeks rather than nostalgia freaks. This episode is a particular favorite of mine.

While we are on the subject of full length videos, YouTube has done what it always promised, full length videos with inline ads, similar to Hulu. For the ones that I could find, embedding was disabled for individual items yet they still promote a playlist embed which then doesn’t work. This seems to destroy the essence of what made YouTube so great and viral. Dumb, dumb, dumb.

More on YouTube full length, here.

1 comment drama

Generic Ass Video Site

Jeff writes in the comments: “you’ve really stepped down the quality of your posts recently. you got yourself a srsly generic ass video site now. congrats.”

And you know what, Jeff is right. In defense, I was experimenting, Smashing Telly has no ads, makes no money and is a hobby site It was for me to have some fun doing something I enjoy, it has won a couple of awards and people say nice things about it.

I was thinking about closing the site down, but am going to try and turn it into more of a community site, based upon link suggestions sent in. In the interim I am going to revert to full length media instead of clips.

18 comments Uncategorized

Dick Fuld’s half billion dollar pay

Dick Fuld’s “televised humiliation was orchestrated by a veteran Democrat, Henry Waxman, whose simple question about Fuld’s alleged $480m of earnings – Is that fair? – hit the banker like a haymaker, rendering him speechless.” Link

The expression the buck stops here was supposed to refer to responsibility rather than reward, the other kind of bucks. Fuld claimed full responsibility for Lehman’s collapse but the responsibility came with reduced reward (share options wiped out) rather than risk. Laws are being rewritten to save banks and voters may wake up to the fact that they can make these laws do whatever they want – like seize Fuld’s assets, put him in jail etc.

This might seem naive, but people really do have that power now, and retribution against a few will save the anger of the mob spilling into the traditional avenues for choosing scapegoats like antisemitism. People like Fuld need to be given the equivalent of a loaded revolver to do the honorable thing. Sure, its unfair, like being paid lots when the times are good, but if he doesn’t other people will suffer more. The buck stops.

4 comments business

Al Munajid Responds to Media About Killing Mickey Mouse

Belonging definitively in the ‘you cannot make this shit up’ box, Al Munajid reminds us all of a universal maxim that often applies to people who worship bronze age sky gods:

“If you don’t have a sense of humor, do not try and defend yourself when people take the piss out of something you said that was accidentally hilarious. You will only make things worse.”

As an aside, there is another perfect piece of irony here. Given that the topic is a hand rendered cartoon, I can’t help but feel that Al Munajid looks like a computer rendering from the neck down, and that the room he is in also looks, well, a bit Mickey Mouse.

via Atheist Media Blog

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