The Mediasphere

month

July 2010

57 posts

No More Apologies -- It's Time to Stand Up for Our Convictions

 The Huffington Post | JULY 28, 2010

Howard Dean

Former Governor of Vermont and DNC Chairman

Posted: July 26, 2010 09:15 AM

For some time now, various “reporters” and on-air personalities on the Fox News Network have failed to report the full story or relevant facts, instead indulging in race baiting in order to exploit people’s fears and crank up the fringe of their audience. This was exemplified by Glenn Beck’s nightly assault on Van Jones earlier this year. Recently, Fox has cranked up stories about the Department of Justice’s decision not to prosecute a voter intimidation case against a Black Panther group and even worse, calls for Atty. General Holder’s resignation. And now, the Sherrod Debacle.

Turns out Van Jones’ name was added to a website without his permission, a fact the group finally admitted some time after he resigned. And maybe he said some things about the Republican Party that he shouldn’t have — but that has nothing to do with the fact that he is a brilliant environmental organizer. It also turns out that it was the Bush Administration who decided not to prosecute the case against the black panthers because as Bush’s Assistant Attorney General Perez testified, “the facts did not constitute a prosecutable violation of the criminal statues, and under the Obama Administration Justice Department a judgment was won in a civil case.

And by now we all know how the Sherrod story went down. Despite his claims to the contrary on Fox News Sunday, Chris Wallace didn’t have his facts quite right. As a media matters study showed, Fox News did in fact spend a lot of air-time on July 19th and 20th cranking up the false story. Not to mention that foxnews.com bragged that shortly after they posted a “report” about the video Mrs. Sherrod resigned.

None of this is new. I don’t believe all or even most of the Republican party voters are racist, but going at least as far back as Lee Atwater, the Willie Horton ads, and the attacks on John McCain in the South Carolina primaries in both 2000 and 2008, the immigration debate in 2006, there is a persistent willingness in the Republican party to use race baiting for electoral advantage. The fact is, this is racist behavior.

Now if the Tea Party, which is not a professional group of politicians have the decency to repudiate the racist fringe in their group, why can’t the Republicans? Obviously they think this approach works on the margins, but even if this stuff works, it sure doesn’t produce good leaders or a civil society, and it certainly doesn’t produce a stronger America, it produces an even more polarized and angry America. It’s that willingness to put party ahead of country that has the Republicans in such low regard.

There are lessons to be learned here. Tom Vilsack stated the first one best: don’t make decisions without all the facts. To that I would add: consider the source. If it is a group of individuals or a corporation that has chronically ignored the facts and engaged in race baiting in the past, they are likely to do it again. A report by Fox News, Breitbart or Matt Drudge, ought to have — as it does in most people’s minds — little credibility.

The second lesson is harder. Stand up for what you believe in. I admire Nancy Pelosi because she is tough, gets things done, and doesn’t take crap from the right wing or any one else. After the year and a half this country has just been through, it is pretty obvious that the right-wing has no intention of cooperating with anyone, and that they will do anything to regain power, just as they were willing to do anything to hold on to it. The only reasonable approach is to stand up to them as you would any group of bullies. Call them out for what they do- or don’t do as the case may be. If the Tea Party can call out some of their own members, surely we can call out a group of people who have put their party ahead of their country.

I have often said the biggest problem with the Democrats is that we are not tough enough. Now is the time to be tough. The fact is that the stimulus package has reduced unemployment from where it would have otherwise been in this Bush-induced recession (based on policies most of the Republicans now in Congress voted for). The fact is, as 60 members of the House and the CBO showed last week, the Public Option, or Medicare Buy-in, as it should more correctly be called, would have reduced the deficit over ten years by an additional $68 million dollars. The fact is that President Obama — despite Republicans killing the climate change bill — has done more in 18 months to change America’s approach to the environment and green jobs than any president in memory.

The fact is that if we are going to tackle the deficit, it makes no sense to cut taxes for people with plenty of money while we tell people who depend on Social Security and Medicare that they have to do with less, or to play games with unemployment insurance for those who need it most.

The fact is that the Democrats won the election in 2008. The Republicans refuse to do anything for the country except say “no”. That means we have to work hard and do what we believe is right. And we have to stop apologizing for it. We have to stand up for what we believe in and stop trying to make deals with people who cannot be trusted to make deals for the good of our country. It’s not too late to win in 2010. Conviction politics works. Just ask the right wing!

Jul 28, 20100 notes
Diversity and the Myth of White Privilege

America still owes a debt to its black citizens, but government programs to help all ‘people of color’ are unfair. They should end.

By JAMES WEBB

The NAACP believes the tea party is racist. The tea party believes the NAACP is racist. And Pat Buchanan got into trouble recently by pointing out that if Elena Kagan is confirmed to the Supreme Court, there will not be a single Protestant Justice, although Protestants make up half the U.S. population and dominated the court for generations.

Forty years ago, as the United States experienced the civil rights movement, the supposed monolith of White Anglo-Saxon Protestant dominance served as the whipping post for almost every debate about power and status in America. After a full generation of such debate, WASP elites have fallen by the wayside and a plethora of government-enforced diversity policies have marginalized many white workers. The time has come to cease the false arguments and allow every American the benefit of a fair chance at the future.

I have dedicated my political career to bringing fairness to America’s economic system and to our work force, regardless of what people look like or where they may worship. Unfortunately, present-day diversity programs work against that notion, having expanded so far beyond their original purpose that they now favor anyone who does not happen to be white.

In an odd historical twist that all Americans see but few can understand, many programs allow recently arrived immigrants to move ahead of similarly situated whites whose families have been in the country for generations. These programs have damaged racial harmony. And the more they have grown, the less they have actually helped African-Americans, the intended beneficiaries of affirmative action as it was originally conceived.

How so?

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Martin Kozlowski

Lyndon Johnson’s initial program for affirmative action was based on the 13th Amendment and on the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which authorized the federal government to take actions in order to eliminate “the badges of slavery.” Affirmative action was designed to recognize the uniquely difficult journey of African-Americans. This policy was justifiable and understandable, even to those who came from white cultural groups that had also suffered in socio-economic terms from the Civil War and its aftermath.

The injustices endured by black Americans at the hands of their own government have no parallel in our history, not only during the period of slavery but also in the Jim Crow era that followed. But the extrapolation of this logic to all “people of color”—especially since 1965, when new immigration laws dramatically altered the demographic makeup of the U.S.—moved affirmative action away from remediation and toward discrimination, this time against whites. It has also lessened the focus on assisting African-Americans, who despite a veneer of successful people at the very top still experience high rates of poverty, drug abuse, incarceration and family breakup.

Those who came to this country in recent decades from Asia, Latin America and Africa did not suffer discrimination from our government, and in fact have frequently been the beneficiaries of special government programs. The same cannot be said of many hard-working white Americans, including those whose roots in America go back more than 200 years.

Contrary to assumptions in the law, white America is hardly a monolith. And the journey of white American cultures is so diverse (yes) that one strains to find the logic that could lump them together for the purpose of public policy.

The clearest example of today’s misguided policies comes from examining the history of the American South.

The old South was a three-tiered society, with blacks and hard-put whites both dominated by white elites who manipulated racial tensions in order to retain power. At the height of slavery, in 1860, less than 5% of whites in the South owned slaves. The eminent black historian John Hope Franklin wrote that “fully three-fourths of the white people in the South had neither slaves nor an immediate economic interest in the maintenance of slavery.”

The Civil War devastated the South, in human and economic terms. And from post-Civil War Reconstruction to the beginning of World War II, the region was a ravaged place, affecting black and white alike.

In 1938, President Franklin Roosevelt created a national commission to study what he termed “the long and ironic history of the despoiling of this truly American section.” At that time, most industries in the South were owned by companies outside the region. Of the South’s 1.8 million sharecroppers, 1.2 million were white (a mirror of the population, which was 71% white). The illiteracy rate was five times that of the North-Central states and more than twice that of New England and the Middle Atlantic (despite the waves of European immigrants then flowing to those regions). The total endowments of all the colleges and universities in the South were less than the endowments of Harvard and Yale alone. The average schoolchild in the South had $25 a year spent on his or her education, compared to $141 for children in New York.

Generations of such deficiencies do not disappear overnight, and they affect the momentum of a culture. In 1974, a National Opinion Research Center (NORC) study of white ethnic groups showed that white Baptists nationwide averaged only 10.7 years of education, a level almost identical to blacks’ average of 10.6 years, and well below that of most other white groups. A recent NORC Social Survey of white adults born after World War II showed that in the years 1980-2000, only 18.4% of white Baptists and 21.8% of Irish Protestants—the principal ethnic group that settled the South—had obtained college degrees, compared to a national average of 30.1%, a Jewish average of 73.3%, and an average among those of Chinese and Indian descent of 61.9%.

Policy makers ignored such disparities within America’s white cultures when, in advancing minority diversity programs, they treated whites as a fungible monolith. Also lost on these policy makers were the differences in economic and educational attainment among nonwhite cultures. Thus nonwhite groups received special consideration in a wide variety of areas including business startups, academic admissions, job promotions and lucrative government contracts.

Where should we go from here? Beyond our continuing obligation to assist those African-Americans still in need, government-directed diversity programs should end.

Nondiscrimination laws should be applied equally among all citizens, including those who happen to be white. The need for inclusiveness in our society is undeniable and irreversible, both in our markets and in our communities. Our government should be in the business of enabling opportunity for all, not in picking winners. It can do so by ensuring that artificial distinctions such as race do not determine outcomes.

Memo to my fellow politicians: Drop the Procrustean policies and allow harmony to invade the public mindset. Fairness will happen, and bitterness will fade away.

Mr. Webb, a Democrat, is a U.S. senator from Virginia.

Copyright 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Jul 27, 20100 notes
No To Oligarchy

Bernie Sanders

July 22, 2010

The American people are hurting. As a result of the greed, recklessness and illegal behavior on Wall Street, millions of Americans have lost their jobs, homes, life savings and their ability to get a higher education. Today, some 22 percent of our children live in poverty, and millions more have become dependent on food stamps for their food.

And while the Great Wall Street Recession has devastated the middle class, the truth is that working families have been experiencing a decline for decades. During the Bush years alone, from 2000-2008, median family income dropped by nearly $2,200 and millions lost their health insurance. Today, because of stagnating wages and higher costs for basic necessities, the average two-wage-earner family has less disposable income than a one-wage-earner family did a generation ago. The average American today is underpaid, overworked and stressed out as to what the future will bring for his or her children. For many, the American dream has become a nightmare. 

 But, not everybody is hurting. While the middle class disappears and poverty increases the wealthiest people in our country are not only doing extremely well, they are using their wealth and political power to protect and expand their very privileged status at the expense of everyone else. This upper-crust of extremely wealthy families are hell-bent on destroying the democratic vision of a strong middle-class which has made the United States the envy of the world. In its place they are determined to create an oligarchy in which a small number of families control the economic and political life of our country.

 The 400 richest families in America, who saw their wealth increase by some $400 billion during the Bush years, have now accumulated $1.27 trillion in wealth. Four hundred families! During the last fifteen years, while these enormously rich people became much richer their effective tax rates were slashed almost in half. While the highest-paid 400 Americans had an average income of $345 million in 2007, as a result of Bush tax policy they now pay an effective tax rate of 16.6 percent, the lowest on record.

Last year, the top twenty-five hedge fund managers made a combined $25 billion but because of tax policy their lobbyists helped write, they pay a lower effective tax rate than many teachers, nurses and police officers. As a result of tax havens in the Cayman Islands, Bermuda and elsewhere, the wealthy and large corporations are evading some $100 billion a year in U.S. taxes. Warren Buffett, one of the richest people on earth, has often commented that he pays a lower effective tax rate than his secretary.

 But it’s not just wealthy individuals who grotesquely manipulate the system for their benefit. It’s the multinational corporations they own and control. In 2009, Exxon Mobil, the most profitable corporation in history made $19 billion in profits and not only paid no federal income tax—they actually received a $156 million refund from the government. In 2005, one out of every four large corporations in the United States paid no federal income taxes while earning $1.1 trillion in revenue.

 But, perhaps the most outrageous tax break given to multi-millionaires and billionaires happened this January when the estate tax, established in 1916, was repealed for one year as a result of President Bush’s 2001 tax legislation. This tax applies only to the wealthiest three-tenths of 1 percent of our population. This is what Teddy Roosevelt, a leading proponent of the estate tax, said in 1910. “The absence of effective state, and, especially, national restraint upon unfair money-getting has tended to create a small class of enormously wealthy and economically powerful men, whose chief object is to hold and increase their power. The prime need is to change the conditions which enable these men to accumulate power which is not for the general welfare that they should hold or exercise.… Therefore, I believe in a…graduated inheritance tax on big fortunes, properly safeguarded against evasion and increasing rapidly in amount with the size of the estate.” And that’s what we’ve had for the last ninety-five years—until 2010.

 Today, not content with huge tax breaks on their income; not content with massive corporate tax loopholes; not content with trade laws enabling them to outsource the jobs of millions of American workers to low-wage countries and not content with tax havens around the world, the ruling elite and their lobbyists are working feverishly to either eliminate the estate tax or substantially lower it. If they are successful at wiping out the estate tax, as they came close to doing in 2006 with every Republican but two voting to do, it would increase the national debt by over $1 trillion during a ten-year period. At a time when we already have a $13 trillion debt, enormous unmet needs and the highest level of wealth inequality in the industrialized world, it is simply obscene to provide more tax breaks to multi-millionaires and billionaires.

 That is why I have introduced the Responsible Estate Tax Act (S.3533). This legislation would raise $318 billion over the next decade by establishing a graduated inheritance tax on estates over $3.5 million retroactive to this year. This bill ensures that the wealthiest 0.3 percent of Americans pays their fair share of estate taxes, while making sure that 99.7 percent of Americans never have to pay a dime when they lose a loved one. It also makes certain that the overwhelming majority of family farmers and small businesses never have to pay an estate tax.

 This legislation must be passed because, with a $13 trillion national debt and huge unmet needs, we cannot afford more tax breaks for millionaire and billionaire families. But even more importantly, it must be passed because the United States must not become an oligarchy in which a handful of wealthy and powerful families control the destiny of our nation. Too many people, from the inception of this country, have struggled and died to maintain our democratic vision. We owe it to them and to our children to maintain it.

Bernie SandersJuly 22, 2010

  
Jul 27, 20100 notes
7 Superb Podcasts for Summer Listening

Alexander Hotz is a freelance multimedia journalist and public radio junkie based in New York City. Currently he teaches digital media at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. Follow Alex on Twitter at @hotzington.

Along with SPF and sunglasses, a captivating story can be essential for a trip to the beach. But this summer, beach goers should expand their narrative appetite beyond the written word. Podcasts, unbeknownst to many a bibliophile, are increasingly an excellent (and free) source of stories.

Whether you’re looking for fiction, non-fiction, comedy, tragedy or just a good yarn, these seven podcasts (in no particular order) are required listening for anyone under a beach umbrella this summer.

1. This American Life

The undisputed granddaddy of the podcast world, “TAL,” as its devotees know it, is arguably the best source for contemporary storytelling online. TAL boasts half a million downloads every week and is consistently ranked as the first or second most downloaded podcast on iTunes.

In addition to an impressive array of non-fiction stories, TAL features investigative journalism, fiction, essays and experimental story telling. The show helped launch the literary careers of David Sedaris, Sarah Vowell and David Rakoff. To date it’s the only podcast to have spawned a TV spinoff.

Length: About an hour

Frequency: Weekly

2. The Moth

Although The New York Times described it as a “farm league” for This American Life, The Moth is by no means an also-ran. Every month the podcast attracts about 70,000 subscribers and one million downloads. Notable storytellers have included Margaret Cho, Ethan Hawke, Malcolm Gladwell, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, George Plimpton, Gay Talese, Moby, and Sam Shepard. Stories are recorded live and without scripts or notes at packed venues across the country. Like TAL, The Moth’s stories run the gamut from deeply moving to hilarious.

Length: About 5-17 minutes

Frequency: Weekly

3. Risk!

Risk! is similar in style to The Moth. The stories are all true and typically recorded at live shows in New York City. What sets Risk! apart is its subject matter. Generally, stories are outlandish and brimming with uncensored content. The show’s tagline, “Where people share true tales they never thought they’d dare share!” tends to be an understatement.

Despite its R-rated nature, Risk! has a healthy supply of talent. Many of the show’s contributors are actors, writers, directors, comedians and musicians. The first season, which recently wrapped up, included big names like Janeane Garofalo and Rachel Dratch.

Length: About an hour

Frequency: Weekly

4. WireTap

WireTap is the creation of former This American Life producer Jonathan Goldstein. Although iTunes classifies the podcast as a comedy, the Canadian public radio show is difficult to pin down. Most of the program revolves around the hapless day-to-day existence of Goldstein’s dysfunctional alter ego, an exaggerated form of Goldstein himself. Like Jerry Seinfeld and Woody Allen before him, Goldstein’s self-deprecating humor delves into the minutiae of daily life.

When Goldstein isn’t wrapped up in one of his misadventures, WireTap also features short stories, which can be both humorous and sincere.

Length: About 30 minutes

Frequency: Weekly

5. StoryCorps

Like The Moth, StoryCorps’ podcast is produced by a non-profit devoted to storytelling. However, where The Moth’s focus is on the art of storytelling, StoryCorps’ mission is to record and preserve narratives for future generations.

Begun in 2003 by radio producer Dave Isay, StoryCorps is similar to the oral history projects undertaken by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) of the 1930s. Recording booths are set up in public places across the country and Americans — no matter what their background — are invited to come and tell their stories. Thousands of these recorded stories are stored at the Library of Congress, but the highlights are available online thanks to the podcast.

Length: About 4-10 minutes

Frequency: Weekly

6. Selected Shorts

If you’d prefer more of an audio book experience, one of your best bets is Selected Shorts, a podcast produced by New York City’s Public Radio Station WNYC. Each week this podcast features classic and new short fiction stories read by stage, screen and television actors. Depending on the length of the stories, the podcast can have 2-5 narratives. Like The Moth and Risk!, Selected Shorts is recorded in front of a live audience.

Length: One hour

Frequency: Weekly

7. The New Yorker Fiction Podcast

For the recovering English major, The New Yorker’s Fiction podcast may be the Holy Grail of online audio. Authors both prominent and up-and-coming read short stories they’ve picked by their favorite authors. Think Orhan Pamuk reading Vladimir Nabokov or Tobias Wolff reading Denis Johnson. If you know who those authors are, this podcast might be right up your alley.

Length: 20-50 minutes

Frequency: Monthly

More Entertainment Resources from Mashable:

- 5 Great Ways to Find Music That Suits Your Mood
- 7 Unique Sites for Discovering New Music
- Top 10 Facebook Applications for Music Lovers
- Social Music: Top 5 Sites to Build a Playlist

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, PeskyMonkey

Jul 26, 2010-1 notes
5 Tips for Aspiring Social Media Marketers

 

Within the past few years, it seems that social media positions are popping up everywhere, in all types of organizations, fromThe New York Times, to Pizza Hut, and even in the White House. Businesses of all types are identifying the need to stay connected with their communities because they recognize the benefits.

Social media marketing is just a slice of the social media industry, but it’s a very important piece of the story. Businesses see social media as a platform for engaging with consumers and informing them of the latest company news and products. Marketers are blazing trails in the social media marketing sector, creating campaigns that are interactive, shareable and inclusive of the online community. For the most innovative of marketers, the focus isn’t on campaigns, but on letting consumers take the reigns in guiding a brand’s social presence.

For aspiring social media marketers, there are no strict rules for becoming successful. But we’ve gathered eight of the brightest minds in the social media industry to elaborate on five helpful tips for landing a job in social media marketing.

1. Join Social Media Meetups and Networks

 

In talking with a number of digital entrepreneurs, one tip stood out as the first step towards online success: step away from your computer, meet with professionals in the field you want to work with and join groups of others interested in social media and technology. Damien Basile, communication strategist and founder ofDigital Somethings, a monthly digital influencer event series, said it loud and clear, “The old axiom still rings true: It’s who you know, what you know and how much money you have access to.”

Digital Strategist and Co-Founder of Foodspotting, Soraya Darabi, recommends that job seekers looking to break into the social media world get out and meet people in the industry:

“Most careers depend a lot on networks, but the beauty of social media is that you can “meet” most of the people you need to know online. Having said that, I truly appreciate real life conversations, and get great value from the New York Tech Meetup after-events, where like-minded entrepreneurs and digital strategists roam. Create your own networking event if you can’t find a nearby group to suit your interests.”

Joining groups like the New York Tech Meetup and Social Media Club are a great start to getting to know professionals in the industry. Make sure you’re not just attending events, sitting in the back and leaving after the speeches end. Be proactive about meeting new people, learning about what they do and having meaningful conversations.

If you can’t find a fitting group of interesting people nearby, start your own Meetup. Organizing a group of specialized experts is one way to sky-rocket your name to the top.

2. Make Relationships, Not Pitches

Joining specialized groups is just the beginning; don’t stop there. When you meet people with interesting stories, get to know them and build a true relationship. Forget the marketing pitches and the elevator speech and leave your resume at home. People can instinctively identify a fraud; be genuine in your mission to understand the industry and what your acquaintances are working on. I like the way Soundcloud EvangelistDavid Noël puts it, “Don’t be spammy, pushy, sales-y, douchey, or scary.”

The best thing about the social space is that you can continue your relationships online. As Basile puts it, “Comment, interact, blog and re-blog. The more you make yourself heard, the more you will be heard.” Make sure you’re staying active within your network, and don’t forget to listen.

Pedro Sorrentino, MediaMind’s marketing and PR coordinator in Brazil, says to remember that “it’s not only about the people you know, it’s about the way you treat them as well. Technology is just a platform and social media is all about sociology, human behavior and status.” He points out that technology can lead way to short, crass communications. Learn how to engage your network in a “clever and polite way.”

Sophia Aladenoye, a digital strategist at Ogilvy Public Relations, stresses the important of embracing the extrovert in you while on your mission to make your connections count:

“My top tip would be to always engage with people. I have seen this, time and time again, that those who are in the social media industry and who wish to break in are individuals who actually like people and like talking to people. Those are the ones who I see thriving in this industry — it is called “social” for a reason. Even if you consider yourself an introvert, there should be a part of yourself that still reaches out to people.”

3. Stay Informed of Trends, Tools and News

Training, experience and knowledge are all very important for any career choice. Since social media is such a new industry, there aren’t very many standards on what type of training you should have or which tools you should be utilizing to measure success. Because the landscape changes so quickly, it is therefore very important that you are constantly learning. Keep yourself updated on the latest technologies, trends and news by reading up. Walter Junior, social media strategist at Riot, points out that being in the know is key:

“Keep up-to-date with tools, applications, studies and reports. In my opinion, it’s essential to monitor and be familiar with a wide range of Internet

materials, such as social media usage research, in order not only to comprehend market and users’ consumption habits, but also to know how they are changing each day.”

Darabi believes that industry awareness and a passion for new things keeps aspiring social media marketers on top of their game. “The magic word in our industry is beta. Get on the beta list for every product that intrigues you, try it for yourself before you recommend the product or platform to your brand or organization. Early-adoption and the ability to be first-to-market is an easy gateway to success.”

A background or knowledge in marketing or PR doesn’t hurt, either. Jakub Svoboda, publisher ofTyinternety.cz, a Czech blog specialized in digital marketing and social media, says that “you have to understand, at least on a basic level, how companies are communicating, what brand marketing is, how to deal with reputation, how to manage a PR crisis, and how to write copy for social advertisements.” If you have a passion for social media, but don’t have the marketing experience, don’t be discouraged. Pick up a marketing book, take a course, or get a mentor.

When you’re on top of the latest news, you’ll never have to worry about fudging up on the facts in an interview.Kimberly Aguilera, planning and new media recruiter at Tangerine Talent Management, advises that, “at an interview you should be prepared with your own ideas for the company or agency [you are interviewing with]. Have relevant examples of who is doing what right.” Aguilera also advises that you cut out the jargon and start at the basics while interviewing. “Being able to teach is a big part of the roles. Not everyone knows as much as you do all of the time. You have to make it all understandable for non-social media experts.”

To stay on top of the latest news, fill your RSS reader with the sources that cover that news. Our experts recommend AdAge

, PSFK, Creativity Magazine, eMarketer, and of course, Mashable

. We also recommend following or creating a Twitter List of social media of great thinkers in the industry, and interacting with individual tweeters on the list when they post something that’s of interest to you.

4. Find an Online Balance Between Personal & Professional

Noël will tell you that “the lines between your personal and work online presences are blurred.” There isn’t an invisible line between the two, and there is no way of keeping them separate, no matter how you may try. Noël looks at this truth as an opportunity to showcase your expertise. He elaborates, “Don’t be afraid though, and use this to position yourself as an expert in your field and beyond, by blogging about things that are tangent to what your work life is about, but not necessarily cover it as a whole.”

Darabi advises, “Develop your own ‘personal-professional hybrid,’ a version of yourself online that you’re comfortable sharing with the CEO of a Fortune 100 company and your grandmother alike.”

Finally, don’t forget that anything you contribute to the Internet stays there. Basile puts it into perspective, “Everything is Googleable. Anything you put online is fair game, even if your privacy settings are strict. All it takes is one person to copy-paste something you said. Take 10 seconds to think about what you’re saying before you post anything. Someone is ALWAYS paying attention.”

5. Make Your Resume Stand Out

We asked our eight social media, communications, and digital strategy experts for their top resume tips for aspiring social media marketers. They had so many great ideas that we decided to leave you with these notes on sprucing up your resume:

  • “Aspiring social media marketers must include their professional and personal social networking links on their resume. A potential employer will find them anyway, so including them shows savvy and initiative. Don’t include your follower numbers, ratio or “influence” score. A potential employer will find that out when they search your social profiles”. -Damien Basile
  • “What you emphasize on your resume should also reflect what companies or positions you are applying for. No one likes a resume that doesn’t feel somewhat personalized.” -Sophia Aladenoye
  • “It’s essential to emphasize your social presences by including your links to Twitter

    , Facebook

    ,LinkedIn

     and personal blog on your resume. In that way, interviewers can analyze your writing and publishing skills, the way you interact with other people and your ability to build a consistent personal image.” -Walter Junior
  • “Emphasize your writing and photography abilities, as this industry is largely about making content interesting through basic blogging techniques. You should also highlight projects you’ve self-started. My friend Mike Hudack, [co-founder] of blip.tv, often says he only hires people if they have a side project they feel passionately about. He wants all hires to be innovative and entrepreneurial. I like that approach.” -Soraya Darabi
  • “I consider owning some information channel that seems to be interesting a “must have”. Even if it’s your Twitter, a forum, or maybe a very good blog. And don’t forget to show that you are always learning, don’t try to be a know-it-all. Information changes really fast. If you want to show that you know something interesting and add some character, include something like, ‘My friends love my risotto!’” -Pedro Sorrentino
  • “Emphasize your own social media presence and successes. Present your great communication and language skills, and don’t forget social links to your blog, Twitter, and other sites you’re active on. Have your resume online, on sites such as on LinkedIn.” -Jakub Svoboda
  • “Include your passion projects. This is what sets you apart and tells your story. I recommend to leave off irrelevant experience.” -Kimberly Aguilera
  • “Get out there and do, write and say smart things. If you can back this up by [having] a strong web presence and point a recruiter to the things that best describe who you are as a person, you basically don’t need a resume. A cover letter leaves too much room for BS anyway, and a CV can be constructed. Bottom line: link to your online presences that prove that you’re awesome, and you have one foot in the door. Bonus if a company finds you before you find it.” -David Noël
Jul 26, 2010-1 notes
The Middle Class in America Is Radically Shrinking. Here Are the Stats to Prove it

Posted Jul 15, 2010 02:25pm EDT by Michael Snyder in Recession
From The Business Insider

Editor’s note: Michael Snyder is editor of theeconomiccollapseblog.com

The 22 statistics detailed here prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the middle class is being systematically wiped out of existence in America.

The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer at a staggering rate. Once upon a time, the United States had the largest and most prosperous middle class in the history of the world, but now that is changing at a blinding pace.

So why are we witnessing such fundamental changes? Well, the globalism and “free trade” that our politicians and business leaders insisted would be so good for us have had some rather nasty side effects. It turns out that they didn’t tell us that the “global economy” would mean that middle class American workers would eventually have to directly compete for jobs with people on the other side of the world where there is no minimum wage and very few regulations. The big global corporations have greatly benefited by exploiting third world labor pools over the last several decades, but middle class American workers have increasingly found things to be very tough.

Here are the statistics to prove it:

•    83 percent of all U.S. stocks are in the hands of 1 percent of the people. 
•    61 percent of Americans “always or usually” live paycheck to paycheck, which was up from 49 percent in 2008 and 43 percent in 2007.
•    66 percent of the income growth between 2001 and 2007 went to the top 1% of all Americans.
•    36 percent of Americans say that they don’t contribute anything to retirement savings.
•    A staggering 43 percent of Americans have less than $10,000 saved up for retirement.
•    24 percent of American workers say that they have postponed their planned retirement age in the past year.
•    Over 1.4 million Americans filed for personal bankruptcy in 2009, which represented a 32 percent increase over 2008.
•    Only the top 5 percent of U.S. households have earned enough additional income to match the rise in housing costs since 1975.
•    For the first time in U.S. history, banks own a greater share of residential housing net worth in the United States than all individual Americans put together.
•    In 1950, the ratio of the average executive’s paycheck to the average worker’s paycheck was about 30 to 1. Since the year 2000, that ratio has exploded to between 300 to 500 to one.
•    As of 2007, the bottom 80 percent of American households held about 7% of the liquid financial assets.
•    The bottom 50 percent of income earners in the United States now collectively own less than 1 percent of the nation’s wealth.
•    Average Wall Street bonuses for 2009 were up 17 percent when compared with 2008.
•    In the United States, the average federal worker now earns 60% MORE than the average worker in the private sector.
•    The top 1 percent of U.S. households own nearly twice as much of America’s corporate wealth as they did just 15 years ago.
•    In America today, the average time needed to find a job has risen to a record 35.2 weeks.
•    More than 40 percent of Americans who actually are employed are now working in service jobs, which are often very low paying.
•    or the first time in U.S. history, more than 40 million Americans are on food stamps, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture projects that number will go up to 43 million Americans in 2011.
•    This is what American workers now must compete against: in China a garment worker makes approximately 86 cents an hour and in Cambodia a garment worker makes approximately 22 cents an hour.
•    Approximately 21 percent of all children in the United States are living below the poverty line in 2010 - the highest rate in 20 years.
•    Despite the financial crisis, the number of millionaires in the United States rose a whopping 16 percent to 7.8 million in 2009.
•    The top 10 percent of Americans now earn around 50 percent of our national income.

Giant Sucking Sound

The reality is that no matter how smart, how strong, how educated or how hard working American workers are, they just cannot compete with people who are desperate to put in 10 to 12 hour days at less than a dollar an hour on the other side of the world. After all, what corporation in their right mind is going to pay an American worker 10 times more (plus benefits) to do the same job? The world is fundamentally changing. Wealth and power are rapidly becoming concentrated at the top and the big global corporations are making massive amounts of money. Meanwhile, the American middle class is being systematically wiped out of existence as U.S. workers are slowly being merged into the new “global” labor pool.

What do most Americans have to offer in the marketplace other than their labor? Not much. The truth is that most Americans are absolutely dependent on someone else giving them a job. But today, U.S. workers are “less attractive” than ever. Compared to the rest of the world, American workers are extremely expensive, and the government keeps passing more rules and regulations seemingly on a monthly basis that makes it even more difficult to conduct business in the United States.

So corporations are moving operations out of the U.S. at breathtaking speed. Since the U.S. government does not penalize them for doing so, there really is no incentive for them to stay.

What has developed is a situation where the people at the top are doing quite well, while most Americans are finding it increasingly difficult to make it. There are now about six unemployed Americans for every new job opening in the United States, and the number of “chronically unemployed” is absolutely soaring. There simply are not nearly enough jobs for everyone.

Many of those who are able to get jobs are finding that they are making less money than they used to. In fact, an increasingly large percentage of Americans are working at low wage retail and service jobs.

But you can’t raise a family on what you make flipping burgers at McDonald’s or on what you bring in from greeting customers down at the local Wal-Mart.

The truth is that the middle class in America is dying — and once it is gone it will be incredibly difficult to rebuild.

Jul 25, 20100 notes
Publishers now reaping the grief they sowed.

NEWS, PUBLISHING, COMMENTARY

They Had It Coming

July 24, 2010 01:08 AM EDT

The Wylie Agency sells exclusive rights to Kindle while major publishers gasp in terror.

by David A. Rozansky, Publisher, Flying Pen Press

Readers, Writers & Royalties columnist

Copyright 2010 David A. Rozansky

The Wylie Agency is a very prestigious literary agency. They have many clients from way back, before the computer had made electronic rights to books an issue.

Kindle is Amazon’s ebook reader. It has been losing ground to the Apple iPad and the Barnes & Noble Nook. But Amazon has been here before, and their response is to acquire exclusive titles for the Kindle.

It was a natural marriage. Wylie had some of the best authors that ever lived in its portfolio, whose electronic rights were not being used, and Amazon was willing to pay for exclusive access to those rights.

So Wylie signed the contract, and Amazon began distributing Kindle versions of this valuable store of literary treasure.

Major publishers, particularly Random House and MacMillan, roared in protest. No way that Amazon could sieze exclusive ground where once only publishers could tread. A bookseller, even one as large as Amazon, had no right sewing up such rights.

Random House even went so far as to try and claim it held those electronic rights, even though the old contracts said nothing about the not-yet-invented rights. It’s a bluff; New York Times Co. v. Tasini, 533 U.S. 483 (2001), put that bugaboo to bed a decade ago—the electronic rights belong exclusively to the author when a publishing contract has no specific claim on those rights.

But this is not just about owning the electronic rights to a few older books. Random House, MacMillan, and the rest of the publishing houses in New York and London are now seeing the result of their greedy, draconian habits, of making money off the work of authors. Because they have squeezed authors harder and harder, authors have had to change to self-publishing business models, and they are doing so rather successfully. Publishers are finding that the authors have become their biggest competitors, and to their horror, they are finding that the authors control the industry. Content is king, and only authors provide the content.

The publishers should have seen this coming. At every writers conference I have been to in the last thirty years, someone in the cheap seats at the back of the room asks “So, why do authors need publishers, then?”

Publishers, editors and agents have tried in vain to answer this question, usually with desperation and trepidation in their voices. I know, because I have asked this question as a writer, and tried to answer it as a publisher. The only answer I can give is that authors do not need us publishers. Authors absolutely do not need us in any way!

Oh, there was a time when publishers controlled the means of prepress production. Setting type was a difficult and expensive process. As presses became gargantuan monsters, it became even more of difficult for authors to reach large numbers of readers without a publisher.

Publishers also had control of the distribution of books. Readers could only buy books at bookstores and news racks, and only publishers had the means to reach those venues.

But today, in the Twenty-First Century, authors can push a button and create a book, push another button, and the book is assembled into an electronic file or printed on paper, and automatically, without even a single button, those books are distributed globally, even to the North and South Poles.

These publishers tell us that authors need publishers to reach their audience, to have more marketing resources, to be vetted by professional editors. But not one word of this is true. Authors now have to do their own marketing, no matter how large the publisher is. Editors have less experience with the written word than authors. And Amazon has made it possible for the lowliest man in the street to sell books to the public in commercial quantities.

Big-name authors are beginning to jump ship and self-publish more and more of their work. New authors are turning to self-publishing as the first avenue of building a platform, and once that platform is built, they are electing to stick with that distribution model. After all, a 70% profit margin is a heck of a lot better than a 9% royalty.

Even worse for those big publishers, there are writers like me, writers who have had enough of the squeezing, the power plays, the rights grabs. We writers, who have screamed from the street with fist held high, “I’m mad as hell, and I am not going to take it anymore!”, have started our own publishing companies, with a focus on serving writers, not on serving shareholders. And now we stand laughing as the giant publishers desperately try to save themselves from eventual obsolescence by stepping up their bully ways.

This business of publishing has always been about getting the words of the writer to the eyes of the reader. Thus, it is only natural that authors would seek out the easiest form of publishing that most efficiently reaches the reader. When authors can give their material directly to readers via blogs, internet and electronic books, they quickly adapt such formats. That it is more profitable for the authors to do so is just an added bonus.

Bookstores will also suffer obsolescence. In the 1970s, bookstores insisted books be returnable to the publishers. And it became the industry standard. But offering low-price, narrow-margin products universally on a return basis is very risky, and very expensive. The bookstores squeezed the publishers, and the publishers had no one else to squeeze in return other than the authors.

Despite what most authors say about supporting independent bookstores, the truth is, given the choice between selling books on a returnable basis through bookstores or selling directly to the reader at no cost or risk, authors will serve the customer directly. After all, the reader is not the bookstore’s customer, the reader is the author’s customer.

The bookstore is merely an intermediary, one that has become irrelevant in the author-reader relationship.

And Amazon is in no better shape. While Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Borders, Sony and Apple all try to control access to ebooks, the truth is, ebooks are not controllable by device. The open Internet trumps them all.

The Internet, where you are reading this article, where you read thousands of articles, stories, and websites, millions of words, and watch an ungodly amount of video—the INTERNET!

Already, the Internet is the easiest tool for authors to reach readers. Almost all serious authors write blogs. As more devices can access the Internet in more places, and more people become comfortable with the data cloud, books on Internet will become the norm. No one will be able to control this distribution, not even Amazon with its “shocking” exclusionary contract with The Wylie Agency. Soon, when you want to read a book, you will simply enter the title or the author’s name in a search engine or click on a link on some blog somewhere, and presto, the book appears on your favorite browser.

This is technology that exists right now, has existed for some twenty-odd years. It is possible to program such books to track individual bookmarks, margin notes, and reading preferences. Font, language, and color can be changed at will. These do not require any difficult programming or new devices. The typical WordPress page can handle it adequately. We won’t need Amazon or Barnes & Noble or even Google to bring us our books, they will just be where we need them, when we need them, with 100% of the proceeds going to the author.

Authors control the content, and there are no barriers left to reaching the readers directly. Simply said, no one needs publishers anymore. We will need new business models, but authors have been quick to develop these. There will need to be a means of filtering out the good books from the slush, but the nature of the Internet is that news of good books and great authors will spread rapidly, while substandard writing cannot gain traction. This creates a self-vetting industry.

I have no sympathy for Random House or Macmillan, which are screaming that authors should not have the right to go directly to their own readers without intermediaries; as the man said in my favorite movie, “You can’t stop the signal.”

And agents, you better transform yourselves. Without the need for publishers, the need for literary agents will also vanish; the need for business managers will grow.

Without publishers, authors will need to hire their own editors, their own publicity managers, their own webmasters. They will have to be more business savvy, as they will be contracting with a lot of people and running their own marketing campaign. But they will never have to cede control of their rights. And that will make all the difference.

Write on, my friends, and know this: The author is now in charge of the industry. Go forth and publish thyself. Should Random House and Penguin and Macmillan and all the others come crashing to the ground in the next two years, it won’t affect us, nor will it affect our readers. The books will still be there, the readers will enjoy those books, and we won’t let anyone else ever again interfere in our business and take for themselves an unfair proportion of the proceeds of our hard work.

Writing has never been so sweet an enterprise.

Jul 24, 20100 notes

July/August 2010 

The End of Men

EARLIER THIS YEAR, WOMEN BECAME THE MAJORITY OF THE WORKFORCE FOR THE FIRST TIME IN U.S. HISTORY. MOST MANAGERS ARE NOW WOMEN TOO. AND FOR EVERY TWO MEN WHO GET A COLLEGE DEGREE THIS YEAR, THREE WOMEN WILL DO THE SAME. FOR YEARS, WOMEN’S PROGRESS HAS BEEN CAST AS A STRUGGLE FOR EQUALITY. BUT WHAT IF EQUALITY ISN’T THE END POINT? WHAT IF MODERN, POSTINDUSTRIAL SOCIETY IS SIMPLY BETTER SUITED TO WOMEN? A REPORT ON THE UNPRECEDENTED ROLE REVERSAL NOW UNDER WAY— AND ITS VAST CULTURAL CONSEQUENCES

By Hanna Rosin

IMAGE CREDIT: JOHN RITTER

IN THE 1970s the biologist Ronald Ericsson came up with a way to separate sperm carrying the male-producing Y chromosome from those carrying the X. He sent the two kinds of sperm swimming down a glass tube through ever-thicker albumin barriers. The sperm with the X chromosome had a larger head and a longer tail, and so, he figured, they would get bogged down in the viscous liquid. The sperm with the Y chromosome were leaner and faster and could swim down to the bottom of the tube more efficiently. Ericsson had grown up on a ranch in South Dakota, where he’d developed an Old West, cowboy swagger. The process, he said, was like “cutting out cattle at the gate.” The cattle left flailing behind the gate were of course the X’s, which seemed to please him. He would sometimes demonstrate the process using cartilage from a bull’s penis as a pointer.

In the late 1970s, Ericsson leased the method to clinics around the U.S., calling it the first scientifically proven method for choosing the sex of a child. Instead of a lab coat, he wore cowboy boots and a cowboy hat, and doled out his version of cowboy poetry. (People magazine once suggested a TV miniseries based on his life called Cowboy in the Lab.) The right prescription for life, he would say, was “breakfast at five-thirty, on the saddle by six, no room for Mr. Limp Wrist.” In 1979, he loaned out his ranch as the backdrop for the iconic “Marlboro Country” ads because he believed in the campaign’s central image—“a guy riding on his horse along the river, no bureaucrats, no lawyers,” he recalled when I spoke to him this spring. “He’s the boss.” (The photographers took some 6,500 pictures, a pictorial record of the frontier that Ericsson still takes great pride in.)


VIDEO: In this family feud, Hanna Rosin and her daughter, Noa, debate the superiority of women with Rosin’s son, Jacob, and husband, Slate editor David Plotz

Feminists of the era did not take kindly to Ericsson and his Marlboro Man veneer. To them, the lab cowboy and his sperminator portended a dystopia of mass-produced boys. “You have to be concerned about the future of all women,” Roberta Steinbacher, a nun-turned-social-psychologist, said in a 1984 People profile of Ericsson. “There’s no question that there exists a universal preference for sons.” Steinbacher went on to complain about women becoming locked in as “second-class citizens” while men continued to dominate positions of control and influence. “I think women have to ask themselves, ‘Where does this stop?’” she said. “A lot of us wouldn’t be here right now if these practices had been in effect years ago.”

Ericsson, now 74, laughed when I read him these quotes from his old antagonist. Seldom has it been so easy to prove a dire prediction wrong. In the ’90s, when Ericsson looked into the numbers for the two dozen or so clinics that use his process, he discovered, to his surprise, that couples were requesting more girls than boys, a gap that has persisted, even though Ericsson advertises the method as more effective for producing boys. In some clinics, Ericsson has said, the ratio is now as high as 2 to 1. Polling data on American sex preference is sparse, and does not show a clear preference for girls. But the picture from the doctor’s office unambiguously does. A newer method for sperm selection, called MicroSort, is currently completing Food and Drug Administration clinical trials. The girl requests for that method run at about 75 percent.

Even more unsettling for Ericsson, it has become clear that in choosing the sex of the next generation, he is no longer the boss. “It’s the women who are driving all the decisions,” he says—a change the MicroSort spokespeople I met with also mentioned. At first, Ericsson says, women who called his clinics would apologize and shyly explain that they already had two boys. “Now they just call and [say] outright, ‘I want a girl.’ These mothers look at their lives and think their daughters will have a bright future their mother and grandmother didn’t have, brighter than their sons, even, so why wouldn’t you choose a girl?”

Why wouldn’t you choose a girl? That such a statement should be so casually uttered by an old cowboy like Ericsson—or by anyone, for that matter—is monumental. For nearly as long as civilization has existed, patriarchy—enforced through the rights of the firstborn son—has been the organizing principle, with few exceptions. Men in ancient Greece tied off their left testicle in an effort to produce male heirs; women have killed themselves (or been killed) for failing to bear sons. In her iconic 1949 book, TheSecond Sex, the French feminist Simone de Beauvoir suggested that women so detested their own “feminine condition” that they regarded their newborn daughters with irritation and disgust. Now the centuries-old preference for sons is eroding—or even reversing. “Women of our generation want daughters precisely because we like who we are,” breezes one woman in Cookie magazine. Even Ericsson, the stubborn old goat, can sigh and mark the passing of an era. “Did male dominance exist? Of course it existed. But it seems to be gone now. And the era of the firstborn son is totally gone.”

Ericsson’s extended family is as good an illustration of the rapidly shifting landscape as any other. His 26-year-old granddaughter—“tall, slender, brighter than hell, with a take-no-prisoners personality”—is a biochemist and works on genetic sequencing. His niece studied civil engineering at the University of Southern California. His grandsons, he says, are bright and handsome, but in school “their eyes glaze over. I have to tell ’em: ‘Just don’t screw up and crash your pickup truck and get some girl pregnant and ruin your life.’” Recently Ericsson joked with the old boys at his elementary-school reunion that he was going to have a sex-change operation. “Women live longer than men. They do better in this economy. More of ’em graduate from college. They go into space and do everything men do, and sometimes they do it a whole lot better. I mean, hell, get out of the way—these females are going to leave us males in the dust.”

Man has been the dominant sex since, well, the dawn of mankind. But for the first time in human history, that is changing—and with shocking speed. Cultural and economic changes always reinforce each other. And the global economy is evolving in a way that is eroding the historical preference for male children, worldwide. Over several centuries, South Korea, for instance, constructed one of the most rigid patriarchal societies in the world. Many wives who failed to produce male heirs were abused and treated as domestic servants; some families prayed to spirits to kill off girl children. Then, in the 1970s and ’80s, the government embraced an industrial revolution and encouraged women to enter the labor force. Women moved to the city and went to college. They advanced rapidly, from industrial jobs to clerical jobs to professional work. The traditional order began to crumble soon after. In 1990, the country’s laws were revised so that women could keep custody of their children after a divorce and inherit property. In 2005, the court ruled that women could register children under their own names. As recently as 1985, about half of all women in a national survey said they “must have a son.” That percentage fell slowly until 1991 and then plummeted to just over 15 percent by 2003. Male preference in South Korea “is over,” says Monica Das Gupta, a demographer and Asia expert at the World Bank. “It happened so fast. It’s hard to believe it, but it is.” The same shift is now beginning in other rapidly industrializing countries such as India and China.

Up to a point, the reasons behind this shift are obvious. As thinking and communicating have come to eclipse physical strength and stamina as the keys to economic success, those societies that take advantage of the talents of all their adults, not just half of them, have pulled away from the rest. And because geopolitics and global culture are, ultimately, Darwinian, other societies either follow suit or end up marginalized. In 2006, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development devised the Gender, Institutions and Development Database, which measures the economic and political power of women in 162 countries. With few exceptions, the greater the power of women, the greater the country’s economic success. Aid agencies have started to recognize this relationship and have pushed to institute political quotas in about 100 countries, essentially forcing women into power in an effort to improve those countries’ fortunes. In some war-torn states, women are stepping in as a sort of maternal rescue team. Liberia’s president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, portrayed her country as a sick child in need of her care during her campaign five years ago. Postgenocide Rwanda elected to heal itself by becoming the first country with a majority of women in parliament.

In feminist circles, these social, political, and economic changes are always cast as a slow, arduous form of catch-up in a continuing struggle for female equality. But in the U.S., the world’s most advanced economy, something much more remarkable seems to be happening. American parents are beginning to choose to have girls over boys. As they imagine the pride of watching a child grow and develop and succeed as an adult, it is more often a girl that they see in their mind’s eye.

What if the modern, postindustrial economy is simply more congenial to women than to men? For a long time, evolutionary psychologists have claimed that we are all imprinted with adaptive imperatives from a distant past: men are faster and stronger and hardwired to fight for scarce resources, and that shows up now as a drive to win on Wall Street; women are programmed to find good providers and to care for their offspring, and that is manifested in more- nurturing and more-flexible behavior, ordaining them to domesticity. This kind of thinking frames our sense of the natural order. But what if men and women were fulfilling not biological imperatives but social roles, based on what was more efficient throughout a long era of human history? What if that era has now come to an end? More to the point, what if the economics of the new era are better suited to women?

Once you open your eyes to this possibility, the evidence is all around you. It can be found, most immediately, in the wreckage of the Great Recession, in which three-quarters of the 8 million jobs lost were lost by men. The worst-hit industries were overwhelmingly male and deeply identified with macho: construction, manufacturing, high finance. Some of these jobs will come back, but the overall pattern of dislocation is neither temporary nor random. The recession merely revealed—and accelerated—a profound economic shift that has been going on for at least 30 years, and in some respects even longer.

Earlier this year, for the first time in American history, the balance of the workforce tipped toward women, who now hold a majority of the nation’s jobs. The working class, which has long defined our notions of masculinity, is slowly turning into a matriarchy, with men increasingly absent from the home and women making all the decisions. Women dominate today’s colleges and professional schools—for every two men who will receive a B.A. this year, three women will do the same. Of the 15 job categories projected to grow the most in the next decade in the U.S., all but two are occupied primarily by women. Indeed, the U.S. economy is in some ways becoming a kind of traveling sisterhood: upper-class women leave home and enter the workforce, creating domestic jobs for other women to fill.

The postindustrial economy is indifferent to men’s size and strength. The attributes that are most valuable today—social intelligence, open communication, the ability to sit still and focus—are, at a minimum, not predominantly male. In fact, the opposite may be true. Women in poor parts of India are learning English faster than men to meet the demands of new global call centers. Women own more than 40 percent of private businesses in China, where a red Ferrari is the new status symbol for female entrepreneurs. Last year, Iceland elected Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir, the world’s first openly lesbian head of state, who campaigned explicitly against the male elite she claimed had destroyed the nation’s banking system, and who vowed to end the “age of testosterone.”

Yes, the U.S. still has a wage gap, one that can be convincingly explained—at least in part—by discrimination. Yes, women still do most of the child care. And yes, the upper reaches of society are still dominated by men. But given the power of the forces pushing at the economy, this setup feels like the last gasp of a dying age rather than the permanent establishment. Dozens of college women I interviewed for this story assumed that they very well might be the ones working while their husbands stayed at home, either looking for work or minding the children. Guys, one senior remarked to me, “are the new ball and chain.” It may be happening slowly and unevenly, but it’s unmistakably happening: in the long view, the modern economy is becoming a place where women hold the cards.

In his final book, The Bachelors’ Ball, published in 2007, the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu describes the changing gender dynamics of Béarn, the region in southwestern France where he grew up. The eldest sons once held the privileges of patrimonial loyalty and filial inheritance in Béarn. But over the decades, changing economic forces turned those privileges into curses. Although the land no longer produced the impressive income it once had, the men felt obligated to tend it. Meanwhile, modern women shunned farm life, lured away by jobs and adventure in the city. They occasionally returned for the traditional balls, but the men who awaited them had lost their prestige and become unmarriageable. This is the image that keeps recurring to me, one that Bourdieu describes in his book: at the bachelors’ ball, the men, self-conscious about their diminished status, stand stiffly, their hands by their sides, as the women twirl away.

The role reversal that’s under way between American men and women shows up most obviously and painfully in the working class. In recent years, male support groups have sprung up throughout the Rust Belt and in other places where the postindustrial economy has turned traditional family roles upside down. Some groups help men cope with unemployment, and others help them reconnect with their alienated families. Mustafaa El-Scari, a teacher and social worker, leads some of these groups in Kansas City. El-Scari has studied the sociology of men and boys set adrift, and he considers it his special gift to get them to open up and reflect on their new condition. The day I visited one of his classes, earlier this year, he was facing a particularly resistant crowd.

None of the 30 or so men sitting in a classroom at a downtown Kansas City school have come for voluntary adult enrichment. Having failed to pay their child support, they were given the choice by a judge to go to jail or attend a weekly class on fathering, which to them seemed the better deal. This week’s lesson, from a workbook called Quenching the Father Thirst, was supposed to involve writing a letter to a hypothetical estranged 14-year-old daughter named Crystal, whose father left her when she was a baby. But El-Scari has his own idea about how to get through to this barely awake, skeptical crew, and letters to Crystal have nothing to do with it.

Like them, he explains, he grew up watching Bill Cosby living behind his metaphorical “white picket fence”—one man, one woman, and a bunch of happy kids. “Well, that check bounced a long time ago,” he says. “Let’s see,” he continues, reading from a worksheet. What are the four kinds of paternal authority? Moral, emotional, social, and physical. “But you ain’t none of those in that house. All you are is a paycheck, and now you ain’t even that. And if you try to exercise your authority, she’ll call 911. How does that make you feel? You’re supposed to be the authority, and she says, ‘Get out of the house, bitch.’ She’s calling you ‘bitch’!”

The men are black and white, their ages ranging from about 20 to 40. A couple look like they might have spent a night or two on the streets, but the rest look like they work, or used to. Now they have put down their sodas, and El-Scari has their attention, so he gets a little more philosophical. “Who’s doing what?” he asks them. “What is our role? Everyone’s telling us we’re supposed to be the head of a nuclear family, so you feel like you got robbed. It’s toxic, and poisonous, and it’s setting us up for failure.” He writes on the board: $85,000. “This is her salary.” Then: $12,000. “This is your salary. Who’s the damn man? Who’s the man now?” A murmur rises. “That’s right. She’s the man.”

Judging by the men I spoke with afterward, El-Scari seemed to have pegged his audience perfectly. Darren Henderson was making $33 an hour laying sheet metal, until the real-estate crisis hit and he lost his job. Then he lost his duplex—“there’s my little piece of the American dream”—then his car. And then he fell behind on his child-support payments. “They make it like I’m just sitting around,” he said, “but I’m not.” As proof of his efforts, he took out a new commercial driver’s permit and a bartending license, and then threw them down on the ground like jokers, for all the use they’d been. His daughter’s mother had a $50,000-a-year job and was getting her master’s degree in social work. He’d just signed up for food stamps, which is just about the only social-welfare program a man can easily access. Recently she’d seen him waiting at the bus stop. “Looked me in the eye,” he recalled, “and just drove on by.”

The men in that room, almost without exception, were casualties of the end of the manufacturing era. Most of them had continued to work with their hands even as demand for manual labor was declining. Since 2000, manufacturing has lost almost 6 million jobs, more than a third of its total workforce, and has taken in few young workers. The housing bubble masked this new reality for a while, creating work in construction and related industries. Many of the men I spoke with had worked as electricians or builders; one had been a successful real-estate agent. Now those jobs are gone too. Henderson spent his days shuttling between unemployment offices and job interviews, wondering what his daughter might be doing at any given moment. In 1950, roughly one in 20 men of prime working age, like Henderson, was not working; today that ratio is about one in five, the highest ever recorded.

Men dominate just two of the 15 job categories projected to grow the most over the next decade: janitor and computer engineer. Women have everything else—nursing, home health assistance, child care, food preparation. Many of the new jobs, says Heather Boushey of the Center for American Progress, “replace the things that women used to do in the home for free.” None is especially high-paying. But the steady accumulation of these jobs adds up to an economy that, for the working class, has become more amenable to women than to men.

The list of growing jobs is heavy on nurturing professions, in which women, ironically, seem to benefit from old stereotypes and habits. Theoretically, there is no reason men should not be qualified. But they have proved remarkably unable to adapt. Over the course of the past century, feminism has pushed women to do things once considered against their nature—first enter the workforce as singles, then continue to work while married, then work even with small children at home. Many professions that started out as the province of men are now filled mostly with women—secretary and teacher come to mind. Yet I’m not aware of any that have gone the opposite way. Nursing schools have tried hard to recruit men in the past few years, with minimal success. Teaching schools, eager to recruit male role models, are having a similarly hard time. The range of acceptable masculine roles has changed comparatively little, and has perhaps even narrowed as men have shied away from some careers women have entered. As Jessica Grose wrote in Slate, men seem “fixed in cultural aspic.” And with each passing day, they lag further behind.

As we recover from the Great Recession, some traditionally male jobs will return—men are almost always harder-hit than women in economic downturns because construction and manufacturing are more cyclical than service industries—but that won’t change the long-term trend. When we look back on this period, argues Jamie Ladge, a business professor at Northeastern University, we will see it as a “turning point for women in the workforce.”

The economic and cultural power shift from men to women would be hugely significant even if it never extended beyond working-class America. But women are also starting to dominate middle management, and a surprising number of professional careers as well. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, women now hold 51.4 percent of managerial and professional jobs—up from 26.1 percent in 1980. They make up 54 percent of all accountants and hold about half of all banking and insurance jobs. About a third of America’s physicians are now women, as are 45 percent of associates in law firms—and both those percentages are rising fast. A white-collar economy values raw intellectual horsepower, which men and women have in equal amounts. It also requires communication skills and social intelligence, areas in which women, according to many studies, have a slight edge. Perhaps most important—for better or worse—it increasingly requires formal education credentials, which women are more prone to acquire, particularly early in adulthood. Just about the only professions in which women still make up a relatively small minority of newly minted workers are engineering and those calling on a hard-science background, and even in those areas, women have made strong gains since the 1970s.

Office work has been steadily adapting to women—and in turn being reshaped by them—for 30 years or more. Joel Garreau picks up on this phenomenon in his 1991 book, Edge City, which explores the rise of suburbs that are home to giant swaths of office space along with the usual houses and malls. Companies began moving out of the city in search not only of lower rent but also of the “best educated, most conscientious, most stable workers.” They found their brightest prospects among “underemployed females living in middle-class communities on the fringe of the old urban areas.” As Garreau chronicles the rise of suburban office parks, he places special emphasis on 1978, the peak year for women entering the workforce. When brawn was off the list of job requirements, women often measured up better than men. They were smart, dutiful, and, as long as employers could make the jobs more convenient for them, more reliable. The 1999 movie Office Space was maybe the first to capture how alien and dispiriting the office park can be for men. Disgusted by their jobs and their boss, Peter and his two friends embezzle money and start sleeping through their alarm clocks. At the movie’s end, a male co-worker burns down the office park, and Peter abandons desk work for a job in construction.

Near the top of the jobs pyramid, of course, the upward march of women stalls. Prominent female CEOs, past and present, are so rare that they count as minor celebrities, and most of us can tick off their names just from occasionally reading the business pages: Meg Whitman at eBay, Carly Fiorina at Hewlett-Packard, Anne Mulcahy and Ursula Burns at Xerox, Indra Nooyi at PepsiCo; the accomplishment is considered so extraordinary that Whitman and Fiorina are using it as the basis for political campaigns. Only 3 percent of Fortune 500 CEOs are women, and the number has never risen much above that.

But even the way this issue is now framed reveals that men’s hold on power in elite circles may be loosening. In business circles, the lack of women at the top is described as a “brain drain” and a crisis of “talent retention.” And while female CEOs may be rare in America’s largest companies, they are highly prized: last year, they outearned their male counterparts by 43 percent, on average, and received bigger raises.

Even around the delicate question of working mothers, the terms of the conversation are shifting. Last year, in a story about breast-feeding, I complained about how the early years of child rearing keep women out of power positions. But the term mommy track is slowly morphing into the gender-neutral flex time, reflecting changes in the workforce. For recent college graduates of both sexes, flexible arrangements are at the top of the list of workplace demands, according to a study published last year in the Harvard Business Review. And companies eager to attract and retain talented workers and managers are responding. The consulting firm Deloitte, for instance, started what’s now considered the model program, called Mass Career Customization, which allows employees to adjust their hours depending on their life stage. The program, Deloitte’s Web site explains, solves “a complex issue—one that can no longer be classified as a woman’s issue.”

“Women are knocking on the door of leadership at the very moment when their talents are especially well matched with the requirements of the day,” writes David Gergen in the introduction toEnlightened Power: How Women Are Transforming the Practice of Leadership. What are these talents? Once it was thought that leaders should be aggressive and competitive, and that men are naturally more of both. But psychological research has complicated this picture. In lab studies that simulate negotiations, men and women are just about equally assertive and competitive, with slight variations. Men tend to assert themselves in a controlling manner, while women tend to take into account the rights of others, but both styles are equally effective, write the psychologists Alice Eagly and Linda Carli, in their 2007 book, Through the Labyrinth.

Over the years, researchers have sometimes exaggerated these differences and described the particular talents of women in crude gender stereotypes: women as more empathetic, as better consensus-seekers and better lateral thinkers; women as bringing a superior moral sensibility to bear on a cutthroat business world. In the ’90s, this field of feminist business theory seemed to be forcing the point. But after the latest financial crisis, these ideas have more resonance. Researchers have started looking into the relationship between testosterone and excessive risk, and wondering if groups of men, in some basic hormonal way, spur each other to make reckless decisions. The picture emerging is a mirror image of the traditional gender map: men and markets on the side of the irrational and overemotional, and women on the side of the cool and levelheaded.

We don’t yet know with certainty whether testosterone strongly influences business decision-making. But the perception of the ideal business leader is starting to shift. The old model of command and control, with one leader holding all the decision-making power, is considered hidebound. The new model is sometimes called “post-heroic,” or “transformational” in the words of the historian and leadership expert James MacGregor Burns. The aim is to behave like a good coach, and channel your charisma to motivate others to be hardworking and creative. The model is not explicitly defined as feminist, but it echoes literature about male-female differences. A program at Columbia Business School, for example, teaches sensitive leadership and social intelligence, including better reading of facial expressions and body language. “We never explicitly say, ‘Develop your feminine side,’ but it’s clear that’s what we’re advocating,” says Jamie Ladge.

A 2008 study attempted to quantify the effect of this more-feminine management style. Researchers at Columbia Business School and the University of Maryland analyzed data on the top 1,500 U.S. companies from 1992 to 2006 to determine the relationship between firm performance and female participation in senior management. Firms that had women in top positions performed better, and this was especially true if the firm pursued what the researchers called an “innovation intensive strategy,” in which, they argued, “creativity and collaboration may be especially important”—an apt description of the future economy.

It could be that women boost corporate performance, or it could be that better-performing firms have the luxury of recruiting and keeping high-potential women. But the association is clear: innovative, successful firms are the ones that promote women. The same Columbia-Maryland study ranked America’s industries by the proportion of firms that employed female executives, and the bottom of the list reads like the ghosts of the economy past: shipbuilding, real estate, coal, steelworks, machinery.

IF YOU REALLY want to see where the world is headed, of course, looking at the current workforce can get you only so far. To see the future—of the workforce, the economy, and the culture—you need to spend some time at America’s colleges and professional schools, where a quiet revolution is under way. More than ever, college is the gateway to economic success, a necessary precondition for moving into the upper-middle class—and increasingly even the middle class. It’s this broad, striving middle class that defines our society. And demographically, we can see with absolute clarity that in the coming decades the middle class will be dominated by women.

We’ve all heard about the collegiate gender gap. But the implications of that gap have not yet been fully digested. Women now earn 60 percent of master’s degrees, about half of all law and medical degrees, and 42 percent of all M.B.A.s. Most important, women earn almost 60 percent of all bachelor’s degrees—the minimum requirement, in most cases, for an affluent life. In a stark reversal since the 1970s, men are now more likely than women to hold only a high-school diploma. “One would think that if men were acting in a rational way, they would be getting the education they need to get along out there,” says Tom Mortenson, a senior scholar at the Pell Institute for the Study of Opportunity in Higher Education. “But they are just failing to adapt.”

This spring, I visited a few schools around Kansas City to get a feel for the gender dynamics of higher education. I started at the downtown campus of Metropolitan Community College. Metropolitan is the kind of place where people go to learn practical job skills and keep current with the changing economy, and as in most community colleges these days, men were conspicuously absent. One afternoon, in the basement cafeteria of a nearly windowless brick building, several women were trying to keep their eyes on their biology textbook and ignore the text messages from their babysitters. Another crew was outside the ladies’ room, braiding each other’s hair. One woman, still in her medical-assistant scrubs, looked like she was about to fall asleep in the elevator between the first and fourth floors.

When Bernard Franklin took over as campus president in 2005, he looked around and told his staff early on that their new priority was to “recruit more boys.” He set up mentoring programs and men-only study groups and student associations. He made a special effort to bond with male students, who liked to call him “Suit.” “It upset some of my feminists,” he recalls. Yet, a few years later, the tidal wave of women continues to wash through the school—they now make up about 70 percent of its students. They come to train to be nurses and teachers—African American women, usually a few years older than traditional college students, and lately, working-class white women from the suburbs seeking a cheap way to earn a credential. As for the men? Well, little has changed. “I recall one guy who was really smart,” one of the school’s counselors told me. “But he was reading at a sixth-grade level and felt embarrassed in front of the women. He had to hide his books from his friends, who would tease him when he studied. Then came the excuses. ‘It’s spring, gotta play ball.’ ‘It’s winter, too cold.’ He didn’t make it.”

It makes some economic sense that women attend community colleges—and in fact, all colleges—in greater numbers than men. Women ages 25 to 34 with only a high-school diploma currently have a median income of $25,474, while men in the same position earn $32,469. But it makes sense only up to a point. The well-paid lifetime union job has been disappearing for at least 30 years. Kansas City, for example, has shifted from steel manufacturing to pharmaceuticals and information technologies. “The economy isn’t as friendly to men as it once was,” says Jacqueline King, of the American Council on Education. “You would think men and women would go to these colleges at the same rate.” But they don’t.

In 2005, King’s group conducted a survey of lower-income adults in college. Men, it turned out, had a harder time committing to school, even when they desperately needed to retool. They tended to start out behind academically, and many felt intimidated by the schoolwork. They reported feeling isolated and were much worse at seeking out fellow students, study groups, or counselors to help them adjust. Mothers going back to school described themselves as good role models for their children. Fathers worried that they were abrogating their responsibilities as breadwinner.

The student gender gap started to feel like a crisis to some people in higher-education circles in the mid-2000s, when it began showing up not just in community and liberal-arts colleges but in the flagship public universities—the UCs and the SUNYs and the UNCs. Like many of those schools, the University of Missouri at Kansas City, a full research university with more than 13,000 students, is now tipping toward 60 percent women, a level many admissions officers worry could permanently shift the atmosphere and reputation of a school. In February, I visited with Ashley Burress, UMKC’s student-body president. (The other three student-government officers this school year were also women.) Burress, a cute, short, African American 24-year-old grad student who is getting a doctor-of-pharmacy degree, had many of the same complaints I heard from other young women. Guys high-five each other when they get a C, while girls beat themselves up over a B-minus. Guys play video games in each other’s rooms, while girls crowd the study hall. Girls get their degrees with no drama, while guys seem always in danger of drifting away. “In 2012, I will be Dr. Burress,” she said. “Will I have to deal with guys who don’t even have a bachelor’s degree? I would like to date, but I’m putting myself in a really small pool.”

UMKC is a working- and middle-class school—the kind of place where traditional sex roles might not be anathema. Yet as I talked to students this spring, I realized how much the basic expectations for men and women had shifted. Many of the women’s mothers had established their careers later in life, sometimes after a divorce, and they had urged their daughters to get to their own careers more quickly. They would be a campus of Tracy Flicks, except that they seemed neither especially brittle nor secretly falling apart.

Victoria, Michelle, and Erin are sorority sisters. Victoria’s mom is a part-time bartender at a hotel. Victoria is a biology major and wants to be a surgeon; soon she’ll apply to a bunch of medical schools. She doesn’t want kids for a while, because she knows she’ll “be at the hospital, like, 100 hours a week,” and when she does have kids, well, she’ll “be the hotshot surgeon, and he”—a nameless he—“will be at home playing with the kiddies.”

Michelle, a self-described “perfectionist,” also has her life mapped out. She’s a psychology major and wants to be a family therapist. After college, she will apply to grad school and look for internships. She is well aware of the career-counseling resources on campus. And her fiancé?

 MICHELLE: He’s changed majors, like, 16 times. Last week he wanted to be a dentist. This week it’s environmental science. 

ERIN: Did he switch again this week? When you guys have kids, he’ll definitely stay home. Seriously, what does he want to do? 

MICHELLE: It depends on the day of the week. Remember last year? It was bio. It really is a joke. But it’s not. It’s funny, but it’s not.

Among traditional college students from the highest-income families, the gender gap pretty much disappears. But the story is not so simple. Wealthier students tend to go to elite private schools, and elite private schools live by their own rules. Quietly, they’ve been opening up a new frontier in affirmative action, with boys playing the role of the underprivileged applicants needing an extra boost. In 2003, a study by the economists Sandy Baum and Eban Goodstein found that among selective liberal-arts schools, being male raises the chance of college acceptance by 6.5 to 9 percentage points. Now the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has voted to investigate what some academics have described as the “open secret” that private schools “are discriminating in admissions in order to maintain what they regard as an appropriate gender balance.”

Jennifer Delahunty, the dean of admissions and financial aid at Kenyon College, in Ohio, let this secret out in a 2006 New York Times op-ed. Gender balance, she wrote back then, is the elephant in the room. And today, she told me, the problem hasn’t gone away. A typical female applicant, she said, manages the process herself—lines up the interviews, sets up a campus visit, requests a visit with faculty members. But the college has seen more than one male applicant “sit back on the couch, sometimes with their eyes closed, while their mom tells them where to go and what to do. Sometimes we say, ‘What a nice essay his mom wrote,’” she said, in that funny-but-not vein.

To avoid crossing the dreaded 60 percent threshold, admissions officers have created a language to explain away the boys’ deficits: “Brain hasn’t kicked in yet.” “Slow to cook.” “Hasn’t quite peaked.” “Holistic picture.” At times Delahunty has become so worried about “overeducated females” and “undereducated males” that she jokes she is getting conspiratorial. She once called her sister, a pediatrician, to vet her latest theory: “Maybe these boys are genetically like canaries in a coal mine, absorbing so many toxins and bad things in the environment that their DNA is shifting. Maybe they’re like those frogs—they’re more vulnerable or something, so they’ve gotten deformed.”

Clearly, some percentage of boys are just temperamentally unsuited to college, at least at age 18 or 20, but without it, they have a harder time finding their place these days. “Forty years ago, 30 years ago, if you were one of the fairly constant fraction of boys who wasn’t ready to learn in high school, there were ways for you to enter the mainstream economy,” says Henry Farber, an economist at Princeton. “When you woke up, there were jobs. There were good industrial jobs, so you could have a good industrial, blue-collar career. Now those jobs are gone.”

Since the 1980s, as women have flooded colleges, male enrollment has grown far more slowly. And the disparities start before college. Throughout the ’90s, various authors and researchers agonized over why boys seemed to be failing at every level of education, from elementary school on up, and identified various culprits: a misguided feminism that treated normal boys as incipient harassers (Christina Hoff Sommers); different brain chemistry (Michael Gurian); a demanding, verbally focused curriculum that ignored boys’ interests (Richard Whitmire). But again, it’s not all that clear that boys have become more dysfunctional—or have changed in any way. What’s clear is that schools, like the economy, now value the self-control, focus, and verbal aptitude that seem to come more easily to young girls.

Researchers have suggested any number of solutions. A movement is growing for more all-boys schools and classes, and for respecting the individual learning styles of boys. Some people think that boys should be able to walk around in class, or take more time on tests, or have tests and books that cater to their interests. In their desperation to reach out to boys, some colleges have formed football teams and started engineering programs. Most of these special accommodations sound very much like the kind of affirmative action proposed for women over the years—which in itself is an alarming flip.

Whether boys have changed or not, we are well past the time to start trying some experiments. It is fabulous to see girls and young women poised for success in the coming years. But allowing generations of boys to grow up feeling rootless and obsolete is not a recipe for a peaceful future. Men have few natural support groups and little access to social welfare; the men’s-rights groups that do exist in the U.S. are taking on an angry, antiwoman edge. Marriages fall apart or never happen at all, and children are raised with no fathers. Far from being celebrated, women’s rising power is perceived as a threat.

WHAT WOULD A SOCIETY in which women are on top look like? We already have an inkling. This is the first time that the cohort of Americans ages 30 to 44 has more college-educated women than college-educated men, and the effects are upsetting the traditional Cleaver-family dynamics. In 1970, women contributed 2 to 6 percent of the family income. Now the typical working wife brings home 42.2 percent, and four in 10 mothers—many of them single mothers—are the primary breadwinners in their families. The whole question of whether mothers should work is moot, argues Heather Boushey of the Center for American Progress, “because they just do. This idealized family—he works, she stays home—hardly exists anymore.”

The terms of marriage have changed radically since 1970. Typically, women’s income has been the main factor in determining whether a family moves up the class ladder or stays stagnant. And increasing numbers of women—unable to find men with a similar income and education—are forgoing marriage altogether. In 1970, 84 percent of women ages 30 to 44 were married; now 60 percent are. In 2007, among American women without a high-school diploma, 43 percent were married. And yet, for all the hand-wringing over the lonely spinster, the real loser in society—the only one to have made just slight financial gains since the 1970s—is the single man, whether poor or rich, college-educated or not. Hens rejoice; it’s the bachelor party that’s over.

The sociologist Kathryn Edin spent five years talking with low-income mothers in the inner suburbs of Philadelphia. Many of these neighborhoods, she found, had turned into matriarchies, with women making all the decisions and dictating what the men should and should not do. “I think something feminists have missed,” Edin told me, “is how much power women have” when they’re not bound by marriage. The women, she explained, “make every important decision”—whether to have a baby, how to raise it, where to live. “It’s definitely ‘my way or the highway,’” she said. “Thirty years ago, cultural norms were such that the fathers might have said, ‘Great, catch me if you can.’ Now they are desperate to father, but they are pessimistic about whether they can meet her expectations.” The women don’t want them as husbands, and they have no steady income to provide. So what do they have?

“Nothing,” Edin says. “They have nothing. The men were just annihilated in the recession of the ’90s, and things never got better. Now it’s just awful.”

The situation today is not, as Edin likes to say, a “feminist nirvana.” The phenomenon of children being born to unmarried parents “has spread to barrios and trailer parks and rural areas and small towns,” Edin says, and it is creeping up the class ladder. After staying steady for a while, the portion of American children born to unmarried parents jumped to 40 percent in the past few years. Many of their mothers are struggling financially; the most successful are working and going to school and hustling to feed the children, and then falling asleep in the elevator of the community college.

Still, they are in charge. “The family changes over the past four decades have been bad for men and bad for kids, but it’s not clear they are bad for women,” says W. Bradford Wilcox, the head of the University of Virginia’s National Marriage Project.

Over the years, researchers have proposed different theories to explain the erosion of marriage in the lower classes: the rise of welfare, or the disappearance of work and thus of marriageable men. But Edin thinks the most compelling theory is that marriage has disappeared because women are setting the terms—and setting them too high for the men around them to reach. “I want that white-picket-fence dream,” one woman told Edin, and the men she knew just didn’t measure up, so she had become her own one-woman mother/father/nurturer/provider. The whole country’s future could look much as the present does for many lower-class African Americans: the mothers pull themselves up, but the men don’t follow. First-generation college-educated white women may join their black counterparts in a new kind of middle class, where marriage is increasingly rare.

As the traditional order has been upended, signs of the profound disruption have popped up in odd places. Japan is in a national panic over the rise of the “herbivores,” the cohort of young men who are rejecting the hard-drinking salaryman life of their fathers and are instead gardening, organizing dessert parties, acting cartoonishly feminine, and declining to have sex. The generational young-women counterparts are known in Japan as the “carnivores,” or sometimes the “hunters.”

American pop culture keeps producing endless variations on the omega male, who ranks even below the beta in the wolf pack. This often-unemployed, romantically challenged loser can show up as a perpetual adolescent (in Judd Apatow’s Knocked Up or The 40-Year-Old Virgin), or a charmless misanthrope (in Noah Baumbach’s Greenberg), or a happy couch potato (in a Bud Light commercial). He can be sweet, bitter, nostalgic, or cynical, but he cannot figure out how to be a man. “We call each other ‘man,’” says Ben Stiller’s character in Greenberg, “but it’s a joke. It’s like imitating other people.” The American male novelist, meanwhile, has lost his mojo and entirely given up on sex as a way for his characters to assert macho dominance, Katie Roiphe explains in her essay “The Naked and the Conflicted.” Instead, she writes, “the current sexual style is more childlike; innocence is more fashionable than virility, the cuddle preferable to sex.”

At the same time, a new kind of alpha female has appeared, stirring up anxiety and, occasionally, fear. The cougar trope started out as a joke about desperate older women. Now it’s gone mainstream, even in Hollywood, home to the 50-something producer with a starlet on his arm. Susan Sarandon and Demi Moore have boy toys, and Aaron Johnson, the 19-year-old star of Kick-Ass, is a proud boy toy for a woman 24 years his senior. The New York Times columnist Gail Collins recently wrote that the cougar phenomenon is beginning to look like it’s not about desperate women at all but about “desperate young American men who are latching on to an older woman who’s a good earner.” Up in the Air, a movie set against the backdrop of recession-era layoffs, hammers home its point about the shattered ego of the American man. A character played by George Clooney is called too old to be attractive by his younger female colleague and is later rejected by an older woman whom he falls in love with after she sleeps with him—and who turns out to be married. George Clooney! If the sexiest man alive can get twice rejected (and sexually played) in a movie, what hope is there for anyone else? The message to American men is summarized by the title of a recent offering from the romantic-comedy mill: She’s Out of My League.

In fact, the more women dominate, the more they behave, fittingly, like the dominant sex. Rates of violence committed by middle-aged women have skyrocketed since the 1980s, and no one knows why. High-profile female killers have been showing up regularly in the news: Amy Bishop, the homicidal Alabama professor; Jihad Jane and her sidekick, Jihad Jamie; the latest generation of Black Widows, responsible for suicide bombings in Russia. In Roman Polanski’s The Ghost Writer, the traditional political wife is rewritten as a cold-blooded killer at the heart of an evil conspiracy. In her recent video Telephone, Lady Gaga, with her infallible radar for the cultural edge, rewritesThelma and Louise as a story not about elusive female empowerment but about sheer, ruthless power. Instead of killing themselves, she and her girlfriend (played by Beyoncé) kill a bad boyfriend and random others in a homicidal spree and then escape in their yellow pickup truck, Gaga bragging, “We did it, Honey B.”

The Marlboro Man, meanwhile, master of wild beast and wild country, seems too far-fetched and preposterous even for advertising. His modern equivalents are the stunted men in the Dodge Charger ad that ran during this year’s Super Bowl in February. Of all the days in the year, one might think, Super Bowl Sunday should be the one most dedicated to the cinematic celebration of macho. The men in Super Bowl ads should be throwing balls and racing motorcycles and doing whatever it is men imagine they could do all day if only women were not around to restrain them.

Instead, four men stare into the camera, unsmiling, not moving except for tiny blinks and sways. They look like they’ve been tranquilized, like they can barely hold themselves up against the breeze. Their lips do not move, but a voice-over explains their predicament—how they’ve been beaten silent by the demands of tedious employers and enviro-fascists and women. Especially women. “I will put the seat down, I will separate the recycling, I will carry your lip balm.” This last one—lip balm—is expressed with the mildest spit of emotion, the only hint of the suppressed rage against the dominatrix. Then the commercial abruptly cuts to the fantasy, a Dodge Charger vrooming toward the camera punctuated by bold all caps: MAN’S LAST STAND. But the motto is unconvincing. After that display of muteness and passivity, you can only imagine a woman—one with shiny lips—steering the beast.

This article available online at:

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/07/the-end-of-men/8135/

Copyright © 2010 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved.

Jul 22, 20100 notes
Top Secret America - In-depth Analysis of the Secret-Industrial Complex

ANALYSIS - PROJECT - INFOGRAPHICS - FOUR STAR PROJECT - MUST SEE

Posted at 12:00 PM, 7/18/2010

TOP SECRET AMERICA

“Top Secret America” is a project nearly two years in the making that describes the huge national security buildup in the United States after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

When it comes to national security, all too often no expense is spared and few questions are asked - with the result an enterprise so massive that nobody in government has a full understanding of it. It is, as Dana Priest and William M. Arkin have found, ubiquitous, often inefficient and mostly invisible to the people it is meant to protect and who fund it.

The articles in this series and an online database at topsecretamerica.com depict the scope and complexity of the government’s national security program through interactive maps and other graphics. Every data point on the Web site is substantiated by at least two public records.

Because of the nature of this project, we allowed government officials to see the Web site several months ago and asked them to tell us of any specific concerns. They offered none at that time. As the project evolved, we shared the Web site’s revised capabilities. Again, we asked for specific concerns. One government body objected to certain data points on the site and explained why; we removed those items. Another agency objected that the entire Web site could pose a national security risk but declined to offer specific comments.

We made other public safety judgments about how much information to show on the Web site. For instance, we used the addresses of company headquarters buildings, information which, in most cases, is available on companies’ own Web sites, but we limited the degree to which readers can use the zoom function on maps to pinpoint those or other locations.

Our maps show the headquarters buildings of the largest government agencies involved in top-secret work. A user can also see the cities and towns where the government conducts top-secret work in the United States, but not the specific locations, companies or agencies involved.

Within a responsible framework, our objective is to provide as much information as possible, so readers gain a real, granular understanding of the scale and breadth of the top-secret world we are describing.

We look forward to your feedback and can be reached attopsecretamerica@washpost.com.

- The Editors

Jul 22, 20100 notes
The Web Means the End of Forgetting

SOCIAL COMMENTARY, INTERNET

Photo Illustration by James Wojcik. Prop Stylist: Megan Caponetto.
By JEFFREY ROSEN
Published: July 19, 2010

Four years ago, Stacy Snyder, then a 25-year-old teacher in training at Conestoga Valley High School in Lancaster, Pa., posted a photo on her MySpace page that showed her at a party wearing a pirate hat and drinking from a plastic cup, with the caption “Drunken Pirate.” After discovering the page, her supervisor at the high school told her the photo was “unprofessional,” and the dean of Millersville University School of Education, where Snyder was enrolled, said she was promoting drinking in virtual view of her under-age students. As a result, days before Snyder’s scheduled graduation, the university denied her a teaching degree. Snyder sued, arguing that the university had violated her First Amendment rights by penalizing her for her (perfectly legal) after-hours behavior. But in 2008, a federal district judge rejected the claim, saying that because Snyder was a public employee whose photo didn’t relate to matters of public concern, her “Drunken Pirate” post was not protected speech.

When historians of the future look back on the perils of the early digital age, Stacy Snyder may well be an icon. The problem she faced is only one example of a challenge that, in big and small ways, is confronting millions of people around the globe: how best to live our lives in a world where the Internet records everything and forgets nothing — where every online photo, status update, Twitter post and blog entry by and about us can be stored forever. With Web sites like LOL Facebook Moments, which collects and shares embarrassing personal revelations from Facebook users, ill-advised photos and online chatter are coming back to haunt people months or years after the fact. Examples are proliferating daily: there was the 16-year-old British girl who was fired from her office job for complaining on Facebook, “I’m so totally bored!!”; there was the 66-year-old Canadian psychotherapist who tried to enter the United States but was turned away at the border — and barred permanently from visiting the country — after a border guard’s Internet search found that the therapist had written an article in a philosophy journal describing his experiments 30 years ago with L.S.D.

According to a recent survey by Microsoft, 75 percent of U.S. recruiters and human-resource professionals report that their companies require them to do online research about candidates, and many use a range of sites when scrutinizing applicants — including search engines, social-networking sites, photo- and video-sharing sites, personal Web sites and blogs, Twitter and online-gaming sites. Seventy percent of U.S. recruiters report that they have rejected candidates because of information found online, like photos and discussion-board conversations and membership in controversial groups.

Technological advances, of course, have often presented new threats to privacy. In 1890, in perhaps the most famous article on privacy ever written, Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis complained that because of new technology — like the Kodak camera and the tabloid press — “gossip is no longer the resource of the idle and of the vicious but has become a trade.” But the mild society gossip of the Gilded Age pales before the volume of revelations contained in the photos, video and chatter on social-media sites and elsewhere across the Internet. Facebook, which surpassed MySpace in 2008 as the largest social-networking site, now has nearly 500 million members, or 22 percent of all Internet users, who spend more than 500 billion minutes a month on the site. Facebook users share more than 25 billion pieces of content each month (including news stories, blog posts and photos), and the average user creates 70 pieces of content a month. There are more than 100 million registered Twitter users, and the Library of Congress recently announced that it will be acquiring — and permanently storing — the entire archive of public Twitter posts since 2006.

In Brandeis’s day — and until recently, in ours — you had to be a celebrity to be gossiped about in public: today all of us are learning to expect the scrutiny that used to be reserved for the famous and the infamous. A 26-year-old Manhattan woman told The New York Times that she was afraid of being tagged in online photos because it might reveal that she wears only two outfits when out on the town — a Lynyrd Skynyrd T-shirt or a basic black dress. “You have movie-star issues,” she said, “and you’re just a person.”

We’ve known for years that the Web allows for unprecedented voyeurism, exhibitionism and inadvertent indiscretion, but we are only beginning to understand the costs of an age in which so much of what we say, and of what others say about us, goes into our permanent — and public — digital files. The fact that the Internet never seems to forget is threatening, at an almost existential level, our ability to control our identities; to preserve the option of reinventing ourselves and starting anew; to overcome our checkered pasts.

In a recent book, “Delete: The Virtue of Forgetting in the Digital Age,” the cyberscholar Viktor Mayer-Schönberger cites Stacy Snyder’s case as a reminder of the importance of “societal forgetting.” By “erasing external memories,” he says in the book, “our society accepts that human beings evolve over time, that we have the capacity to learn from past experiences and adjust our behavior.” In traditional societies, where missteps are observed but not necessarily recorded, the limits of human memory ensure that people’s sins are eventually forgotten. By contrast, Mayer-Schönberger notes, a society in which everything is recorded “will forever tether us to all our past actions, making it impossible, in practice, to escape them.” He concludes that “without some form of forgetting, forgiving becomes a difficult undertaking.”

It’s often said that we live in a permissive era, one with infinite second chances. But the truth is that for a great many people, the permanent memory bank of the Web increasingly means there are no second chances — no opportunities to escape a scarlet letter in your digital past. Now the worst thing you’ve done is often the first thing everyone knows about you.

THE CRISIS — AND THE SOLUTION?
All this has created something of a collective identity crisis. For most of human history, the idea of reinventing yourself or freely shaping your identity — of presenting different selves in different contexts (at home, at work, at play) — was hard to fathom, because people’s identities were fixed by their roles in a rigid social hierarchy. With little geographic or social mobility, you were defined not as an individual but by your village, your class, your job or your guild. But that started to change in the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance, with a growing individualism that came to redefine human identity. As people perceived themselves increasingly as individuals, their status became a function not of inherited categories but of their own efforts and achievements. This new conception of malleable and fluid identity found its fullest and purest expression in the American ideal of the self-made man, a term popularized by Henry Clay in 1832. From the late 18th to the early 20th century, millions of Europeans moved from the Old World to the New World and then continued to move westward across America, a development that led to what the historian Frederick Jackson Turner called “the significance of the frontier,” in which the possibility of constant migration from civilization to the wilderness made Americans distrustful of hierarchy and committed to inventing and reinventing themselves.

In the 20th century, however, the ideal of the self-made man came under siege. The end of the Western frontier led to worries that Americans could no longer seek a fresh start and leave their past behind, a kind of reinvention associated with the phrase “G.T.T.,” or “Gone to Texas.” But the dawning of the Internet age promised to resurrect the ideal of what the psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton has called the “protean self.” If you couldn’t flee to Texas, you could always seek out a new chat room and create a new screen name. For some technology enthusiasts, the Web was supposed to be the second flowering of the open frontier, and the ability to segment our identities with an endless supply of pseudonyms, avatars and categories of friendship was supposed to let people present different sides of their personalities in different contexts. What seemed within our grasp was a power that only Proteus possessed: namely, perfect control over our shifting identities.

But the hope that we could carefully control how others view us in different contexts has proved to be another myth. As social-networking sites expanded, it was no longer quite so easy to have segmented identities: now that so many people use a single platform to post constant status updates and photos about their private and public activities, the idea of a home self, a work self, a family self and a high-school-friends self has become increasingly untenable. In fact, the attempt to maintain different selves often arouses suspicion. Moreover, far from giving us a new sense of control over the face we present to the world, the Internet is shackling us to everything that we have ever said, or that anyone has said about us, making the possibility of digital self-reinvention seem like an ideal from a distant era.

Concern about these developments has intensified this year, as Facebook took steps to make the digital profiles of its users generally more public than private. Last December, the company announced that parts of user profiles that had previously been private — including every user’s friends, relationship status and family relations — would become public and accessible to other users. Then in April, Facebook introduced an interactive system called Open Graph that can share your profile information and friends with the Facebook partner sites you visit.

What followed was an avalanche of criticism from users, privacy regulators and advocates around the world. Four Democratic senators — Charles Schumer of New York, Michael Bennet of Colorado, Mark Begich of Alaska and Al Franken of Minnesota — wrote to the chief executive of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, expressing concern about the “instant personalization” feature and the new privacy settings. The reaction to Facebook’s changes was such that when four N.Y.U. students announced plans in April to build a free social-networking site called Diaspora, which wouldn’t compel users to compromise their privacy, they raised more than $20,000 from more than 700 backers in a matter of weeks. In May, Facebook responded to all the criticism by introducing a new set of privacy controls that the company said would make it easier for users to understand what kind of information they were sharing in various contexts.

Facebook’s partial retreat has not quieted the desire to do something about an urgent problem. All around the world, political leaders, scholars and citizens are searching for responses to the challenge of preserving control of our identities in a digital world that never forgets. Are the most promising solutions going to be technological? Legislative? Judicial? Ethical? A result of shifting social norms and cultural expectations? Or some mix of the above? Alex Türk, the French data-protection commissioner, has called for a “constitutional right to oblivion” that would allow citizens to maintain a greater degree of anonymity online and in public places. In Argentina, the writers Alejandro Tortolini and Enrique Quagliano have started a campaign to “reinvent forgetting on the Internet,” exploring a range of political and technological ways of making data disappear. In February, the European Union helped finance a campaign called “Think B4 U post!” that urges young people to consider the “potential consequences” of publishing photos of themselves or their friends without “thinking carefully” and asking permission. And in the United States, a group of technologists, legal scholars and cyberthinkers are exploring ways of recreating the possibility of digital forgetting. These approaches share the common goal of reconstructing a form of control over our identities: the ability to reinvent ourselves, to escape our pasts and to improve the selves that we present to the world.

REPUTATION BANKRUPTCY AND TWITTERGATION
A few years ago, at the giddy dawn of the Web 2.0 era — so called to mark the rise of user-generated online content — many technological theorists assumed that self-governing communities could ensure, through the self-correcting wisdom of the crowd, that all participants enjoyed the online identities they deserved. Wikipedia is one embodiment of the faith that the wisdom of the crowd can correct most mistakes — that a Wikipedia entry for a small-town mayor, for example, will reflect the reputation he deserves. And if the crowd fails — perhaps by turning into a digital mob — Wikipedia offers other forms of redress. Those who think their Wikipedia entries lack context, because they overemphasize a single personal or professional mistake, can petition a group of select editors that decides whether a particular event in someone’s past has been given “undue weight.” For example, if the small-town mayor had an exemplary career but then was arrested for drunken driving, which came to dominate his Wikipedia entry, he can petition to have the event put in context or made less prominent.

In practice, however, self-governing communities like Wikipedia — or algorithmically self-correcting systems like Google — often leave people feeling misrepresented and burned. Those who think that their online reputations have been unfairly tarnished by an isolated incident or two now have a practical option: consulting a firm like ReputationDefender, which promises to clean up your online image. ReputationDefender was founded by Michael Fertik, a Harvard Law School graduate who was troubled by the idea of young people being forever tainted online by their youthful indiscretions. “I was seeing articles about the ‘Lord of the Flies’ behavior that all of us engage in at that age,” he told me, “and it felt un-American that when the conduct was online, it could have permanent effects on the speaker and the victim. The right to new beginnings and the right to self-definition have always been among the most beautiful American ideals.”

ReputationDefender, which has customers in more than 100 countries, is the most successful of the handful of reputation-related start-ups that have been growing rapidly after the privacy concerns raised by Facebook and Google. (ReputationDefender recently raised $15 million in new venture capital.) For a fee, the company will monitor your online reputation, contacting Web sites individually and asking them to take down offending items. In addition, with the help of the kind of search-optimization technology that businesses use to raise their Google profiles, ReputationDefender can bombard the Web with positive or neutral information about its customers, either creating new Web pages or by multiplying links to existing ones to ensure they show up at the top of any Google search. (Services begin from $10 a month to $1,000 a year; for challenging cases, the price can rise into the tens of thousands.) By automatically raising the Google ranks of the positive links, ReputationDefender pushes the negative links to the back pages of a Google search, where they’re harder to find. “We’re hearing stories of employers increasingly asking candidates to open up Facebook pages in front of them during job interviews,” Fertik told me. “Our customers include parents whose kids have talked about them on the Internet — ‘Mom didn’t get the raise’; ‘Dad got fired’; ‘Mom and Dad are fighting a lot, and I’m worried they’ll get a divorce.’ ”

Companies like ReputationDefender offer a promising short-term solution for those who can afford it; but tweaking your Google profile may not be enough for reputation management in the near future, as Web 2.0 swiftly gives way to Web. 3.0 — a world in which user-generated content is combined with a new layer of data aggregation and analysis and live video. For example, the Facebook application Photo Finder, by Face.com, uses facial-recognition and social-connections software to allow you to locate any photo of yourself or a friend on Facebook, regardless of whether the photo was “tagged” — that is, the individual in the photo was identified by name. At the moment, Photo Finder allows you to identify only people on your contact list, but as facial-recognition technology becomes more widespread and sophisticated, it will almost certainly challenge our expectation of anonymity in public. People will be able to snap a cellphone picture (or video) of a stranger, plug the images into Google and pull up all tagged and untagged photos of that person that exist on the Web.

In the nearer future, Internet searches for images are likely to be combined with social-network aggregator search engines, like today’s Spokeo and Pipl, which combine data from online sources — including political contributions, blog posts, YouTube videos, Web comments, real estate listings and photo albums. Increasingly these aggregator sites will rank people’s public and private reputations, like the new Web site Unvarnished, a reputation marketplace where people can write anonymous reviews about anyone. In the Web 3.0 world, Fertik predicts, people will be rated, assessed and scored based not on their creditworthiness but on their trustworthiness as good parents, good dates, good employees, good baby sitters or good insurance risks.

Anticipating these challenges, some legal scholars have begun imagining new laws that could allow people to correct, or escape from, the reputation scores that may govern our personal and professional interactions in the future. Jonathan Zittrain, who teaches cyberlaw at Harvard Law School, supports an idea he calls “reputation bankruptcy,” which would give people a chance to wipe their reputation slates clean and start over. To illustrate the problem, Zittrain showed me an iPhone app called Date Check, by Intelius, that offers a “sleaze detector” to let you investigate people you’re thinking about dating — it reports their criminal histories, address histories and summaries of their social-networking profiles. Services like Date Check, Zittrain said, could soon become even more sophisticated, rating a person’s social desirability based on minute social measurements — like how often he or she was approached or avoided by others at parties (a ranking that would be easy to calibrate under existing technology using cellphones and Bluetooth). Zittrain also speculated that, over time, more and more reputation queries will be processed by a handful of de facto reputation brokers — like the existing consumer-reporting agencies Experian and Equifax, for example — which will provide ratings for people based on their sociability, trustworthiness and employability.

To allow people to escape from negative scores generated by these services, Zittrain says that people should be allowed to declare “reputation bankruptcy” every 10 years or so, wiping out certain categories of ratings or sensitive information. His model is the Fair Credit Reporting Act, which requires consumer-reporting agencies to provide you with one free credit report a year — so you can dispute negative or inaccurate information — and prohibits the agencies from retaining negative information about bankruptcies, late payments or tax liens for more than 10 years. “Like personal financial bankruptcy, or the way in which a state often seals a juvenile criminal record and gives a child a ‘fresh start’ as an adult,” Zittrain writes in his book “The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It,” “we ought to consider how to implement the idea of a second or third chance into our digital spaces.”

Another proposal, offered by Paul Ohm, a law professor at the University of Colorado, would make it illegal for employers to fire or refuse to hire anyone on the basis of legal off-duty conduct revealed in Facebook postings or Google profiles. “Is it really fair for employers to know what you’ve put in your Facebook status updates?” Ohm asks. “We could say that Facebook status updates have taken the place of water-cooler chat, which employers were never supposed to overhear, and we could pass a prohibition on the sorts of information employers can and can’t consider when they hire someone.”

Ohm became interested in this problem in the course of researching the ease with which we can learn the identities of people from supposedly anonymous personal data like movie preferences and health information. When Netflix, for example, released 100 million purportedly anonymous records revealing how almost 500,000 users had rated movies from 1999 to 2005, researchers were able to identify people in the database by name with a high degree of accuracy if they knew even only a little bit about their movie-watching preferences, obtained from public data posted on other ratings sites.

Ohm says he worries that employers would be able to use social-network-aggregator services to identify people’s book and movie preferences and even Internet-search terms, and then fire or refuse to hire them on that basis. A handful of states — including New York, California, Colorado and North Dakota — broadly prohibit employers from discriminating against employees for legal off-duty conduct like smoking. Ohm suggests that these laws could be extended to prevent certain categories of employers from refusing to hire people based on Facebook pictures, status updates and other legal but embarrassing personal information. (In practice, these laws might be hard to enforce, since employers might not disclose the real reason for their hiring decisions, so employers, like credit-reporting agents, might also be required by law to disclose to job candidates the negative information in their digital files.)

Another legal option for responding to online setbacks to your reputation is to sue under current law. There’s already a sharp rise in lawsuits known as Twittergation — that is, suits to force Web sites to remove slanderous or false posts. Last year, Courtney Love was sued for libel by the fashion designer Boudoir Queen for supposedly slanderous comments posted on Twitter, on Love’s MySpace page and on the designer’s online marketplace-feedback page. But even if you win a U.S. libel lawsuit, the Web site doesn’t have to take the offending material down any more than a newspaper that has lost a libel suit has to remove the offending content from its archive.

Some scholars, therefore, have proposed creating new legal rights to force Web sites to remove false or slanderous statements. Cass Sunstein, the Obama administration’s regulatory czar, suggests in his new book, “On Rumors,” that there might be “a general right to demand retraction after a clear demonstration that a statement is both false and damaging.” (If a newspaper or blogger refuses to post a retraction, they might be liable for damages.) Sunstein adds that Web sites might be required to take down false postings after receiving notice that they are false — an approach modeled on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which requires Web sites to remove content that supposedly infringes intellectual property rights after receiving a complaint.

As Stacy Snyder’s “Drunken Pirate” photo suggests, however, many people aren’t worried about false information posted by others — they’re worried about true information they’ve posted about themselves when it is taken out of context or given undue weight. And defamation law doesn’t apply to true information or statements of opinion. Some legal scholars want to expand the ability to sue over true but embarrassing violations of privacy — although it appears to be a quixotic goal.

Daniel Solove, a George Washington University law professor and author of the book “The Future of Reputation,” says that laws forbidding people to breach confidences could be expanded to allow you to sue your Facebook friends if they share your embarrassing photos or posts in violation of your privacy settings. Expanding legal rights in this way, however, would run up against the First Amendment rights of others. Invoking the right to free speech, the U.S. Supreme Court has already held that the media can’t be prohibited from publishing the name of a rape victim that they obtained from public records. Generally, American judges hold that if you disclose something to a few people, you can’t stop them from sharing the information with the rest of the world.

That’s one reason that the most promising solutions to the problem of embarrassing but true information online may be not legal but technological ones. Instead of suing after the damage is done (or hiring a firm to clean up our messes), we need to explore ways of pre-emptively making the offending words or pictures disappear.

EXPIRATION DATES
Jorge Luis Borges
, in his short story “Funes, the Memorious,” describes a young man who, as a result of a riding accident, has lost his ability to forget. Funes has a tremendous memory, but he is so lost in the details of everything he knows that he is unable to convert the information into knowledge and unable, as a result, to grow in wisdom. Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, in “Delete,” uses the Borges story as an emblem for the personal and social costs of being so shackled by our digital past that we are unable to evolve and learn from our mistakes. After reviewing the various possible legal solutions to this problem, Mayer-Schönberger says he is more convinced by a technological fix: namely, mimicking human forgetting with built-in expiration dates for data. He imagines a world in which digital-storage devices could be programmed to delete photos or blog posts or other data that have reached their expiration dates, and he suggests that users could be prompted to select an expiration date before saving any data.

This is not an entirely fanciful vision. Google not long ago decided to render all search queries anonymous after nine months (by deleting part of each Internet protocol address), and the upstart search engine Cuil has announced that it won’t keep any personally identifiable information at all, a privacy feature that distinguishes it from Google. And there are already small-scale privacy apps that offer disappearing data. An app called TigerText allows text-message senders to set a time limit from one minute to 30 days after which the text disappears from the company’s servers on which it is stored and therefore from the senders’ and recipients’ phones. (The founder of TigerText, Jeffrey Evans, has said he chose the name before the scandal involving Tiger Woods’s supposed texts to a mistress.)

Expiration dates could be implemented more broadly in various ways. Researchers at theUniversity of Washington, for example, are developing a technology called Vanish that makes electronic data “self-destruct” after a specified period of time. Instead of relying on Google, Facebook or Hotmail to delete the data that is stored “in the cloud” — in other words, on their distributed servers — Vanish encrypts the data and then “shatters” the encryption key. To read the data, your computer has to put the pieces of the key back together, but they “erode” or “rust” as time passes, and after a certain point the document can no longer be read. Tadayoshi Kohno, a designer of Vanish, told me that the system could provide expiration dates not only for e-mail but also for any data stored in the cloud, including photos or text or anything posted on Facebook, Google or blogs. The technology doesn’t promise perfect control — you can’t stop someone from copying your photos or Facebook chats during the period in which they are not encrypted. But as Vanish improves, it could bring us much closer to a world where our data didn’t linger forever.

Kohno told me that Facebook, if it wanted to, could implement expiration dates on its own platform, making our data disappear after, say, three days or three months unless a user specified that he wanted it to linger forever. It might be a more welcome option for Facebook to encourage the development of Vanish-style apps that would allow individual users who are concerned about privacy to make their own data disappear without imposing the default on all Facebook users.

So far, however, Zuckerberg, Facebook’s C.E.O., has been moving in the opposite direction — toward transparency rather than privacy. In defending Facebook’s recent decision to make the default for profile information about friends and relationship status public rather than private, Zuckerberg said in January to the founder of the publication TechCrunch that Facebook had an obligation to reflect “current social norms” that favored exposure over privacy. “People have really gotten comfortable not only sharing more information and different kinds but more openly and with more people, and that social norm is just something that has evolved over time,” he said.

PRIVACY’S NEW NORMAL
But not all Facebook users agree with Zuckerberg. Plenty of anecdotal evidence suggests that young people, having been burned by Facebook (and frustrated by its privacy policy, which at more than 5,000 words is longer than the U.S. Constitution), are savvier than older users about cleaning up their tagged photos and being careful about what they post. And two recent studies challenge the conventional wisdom that young people have no qualms about having their entire lives shared and preserved online forever. A University of California, Berkeley, study released in April found that large majorities of people between 18 and 22 said there should be laws that require Web sites to delete all stored information about individuals (88 percent) and that give people the right to know all the information Web sites know about them (62 percent) — percentages that mirrored the privacy views of older adults. A recent Pew study found that 18-to-29-year-olds are actually more concerned about their online profiles than older people are, vigilantly deleting unwanted posts, removing their names from tagged photos and censoring themselves as they share personal information, because they are coming to understand the dangers of oversharing.

Still, Zuckerberg is on to something when he recognizes that the future of our online identities and reputations will ultimately be shaped not just by laws and technologies but also by changing social norms. And norms are already developing to recreate off-the-record spaces in public, with no photos, Twitter posts or blogging allowed. Milk and Honey, an exclusive bar on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, requires potential members to sign an agreement promising not to blog about the bar’s goings on or to post photos on social-networking sites, and other bars and nightclubs are adopting similar policies. I’ve been at dinners recently where someone has requested, in all seriousness, “Please don’t tweet this” — a custom that is likely to spread.

But what happens when people transgress those norms, using Twitter or tagging photos in ways that cause us serious embarrassment? Can we imagine a world in which new norms develop that make it easier for people to forgive and forget one another’s digital sins?

That kind of social norm may be harder to develop. Alessandro Acquisti, a scholar atCarnegie Mellon University, studies the behavioral economics of privacy — that is, the conscious and unconscious mental trade-offs we make in deciding whether to reveal or conceal information, balancing the benefits of sharing with the dangers of disclosure. He is conducting experiments about the “decay time” and the relative weight of good and bad information — in other words, whether people discount positive information about you more quickly and heavily than they discount negative information about you. His research group’s preliminary results suggest that if rumors spread about something good you did 10 years ago, like winning a prize, they will be discounted; but if rumors spread about something bad that you did 10 years ago, like driving drunk, that information has staying power. Research in behavioral psychology confirms that people pay more attention to bad rather than good information, and Acquisti says he fears that “20 years from now, if all of us have a skeleton on Facebook, people may not discount it because it was an error in our youth.”

On the assumption that strangers may not make it easy for us to escape our pasts, Acquisti is also studying technologies and strategies of “privacy nudges” that might prompt people to think twice before sharing sensitive photos or information in the first place. Gmail, for example, has introduced a feature that forces you to think twice before sending drunken e-mail messages. When you enable the feature, called Mail Goggles, it prompts you to solve simple math problems before sending e-mail messages at times you’re likely to regret. (By default, Mail Goggles is active only late on weekend nights.) Acquisti is investigating similar strategies of “soft paternalism” that might nudge people to hesitate before posting, say, drunken photos from Cancún. “We could easily think about a system, when you are uploading certain photos, that immediately detects how sensitive the photo will be.”

A silly but surprisingly effective alternative might be to have an anthropomorphic icon — a stern version of Microsoft’s Clippy — that could give you a reproachful look before you hit the send button. According to M. Ryan Calo, who runs the consumer-privacy project at Stanford Law School, experimenters studying strategies of “visceral notice” have found that when people navigate a Web site in the presence of a human-looking online character who seems to be actively following the cursor, they disclose less personal information than people who browse with no character or one who appears not to be paying attention. As people continue to experience the drawbacks of living in a world that never forgets, they may well learn to hesitate before posting information, with or without humanoid Clippys.

FORGIVENESS
In addition to exposing less for the Web to forget, it might be helpful for us to explore new ways of living in a world that is slow to forgive. It’s sobering, now that we live in a world misleadingly called a “global village,” to think about privacy in actual, small villages long ago. In the villages described in the Babylonian Talmud, for example, any kind of gossip or tale-bearing about other people — oral or written, true or false, friendly or mean — was considered a terrible sin because small communities have long memories and every word spoken about other people was thought to ascend to the heavenly cloud. (The digital cloud has made this metaphor literal.) But the Talmudic villages were, in fact, far more humane and forgiving than our brutal global village, where much of the content on the Internet would meet the Talmudic definition of gossip: although the Talmudic sages believed that God reads our thoughts and records them in the book of life, they also believed that God erases the book for those who atone for their sins by asking forgiveness of those they have wronged. In the Talmud, people have an obligation not to remind others of their past misdeeds, on the assumption they may have atoned and grown spiritually from their mistakes. “If a man was a repentant [sinner],” the Talmud says, “one must not say to him, ‘Remember your former deeds.’ ”

Unlike God, however, the digital cloud rarely wipes our slates clean, and the keepers of the cloud today are sometimes less forgiving than their all-powerful divine predecessor. In an interview with Charlie Rose on PBS, Eric Schmidt, the C.E.O. of Google, said that “the next generation is infinitely more social online” — and less private — “as evidenced by their Facebook pictures,” which “will be around when they’re running for president years from now.” Schmidt added: “As long as the answer is that I chose to make a mess of myself with this picture, then it’s fine. The issue is when somebody else does it.” If people chose to expose themselves for 15 minutes of fame, Schmidt says, “that’s their choice, and they have to live with it.”

Schmidt added that the “notion of control is fundamental to the evolution of these privacy-based solutions,” pointing to Google Latitude, which allows people to broadcast their locations in real time.

This idea of privacy as a form of control is echoed by many privacy scholars, but it seems too harsh to say that if people like Stacy Snyder don’t use their privacy settings responsibly, they have to live forever with the consequences. Privacy protects us from being unfairly judged out of context on the basis of snippets of private information that have been exposed against our will; but we can be just as unfairly judged out of context on the basis of snippets of public information that we have unwisely chosen to reveal to the wrong audience.

Moreover, the narrow focus on privacy as a form of control misses what really worries people on the Internet today. What people seem to want is not simply control over their privacy settings; they want control over their online reputations. But the idea that any of us can control our reputations is, of course, an unrealistic fantasy. The truth is we can’t possibly control what others say or know or think about us in a world of Facebook and Google, nor can we realistically demand that others give us the deference and respect to which we think we’re entitled. On the Internet, it turns out, we’re not entitled to demand any particular respect at all, and if others don’t have the empathy necessary to forgive our missteps, or the attention spans necessary to judge us in context, there’s nothing we can do about it.

But if we can’t control what others think or say or view about us, we can control our own reaction to photos, videos, blogs and Twitter posts that we feel unfairly represent us. A recent study suggests that people on Facebook and other social-networking sites express their real personalities, despite the widely held assumption that people try online to express an enhanced or idealized impression of themselves. Samuel Gosling, theUniversity of Texas, Austin, psychology professor who conducted the study, told the Facebook blog, “We found that judgments of people based on nothing but their Facebook profiles correlate pretty strongly with our measure of what that person is really like, and that measure consists of both how the profile owner sees him or herself and how that profile owner’s friends see the profile owner.”

By comparing the online profiles of college-aged people in the United States and Germany with their actual personalities and their idealized personalities, or how they wanted to see themselves, Gosling found that the online profiles conveyed “rather accurate images of the profile owners, either because people aren’t trying to look good or because they are trying and failing to pull it off.” (Personality impressions based on the online profiles were most accurate for extroverted people and least accurate for neurotic people, who cling tenaciously to an idealized self-image.)

Gosling is optimistic about the implications of his study for the possibility of digital forgiveness. He acknowledged that social technologies are forcing us to merge identities that used to be separate — we can no longer have segmented selves like “a home or family self, a friend self, a leisure self, a work self.” But although he told Facebook, “I have to find a way to reconcile my professor self with my having-a-few-drinks self,” he also suggested that as all of us have to merge our public and private identities, photos showing us having a few drinks on Facebook will no longer seem so scandalous. “You see your accountant going out on weekends and attending clown conventions, that no longer makes you think that he’s not a good accountant. We’re coming to terms and reconciling with that merging of identities.”

Perhaps society will become more forgiving of drunken Facebook pictures in the way Gosling says he expects it might. And some may welcome the end of the segmented self, on the grounds that it will discourage bad behavior and hypocrisy: it’s harder to have clandestine affairs when you’re broadcasting your every move on Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare. But a humane society values privacy, because it allows people to cultivate different aspects of their personalities in different contexts; and at the moment, the enforced merging of identities that used to be separate is leaving many casualties in its wake. Stacy Snyder couldn’t reconcile her “aspiring-teacher self” with her “having-a-few-drinks self”: even the impression, correct or not, that she had a drink in a pirate hat at an off-campus party was enough to derail her teaching career.

That doesn’t mean, however, that it had to derail her life. After taking down her MySpace profile, Snyder is understandably trying to maintain her privacy: her lawyer told me in a recent interview that she is now working in human resources; she did not respond to a request for comment. But her success as a human being who can change and evolve, learning from her mistakes and growing in wisdom, has nothing to do with the digital file she can never entirely escape. Our character, ultimately, can’t be judged by strangers on the basis of our Facebook or Google profiles; it can be judged by only those who know us and have time to evaluate our strengths and weaknesses, face to face and in context, with insight and understanding. In the meantime, as all of us stumble over the challenges of living in a world without forgetting, we need to learn new forms of empathy, new ways of defining ourselves without reference to what others say about us and new ways of forgiving one another for the digital trails that will follow us forever.

Jeffrey Rosen, a law professor at George Washington University, is a frequent contributor to the magazine. He is writing a book about Louis Brandeis.

A version of this article appeared in print on July 25, 2010, on page MM32 of the Sunday Magazine.
Jul 22, 20100 notes
Frequently asked questions about the search for extraterrestrial life
SCIENCE - ASTRONOMY - SPECULATION
Subject: Introduction

sci.astro is a newsgroup devoted to the discussion of the science of astronomy. As such its content ranges from the Earth to the farthest reaches of the Universe. However, certain questions tend to appear fairly regularly.

This document attempts to summarize answers to these questions.

———————————————

Subject:

F.00 Extraterrestrial Life [Dates in brackets are last edit.]
F.01 What is life? [1997-09-03]
F.02 Life in the Solar System
-02.1 Is there life on Mars? [1996-09-03]
-02.2 Is there life in Jupiter (or Saturn)? [1996-09-03]
-02.3 Is there life on Jupiter’s moon Europa? [1996-09-03]
-02.4 Is there life on Saturn’s moon Titan? [1997-08-05]
F.03 What is the Drake equation? [1995-10-04]
F.04 What is the Fermi paradox? [1995-12-28]
F.05 Could we detect extraterrestrial life? [1999-09-15]
F.06 How far away could we detect radio transmissions? [2000-07-19]
F.07 What’s a Dyson sphere? [1997-06-04]
F.08 What is happening with SETI now? [2998-01-31]
F.09 Why search for extraterrestrial intelligence using radio? Why not <fill in the blank> method? [2000-01-01]
F.10 Why do we assume that other beings must be based on carbon? Why couldn’t organisms be based on other substances? [2001-03-20]
F.11 Could life occur on an interstellar planet? [2003-04-27]
See also the entry in Section G of the FAQ on the detection of extrasolar planets.

———————————————

Subject: F.01 What is life? Author: T. Joseph W. Lazio <jlazio@patriot.net>

This material is extracted from the review article by Chyba &
MaDonald (1995, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Science).

How might we tell if a future mission to another body in the solar
system had discovered life?  How do we separate living from
non-living?  A simple set of criteria  for doing so might be,
Something that is alive must (1) acquire nutrients from its
environment, (2) respond to stimuli in its environment, and 
(3) reproduce.  Unfortunately, with this definition we would conclude
that mules are not alive while fire is.  Other attempts to define
life---based on genetic, chemical, or thermodynamic criteria---suffer
from similar failings.

 A working definition used by many attempting to understand the origin
of life on the Earth is something like, "Life is a self-sustained
chemical system capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution."  (Note
that this definition, *chemical* systems, would exclude computer life
or A-life, but other definitions exist which would not.)  Again this
definition is not without its difficulties.  The emphasis on evolving
systems implicitly assumes a collection of entities; Victor
Frankenstein's creation would not have been classified as alive.
Further, how long must one wait before concluding that a system was
not evolving?  A recent definition that focusses on individual
entities is that a living organism must be (1) self-bounded, (2)
self-generating, and (3) self-perpetuating.

 Perhaps it is not possible to provide necessary and sufficient
criteria to distinguish "alive" from "not alive."  Indeed, if life can
arise from natural physical and chemical processes, there may be a
continuous spectrum of "aliveness," with some entities clearly
"alive"---humans, trees, dogs---some entities clearly "not
alive"---rocks, pop bottles---and some entities somewhere in
between---viruses.

Operationally, at our current stage of exploration of the solar
system, all of the above definitions are probably too detailed.  On
Earth, we have entities we clearly identify as "alive."  Liquid water
appears to be a requirement for these living things.  Hence, the focus
in solar system studies of life has been to target those bodies where
liquid water either is possibly now or may have once been present.

------------------------------

Subject: F.02 Life in the Solar System

Within the past 100--150 years, the conventional wisdom regarding life
in the solar system (beside the Earth) has been on a roller coaster
ride.  Life on other planets used to be considered likely.
Suggestions for sending messages to other planets included cutting
down huge tracts in the Siberian forests or filling and setting afire
trenches of kerosene in the Sahara.  Lowell believed that he could see
evidence for a civilization on Mars.

During the Space Age the planets were explored with robotic craft.
The images and other measurements sent back by these craft convinced
most scientists that only the Earth harbored life.

With even more recent findings, the possibility of life that life
exists or existed elsewhere in the solar system is now being
re-examined.

------------------------------

Subject: F.02.1 Is there life on Mars?
Author:	Steve Willner <swillner@cfa.harvard.edu>

The Viking landers found conditions on the surface of Mars unlikely to
support life as we know it.  The mass spectrometer found too little
carbon, which is the basis for organic molecules.  The chemistry is
apparently highly oxidizing as well.  Some optimists have nevertheless
argued that there still might be life on Mars, either below the
surface or in surface regions not sampled by the landers, but most
scientists consider life on Mars quite unlikely.  Evidence of surface
water suggests, however, that Mars had a wetter and possibly warmer
climate in the past, and life might have existed then.  If so, there
might still be remnants (either living or fossil) today, but close
examination will be necessary to find out.

More recently, McKay et al. have invoked biological activity to
explain a number of features detected in a meteorite from Mars.  See
<URL:http://www.fas.org/mars/> for additional information.

------------------------------

Subject: F.02.2 Is there life in Jupiter (or Saturn)?

Jupiter (and Saturn) has no solid surface, like the Earth.  Rather the
density and temperature increase with depth.  The lack of solid
surface need not be a deterrent to life, though, as many aquatic
animals (e.g., fish, jellyfish) never touch a solid surface.

There has been speculation that massive gas-bag organisms could exist
in Jupiter's atmosphere.  These organisms might be something like
jellyfish, floating upon the atmospheric currents and eating either
each other or the organic materials formed in Jupiter's atmosphere.

------------------------------

Subject: F.02.3 Is there life on Jupiter's moon, Europa?

This article is adapted from NASA Press Releases.

In the late 1970's, NASA Voyager spacecraft imaged Europa.  Its
surface was marked by complicated linear features, appearing like
cracks or huge fractures in the surface.  No large craters (more than
five kilometers in diameter) were easily identifiable.  One
explanation for this appearance is that the surface is a thin ice
crust overlying water or softer ice and that the linear features are
fractures in that crust.  Galileo images have reinforced the idea that
Europa's surface is an ice-crust, showing places on Europa that
resemble ice floes in Earth's polar regions, along with suggestions of
geyser-like eruptions.

Europa's appearance could result from the stresses of the contorting
tidal effects of Jupiter's strong gravity (possibly combined with some
internal heat from decay of radioactive elements).  If the warmth
generated by tidal heating is (or has been) enough to liquefy some
portion of Europa, then the moon may have environmental niches warm
and wet enough to host life.  These niches might be similar to those
found near ocean-floor vents on the Earth.

------------------------------

Subject: F.02.4 Is there life on Saturn's moon Titan?
Author: T. Joseph W. Lazio <jlazio@patriot.net>

 This material is extracted from the review article by Chyba &
McDonald (1995, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Science).

 Titan's atmosphere is a rich mix of nitrogen and methane, from which
organic molecules (i.e., those containing carbon, not necessarily
molecules in living organisms) can be formed.  Indeed, there has been
speculation that Titan's atmosphere resembles that of Earth some 4
billion years ago.  Complex organic chemistry can result from the
ultraviolet light from the Sun or from charged particle impacts on the
upper atmosphere.  Unfortunately, Titan's great distance from the Sun
means that the surface temperature is so low that liquid water is
probably not present globally.  Since we believe that liquid water is
probably necessary for the emergence of life, Titan is unlikely to
harbor any life.  The impact of comets or asteroids on Titan may,
however, warm the surface enough that any water ice could melt.  Such
"impact pools" could persist for as long as 1 thousand years,
potentially allowing life-like chemical reactions to occur.

------------------------------

Subject: F.03 What is the Drake equation?
Author: John Pike <johnpike@fas.org>, Bill Arnett <billa@znet.com>,
	Steve Willner <swillner@cfa.harvard.edu>

There are various forms of it, but basically it is a means of doing
boundary calculations for the prevalence of intelligent life in the
universe.  It might take the form of saying that if there are:

X   stars in the Galaxy, of which
Y % have planets, of which
Z % can support life, on which
A % intelligent life has arisen, with
B   representing the average duration of civilizations

then you fool around with the numbers to figure out how close on average
the nearest civilization is.  There are various mathematical expressions
for this formula (see below), and there are variations on how many terms
the equations include.

The problem, of course, is that some of the variables are easy to pick
(e.g., stars in the Galaxy), some are under study (e.g., how many
stars have terrestrial-like planets), and others are just flat-out
wild guesses (e.g., duration of civilization, where we are currently
running an experiment to test this here on Terra of Sol).


One useful form says the number of detectable civilizations is:
        N  = R * fp * ne * fl * fi * fc * L
 where        
        R  = "the average rate of star formation in the region in question",
        fp = "the fraction of stars that form planets"
        ne = "the average number of planets hospitable to life per star"
        fl = "the fraction of those planets where life actually emerges"
        fi = "the fraction of life-bearing planets where life evolves into
              intelligent beings"
        fc = "the fraction of planets with intelligent creatures capable
              of interstellar communication"
        L = "the length of time that such a civilization remains
              detectable".

(If you want some definition of civilization other than detectability,
just change your definition of fc and L accordingly.)

Can we provide reasonable estimates for any of the above numbers?  The
"social/biological" quantities are at best speculative and aren't
appropriate for this newsgroup anyway.  (For arguments that they are
quite small, see biologist Ernst Mayr's article in _Bioastronomy
News_, Quarter 1995, <URL:http://planetary.org/tps/mayr.html>.)  Even
the "astronomical" numbers, though determinable in principle, have
considerable uncertainty.  Nevertheless, I will attempt to provide
reasonable estimates.  I'll take the "region in question" to be the
Milky Way Galaxy and consider only cases "similar to" our solar
system.

For R, I'm going to use only stars with luminosities between half and
double that of the Sun.  Dimmer stars have a very small zone where
Earth-like temperatures will be found, and more luminous stars have
relatively short lifetimes.  Near the Sun, there are about 4.5E-3 such
stars in a cubic parsec.  I'm only going to consider stars in the
Galactic disk, which I take to have a scale height of 660 pc and scale
length of between 5 and 8 kpc.  (Stars outside the disk either have
lower metallicity than the Sun or live in a very different environment
and may have formed in a different way.)  The Sun is about 8 kpc from
the Galactic center, and thus in a region of lower than maximum star
density.  Putting everything together, there ought to be around 1.4E9
stars in the class defined.  This represents about 1% of the total mass
of the Galaxy.  The age of the Sun is about 4.5E9 years, so the average
rate of formation R is about 0.3 "solar like stars" per year.

Planets are more problematic, since extrasolar planets cannot generally
be detected, but it is thought that their formation is a natural and
indeed inevitable part of star formation.  For stars like the Sun, in
fact, there is either observational evidence or clear theoretical
justification for every stage of the planet formation process as it is
currently understood.  We might therefore be tempted to take fp=1 (for
stars in the luminosity range defined), but we have to consider binary
stars.  A second star may disrupt planetary orbits or may somehow
prevent planets forming in the first place.  Because about 2/3 of the
relevant stars are in binary systems, I'm going to take fp=1/3.

Now we are pretty much out of the range of observation and into
speculation.  It seems reasonable to take ne=1 or even 1.5 on the basis
of the Solar system (Earth and Mars), but a pessimist could surely take
a smaller number.  You can insert your own values for the probabilities,
but if we arbitrarily set all of them equal to one
  N <= 0.1 L
seems consistent with all known data.

A more detailed discussion of interpretation of the Drake equation and
the factors in it can be found in Issue 5 of SETIQuest.

------------------------------

Subject: F.04 What is the Fermi paradox?
Author: John Pike <johnpike@fas.org>, 
	Steve Willner <swillner@cfa.harvard.edu>

One of the problems that the Drake Equation produces is that if you take
reasonable (some would say optimistic) numbers for everything up to the
average duration of technological civilizations, then you are left with
three possibilities:

1. If such civilizations last a long time, "They" should be _here_
(leading either the the Flying Saucer hypothesis---they are here and
we are seeing them, or the Zoo Hypothesis---they are here and are
hiding in obedience to the Prime Directive, which they observe with
far greater fiqdelity than Captain Kirk could ever muster). -or-

2. If such civilizations last a long time, and "They" are not "here"
then it becomes necessary to explain why each and every technological
civilization has consistently chosen not to build starships.  The
first civilization to build starships would spread across the entire
Galaxy on a timescale that is short relative to the age of the Galaxy.
Perhaps they lose interest in space flight and building starships
because they are spending all their time surfing the net. (Think about
it---the whole point of space flight is the proposition that there are
privileged spatial locations, and the whole point of the net is that
physical location is more or less irrelevant.) -or-

3. Such civilizations do not last a long time, and blow themselves up
or otherwise fall apart pretty quickly (... film at 11).

Thus the Drake Equation produces what is called the Fermi Paradox
(i.e., "Where are They?"), in that the implications of #3 and #2 are
not terribly encouraging to some folks, but the two flavors of #1 are
kinda hard to come to grips with.


An alternate version of 2 is that interstellar travel is far more
difficult than we think it is.  Right now, it doesn't seem much beyond
the boundaries of current technology to launch "generation ships," which
amount to an O'Neill colony plus propulsion and power systems.  An
alternative is robot probes with artificial intelligence; these don't
seem so difficult either.  The Milky Way galaxy is well under 10^5 light
years in diameter and over 10^9 years old, so even travel beginning
fairly recently in Galactic history and proceeding well under the speed
of light ought to have filled the Galaxy by now.  (Travel very near the
speed of light still seems very hard, but such high speed isn't
necessary to fill the Galaxy with life.)  The paradox, then, is that we
don't observe evidence of anybody besides us.

------------------------------

Subject: F.05 Could we detect extraterrestrial life?
Author: Steve Willner <swillner@cfa.harvard.edu>

Yes, although present observations can do so only under optimistic
assumptions.  Radio and optical searches currently underway are aimed
at detecting "beacons" built by putative advanced civilizations and
intended to attract attention.  More sensitive searches (e.g., Project
Cyclops) that might detect normal activities of an advanced
civilization (similar for example to our military radars or TV
stations) have been proposed but so far not funded.  No funding of
these is likely until the search for beacons is far closer to being
complete.  Why get involved with the difficult until you are done with
the easy?

Ordinary astronomical observations are most unlikely to detect life.
The kinds of life we speculate about would be near stars, and the
light from the star would conceal most signs of life unless a special
effort is made to look for them.

Within the solar system, the Viking landers found conditions on the
surface of Mars unlikely to support life as we know it.  The mass
spectrometer found too little carbon, which is the basis for organic
molecules.  The chemistry is apparently highly oxidizing as well.
Some optimists have nevertheless argued that there still might be
life on Mars, either below the surface or in surface regions not
sampled by the landers, but most scientists consider life on Mars
quite unlikely.  Evidence of surface water suggests, however, that
Mars had a wetter and possibly warmer climate in the past, and life
might have existed then.  If so, there might still be remnants
(either living or fossil) today, but close examination will be
necessary to find out.

Other sites that conceivably could have life include the atmosphere
of Jupiter (and perhaps Saturn) and the presumed liquid water under
the surface ice of Jupiter's satellite Europa.  Organisms living in
either place would have to be very different from anything we know on
Earth, and it's hard to know how one would even start to look for
them.

Concepts for specialized space missions that could detect Earth-like
planets and return spectral information on their atmospheres have been
suggested, and either NASA or ESA may launch such a mission some time
in the next two decades (see
<URL:http://techinfo.jpl.nasa.gov/www/ExNPS/HomePage.html> and
<URL:http://ast.star.rl.ac.uk/darwin/>).  The evidence for life would
be detection of ozone (implying oxygen) in the planet's atmosphere.
While this would be strong evidence for life---oxygen in Earth's
atmosphere is thought to have come from life---it would not be
ironclad proof, as there may be some way an oxygen atmosphere could
form without life.

For more information, see references at the end of F.06.  Also, check
out the SETI Institute Web site at <URL:http://www.seti-inst.edu>.

------------------------------

Subject: F.06 How far away could we detect radio transmissions?
Author: Al Aburto <aburto@nosc.mil>, 
	David Woolley <david@djwhome.demon.co.uk>

Representative results are presented in Tables 1 and 2.  The short
answer is
 (1) Detection of broadband signals from Earth such as AM radio, FM
     radio, and television picture and sound would be extremely
     difficult even at a fraction of a light-year distant from the
     Sun.  For example, a TV picture having 5 MHz of bandwidth and 5
     MWatts of power could not be detected beyond the solar system
     even with a radio telescope with 100 times the sensitivity of the
     305 meter diameter Arecibo telescope.

 (2) Detection of narrowband signals is more resonable out to
     thousands of light-years distance from the Sun depending on the
     transmitter's transmitting power and the receiving antenna size.
            
 (3) Instruments such as the Arecibo radio telescope could detect
     narrowband signals originating thousands of light-years from the
     Sun.
            
 (4) A well-designed 12 ft diameter amateur radio telescope could
     detect narrowband signals from 1 to 100 light-years distance
     assuming the transmitting power of the transmitter is in the
     terawatt range.

What follows is a basic example for the estimation of radio and
microwave detection ranges of interest to SETI.  Minimum signal
processing is assumed.  For example an FFT can be used in the
narrowband case and a bandpass filter in the broadband case (with
center frequency at the right place of course).  In addition it is
assumed that the bandwidth of the receiver (Br) is constrained such
that it is greater than or equal to the bandwidth of the transmitted
signal (Bt) (that is, Br >= Bt).

Assume a power Pt (watts) in bandwidth Bt (Hz) radiated isotropically.
At a distance of R (meters), this power will be uniformly distributed
(reduced) over a sphere of area: 4 * pi * R^2.  The amount of this
power received by an antenna of effective area Aer with bandwidth Br
(Hz), where Br >= Bt, is therefore:

  Pr = Aer * (Pt / (4 * pi * R^2))

If the transmitting antenna is directive (that is, most of the
available power is concentrated into a narrow beam) with power gain Gt
in the desired direction then:

  Pr = Aer * ((Pt * Gt) / (4 * pi * R^2))

The antenna gain G (Gt for transmitting antenna) is given by the
following expression.  (The receiving antenna has a similar expression
for its gain, but the receiving antenna's gain is not used explicitly
in the range equation.  Only the effective area, Aer, intercepting the
radiated energy at range R is required.)

  Gt = Aet * (4 * pi / (w^2)), where
     
       Aet = effective area of the transmitting antenna (m^2), and
         w = wavelength (m) the antenna is tuned to.
         f = c / w, where f is the frequency and c is the speed of light.
         c = 2.99792458E+08 (m/sec)
        pi = 3.141592654...

For an antenna (either transmiting or receiving) with circular apertures:

  Ae = <eta> * pi * d^2 / 4

        <eta>r = efficiency of the antenna,
        d = diameter (m) of the antenna.

The Nyquist noise, Pn, is given by:

  Pn = k * Tsys * Br, where
     
          k = Boltzmann's constant = 1.38054E-23 (joule/kelvin)
       Tsys = is the system temperature (kelvins), and
         Br = the receiver bandwidth (hertz).

The signal-to-noise ratio, snr, is given by:

  snr = Pr / Pn.

If we average the output for a time t, in order to reduce the variance
of the noise, then one can improve the snr by a factor of 
sqrt(Br * t). Thus:

  snr = Pr * sqrt(Br * t) / Pn.

The factor Br*t is called the "time bandwidth product," of the receive
processing in this case, which we'll designate as:

  twp = Br * t.

We'll designate the integration or averaging gain as:

  twc = sqrt(twp).

Integration of the data (which means: twp = Br * t > 1, or
t > (1 / Br) ) makes sense for unmodulated "CW" signals that are
relatively stable over time in a relatively stationary (steady) noise
field.  On the other hand, integration of the data does not make
sense for time-varying signals since this would distroy the
information content of the signal.  Thus for a modulated signal 
twp = Br * t = 1 is appropriate.

In any case the snr can be rewritten as:

snr = (Pt * Gt) * Aer * twc / (4 * pi * R^2 * Br * k * Tsys)

Pt * Gt is called the Effective Isotropic Radiated Power (EIRP) in
the transmitted signal of bandwidth Bt. So:

EIRP = Pt * Gt, and

snr = EIRP * Aer * twc / (4 * pi * R^2 * Br * k * Tsys)

This is a basic equation that one can use to estimate SETI detection
ranges. 

#######################################################################
# If Rl is the number of meters in a light year (9.46E+15 [m/LY]),    #
# then the detection range in light years is given by                 #
#                                                                     #
# R = sqrt[ EIRP * Aer * twc / (4 * pi * snr * Br * k * Tsys) ] / Rl  #
#                                                                     #
# If we wanted the range in Astronomical Units then replace Rl        #
# with Ra = 1.496E+11 (m/AU).                                         #
#######################################################################

Note that for maximum detection range (R) one would want the transmit
power (EIRP), the area of the receive antenna (Aer), and the time
bandwidth product (twp) to be as big as possible.  In addition one
would want the snr, the receiver bandwidth (Br), and thus transmit
signal bandwidth (Bt), and the receive system temperature (Tsys) to be
as small as possible.

(There is a minor technical complication here.  Interstellar space
contains a plasma.  Its effects on a propagating radio wave including
broadening the bandwidth of the signal.  This effect was first
calculated by Drake & Helou and later by Cordes & Lazio.  The
magnitude of the effect is direction, distance, and frequency
dependent, but for most lines of sight through the Milky Way a typical
value might be 0.1 Hz at a frequency of 1000 MHz.  Thus, bandwidths
much below this value are unnecessary because there will be few, if
any, signals with narrower bandwidths.)

Now we are in a position to carry out some simple estimates of
detection range.  These are shown in Table 1 for a variety of radio
transmitters.  We'll assume the receiver is similar to Arecibo, with
diameter dr = 305 m and an efficiency of 50% (<eta>r = 0.5).  We'll
assume snr = 25 is required for detection (The META project used a snr
of 27--33 and SETI@home uses 22; more refined signal processing might
yield increased detection ranges by a factor of 2 over those shown in
the Table 1.)  We'll also assume that twp = Br * Tr = 1.  An
"educated" guess for some of the parameter values, Tsys in particular,
was taken as indicated by the question marks in the table.  As a
reference note that Jupiter is 5.2 AU from the Sun and Pluto 39.4 AU,
while the nearest star to the Sun is 4.3 LY away.  Also any signal
attenuation due to the Earth's atmosphere and ionosphere have been
ignored; AM radio, for example, from Earth, is trapped within the
ionosphere.

The receive antenna area, Aer, is 

  Aer = <eta>r * pi * dr^2 / 4 = 36.5E3 m^2.

(Scientific notation is being used here; 1E1 = 10, 1E2 = 100, 1E3 =
1000, so 36.5E3 is 36.5 times 1000.)  Hence the detection range (light
years) becomes

  R = 3.07E-04 * sqrt[ EIRP / (Br * Tsys) ].

Table 1 Detection ranges of various EM emissions from Earth and the
          Pioneer spacecraft assuming a 305 meter diameter circular
          aperture receive antenna, similar to the Arecibo radio
          telescope. Assuming snr = 25, twp = Br * Tr = 1, <eta>r =
          0.5, and dr = 305 meters.
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
Source       | Frequency    | Bandwidth | Tsys   | EIRP   | Detection |
             | Range        |    (Br)   |(Kelvin)|        | Range (R) |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
AM Radio     | 530-1605 kHz |  10   kHz | 68E6   | 100 KW |  0.007 AU |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
FM Radio     |  88-108  MHz | 150   kHz |  430   |   5 MW |    5.4 AU |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
UHF TV       | 470-806  MHz |   6   MHz |  50  ? |   5 MW |    2.5 AU |
Picture      |              |           |        |        |           |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
UHF TV       | 470-806  MHz |   0.1  Hz |  50  ? |   5 MW |    0.3 LY |
Carrier      |              |           |        |        |           |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
WSR-88D      |   2.8    GHz |  0.63 MHz |  40    |  32 GW |   0.01 LY |
Weather Radar|              |           |        |        |           |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
Arecibo      |   2.380  GHz |  0.1   Hz |  40    |  22 TW |    720 LY |
S-Band (CW)  |              |           |        |        |           |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
Arecibo      |   2.380  GHz |  0.1   Hz |  40    |   1 TW |    150 LY |
S-Band (CW)  |              |           |        |        |           |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
Arecibo      |   2.380  GHz |  0.1   Hz |  40    |   1 GW |      5 LY |
S-Band (CW)  |              |           |        |        |           |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+
Pioneer 10   |   2.295  GHz |  1.0   Hz |  40    | 1.6 kW |    120 AU |
Carrier      |              |           |        |        |           |
-------------+--------------+-----------+--------+--------+-----------+

It should be apparent then from these results that the detection of AM
radio, FM radio, or TV pictures much beyond the orbit of Pluto will be
extremely difficult even for an Arecibo-like 305 meter diameter radio
telescope!  Even a 3000 meter diameter radio telescope could not
detect the "I Love Lucy" TV show (re-runs) at a distance of 0.01
Light-Years!

It is only the narrowband high intensity emissions from Earth
(narrowband radar generally) that will be detectable at significant
ranges (greater than 1 LY).  Perhaps they'll show up very much like
the narrowband, short duration, and non-repeating, signals observed by
our SETI telescopes.  Perhaps we should document all these
"non-repeating" detections very carefully to see if any long term
spatial detection patterns show up.

Another question to consider is what an Amateur SETI radio telescope
might achieve in terms of detection ranges using narrowband FFT
processing.  Detection ranges (LY) are given in Table 2 assuming a 12
ft (3.7 m) dish antenna operating at 1.42 GHz, for various FFT
binwidths (Br), Tsys, snr, time bandwidth products (twp = Br*t), and
EIRP values.  It appears from the table that effective amateur SETI
explorations can be conducted out beyond approximately 30 light years
provided the processing bandwidth is near the minimum (approximately
0.1 Hz), the system temperature is minimal (20 to 50 Degrees Kelvin),
and the EIRP of the source (transmitter) is greater than approximately
25 terawatts.


Table 2     Detection ranges (LY) for a 12 foot diameter amateur
            radio telescope SETI system, operating at 1.420 GHz.
                                 +-------------------------------+
                                 |             EIRP              |
                                 +-------+--------+------+-------+
                                 | 100TW |  25TW  |  1TW | 100GW |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+
   Br  | Br*t  |   Tsys   | snr  |        Detection Range        |
  (Hz) |       | (kelvin) |      |             (LY)              |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+
  0.1  |   2   |    50    |  25  |   28  |    17  |  3.4 |   1.1 |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+
  0.1  |   1   |    50    |  25  |   20  |    12  |  2.4 |  0.76 |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+
  0.5  |   2   |    50    |  25  |  12.7 |    6.4 |  1.3 |   0.4 |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+
  0.5  |   1   |    50    |  25  |    9  |    4.5 |  0.9 |   0.3 |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+
  0.1  |  20   |    50    |  25  |   90  |    54  |  11  |   3.4 |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+
  1.0  | 200   |    50    |  25  |   90  |    54  |  11  |   3.4 |
-------+-------+----------+------+-------+--------+------+-------+


REFERENCES:
        Radio Astronomy, John D. Kraus, 2nd edition, Cygnus-Quasar
        Books, 1986, P.O. Box 85, Powell, Ohio, 43065.

        Radio Astronomy, J. L. Steinberg, J. Lequeux, McGraw-Hill
        Electronic Science Series, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc,
        1963.

        Project Cyclops, ISBN 0-9650707-0-0, Reprinted 1996, by the
        SETI League and SETI Institute.

        Extraterrestrial Civilizations, Problems of Interstellar
        Communication, S. A. Kaplan, editor, 1971, NASA TT F-631
        (TT 70-50081), page 88.


------------------------------

Subject: F.07 What's a Dyson spheres?
Author: Anders Sandberg <nv91-asa@nada.kth.se>

Freeman Dyson noted that one of the limiting resources for
civilizations is the amount of energy they can harness.  He proposed
that an advanced civilization could harness a substantial fraction of
its sun's energy by enclosing the star in a shell which would capture
most of the radiation emitted by the star.  That energy could then be
used to do work.

As originally proposed a Dyson sphere consisted of many solar
collectors in independent orbits.  Many science fiction writers have
modified the idea to make a Dyson sphere one complete shell.  In
addition to capturing all of the available energy from the star, such
a shell would have a huge surface area for living space.  While
Dyson's original proposal of a number of solar collectors is stable,
this later idea of a complete shell is not stable.  Without some
stablizing mechanism, even small forces, e.g., a meteor hit, would
cause the shell to drift and eventually hit the star.  Also, the
stresses on a complete shell Dyson sphere are huge and no known
material has enough strength to be used in the construction of such a
shell.

There have been searches for Dyson spheres.  Such searches typically
take place in the infrared.  Because the shell is trapping energy from
the star, it will begin to heat up.  At some point it will radiate as
much energy as it receives from the star.  For a Dyson sphere with a
radius about the radius of Earth's orbit, most of the radiation
emitted by the shell should be in the infrared.  Thus far, no search
has been successful.

Considerably more discussion of Dyson spheres is in the Dyson sphere
FAQ, <URL:http://www.student.nada.kth.se/~nv91-asa/dysonFAQ.html>.

------------------------------

Subject: F.08 What is happening with SETI now?
Author: Larry Klaes <larryk@cambridge.village.com>

Some of the following material is from SETIQuest Magazine, copyright
Helmers Publishing, and used by permission.  

Project BETA (Billion-channel ExtraTerrestrial Assay) is a radio
search begun 1995 October 30.  It is sponsored by the Planetary
Society and is an upgraded version of Project META (Million...).
(Actually META I; see below for META II.)  META I/BETA's observatory
is the 26-meter radio antenna at Harvard, Massachusetts.  Their Web
site is <URL:http://planetary.org/BETA/>.

META II uses a 30-meter antenna at the Argentine Institute for Radio
Astronomy, near Buenos Aires, Argentina, and provides coverage of the
southern sky.  <URL:http://seti.planetary.org/META2/>

META I/II monitored 8.4 million channels at once with a spectral
resolution of 0.05 Hz, an instantaneous bandwidth of 0.4 MHz, a total
frequency coverage of 1.2 MHz, a maximum sensitivity of 7x10^-24 W m^-2,
and a combined sky coverage of 93 percent.  After five years of
observations from the northern hemisphere and observing 6x10^13
different signals, META I found 34 candidates, or "alerts".
Unfortunately, the data are insufficient to determine their real origin.
Interestingly, the observed signals seem to cluster near the galactic
plane, where the major density of Milky Way stars dwell.  META II, after
three years of observations and surveying the southern hemisphere sky
almost three times, found nineteen signals with similar characteristics
to the META I results.  META II has also observed eighty nearby, main
sequence stars (less than fifty light years from the Sun) that have the
same physical characteristics as Earth's star.  These observations were
performed using the tracking mode for periods of one hour each at two
different epochs.

On 1992 October 12, NASA began its first SETI program called
HRMS---High-Resolution Microwave Survey.  Unfortunately for all,
Congress decided the project was spending way too much money---even
though it received less funds per year than your average big league
sports star or film actor---and cut all money to NASA for SETI work.
This act saved our national deficit by all of 0.0002 percent.

Fortunately, NASA SETI was saved as a private venture called Project
Phoenix and run by The SETI Institute.  It operates between 1.0 and
3.2 GHz with 1 Hz resolution and 2.8E7 channels at a time.  Rather
than trying to scan the entire sky, this survey focusses on
approximately 1000 nearby stars.  They began observations in 1995
February using the Parkes 64 m radio telescope in New South Wales,
Australia, and have since moved to the 42 m radio telescope in Green
Bank, West Virginia.  After completing about 1/3 of their targets,
they had found no evidence of ET transmissions.  More details are in
SETIQuest issue 3 and at the Project Phoenix home page
<URL:http://www.seti-inst.edu/phoenix/Welcome.html>.  The Web site has
lots of general information about SETI as well as details of the
survey.

Since 1973, Ohio State University had conducted a radio search with a
telescope consisting of a fixed parabolic reflector and a tiltable
flat reflector, each about 110 m wide and 30 m high.  Information is
available at <URL:http://everest.eng.ohio-state.edu/~klein/ro/> or a
longer version in SETIQuest issue 3.  The "wow!" signal, detected in
1977, had the appearance of an extraterrestrial signal but was seen
only briefly and never repeated.  However, the Ohio State University
administration decided to let the landlord who owns the property on
which Big Ear resides tear down the radio telescopes and put up condos
and a golf course instead.  OSU SETI is considering its next step,
Project Argus, at an undetermined location.

The UC Berkeley SETI Program, SERENDIP (Search for Extraterrestrial
Radio Emissions from Nearby Developed Intelligent Populations) is an
ongoing scientific research effort aimed at detecting radio signals
from extraterrestrial civilizations.  The project is the world's only
"piggyback" SETI system, operating alongside simultaneously conducted
conventional radio astronomy observations.  SERENDIP is currently
piggybacking on the 300 m dish at Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico,
the largest radio telescope in the world.  Information at
<URL:http://albert.ssl.berkeley.edu/serendip/>, from which this
paragraph was extracted.  SERENDIP operates at 430 MHz; more
information is given in SETIQuest issue 3.

Project BAMBI is an amateur SETI effort operating at a radio frequency
of 4 GHz.  See SETIQuest issue 5 and
<URL:http://wbs.net/sara/bambi.htm> for status reports.

The Columbus Optical SETI Observatory uses visible light instead of
radio waves.  The COSETI Observatory is a prototype observatory
located in Bexley, Ohio, USA.  Telescope aperture size is 30 cm.  More
information in SETIQuest issue 4 and at <URL:http://www.coseti.org/>.
Much of the work on "Optical SETI" comes from Dr. Stuart A. Kingsley
<skingsle@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>, who also maintains BBS on
Optical SETI.

The Planetary Society maintains a list of online SETI-related material
at <URL:http://seti.planetary.org/>.

And of course SETIQuest magazine, Larry Klaes, Editor.  For
subscription or other information, contact Helmers Publishing, 174
Concord Street, Peterborough, NH 03458-0874.  Phone (603) 924-9631,
FAX (603) 924-7408, Internet: sqinqnet@pixelacres.mv.com or see
<URL:http://www.setiquest.com/>.


Other references:

Frank Drake, Dava Sobel, Is Anyone Out There: The Scientific
  Search For Extraterrestrial Intelligence, 1992, Delacorte
  Press, ISBN 0-385-30532-X.

Frank White, The SETI Factor, 1990, Walker Publishing Company, 
  Inc., ISBN 0-8027-1105-7. 

Donald Goldsmith and Tobias Owen, The Search For Life in the
  Universe, Second Edition, 1992, Addison-Wesley Publishing 
  Company, Inc., ISBN 0-201-56949-3.

Walter Sullivan, We Are Not Alone: The Continuing Search for
  Extraterrestrial Intelligence, 1993, Dutton, ISBN 
  0-525-93674-2.

G. Seth Shostak, Editor, Progress In The Search For 
  Extraterrestrial Life, 1993 Bioastronomy Symposium, Santa 
  Cruz, California, 16--20 August 1993.  Published in 1995 by The 
  Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP).  ISBN 0-937707-93-7. 

The journals Icarus, <URL:http://astrosun.tn.cornell.edu/Icarus/>, and
  Astronomy & Geophysics often feature papers concerning SETI.

------------------------------

Subject: F.09 Why search for extraterrestrial intelligence using
	radio?  Why not <fill in the blank> method?
Author: Joseph Lazio <jlazio@patriot.net>

There are two possibilities for sending information to other
technological civilizations over interstellar distances: send matter
or send radiation.  The focus in SETI has been on detecting
electromagnetic radiation, particularly radio, because compared to all
other known possibilities, it is cheap, easy to produce, and can
travel across the Milky Way Galaxy.

Compared to radiation, most matter has a distinct disadvantage: it is
slow.  Radiation can travel at the speed of light whereas (most)
matter is constrained to travel slower.  Distances between stars are
so large, it makes no sense to use a slow mode of communication when a
faster one is available.  The speed at which spacecraft travel is the
primary justification why there is little effort spent within the SETI
community searching for interstellar spacecraft (that and the fact
that there is no evidence that there are any such interstellar
spacecraft from other civilizations in our vicinity).  A secondary
justification is that spacecraft are relatively expensive.  The launch
of a single Earth-orbiting spacecraft can cost US $100 million.  It
is difficult to imagine building and launching a fleet of interstellar
spacecraft for US $500 million, yet this is the estimated cost of a
next-generation radio telescope capable of detecting TV signals over
interstellar distances.  It is possible that future technology will
make spacecraft cheaper.  It is difficult to imagine a technology that
would make spacecraft cheaper without also lowering the cost of a new
telescope.

Although chunks of matter, i.e., spacecraft, seem a rather inefficient
way to communicate across interstellar space, what about a beam of
matter.   Most often suggested in this context is a beam of neutrinos.
Neutrinos are nearly massless so they travel at almost the speed of
light.  They also interact only weakly with matter, so a beam of
neutrinos could cross the Milky Way Galaxy without any significant
absorption by interstellar gas and dust clouds.  This advantage is
also a disadvantage:  The weakness of their interaction makes it
difficult to detect a beam of neutrinos, far more difficult than
detecting a beam of electromagnetic radiation.

(A beam of electrons or protons could be accelerated to nearly the
speed of light and would be far easier to detect.  However, electrons
and protons are charged particles.  When travelling through
interstellar space, the direction of their travel is influenced by the
magnetic field of the Milky Way Galaxy.  The Milky Way's magnetic
field has "small-scale" irregularities in it that would divert and
scatter such a beam.  The result is that one could not "aim" such a
beam in any particular direction [except possibly to the very closest
stars] because its actual path would be influenced by the [unknown]
direction[s] of the magnetic field it would encounter.)

The known forms of radiation are electromagnetic and gravitational.
Electromagnetic radiation results from the acceleration of charged
particles and is used commonly:  Radio and TV broadcasts are radio
radiation, microwave ovens produce microwave radiation, X-ray machines
produce X-ray radiation, overhead lights produce visible radiation,
etc.  Gravitational radiation results from the acceleration of massive
objects.  Gravitational radiation has never been detected directly,
and its indirect detection resulted in the 1993 Nobel Prize.  Gravity is
a much weaker force than electromagnetism.  Thus, detectable amounts
of gravitational radiation result only from events like the explosion
of a massive star or the gravitational interaction between two closely
orbiting neutron stars or black holes.  Again, it is possible that a
future technology might result in gravitational radiation becoming
easier to detect.  It is still difficult to imagine that it would not
also result in electromagnetic radiation.

Of the various forms of electromagnetic radiation---radio, microwave,
infrared, visible, ultraviolet, X-ray, and gamma-ray---only radio and
gamma-ray can cross the Milky Way Galaxy.  The other forms suffer
varying amounts of absorption by interstellar dust and gas clouds
(though they could still be used to communicate over shorter
distances).  Gamma rays are extremely energetic and are produced by
events like the explosion of nuclear bombs.  Radio radiation is far
less energetic.  Thus, to send the same amount of information requires
far less energy (i.e., it's cheaper) to send it via radio than gamma
ray.

The above are merely plausibility arguments to suggest why radio is
likely to be a preferred method of communication among technological
civilizations.  Of course, they may reason that they are only
interested in communicating with other civilizations technologically
advanced enough to transmit and detect neutrino beams or gravitational
radiation (or maybe even some undiscovered method).  If so, the
existing radio SETI programs are doomed to failure.  Nonetheless, it
does seem sensible to search first using the most simple technology.

------------------------------

Subject: F.10  Why do we assume that other beings must be based on
	 carbon?  Why couldn't organisms be based on other substances?
Author: Joseph Lazio <jlazio@patriot.net>

[A portion of this entry is based on a lecture by Alain Leger (IAS) at
the SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation 2000 Conference.]

As far as SETI, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, is
concerned, we do not assume that other being must be based on carbon.
In fact, SETI is a bit of a misnomer.  We are searching for
extraterrestrial *technological* intelligences, technological
intelligences capable of broadcasting their existence over
interstellar distances.  Whether the technological civilizations is
based on carbon or some other substance is largely irrelevant.  (Of
course, one might worry that intelligences based on some substance
other than carbon might have such different perspectives on the
Universe that, even if they broadcast electromagnetic radiation, they
would do so in a fashion that we would never consider.)

However, when one moves to finding life on other bodies in the solar
system or traces of life on extrasolar planets, there is a definite
carbon chauvinism in our thinking.  The most commonly mentioned
alternate to carbon (C) is silicon (Si).  It has similar chemical
properties as C, lying just below C in the periodic table of the
elements.

Carbon chauvinism has arisen because C is able to form quite
complicated molecules, in part because its atomic structure is such
that C can bond with up to four other elements.  Not only can it bond
with up to four other elements, but C can form multiple bonds with
other elements, particularly itself.  (Atoms bond by sharing
electrons, when two atoms share more than one electron they have a
multiple bond.  For instance, water is formed by an oxygen atom
sharing the two electrons from two hydrogen atoms.  In contrast, there
are many C compounds in which a single C atom shares multiple
electrons with other atom.)

A clear indication of the versatility of C is found in interstellar
chemistry.  Interstellar chemistry typically occurs on the surface of
microscopic dust grains contained with large clouds of gas between the
stars.  The physical conditions are much different than anything on
the surface of a habitable planet.  Nonetheless, of the molecules
identified in interstellar space as of 1998, 84 are based on C and 8
are based on Si.  Moreover of the eight Si-based compounds, 4 also
include C.

Thus, while there is definitely a C bias in our thinking, there is at
least some evidence from Nature supporting this bias.

------------------------------

Subject: F.11 Could life occur on an interstellar planet?
Author: Joseph Lazio <jlazio@patriot.net> 

This question has taken on increased importance with the discovery of
giant planets close to their primary stars.  It is thought that these
giant planets did not form this close to their host stars but
migrated.  (See the FAQ entry on the formation of the solar system.)
In general, the possibility of migration has alerted (or re-awakened)
astronomers to the possibility that a planetary system can change over
time.  If a giant planet migrates inward from the position at which it
formed, it can scatter terrestrial planets.  These terrestrial planets
might plunge into the host star or be kicked into interstellar space.
(Another possibility, though probably even less likely, is for a
passing star to disrupt a planetary system.)

What would happen if the Earth were kicked into interstellar space?
Life on the surface would certainly be doomed as it gets its energy to
survive from the Sun.  In fairly short order, the oceans would freeze
over.  However, the Earth is still generating heat by radioactive
decay in its interior.  Some of this heat leaks out through
hydrothermal vents on the floors of the oceans.  Thus, the lower
levels of the oceans would remain liquid, and the hydrothermal vents
would remain active.  Organisms that depend only on the hydrothermal
vents could survive probably quite happily for several billion years
after the Earth was ejected from the solar system.  (Indeed, since the
oceans will probably boil away in the next few billion years as the
Sun's luminosity increases, these organisms might prefer the Earth to
be ejected into interstellar space!)

For additional reading see "The Frozen Earth" by Adams & Laughlin,
<URL:
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=1999AAS...194.1511A
> and Stevenson, "Life-sustaining planets in interstellar space?",
Nature, v. 400, 1 Jul 1999, p. 32.

------------------------------
Newsgroups: sci.astro,sci.astro.seti,sci.answers,news.answers
Subject: [sci.astro] ET Life (Astronomy Frequently Asked Questions) (6/9)
Followup-To: poster
From: jlazio@patriot.net
Summary: This posting addresses frequently asked questions about
	extraterrestrial life and the search for it.
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU

Last-modified: $Date: 2003/04/27 01:49:47 $
Version: $Revision: 4.3 $
URL: http://sciastro.astronomy.net/
Posting-frequency: semi-monthly (Wednesday)
Archive-name: astronomy/faq/part6
------------------------------
This document is posted on the first and third Wednesdays of each
month to the newsgroup sci.astro.  It is available via anonymous ftp
from <URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/astronomy/faq/>,
and it is on the World Wide Web at
<URL:http://sciastro.astronomy.net/> and
<URL:http://www.faqs.org/faqs/astronomy/faq/>.  A partial list of
worldwide mirrors (both ftp and Web) is maintained at
<URL:http://sciastro.astronomy.net/mirrors.html>.  (As a general note,
many other FAQs are also available from
<URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/>.)
Questions/comments/flames should be directed to the FAQ maintainer,
Joseph Lazio (jlazio@patriot.net).
------------------------------
Subject: Copyright
 
This document, as a collection, is Copyright 1995--2003 by T. Joseph
W. Lazio (jlazio@patriot.net).  The individual articles are copyright
by the individual authors listed.  All rights are reserved.
Permission to use, copy and distribute this unmodified document by any
means and for any purpose EXCEPT PROFIT PURPOSES is hereby granted,
provided that both the above Copyright notice and this permission
notice appear in all copies of the FAQ itself.  Reproducing this FAQ
by any means, included, but not limited to, printing, copying existing
prints, publishing by electronic or other means, implies full
agreement to the above non-profit-use clause, unless upon prior
written permission of the authors.
 
 This FAQ is provided by the authors "as is," with all its faults.
Any express or implied warranties, including, but not limited to, any
implied warranties of merchantability, accuracy, or fitness for any
particular purpose, are disclaimed.  If you use the information in
this document, in any way, you do so at your own risk.
Jul 21, 2010-1 notes
Over 70,000 Blogs Mysteriously Shut Down (UPDATED)

Huffington Post   |  Bianca Bosker First Posted: 07-19-10 09:44 AM   |   Updated: 07-20-10 10:37 AM

UPDATE: In a press release, BurstNet has provided new information that sheds light on why the company shut down over 70,000 blogs hosted by Blogetery, a blogging platform.

“It was revealed that a link to terrorist material, including bomb-making instructions and an al-Qaeda ‘hit list’, had been posted to the site,” BurstNet explained.

In a previous email exchange, a BurstNet representative had said that “law enforcement officials” requested that Blogetery, and, by extension, the blogs it hosted, be shuttered. However, it has since become clear that BurstNet shut down the Blogetery of its own accord after finding material that violated its policies.

“Upon review, BurstNet determined that the posted material, in addition to potentially inciting dangerous activities, specifically violated the BurstNet Acceptable Use Policy,” the company wrote in a statement. “This policy strictly prohibits the posting of ‘terrorist propaganda, racist material, or bomb/weapon instructions’. Due to this violation and the fact that the site had a history of previous abuse, BurstNet elected to immediately disable the system.” 

CNET 
explains BurstNet CTO Joe Marr “said a Burst.net employee erred in telling Blogetery’s operator and members of the media that the FBI had ordered it to terminate Blogetery’s service. He said Burst.net did that on its own.”

—
Late last week, the Associated Press reported that “dozens of blogs by some of China’s most outspoken users” had been “abruptly” closed in China, notorious for its strict Internet controls.

But less attention has been given to another blog blackout—this time in the US: As CNET reports, some 73,000 blogs hosted by WordPress blogging platform Blogetery.com, were shut down last week byBurstNet , Blogetery’s web hosting company.

According to CNET “nobody seems willing to say why or who is responsible.” What is known is that BurstNet informed Blogetery’s operator, via email, that the its service had been terminated “by request of law enforcement officials, due to material hosted on the server.”

“Please note that this was not a typical case, in which suspension and notification would be the norm. This was a critical matter brought to our attention by law enforcement officials. We had to immediately remove the server,” BurstNet additionally told Blogetery (see quotes from the email exchange here).

A BurstNet representative told TorrentFreak that additional information on the shutdown of the blogs cannot be provided. “Simply put: We cannot give him his data nor can we provide any other details. By stating this, most would recognize that something serious is afoot,” the representative reportedly said.

Is this a copyright issue? TorrentFreak notes that Blogetery’s owner does “admit to handling many copyright-related cease and desists in the past, albeit in a timely manner as the DMCA requires.”

People on Twitter have voiced concerns over the shutdown of the blogs. One user, @Veribatim, tweeted, “I’ve been researching what happened. Either way tens of thousands of blogs who were not criminal were shut down. Not kosher.” Another wrote, “70k+ blogs shut down for no reason, no appeal; and people want MORE gov. control of the internet? #fail”

Jul 21, 2010-1 notes
Space clouds: a briefing

Take a look at the night sky this week and you will be treated to a rare display of noctilucent clouds

Patrick Kingsley | guardian.co.uk | Monday 19 July 2010 20.00 BST

    Noctilucent (or ‘space’) clouds over Northamptonshire in 2009. Photograph: Jamie Cooper/SSPL

    If you’re sleepless tonight – or indeed any time before Friday – look skywards. Each night, between 11pm and 4am, most parts of Britain will be treated to a rare display of “space clouds” – wispy blue-tinged streaks spreadeagled across the outer reaches of the Earth’s atmosphere.

    Known to scientists as noctilucent clouds, these natural phenomena are normally invisible. But in summer months – from late May to early August in the northern parts of Europe, America and Asia – the Earth tilts just enough to allow the setting sun to reflect off them in an impressive fashion.

    Though normal clouds are usually no more than a few miles above the earth’s surface, noctilucent clouds are found at heights of over 60 miles – and John Rowlands, who is studying them for Radio 4’s Material World science programme, says this is what makes them so special. “Night-time clouds are normally silhouetted against the sky,” he says. “But noctilucent clouds are actually luminous.”

    The clouds are pearl-blue at their highest tips, becoming yellow, golden and reddish the closer they are to the horizon. They are formed when ice particles in the mesosphere, the coldest part of the atmosphere, gather around the dusty residue of meteors – and then reflect the light of the setting sun.

    The further north you live, the more likely you are to spy a space cloud, says Nick Mitchell from Bath University’s centre for space, atmospheric and oceanic science. But, he adds: “Anyone can see them as long as they’ve got a clear view in the northern horizon – even people in cities. On 9 July I was in Bath and I saw some very spectacular ones.”

    Jul 21, 20100 notes
    USDA reconsiders employee ouster over race remarks

    NEWS
    By BEN EVANS and MARY CLARE JALONICK (AP) – 1 hour ago
    WASHINGTON — Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says he will reconsider the department’s decision to oust a black employee over racially tinged remarks after learning more about what she said.

    Vilsack said in a statement early Wednesday morning that he will “conduct a thorough review and consider additional facts” about his decision to ask Shirley Sherrod to resign.

    Sherrod, who was the Agriculture Department’s director of rural development in Georgia, criticized the administration for pushing her to resign Monday after a blogger posted an edited video of her saying that she didn’t give a white farmer as much help as she could have 24 years ago.

    Sherrod says her remarks were part of a story about racial reconciliation, not racism.

    THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration is standing by its quick decision to oust a black Agriculture Department employee over racially tinged remarks at an NAACP banquet in Georgia, despite evidence that her remarks were misconstrued and growing calls for USDA to reconsider.

    Shirley Sherrod, who until Tuesday was the Agriculture Department’s director of rural development in Georgia, says the administration caved to political pressure by pushing her to resign for saying that she didn’t give a white farmer as much help as she could have 24 years ago when she worked for a nonprofit group.

    Sherrod says her remarks, delivered in March at a local NAACP banquet in Georgia, were part of a story about racial reconciliation, not racism. The white farming family that was the subject of the story stood by Sherrod and said she should keep her job.

    “We probably wouldn’t have (our farm) today if it hadn’t been for her leading us in the right direction,” said Eloise Spooner, the wife of farmer Roger Spooner of Iron City, Ga. “I wish she could get her job back because she was good to us, I tell you.”

    The NAACP, which initially condemned Sherrod’s remarks and supported Sherrod’s ouster, joined the calls for her to keep her job. The civil rights group said it and millions of others were duped by the conservative website that posted partial video of her speech on Monday.

    “We have come to the conclusion we were snookered … into believing she had harmed white farmers because of racial bias,” said the statement from NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous.

    A White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said President Barack Obama was briefed on the matter after Sherrod’s resignation and stands by the Agriculture Department’s handling of it.

    The website, biggovernment.com, gained fame last year after airing video of workers at the community group ACORN counseling actors posing as a prostitute and her boyfriend. It posted the Sherrod video as evidence that the NAACP, which recently passed a resolution condemning what it calls racist elements of the Tea Party, condones racism of its own.

    Sherrod said she was on the road Monday when USDA deputy undersecretary Cheryl Cook called her and told her the White House wanted her to resign because her comments were generating a cable news controversy.

    “They called me twice,” she told The Associated Press in an interview. “The last time they asked me to pull over to the side of the road and submit my resignation on my Blackberry, and that’s what I did.”

    Sherrod said administration officials weren’t interested in hearing her explanation. “It hurts me that they didn’t even try to attempt to see what is happening here, they didn’t care,” she said. “I’m not a racist … Anyone who knows me knows that I’m for fairness.”

    The administration gave a different version of events.

    Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack — not the White House — made the decision to ask Sherrod to resign, said USDA spokeswoman Chris Mather. She said Sherrod willingly resigned when asked.

    In a statement, Vilsack said the controversy surrounding Sherrod’s comments could, rightly or wrongly, cause people to question her decisions as a federal employee and lead to lingering doubts about civil rights at the agency, which has a troubled history of discrimination.

    “There is zero tolerance for discrimination at USDA,” Vilsack said. “We have a duty to ensure that when we provide services to the American people we do so in an equitable manner.”

    USDA is sensitive to the issue because the agency has for decades faced charges of discrimination against black farmers who said they could not get aid that routinely went to whites. The department agreed to a final $1.25 billion settlement earlier this year in a class-action suit that has been pending for more than a decade. The payout of that settlement is pending in Congress, and Vilsack has made fixing past wrongs over civil rights a top priority.

    The current controversy began Monday when biggovernment.com posted a two-minute, 38-second video clip in which Sherrod describes the first time a white farmer came to her for help. It was 1986, and she worked for a nonprofit rural farm aid group. She said the farmer came in acting “superior” to her and that she debated how much help to give him.

    “I was struggling with the fact that so many black people had lost their farmland, and here I was faced with helping a white person save their land,” Sherrod said.

    Initially, she said, “I didn’t give him the full force of what I could do” and only gave him enough help to keep his case progressing. Eventually, she said, his situation “opened my eyes” that whites were struggling just like blacks, and helping farmers wasn’t so much about race but was “about the poor versus those who have.”

    Sherrod said Tuesday the incomplete video appears to intentionally twist her message. She says she became close friends with the farmer and helped him for two years.

    In the full 43-minute video of her speech released by the NAACP Tuesday evening, Sherrod tells the story of her father’s death in 1965, saying he was killed by white men who were never charged. She says she made a commitment to stay in the South the night of her father’s death, despite the dreams she had always had of leaving her rural town.

    “When I made that commitment I was making that commitment to black people and to black people only,” she said. “But you know God will show you things and he’ll put things in your path so that you realize that the struggle is really about poor people.”

    Sherrod said in the speech that working with Spooner, who she does not name, changed her entire outlook.

    “She’s always been nice and polite and considerate. She was just a good person,” Eloise Spooner said. “She did everything she could trying to help.”

    Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

    Related articles
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      Tonawanda News - 2 hours ago
    Jul 21, 20100 notes
    Calling All Future-Eaters

    SCIENCE / COMMENTARY


    http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/calling_all_future-eaters_20100719/ Posted on Jul 19, 2010

    By Chris Hedges

    The human species during its brief time on Earth has exhibited a remarkable capacity to kill itself off. The Cro-Magnons dispatched the gentler Neanderthals. The conquistadors, with the help of smallpox, decimated the native populations in the Americas. Modern industrial warfare in the 20th century took at least 100 million lives, most of them civilians. And now we sit passive and dumb as corporations and the leaders of industrialized nations ensure that climate change will accelerate to levels that could mean the extinction of our species. Homo sapiens, as the biologist Tim Flannery points out, are the “future-eaters.”

    In the past when civilizations went belly up through greed, mismanagement and the exhaustion of natural resources, human beings migrated somewhere else to pillage anew. But this time the game is over. There is nowhere else to go. The industrialized nations spent the last century seizing half the planet and dominating most of the other half. We giddily exhausted our natural capital, especially fossil fuel, to engage in an orgy of consumption and waste that poisoned the Earth and attacked the ecosystem on which human life depends. It was quite a party if you were a member of the industrialized elite. But it was pretty stupid.

    Collapse this time around will be global. We will disintegrate together. And there is no way out. The 10,000-year experiment of settled life is about to come to a crashing halt. And humankind, which thought it was given dominion over the Earth and all living things, will be taught a painful lesson in the necessity of balance, restraint and humility. There is no human monument or city ruin that is more than 5,000 years old. Civilization, Ronald Wright notes in “A Short History of Progress,” “occupies a mere 0.2 percent of the two and a half million years since our first ancestor sharpened a stone.” Bye-bye, Paris. Bye-bye, New York. Bye-bye, Tokyo. Welcome to the new experience of human existence, in which rooting around for grubs on islands in northern latitudes is the prerequisite for survival.

    We view ourselves as rational creatures. But is it rational to wait like sheep in a pen as oil and natural gas companies, coal companies, chemical industries, plastics manufacturers, the automotive industry, arms manufacturers and the leaders of the industrial world, as they did in Copenhagen, take us to mass extinction? It is too late to prevent profound climate change. But why add fuel to the fire? Why allow our ruling elite, driven by the lust for profits, to accelerate the death spiral? Why continue to obey the laws and dictates of our executioners?

    The news is grim. The accelerating disintegration of Arctic Sea ice means that summer ice will probably disappear within the next decade. The open water will absorb more solar radiation, significantly increasing the rate of global warming. The Siberian permafrost will disappear, sending up plumes of methane gas from underground. The Greenland ice sheet and the Himalayan-Tibetan glaciers will melt. Jay Zwally, a NASA climate scientist, declared in December 2007: “The Arctic is often cited as the canary in the coal mine for climate warming. Now, as a sign of climate warming, the canary has died. It is time to start getting out of the coal mines.”

    But reality is rarely an impediment to human folly. The world’s greenhouse gases have continued to grow since Zwally’s statement. Global emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) from burning fossil fuels since 2000 have increased by 3 per cent a year. At that rate annual emissions will double every 25 years. James Hansen, the head of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies and one of the world’s foremost climate experts, has warned that if we keep warming the planet it will be “a recipe for global disaster.” The safe level of CO2 in the atmosphere, Hansen estimates, is no more than 350 parts per million (ppm). The current level of CO2  is 385 ppm and climbing. This already guarantees terrible consequences even if we act immediately to cut carbon emissions.

    The natural carbon cycle for 3 million years has ensured that the atmosphere contained less than 300 ppm of CO2, which sustained the wide variety of life on the planet. The idea now championed by our corporate elite, at least those in contact with the reality of global warming, is that we will intentionally overshoot 350 ppm and then return to a safer climate through rapid and dramatic emission cuts. This, of course, is a theory designed to absolve the elite from doing anything now. But as Clive Hamiltonin his book “Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth About Climate Change” writes, even “if carbon dioxide concentrations reach 550 ppm, after which emissions fell to zero, the global temperatures would continue to rise for at least another century.”

    Copenhagen was perhaps the last chance to save ourselves. Barack Obama and the other leaders of the industrialized nations blew it. Radical climate change is certain. It is only a question now of how bad it will become. The engines of climate change will, climate scientists have warned, soon create a domino effect that could thrust the Earth into a chaotic state for thousands of years before it regains equilibrium. “Whether human beings would still be a force on the planet, or even survive, is a moot point,” Hamilton writes. “One thing is certain: there will be far fewer of us.”

    We have fallen prey to the illusion that we can modify and control our environment, that human ingenuity ensures the inevitability of human progress and that our secular god of science will save us. The “intoxicating belief that we can conquer all has come up against a greater force, the Earth itself,” Hamilton writes. “The prospect of runaway climate change challenges our technological hubris, our Enlightenment faith in reason and the whole modernist project. The Earth may soon demonstrate that, ultimately, it cannot be tamed and that the human urge to master nature has only roused a slumbering beast.”

    We face a terrible political truth. Those who hold power will not act with the urgency required to protect human life and the ecosystem. Decisions about the fate of the planet and human civilization are in the hands of moral and intellectual trolls such as BP’s Tony Hayward. These political and corporate masters are driven by a craven desire to accumulate wealth at the expense of human life. They do this in the Gulf of Mexico. They do this in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong, where the export-oriented industry is booming. China’s transformation into totalitarian capitalism, done so world markets can be flooded with cheap consumer goods, is contributing to a dramatic rise in carbon dioxide emissions, which in China are expected to more than double by 2030, from a little over 5 billion metric tons to just under 12 billion. 

    This degradation of the planet by corporations is accompanied by a degradation of human beings. In the factories in Guangdong we see the face of our adversaries. The sociologist Ching Kwan Lee found “satanic mills” in China’s industrial southeast that run “at such a nerve-racking pace that worker’s physical limits and bodily strength are put to the test on a daily basis.” Some employees put in workdays of 14 to 16 hours with no rest day during the month until payday. In these factories it is normal for an employee to work 400 hours or more a month, especially those in the garment industry. Most workers, Lee found, endure unpaid wages, illegal deductions and substandard wage rates. They are often physically abused at work and do not receive compensation if they are injured on the job. Every year a dozen or more workers die from overwork in the city of Shenzhen alone. In Lee’s words, the working conditions “go beyond the Marxist notions of exploitation and alienation.” A survey published in 2003 by the official China News Agency, cited in Lee’s book “Against the Law: Labor Protests in China’s Rustbelt and Sunbelt,” found that three in four migrant workers had trouble collecting their pay. Each year scores of workers threaten to commit suicide, Lee writes, by jumping off high-rises or setting themselves on fire over unpaid wages. “If getting paid for one’s labor is a fundamental feature of capitalist employment relations, strictly speaking many Chinese workers are not yet laborers,” Lee writes.

    The leaders of these corporations now determine our fate. They are not endowed with human decency or compassion. Yet their lobbyists make the laws. Their public relations firms craft the propaganda and trivia pumped out through systems of mass communication. Their money determines elections. Their greed turns workers into global serfs and our planet into a wasteland.

    As climate change advances, we will face a choice between obeying the rules put in place by corporations or rebellion. Those who work human beings to death in overcrowded factories in China and turn the Gulf of Mexico into a dead zone are the enemy. They serve systems of death. They cannot be reformed or trusted.

    The climate crisis is a political crisis. We will either defy the corporate elite, which will mean civil disobedience, a rejection of traditional politics for a new radicalism and the systematic breaking of laws, or see ourselves consumed. Time is not on our side. The longer we wait, the more assured our destruction becomes. The future, if we remain passive, will be wrested from us by events. Our moral obligation is not to structures of power, but life.

    AP / Maya Hitij

    “Melting Men,” a series of art installations created by Brazilian artist Nele Azevedo, has been adopted by environmentalists around the world to raise awareness of global warming.

    A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
    Copyright © 2010 Truthdig, L.L.C. All rights reserved.Web site development by Hop Studios

    Jul 21, 20100 notes

    From: www.itworld.com

    Security Secrets the Bad Guys Don’t Want You to Know

    by Robert McMillan

    July 19, 2010 —

     

    You already know the basics of internet security, right?

    You know to keep your antivirus program and patches up to date, to be careful where you go on the Internet, and to exercise online street-smarts to resist being tricked into visiting a phishing site or downloading a Trojan horse.

    But when you’ve got the basics covered, but you still don’t feel secure, what can you do? Here are a few advanced security tips to help you thwart some of today’s most common attacks.

    Remember, however, that security is all about trade-offs. With most of these tips, what you gain in security, you lose in convenience. But hey, it’s your computer. Be as paranoid as you want to be.

    Avoid Scripting

    This may be the one piece of advice that will do most to keep you the safe on the Web: Steer clear ofJavaScript, especially on sites you don’t trust.

    JavaScript is very popular, and for good reason. It works in almost all browsers, and it makes the Web a lot more dynamic. But it also enables bad guys to trick your browser more easily into doing something that it shouldn’t. The deception could be something as simple as telling the browser to load an element from another Web page. Or it could involve something more complicated, like a cross-site scripting attack, which gives the attacker a way to impersonate the victim on a legitimate Web page.

    JavaScipt attacks are everywhere. If you use Facebook, you may have seen one of the latest. Lately, scammers have set up illegitimate Facebook pages offering things like a free $500 gift card if you cut and paste some code into your browser’s address bar.

    That code is JavaScript—and you should never add it to your browser. “Scammers use this technique to open up unwanted surveys, fill your social networking profiles with spam or even to send you to phishing pages,” says Chris Boyd, a security researcher with Sunbelt Software.

    But miscreants can add JavaScript to hacked or malicious Web pages, too. To avoid attacks there, you can use a free Firefox plugin called NoScript that lets you control which Websites can and cannot run JavaScript in the browser. NoScript goes a long way toward preventing rogue antivirus programs or online attacks from popping up when you visit a new Website.

    By blocking scripting everywhere and then using NoScript to build a whitelist of trusted sites, you can derail most of the so-called Web drive-by attacks that currently plague the Internet.

    NoScript also comes with a cross-site scripting blocker. Cross-site scripting has been around for a while, but these days bad guys are using it more frequently than ever to seize control of online accounts on sites such as Facebook and YouTube.

    If you don’t use Firefox, you still have some options for cracking down on scripting. Like Foxfire users, Google Chrome users can disable JavaScript universally and then build a whitelist of sites where it’s permitted.

    Unfortunately, neither Internet Explorer nor Safari has a NoScript equivalent, but IE users can adjust their Internet Zones security settings to require prompts before scripting. And IE 8 includes new cross-site scripting protection to ward off some attacks.

    Disabling JavaScript in Adobe Reader can help, too. According to Symantec, last year nearly half of all Web-based attacks were associated with malicious PDF files. If victims had adjusted their settings to make it impossible for PDFs to execute JavaScript, they would have thwarted most of those attacks.

    To disable JavaScript in Reader, click Edit, Preferences, JavaScript and then uncheck the Enable Acrobat JavaScript box to the right of the window.

    The downside of all these defensive tactics is inconvenience. With scripting disabled in your browser, many animations, movies, and dynamic Web pages simply won’t work—and many users get frustrated by the never-ending cycle of opening a Web page, seeing that it doesn’t work properly, and then choosing to allow scripting on that page.

    The same holds true for Reader, where PDF-based forms may not submit properly if you’ve disabled JavaScript; nevertheless, many people don’t mind simply turning on Reader’s JavaScript whenever they need it.

    Back Out of Rogue Antivirus Offers

    Far too many people have had this experience recently: You’re surfing the Web on a totally legitimate site when a scary-looking warning message pops up suddenly. It tells you that your computer is infected. You try to get rid of it, but more windows keep popping up, urging you to scan your computer.

    If you do this, the scan invariably finds security problems and offers to sell you software that will take care of the problem. This is rogue antivirus software. The only thing the software does is put money into the pockets of criminals.

    Rogue antivirus programs have emerged as one of the most annoying security problems of the past few years. To the victim, the pop-ups can seem like an infection themselves. Every time you try to close a warning window, another one appears.

    Here’s what you do:

    First off, never buy the software. It simply doesn’t work, and often it will trash your system. Either press Alt-F4 to close your browser directly or press Ctrl-Alt-Delete to open your system’s task manager and shut the browser down from there. Closing the browser generally puts an end to the pop-up problem.

    Another way to steer clear of rogue antivirus attacks is to be careful when reading up on a hot news story. The bad guys follow Google Trends and Twitter’s Trending topics, and they can quickly promote one of their malicious Web pages to the top of Google search results.

    Google tries to control this activity, but when a breaking news story is involved, the evil doers are often one step ahead. “Cut down on the risk of being affected by only reading news sources you trust, or—at the very least—search Google News for news services you haven’t seen before,” says Sunbelt’s Boyd.

    Next: Use Less-Popular Apps; Verify That Your Programs Are Up-to-Date

    Don’t Depend on Microsoft Word or Adobe Reader

    They’re extremely popular programs, but Microsoft Office and Adobe Reader are not the strongest applications from a security perspective—especially when it comes to opening files that you think are probably okay but aren’t sure about.

    Most bad guys subscribe to a big-tent theory of troublemaking. When they plan an attack, they usually aim at the most widely used software programs, which is one reason why Windows gets hit so much more often than Linux or Mac operating systems.

    One way to stay a step ahead of them is to use less-popular apps that crooks target relatively infrequently. Many security experts open their PDF files in alternative readers such as Foxit Reader or PDF Studio. Similarly, ou can check .doc and .ppt files in OpenOffice. The downside is that, in a nonstandard application, files may not look exactly as they should. This drawback might make such apps unsuitable for daily use, depending on your needs, but even so you should consider using them to open dubious documents in.

    Use a Service Like Gmail or VirusTotal to Check Documents That You Do Open

    Why do security experts use alternative PDF and .doc readers?

    They’ve warned us for years not to open attachments that come from untrusted sources. Strange .exe files are a sure sign of trouble, but hackers have also found ways to break into computers by tricking users into opening maliciously encoded documents. The vast majority of these attacks take advantage of known flaws in older programs; but in addition, new attacks—called zero-day attacks—periodically pop up, exploiting flaws that software makers haven’t yet patched.

    By now you know to find an alternative document reader, but if that doesn’t work for you, consider adopting other methods to double-check documents and avoid viruses.

    One approach is to let Google do the checking for you. Forward attachments to a Gmail address, and Google’s filters will scan it for malware. Then, you can convert the document and read in Google Docs to see whether it’s legit.

    Another tip is to submit files to Virustotal. This free scanning service runs your file through 41 antivirus scanning engines. If any of the programs identifies it as malicious, Virustotal will let you know

    Know What Programs You Use, and Verify That They’re Up to Date

    The old version of RealPlayer you downloaded a few years ago may be nothing more than a security hole today. If you don’t use a program, consider uninstalling from your PC.

    To trim unwanted apps, visit the Windows Install/Uninstall section of the Control Panel. As a rule of thumb, if you’re not using a program, lose it.

    From a security perspective, every program—especially a widely used app—is just another path that hackers can use to break into your system. A useful security tool is the Secunia Online Software Inspector, which scans your PC for out-of-date software.

    But don’t stop there. On this helpful Mozilla page, you can check to see whether your various browser plug-ins—for Chrome, Firefox, IE, and Opera—need updates.

    It’s also a good idea to check your Facebook applications to make sure that you don’t have the Facebook equivalent of software bloat. While logged in, click Account, Application Settings, and see what apps you have installed. If you don’t use one, delete it.

    Sharpen Your Password Game

    People have to remember too many passwords on the Internet. Everyone knows this, but most of us get around the problem by using the same username and password over and over.

    Hackers know this as well, and they’re happy to use it against you. Often they steal a person’s password and user name, perhaps via a phishing attack, and then try that combination on other popular services—Facebook, Gmail, PayPal, Yahoo—to see if it works there, too.

    Luckily free and simple password management tools, such as KeePass Password Safe, are available to keep track of your passwords for you. They are a bit more work—you may tire of constantly jumping between a password manager and your browser every time you want to log into a Website, but remember that security always involves trade-offs.

    If you use the Firefox browser, you can try the KeeFox plug-in, which integrates KeePass’s password management with your browser. (Products like these “keep people on the good practice of having secure and separate passwords for everything, but keeps them from having to memorize them,” says Wesley McGrew, a security researcher with McGrew Security.

    Robert McMillan covers security issues for the IDG News Service.

    IDG News Service

    Jul 20, 2010-1 notes
    U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

    SCIENCE / COMMENTARY

    smartplanet.com / Smart Business / Business Brains

    By Joe McKendrick | Jul 13, 2010 | 19 Comments

     “[Indiana University professor Jonathan] Plucker recently toured a number of …schools in Shanghai and Beijing. He was amazed by a boy who, for a class science project, rigged a tracking device for his moped with parts from a cell phone. When faculty of a major Chinese university asked Plucker to identify trends in American education, he described our focus on standardized curriculum, rote memorization, and nationalized testing. “After my answer was translated, they just started laughing out loud,” Plucker says. “They said, ‘You’re racing toward our old model. But we’re racing toward your model, as fast as we can.’”

    - from a recent Newsweek report on Innovation, highlighted by Daniel Pink

    This selected passage from Newsweek’s recent piece oncreativity and innovation seems to say it all. Authors Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman point to some of the structural and cultural issues that may be getting in the way of the US’s ability to compete in the emerging hyper-competitive global economy.

    For example, US scores in the so-called “Torrance Test” — developed by professor E. Paul Torrance to measure children’s “Creativity Quotient” or CQ — have been falling over the past two decades. The test was first administered about 50 years ago.  “Creativity scores had been steadily rising, just like IQ scores, until 1990. Since then, creativity scores have consistently inched downward.”

    Bronson and Merryman call this evidence of a “creativity crisis” — but are we really falling short on our ability to innovate? Approaches such as crowdsourcing are opening new doors for innovation. Today’s organizations and society are desperate for creative solutions to problems. Why the decline? The article cites the fact that kids are spending too much time in front of video games. Another possible cause is the US educational system, which is hyper-focused on standardization and testing.

    Bronson and Merryman say that creativity can be nurtured and learned — as shown by various scientific studies of cognitive function. But educational institutions need to provide environments that foster creative approaches. And organizations need to baking creativity and innovation into their corporate cultures.

    The impact is being felt at the highest levels of business. A recent IBM studyfound CEOsinstilling qualities such as creativity into their organization’s operations are those that are seeing the best results in this crazy world in which we operate. The study, which summarized the attitudes and opinions of more than 1,500 decision-makers from across the globe, examined the habits of highly effective CEOs — called “standouts” — and found this group was much more likely to embrace qualities such as customer intimacy, simplicity and creativity.

    (Photo credit: Interior of the o2 Hotel, showing the concierge area, by Badudoy, via Wikimedia Commons)

    Subscribe to this discussion via RSS

    •  1

      gabriel bear

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      when “creativity” is defined by displays of post-deconstructionist angst, rather than a better moped, academics have no way to respond. racing towards abandoned models as a result of fear —which is the driver in “education reform”—demonstrates a failure in the testing model, since all those rising creativity scores of 20 years ago are now decision makers in education and governance.
      creativity, in my pov, is a function of purpose.

    •  2

      Jim Johnson

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      Standardized testing and paying for college

      many elementary and secondary teachers are now required to “teach for the standardized test”. There is little wiggle room to encourage the creative child to grow outside this regimen.

      Likewise, unless a child receives a full-ride scholarship, college financial aide sources currently have a disincentive to award any partial scholarship based on anything other than financial need. The current FAFSA punishes any other type. A bright student with only moderate financial capabilities must often accept a lesser educational opportunity and/or come away from school saddled with more debt than can be justified by potential income.

      We as citizens of this country will ultimately pay a price as other countries outpace us in innovation, and lost income taxes as people take on lower paying jobs than which they are capable of holding because they are undereducated.

    •  3

      abear4562

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      The reason is with ‘no child left behind’ they are teaching only to the test, and the creative kids never have a chance to express themselves. Get rid of NCLB, and use the standardized tests for what they were designed, that is measuring stick not a club.

    •  4

      drsmith@…

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      What happened? Computers and video games - that’s what happened. There is nothing creative about either. A video game is nothing but a maze that rats run through - and American youth have been transformed into domesticated rats. The computer and video games demand linear thinking. They are much more primitive than the human mind. In order to deal with them the mind has to ‘dumb down’. Add to that the so called ‘smart phone’ - yeah right, you now pay more than a thousand a year for that - and stupid ideas like twitter - life in 140 character bites - and what do you get? You get domesticated oxen who pull the wagon when they are told but can imagine how or why the wagon works.

    •  5

      bhartmann

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      Standardized testing detracts from creativity. Basing school funding on test scores assures that even if a school or teacher wanted to get a little creative, no good would come from it.

    •  6

      richphx

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      This sounds like another person wishing us to fail. Show some facts and not opinions.

    •  7

      Altotus

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      Its true fact you opinion that its opinion notwithstanding

      Standardized tests beget a response from the system not a good one. Creativity is eliminated as not a good thing its requires to much time when only standard scores count. Very simple minded solution applied by politicians who simply do not care about the consequence when they are courting the votes of the ignorant. * NO TIME * for anything else! Nothing else matters. Your performance is only a number on a report. That is all that can be learned in such a system that should be clear. This is fact; creativity comes from a larger perspective than 100 answers to 100 questions. No wish to fail, lol they passed the test! Its just that life is not a printed form so conveniently limited to a finite set.

    •  8

      Altotus

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      Oh yes

      No you should not worry after all the best politicians that money can buy say so. You do believe politicians after all they spend so much money using media to insure that you do. Is that a standardized answer? And don’t forget to vote.

    •  9

      rengek

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      I can tell you exactly why, though its only my personal observation and there is no scientific study to back it up but one need not be a genius to see why.

      In all forms of popular culture where kids pay the most attention in the 90s, there was a dramatic shift away from original content to repetitive rehash of the same old. Music was dominated by stupid boy bands and girl bands who did nothing but look like tramps. Movies, you saw nothing but sequels and tv remakes. Video games, all sequels and either first person shooters or fighting games. 

      Nobody in entertainment felt the desire to take a risk. There was no major tech innovation to spur creativity. Plus our kids are LAZY. They are fat, sit around and watch tv and feel entitle to stuff. Combine all of that, and you get the future, one big mess where we will play second fiddle to china.

    •  10

      KarrasB

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      Amazing intelligence in the comments. I have hope for our society 
      every time I read intelligent thoughts such as these.

    •  11

      stancube

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      As with almost everything in our society, fostering creativity (or not) comes down to funding. It’s rare in my local school district to find an elementary school that has full-time art and music programs. They are the first classes to get cut (either partially or completely) when the budget gets cut and are often seen as unnecessary subjects. Classroom teachers are safe because of the emphasis on core skills and testing, and even P.E. teachers are safe because of rising childhood obesity.

      The answer, drsmith, is not to abandon innovations like computers which are AMAZING tools for executing and expressing creativity. Nor is it to call people who use technology and services you don’t like “rats” or “domesticated oxen”, which just puts people off.

      The answer is to encourage people to be more creative and thoughtful in general, whether they’re problem solving at work, exploring a new video game, or tweeting about an interesting experience. This starts in elementary school where the benefits of art and music (and creative writing) aren’t as obvious as the benefits of basic literacy, but are important nonetheless for developing well-rounded students.

    •  12

      dwsimpso

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      I believe we have created an “atmosphere of complacency”.

      An increasing amount of the science and manufacturing jobs are going overseas. They are the really creative ones. Kids know this. Why strive when there are dwindling hopes of a good job?

      Software is where it’s at these days. It drives absolutely everything. But Software Patents have is to no one can create anything without being sued by dozens of companies. You cannot create a software program today without violation patents, whether you know them or not. Patent trolls. The cost of defending patents and products is astronomical. Only the large companies can afford it. Since innovation usually comes from small companies, you make it impossible for small companies to be innovative.

      U.S. companies screw their employees. Why should people excel when the company only wants to take from their employees and them fire/lay them off as quickly as possible.

      Large companies own congress. They create the laws that make innovation for the common person almost impossible.

      Yes education is important. But kids and teachers are smart. If you say “you win if you pass this test” then they primarily focus on that test. Any deviation is punished. You can’t say you want better education on the one hand but constantly punish with the other.

      Kids at told to be afraid they will bill be wiped out by health care costs they can’t afford. The increasing amount of nuisance law suits can wipe out their entire life savings. They know there will be no social security to help in their old age. So with so many negatives, how do you inspire creativity? they are being taught to be a conservative and non-creative as possible, and protect themselves at all costs. They know this.

      College costs are ridiculously high. I know education majors who have $20,000 loans from just state schools.. From the pittance they are paid, they will NEVER be able to pay it back. Engineering degrees can leave you with $50,000 for just average colleges. Great colleges can set you back $100,000 which you know you will never be able to pay back.

      We idolize professional athletes and entertainers above scientists, educators and engineers. 

      Answers: 
      1)get rid of software patents,
      2) keep high tech jobs in the U.S.
      3) pay and reward teachers well
      4) make college a right for everyone who wants it,
      5) make health care so it cannot wipe you out
      6) make Social Security something that is just that: security in your old age
      7) reward companies who treat their employees well and stress innovation.
      8) outlaw nuisance suits, like Australia has done.
      9) make role models of engineers, scientists and educators.

    •  13

      JohnMcGrew@…

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      We have a monopolistic Soviet-style educational system…

      …so we should not be surprised by the results.

      Meanwhile, instead of doing space exploration, NASA is sponsoring 
      video games.

    •  14

      Selabkram

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      They been falling for 20 years and it is only now that we hear about it? Who was afraid to mention it? Can you say…”Politically Correct?”. Children are being taught to keep their heads down and their mouths shut. College campuses are worse. Its no wonder they are tuning out and disengaging. We have too much ‘Imperial’ Science, and not enough Empirical Science.

    •  15

      kdlneal

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      Let’s see. We are seeing a decline in scores on a standardized test of creativity because (in part) of standardized testing. Hm. I do not disagree, anecdotally, that the appearance of creativity is declining, but I suspect that it is (in part) because the expectations for manifestations of creativity have not kept pace with the environment in which that creativity is manifested. We can easily see, and ‘measure,’ a decline in creativity because we are using archaic (uncreative) indicators.

    •  16

      A_Plato

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      This is quite an alarming article.
      I recently read a remarkable blog post on creativity and innovation — Google “the role of psychological distance in creativity and innovation” and have a read

    •  17

      mccarr

      07/14/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      Creativity doesn’t necessarily require massive funds. Often, the inverse. One thing does seem to spur creativity - need (“necessity is the mother of invention”.) - even more than greed. 

      The twentieth century saw a massive amount of innovation and invention out of a small island group in north west Europe. The Japanese Government noted that 25% of all the major inventions of the last century came from the UK, with the predominant amount coming from Scotland and the north of England.

      Most of these inventors were not “normal”; many would today be diagnosed as having Asperger’s Syndrome (arguably, an ‘evolution’ of humanity, as one ‘sufferer’ observed). To succeed, they were given the time and space to focus on their passion - “positive deviants” - and not being forced into a strait-jacket of society’s conventions. Arguably, the homogenisation of society is the biggest threat to creativity.

    •  18

      klaverd@…

      07/15/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      Can you say “Political Correctness”? When what you are allowed to 
      express or even think is limited to what is “acceptable”, all forms of
      creativity are affected. You can’t have creativity without freedom of 
      expression. Take off the blinders and let people look in other 
      directions, even if some of them scare or offend you… that’s how 
      you foster creative thought.

    •  19

      Valhalla629

      07/19/10 | Report as spam

      RE: U.S. ‘creativity quotient’ sinking: should we worry?

      When the schools with decent art programs are teaching the kids they cannot be creative because that is not what is expected of them we shouldn’t be wondering why creativity is expected. It seems parents are the only ones who can keep that creative spark going through support and encouragement.

    Jul 20, 20100 notes
    Treachery In The Gulf

    COMMENTARY - CONSPIRACY THEORY

    By Robbi Skye Campbell

    6-29-10 

    What has happened in the Gulf of Mexico was not by accident. It was most likely a design to support an agenda. What that agenda is we do not know exactly but I will try to connect the dots. We may soon know the true extent of its nature by the “solutions” our government imposes on the people in the Gulf area.

    There are some major problems:

    The Obama administration allowed BP to drill at an unstable site (highly over pressured) in 5,000 feet of water;

    BP CEO Tony Hayward dumped his BP stock 2 months before the spill;

    The well was kicking since they drilled into the production zone, so the drilling fluid or mud was underbalanced (mud weight not quite heavy enough for the upward pressure of the gas);

    Goldman Sachs dumped 44% of BP stock and went short on Transocean stock the day before the spill;

    The drilling crew knew that the annular blowout preventer was damaged and BP company man Kazula did not order it repaired;

    BP company man Kazula was a greenhorn on the Deepwater Horizon (he was inexperienced);

    The well was cased, cemented and had two cement abandonment plugs in place, so how could the well be kicking (trying to blow out)?;

    BP company man Kazula sent away the Schlumberger team (supposed to do the cement bond log to check Halliburton’s cement job on the casing);

    Despite this the BP company man made the decision to change the mud over to seawater (seawater is 40% lighter than the drilling mud). This is not logical;

    Shouting match between the rig superintendent and the company man. Superintendent felt that the order to change over to seawater was irrational and suicidal;

    During the changeover of the mud to seawater is when the blowout naturally occurred;

    President Obama stood by but did not take action for at least three weeks after the spill;

    BP and the White House allowed the spill to continue;

    The White House allowed BP to spray the highly toxic chemical, Corexit 9500, which is considered to be four to ten times more toxic than the oil itself. EPA told BP not to use Corexit 9500 and BP ignored the federal agency. Corexit is being sprayed at nighttime on coastal residences by the CIA-front, Evergreen Air (which reportedly also sprays chemtrails);

    Negligible cleanup measures on the shores and at sea; Barack Obama sent SWAT teams to production platforms and drilling rigs; Obama sent the Army and National Guard into the Gulf States  for what reason?

    Suppression of investigative reporting of the spill; BP arrested people taking pictures of the area; BP is allowed to reap the benefit of gathering oil rather than stopping the spill; Interests and livelihood of the residents suppressed and not considered in decisions; President Obama is using the spill to get the “Cap and Trade” bill passed; Twenty-two countries have offered their experience in spill control and cleanup but neither our government nor BP has accepted their offers;

    BP and Obama have declined to use non-toxic microbes as a clean-up measure;

    BP company man Kazula invoked the Fifth Amendment under congressional questioning of his orders.

    Where are the environmental groups? The Santa Barbara spill in 1969 was from an offshore drilling rig in the Santa Barbara Channel. It was a blowout on Union Oil’s platform A; over ten days it was estimated that 80,000 to 100,000 barrels of crude oil spilled into the channel and onto the beaches from Goleta to Rincon and all four Channel Islands. The oil spill prompted a congressional moratorium in 1981 on new offshore oil leasing with exceptions of the Gulf of Mexico and parts of offshore Alaska that remained in effect until 2008 when Congress did not renew it.

    This was the coming out of environmental groups. At the same time Friends of the Earth was heavily supported by BP, ARCO, and EXXON in its litigation against those companies to prevent the completion of the Alaska Pipeline until the price of oil was raised by the Ayatollah in 1978. Friends of the Earth then withdrew is lawsuit and the pipeline was allowed to begin transporting much more valuable oil.

    In 1989 we saw the Exxon Valdez spill which was the largest oil spill at 10.8 million gallons (250,000 barrels) when it hit the Prince William Sound’s Bligh Reef. Others estimated a far greater amount, closer to 30 million gallons. It was considered to be one of the most devastating environmental disasters. The tanker’s Rayas sonar was not turned on. It was broken and disabled for longer than one year and was considered too expensive to repair or replace. The environmental groups were all over them, and the media piled on.

    The Exxon Valdez crew was criticized for its slow response. The environmental groups were powerful and their voices were heard. In response to this spill the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA) was passed by Congress. It prohibited after 22 MAR 1989 any vessel that has caused a spill of greater than one million US gallons in any marine area from operating in the Prince William Sound. Even though the tanker involved in the spill was double-hulled, this spill resulted in all tankers ordered to be double-hulled. To this day, the spill affects the lives of the people living in the Prince William Sound area. The cleanup has not been successful; more than 26,000 gals of oil remain on the shoreline and the marine life has not recovered. Only 10% of the oil was recovered.

    Even though the environmental groups may have had some effect on the spill it was the community that took the full brunt of the accident. The Chugach Alaska Corporation had to file Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Losses included recreational sports, fisheries, reduced tourism and of something economists call “existence value,” which is the value to the public of a pristine Prince William Sound. The economy of Cordova, Alaska was adversely affected with damage to the herring and salmon stock. Several residents and the mayor committed suicide.

    Let’s take a look at what happened to the cleanup crew of the Exxon Valdez. Workers stood in oil foam for 18 hours per day. The boats steered through a hydrocarbon haze. The workers came from the area  fisherman and sportsmen suddenly jobless. They were hired by Exxon. They were treated for headaches, nausea, chemical burns, breathing problems. Many or all of them were never the same after working the summer for Exxon. Most of the workers died young due to lung disease (asthma, emphysema), liver, pancreatic and spleen problems. Workers went in 100% healthy and came out sick. Well and vibrant, they all became sick after a summer of hard work in Prince William Sound. There were thousands of workers affected by headaches, cancer, rashes, kidney and liver disease all the result of massive chemical exposure to the dispersants, solvents and crude oil mix. We may never know how many people were affected by the Exxon Valdez spill because Exxon and their cleanup company, Velco Inc., denied government investigators the medical records. 

     

    * * *

     

    Russia is another country that has had uncontrollable blowouts. They have had five cratered blowouts. They found that drilling a relief well that intersects the wild well and then placing and detonating a nuclear device (which slid the formation across the wild well bore, choking it off) were successful solutions.

    In 1963 the Russians had a horrible blowout that lasted three years spewing twelve million cubic meters of flaming gas each day. Albert Vasiliev (nuclear physicist and gas well firefighter) said, “We were acting like surgeons in last resort cases, but it worked.” The blowout sounded like 100 jet planes all at once. A nuclear blast choked it off. This method was found to be effective and they used it on similar cases. Vyacheslav Klishin (nuclear physicist, gas well firefighter) said, “One needs to tie up the well where the leak is. There are only two ways: 1. [A relief well to intersect the wild well, injecting mud and cement into the bore]; 2. A nuclear explosion.” The Russians and other countries are obviously alarmed by the Gulf catastrophe and have offered their experience and expertise in wild well control, but Barack Obama and BP have ignored their offers. We can only infer from this that our government and BP are not going to control the well. There is an agenda, but what is it?

    What will happen if the well continues to release 125,000 barrels of oil and at least 9,000 PSI hydrogen sulfide, benzene and methylene chloride gases each day? Benzene is the aromatic hydrocarbon component of crude oil, which is highly toxic and carcinogenic to boot. Acceptable levels are 0 to 4 parts per billion. In Florida, Alabama and Louisiana they have measured 3,000 ppb on shore! Hydrogen sulfide is allowable at 5 to 10 parts per billion. In the above states, H2S has been measured at up to 1,200 ppb. The allowable limit of methylene chloride is 61 parts per billion. The same states have found levels as high as 3,000 to 3,400 ppd!

    The oil flow in the Gulf is equivalent to the Exxon Valdez every two days. It will follow the currents of the Gulf of Mexico to the shores of Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Bahamas and the Caribbean. Russian scientists have said that, once in the Gulf Stream, it will drastically affect the fishing industry globally. There are millions of families that have made their livelihoods on fishing, shrimping and crabbing. The restaurant, hotel and sports businesses based on tourism will be affected. The chemicals have evaporated into the atmosphere and have condensed, falling on the plant life, farms and the entire environment surrounding the Gulf of Mexico causing corrosive lesions on plants and killing the birds. It is now raining chemicals in Louisiana.

    There may be more that it has affected so far but this is what we have seen on the Internet and YouTube. The currents move around the peninsula of Florida and along the East Coast. This will directly affect more coastal regions in a similar fashion as what we are seeing in the Gulf. We are nearing the hurricane season which will drive the toxic mixture inland. The toxic combination of oil, methane and Corexit will continue to have detrimental effects on our environment and humanity. It is a carcinogen. The hydrocarbon fumes and Corexit are causing symptoms which will manifest in diseases that will afflict plants, animals and humans.

    People along the coastal regions will become sick and die prematurely.

    * * *

    It is ironic that the moral and ethical guidelines for the United Nations’ Wildlands Project are based on the philosophy of “Deep Ecology.” Our government and BP are creating a famine by letting the blowout continue in its present state. As mentioned above, the EPA objected to the use of Corexit 9500 but Barack Obama did not step in to stop its use. Greenpeace has a boat in the Gulf of Mexico performing research. Research is not the first step that is needed in this life-changing disaster. This is the only NGO environmental group that I have seen in the mainstream media. They have not spoken out on the marine life that is being killed daily, nor have they made any statements on the use of the cancerous chemical Corexit. There is a report from the Sea Turtle Restoration Project that BP has stopped the rescue of Kemp’s Ridleys that were trapped in the oil. These sea turtles are being burned with the oil. Burning the oil releases toxic fumes into the atmosphere.

    We seem to be witnessing the collapse of the environmental organizations, none of which has an expected strident position regarding the worst ecological disaster that the modern world has ever known. Hasn’t it been their self-appointed responsibility to speak out? Are the environmental organizations taking money from the big polluters?

    Every step during this disaster appears to be controlled by an unprecedented amount of greed. Even greed does not figure because so much natural wealth is being destroyed. What is really going on here?

    Barack Obama spoke to the nation for the first time last week with confident assurances that the Gulf coast would be restored to its original condition eventually. There was no method mentioned. He has made four photo ops trips to the Gulf region, conferring mainly with BP and local leaders. He did not speak to the people who reside in the area. The last one I saw was a silent video showing Obama with a BP cleanup crew relaxing at a picnic table. A local resident commented, “The cleanup crew was there for appearances only; their garbage bags were empty. When Obama left, they got on a bus and left, too.”

    Why do we have a media blackout on a catastrophe that will affect the whole world? BP has hired the CIA-front company, Wackenhut, to patrol the shoreline and prevent reporters, residents and visitors from witnessing, describing and recording the damage. Private thugs are forcing the public off public beaches.

    In 1966, The Report from Iron Mountain asked the question: How do you duplicate the total control over the population in peacetime that you have during wartime? Written by Leonard Lewin and immediately branded a satire by government spokesmen, it nevertheless had the ring of truth. We have since seen all of its extreme programs brought to life by the US government. The most notable example is the 1992 Agenda for the 21st Century. Agenda 21 is a United Nations program but it was spearheaded and directly sponsored by President George H.W. Bush at the Rio Conference. President Bush promised the attendees that Americans would one day pledge their allegiance to the United Nations as he made Agenda 21 de facto US policy.

    Once in office, one of the first things President Clinton did by executive order was establish the Presidents Council for Sustainable Development. All aspects of life were covered, though no one in Congress complained or demanded hearings or any sort of debate. Seventeen years later we see Agenda 21 being quietly enforced in federal, state and local laws and regulations. Agenda 21 is the framework for world government, imposed on us by our own town and city councils, our own county supervisors. But it’s not called “Agenda 21” by the planners. It’s called “Sustainable Development.”

    “Sustainable Development” is a code word for world government. The term “world government” is a euphemism for merciless dictatorship. The excuses are the issues of environmental protection, preservation of water and anti-pollution. For example, most of America will be designated as “wildlands” and will be off-limits to Americans. After a severe reduction of the population, survivors will be highly concentrated into “Smart Growth” cities, stacked and packed into high-rise housing projects.

    By reducing the population to the numbers found around the Dark Ages (five hundred million), government control is thought by the planners to be manageable. To get down to five hundred million people from our present population of six billion people will require a ninety-two percent reduction. The reliable methods of population reduction we saw in the last century ­ Capitalist world wars and Communism  only achieved reductions in the hundreds of millions. Famine and genocide in Africa were not sufficiently destructive. Agenda 21 calls for the slaughter of five and a half billion people.

    AIDS has affected its target populations here and in Africa but the Bird Flu, Swine Flu, Ebola, Lyme disease, BSE (mad cow disease) have not taken the numbers wanted. These are all, in my opinion, government-created weapons. Government vaccine programs have not been successful in creating disease and mortality in the numbers needed. The right combination, however, of disease and famine could accomplish the goal.

    The oil flow, blown inland by storms, will create water shortages by poisoning fresh water sources. People who have been subsistence-living will no longer have ways to live as they had been doing for generations. Farmers will lose production due to chemical rain, thus creating food shortages and famine across America and possibly Mexico and South America. People living on seafood will have the most difficulty and may die off quickly. Oil residue has already been seen in seafood in restaurants and grocery stores. More economic alternative food sources will be sought as the price of seafood skyrockets.

    Genetically-altered food sources created by Monsanto will cause disease and early death. Already the use of Monsanto “suicide seeds” in America has adversely affected the honey bees. Our honey bee population has been drastically reduced. Scientists have found that the genetically-altered DNA has affected bee nervous systems, causing a die off, which is now called “colony collapse disorder.” Without honey bees, pollination ceases and this will be the end of a natural way of life.

    There will be migrations to urban areas as the coastal people lose everything that made their lives worth living. The “Smart Growth” collectivization of stacking and packing will begin. A single family home with a yard will be something of the past and longed for. Actually the packing of people into small areas will increase the spread of diseases and violence. Two of the tenets of Deep Ecology philosophy in the Wildlands Project are: The human population must be reduced; western civilization must radically change its present economic, technological and ideological structures. Independent entrepreneurs will be things of the past.

    To support the Wildlands Project we find the American Lands Alliance group and, at the state level, the creation of the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana (CRCL), which has turned into a land-grab with the support of the US Army Corps of Engineers and the Coastal Restoration and Protection Authority (CRPA). Here is how it works (from “The Louisiana Land-Grab” by Zack Walley):

    “The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers has moved to usurp traditional private property protections in Louisiana’s Atchafalaya Basin. In a highly questionable action the USACE has forced conservation easements on the properties of an untold number of homeowners, farmers, timber producers and sportsmen in a 338,000 acre area (equaling an area 10 miles wide and 53 miles long).

    In an attempt to avoid the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against land takings, the USACE attorney did not refer to these as conservation easements but called them ‘Flowage Development Control and Environmental Protection Easements’ (FLOWAGE) and used some really ‘new math’ to adjust the ‘fair-market value’ of the property down from $1,000 per acre to $125.”  

    Every day that BP and our government allow the oil to flow and the use of Corexit, more of the earth will be poisoned. The land won’t be worth a dollar and a quarter, never mind a hundred and a quarter.

    The marine life that does survive will be contaminated. Recovery of the areas affected is highly unlikely especially when looking at our past record in the Exxon Valdez spill. The use of cancer-causing Corexit has made this disaster many times more toxic than just oil alone.

    News reporter Kerry Kennedy says the people in the Gulf are experiencing symptoms of nausea, headaches and burning eyes. Didn’t BP learn anything from Exxon, or did they learn too much? No one is encouraged to wear respirators and rubber gloves because BP is worried about causing a state of hysteria, i.e., a state of awareness. The doctors do not know exactly how to treat the patients coming in since they don’t know what chemicals BP is using. Only band aids and aspirin are provided to the workers in the Gulf by BP’s company doctors. All I can say is that a majority of the Valdez workers were dead ten years later. The White House has not responded appropriately so BP as a corporation has taken control of the area without the consent of the people.

    Looking at the big picture does put a new light on who is expendable. White House chief of staff Rahm Emmanuel has said, “Never let a crisis go to waste.” And Obama says we are addicted to oil. (This from a man whose largest campaign contributor was BP) We would not have to be using so much oil if so many inventors of alternative energy and free energy had not been frightened off or killed.

    Obama’s first televised address to the nation was right out of the UN’s Sustainable Development handbook, the comprehensive plan to regulate our behavior via the federal, state and local levels of government, primarily the local level. This scheme has been enhanced until recently by the term “global warming,” which was necessarily modified to “global climate change,” since we now appear to be in a cooling period. Fortunately, the last climate change conference in Copenhagen failed to produce a new climate change treaty. At Copenhagen, some of the American conservation groups demanded a course of action that will lead to environmental disaster faster. BP is heavily tied to eco-groups like Conservation International and Nature Conservancy. Real science often is thrown out the window to accommodate the programs of Big Oil and Big Coal. This will only be tackled when the green lobbyists in the US stop taking cash from Big Oil and Big Coal.

    City Paper pointed out that BP spent “hundreds of millions of dollars” to “transform its image from that of a dirty old oil company into ‘Beyond Petroleum’  a company so environmentally friendly it had transcended oil drilling (and spilling) for happy, sunny and clean technologies such as wind and solar.”

    They also noted that the environmental groups “trumpeted their ties to corporations, arguing that these partnerships lead to better corporate environmental policies and less damage to the planet.”

    That’s exactly how the relationship between BP and Conservation International was framed by ABC’s “Nightline” back in 2002”.

    The main objectives are to end national sovereignty, abolition of private property, the “restructuring” of the family unit, increasing restrictions on mobility and individual opportunity. Barack Obama’s way to do this is with something he calls “Cap and Trade.”

    I must admit, for the longest time I did not know what “Cap and Trade” meant. Nothing in those three words suggests anything to do with ecology but “Cap and Trade” is an environmentally-based scam, an artificial marketplace designed to reduce pollution by paying people who reduce pollution with money from polluters. “Cap” refers to limits, or caps, on emissions. So, we would have an emissions trading system in which total emissions are limited, or capped. Permits would be allocated or auctioned up to the set cap on emissions and a market would allow polluting members who are emitting less than their quotas to sell their excess permits to polluters who need to buy “credits” to meet their caps. Which is all as totally phony as it sounds, and as totally phony as “man-made global warming.” The globe is warmed by the sun, or not, if it puts out less heat. Paying money or being paid has nothing to do with pollution or “greenhouse gasses.”

    What “Cap and Trade” does is to create more restrictions and controls on people.

    Some are asking, is there a hidden agenda behind all the foot dragging to the clean-up and to stopping the spill? At my local library, which covers Santa Barbara County, I asked the reference librarian to help me find anything on the Agenda for the 21st Century. What I found was surprising. There were no books, magazines or videos on this subject. The librarian found two brief articles and one review article not on the subject of Agenda 21 but on one aspect of it, the Wildlands Project. The buzz words “Sustainable Development” were used. Nowhere in the public library could one try to inform himself on the scope of Agenda 21. I suspect that this is the way it is throughout America. Agenda 21 is literally a hidden agenda.

    The policymakers have created innocent-sounding catch phrases to capture the hearts and minds of our educators and their students. It will be the students who are the spring board to making Agenda 21 possible through grassroots groups that will carry over to our city councils, town councils and county boards where the policies are made. All these “Sustainable Development” policies and regulations have stolen our soul for life for the communal good. These policies are destroying the soul of life. This is what we are giving up every time we accept these policies. The first point in the moral and ethical guidelines for the Wildlands Project is: All life (human and non-human) has equal value (a minnow is as valuable as man). What we are giving away is what sets man apart from all other animals, our souls.

    This is the most devastating disaster that we have known. It will affect millions of people in the Gulf States, the Eastern Coast and everywhere the Gulf Stream goes. Agenda 21 is not only for America it is international as a United Nations policy for the New World Order. But while we still have some tattered shreds of our Bill of Rights left, each of us who has an ounce of soul left needs to find out for himself and herself the full extent of Agenda 21 and how it will impact on your family’s life.

    Agenda 21 has been creeping through each town and city council for 17 years. The first thing to do is to take a good look at what is happening to the people who are living in the Gulf States and etch into our brains what will happen to your family in the near future. Our response to this must be to seize control of our local institutions, our town and city councils and county boards of supervisors and force the rejection of any and all programs, regulations and policies that conform to the United Nations’ Agenda for the 21st Century. Gulf Coast residents must demand non-toxic forms of clean-up such as bioremediation, i.e., oil-eating microbes.


    Robbi Skye Campbell, humanitarian environmentalist, medical doctor, medicine woman & artist

    askdrfeather@yahoo.com

     

    Jul 19, 2010-1 notes

    Plant flowers to help bees find food in summer Gardeners are being urged to plant more flowers that bloom during the summer and mow their lawns less often as new research is revealing that honey bees have to travel further to find food at this time of year.

    By Richard Gray, Science Correspondent
    Published: 8:30AM BST 11 Jul 2010

    A bumble bee hunts for nectar in a poppy flower in a Birmingham garden Photo: PA

    Summer is typically thought of as a peak time for flowering plants and insects due to the long hours of daylight and warmer weather.

    But preliminary findings of a study into the distances at which bees forage for food through the year suggests it may be one of the toughest times for them.

      In the spring bees seem to be able to find an abundance of flowers that provide them with nectar close to their hives, according to the researchers at the University of Sussex.

      But they fear changes in farming practices and the increasing use of flowers in gardens that are unsuitable for bees as a source of food, force the insects to travel up to five times further in the summer than they do in the spring.

      Although bee numbers in a hive are typically higher during the summer, the further they have to travel to find food increases the risk that the insects will get lost or die while foraging.

      It is also less efficient, forcing bees, which are have suffered dramatic declines in the UK, to work harder and take longer to gather food.

      Bee keepers are now calling on the public to grow flowers that can provide food for bees during the year such as clover, sunflowers, heather, lavender and cornflowers.

      They are also urging people not to mow their lawns as frequently to allow red and white clover, which is a rich source of food for bees, to blossom through the winter.

      Regular mowing of laws to keep the grass short usually lops off the ball shaped heads of these plants.

      Professor Francis Ratnieks, head of the laboratory of apiculture and social insectsat University of Sussex, said: “In the spring, flowers are highly abundant, so bees don’t have to travel more than a few hundred metres from their hives to find food.

      “Although the weather is better for foraging in the summer, the flowers that the bees feed on are no longer as common. The British landscape has become impoverished.

      “There has been a change in land use that is leading to fewer flowers. Fields of wheat and barley now have few weeds while fields of grass have few wild flowers and clover is used less due to the use of nitrogen based ferilisers.

      “Much of the heather moorland has been ploughed up or lost.

      “In August we have found the bees are travelling up to 10 kilometres while the average distance was 4km. The further they have to travel the greater the risk and the more time it takes for them to get food.”

      Professor Ratniek, his doctoral student Fiona Riddell and Dr Maragret Couvillon have been studying the foraging behaviour of honey bees by decoding the waggle dance that the insects perform when they return to the hive after finding food.

      Bees that have found rewarding patches of food communicate the location to others in the hive by vibrating their bodies while moving in a direction that indicates the location of the food.

      This “waggle dance” gives the direction according to the position of the sun and the length of the vibrations provide information about how far away it is.

      The researchers have spent the last year recording the dances of bees in three colonies kept in glass walled hives outside their laboratory on the outskirts of Brighton.

      They have then plotted the location of each food source on maps and visited the locations in an attempt to find out what the food source was.

      Although they still intend to study their foraging behaviour for another year before they are ready to publish any of their work, the preliminary findings suggest that the bees are travelling far greater distances in the summer compared to the Spring and Autumn.

      In March, the bees travelled an average of just 776 yards while in August they travelled 2.4 miles. In September and October the bees on average travelled around 1.2 miles.

      “There is a lot of ivy that blooms in the area in the autumn, so that may explain why they are not going so far,” said Mrs Riddell.

      Honey bee populations in England have declined by 54 per cent in the past 20 years while numbers of wild bees such as bumblebees have also plummeted

      The Sunday Telegraph is running a campaign to encourage readers to help Bring Back Bees by adopting hives and making their gardens more bee-friendly.

      The British Bee Keepers Association are also selling packets of seeds that will provide bee friendly flowers.

      Tim Lovett, from the British Bee Keepers Association, said: “The quality of flowers for bees to forage probably has gone down over the years.

      “Clovers are very good for bees, but we have people cutting their lawns every week and they are now brown and have no clover on them for the summer.

      “Lavender and heather are also very good for bees and produce good honey too.”

      Related Articles
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      Buy bee friendly flowers at the Telegraph Garden Shop

      Jul 18, 20100 notes

      Initial Jobless Claims Drop — Still Too High, But Approaching Magic 400,000 Mark

      Vincent Fernando, CFA | Jul. 15, 2010, 8:31 AM | 1,065 | 

       10

      Initial jobless claims for the week ending July 10th came in at 429,000, vs. 450,000 expected.
      This is better than expected, and beginning to move away from the 450,000 range we’ve been stuck around, but obviously still remains too high.
      Most economists consider the 400,000 mark conducive with strong overall payrolls growth.

      Department of Labor:

      UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE WEEKLY CLAIMS REPORT

      SEASONALLY ADJUSTED DATA

      In the week ending July 10, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 429,000, a decrease of 29,000 from the previous week’s revised figure of 458,000. The 4-week moving average was 455,250, a decrease of 11,750 from the previous week’s revised average of 467,000.

      The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 3.7 percent for the week ending July 3, an increase of 0.2 percentage point from the prior week’s revised rate of 3.5 percent.

      The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending July 3 was 4,681,000, an increase of 247,000 from the preceding week’s revised level of 4,434,000. The 4-week moving average was 4,581,250, an increase of 22,000 from the preceding week’s revised average of 4,559,250.

      The fiscal year-to-date average of seasonally adjusted weekly insured unemployment, which corresponds to the appropriated AWIU trigger, was 5.056 million.

      UNADJUSTED DATA

      The advance number of actual initial claims under state programs, unadjusted, totaled 513,347 in the week ending July 10, an increase of 44,855 from the previous week. There were 671,242 initial claims in the comparable week in 2009.

      The advance unadjusted insured unemployment rate was 3.4 percent during the week ending July 3, unchanged from the prior week. The advance unadjusted number for persons claiming UI benefits in state programs totaled 4,367,712, an increase of 53,180 from the preceding week. A year earlier, the rate was 4.6 percent and the volume was 6,173,940.



      Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/initial-jobless-claims-2010-7#ixzz0ty8uALW4

      Jul 17, 20100 notes
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