Five Links That Are Actually Important, 11/30/08
1. Judge frees five men from Guantanamo Bay.
2. Serious healthcare reform starting to look plausible.
3. This is very late, for which I apologize: Transgender Day of Remembrance link round-up.
4. In an interview, Stuart Kauffman advocates a “new scientific worldview” that seeks to “reclaim God for nonbelievers.” (Via How to Save the World.)
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Black Friday.
A human being was trampled to death by a crowd of “shoppers” stampeding into Wal-Mart this Friday. He was thirty-four years old.
This makes me feel sick, but it does not surprise me.
Consumerism kills.
An Announcement And A Link
I’m writing this just before eight o’clock on Monday evening, but by the time you’re reading it — assuming you’re reading it on Tuesday morning or afternoon — I will be some 38,000 feet in the air, on my way to visit Emily in New York City. I don’t think blogging will be much affected by my trip, but if it is, you’ve been forewarned. We have planned a lovely week of museum tours and gallery visits.
Anyway, my girlfriend, Jessie, pointed me toward this bizarre video of an “alien-like” squid filmed very deep in the see. It’s freaky. I couldn’t even watch the whole video, that animal is so strange. Wow.
Glass Bottle Playing
Our dear friend Speed sent me this video of some very talented glass bottle players:
Neat!
Two Amazing Videos
Via Dark Roasted Blend, check out this video about an ant metropolis. At one point a entire colony is murdered in the name of science, so don’t watch it if that’s going to ruin your day. If it won’t bother you, though, do watch all the way through — you’ll get to see a huge ant city cast in concrete, revealing its intricate tunnels and chambers.
And again from Dark Roasted Blend, a very impressive speed stacking routine.
Wow!
Rat squads help to locate and eradicate land mines and tuberculosis.
Rats are being trained to do good:
In Mozambique, special squads of raccoon-size rats are sniffing out lethal explosive devices buried across the countryside, remnants of the country’s anticolonial and civil wars of the last century.
In neighboring Tanzania, teams of rats use their twitchy noses to detect TB bacteria in saliva samples from four clinics serving slum neighborhoods. So far this year, the 25 rats trained for the pilot medical project have identified 300 cases of early-stage TB – infections missed by lab technicians with their microscopes. If not for the rodents, many of these victims would have died and others would have spread the disease.
“It’s fair, I think, to call these animals ‘hero rats,’ ” said Bart Weetjens, the Belgian conceiver of both programs.
Support from the World Bank, UN, and various land mine eradication groups may encourage the spread of Hero Rat action to more countries, including Angola, Zambia, and Congo.
For both TB and land mines, the rats are trained to respond to the sound of a clicker; when the rat makes the scratching motion that means it has detected an explosive or the odor of disease, the handler or trainer responds by snapping the clicker, which means a nut or fruit is on the way.
So why don’t the animals just scratch every few minutes to win a treat?
“That would be human behavior,” said Weetjens. “Rats are more honest.”
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Making Visible Embryos
Via Morbid Anatomy (which is a really great blog!), check out this neat online exhibition: Making Visible Embryos. It’s an exploration of the many efforts, throughout history, to create visual representations of embryos and fetuses.
Some people — like Emily, I imagine — may find some of the images gross, but I’m sure I’m not the only to find them interesting, and some are quite beautiful. The exhibition chronicles depictions of the unborn from the 1500s to now, documenting five hundred years of evolving scientific and religious understandings of embryos and fetuses. It also includes a lot of information, which explains and contextualizes the images. You can click on any picture to see a large version and read details about the work.
As far as I can tell, Making Visible Embryos is a truly instructional (and artistic) work, not making judgments one way or the other regarding the status and treatment of embryos, and appropriately so. Highly recommended.
Early Thanksgiving Blogging
I am thankful that the genocide against my people is not celebrated annually as an official national holiday in the country that perpetrated it.
I continue to condemn this ritual, for a third time now.