It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Birth Control
Quick some one tell the Vatican that their God practices birth control....
Galactic Birth Control: Unknown Factor Prevents Star Formation
Van Dokkum and his team hope to look back further in time, closer to the Big Bang, to look at the features of large galaxies then for evidence of star birth. They also plan to reexamine the galaxies in this study to try and figure out whether the black holes are in fact acting as “cosmic contraceptives.”
.....imagine the size of those condoms.
See:
Space
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Another Privatization Failure
The U.S. military loves to contract out to the private sector. It embraced the P3 model of Reinventing Government promoted by both Al Gore and the neo-cons.
Of course the failures of privatization of service delivery have been revealed in Iraq and the resulting failures of the U.S. government following Katrina. Now it appears there is another billion dollar privatization boondoogle in the works.
Bioshield dispute underscores problems with US defense program
The anthrax attacks of 2001 prompted passage of Project Bioshield, which promised to build national drug stockpiles to be used in case of a bioterror attack.
The project was supposed to jump start a national security renaissance among drug makers by guaranteeing contracts to develop drugs for combatting potential bioweapons. But it has been greeted with skepticism by many in the industry.
The anthrax project, the first and largest Bioshield contract, was to be the crown jewel.
In November 2004, the $877.5 million (euro690.2 million) contract was awarded to VaxGen to genetically engineer a replacement for the current anthrax vaccine, which requires six shots to be administered over 18 months. VaxGen's is expected to require no more than three shots.
Since winning the contract, however, VaxGen has repeatedly stumbled, starting with its disclosure it would miss the original deadline of November 2005 by a year.
Even before winning the contract, the company had a checkered past highlighted by the 2003 flop of its experimental AIDS vaccine, which failed to protect inoculated volunteers from getting infected.
Since then, it was dropped from the Nasdaq Stock Market for failing to file financial reports, its chief scientific officer left the company in July, and its stock price hovers near $4.40 -- at the low end of its 52-week range -- as VaxGen and the government try to work out their differences.
Then, in March, the government said it wouldn't pay VaxGen until the company completed a costly and time-consuming human test to ensure the vaccine was safe. The new requirement forced the company to sell its stake in another biotechnology company for $79 million (euro62.1 million) to stay afloat and finance the new test.
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Open Transparent Government
Not a chance, meet the New Government same as the Old Government.
Potentially embarrassing information requests "amber-lighted"
The Harpocrites are denying there is any such program. But denying it doesn't make it so.
And while we are at it how about making patronage appointments for old pals of the government like Harvie Andre. Who having promoted the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline when he was in the Mulroney government will now promote the Mackenzie Valley Pipeline as the negotiator for the New Government of Canada. Something he has a great deal of experince with since he has been lobbying for the pipeline as a private consultant. Wait a minute can you say conflict of interest?
Mackenzie Valley Pipeline
The latest round of pipeline fever began last October when former federal Conservative cabinet minister Harvie Andre unveiled an ambitious $8-billion plan to bring both Prudhoe Bay and delta gas on stream as early as 2005. Andre is a Calgary management consultant and the Canadian chairman of Arctic Resources Co. Ltd., a new consortium launched by a group of Texas financiers. They are proposing a 1,760-km pipeline, from Boundary Lake on the northern B.C.-Alberta border to the Mackenzie Delta, that would connect with a second 520-km line to Prudhoe Bay to be built offshore, in the seabed. Andre argues that the economies of scale realized by harnessing both the Prudhoe and delta reserves would significantly improve the rate of return for producers. He also maintains that, by planting the Prudhoe Bay portion offshore, the environmental risks identified in the 1970s can be sidestepped. "Twenty-five years ago, there weren't a lot of ocean-bottom pipelines," he says. "The technology has changed enormously and today there are thousands of kilometres of them."
Andre has been involved for months in talks with northern aboriginal groups and territorial government officials. So, too, have TransCanada and Westcoast. In addition to the original Foothills line, the pipeline giants are also actively considering the option of a pipeline through the Mackenzie Valley. "There's a lot of meetings going on," reports Nellie Cournoyea, chairwoman of the Inuvialuit Regional Corp., the body that administers the land claim reached by natives in the Beaufort Sea region in 1984. "The major companies are all in this area and we deal with them every day."
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Global Warming Worries Canadians
Global polling shows Canadians like the rest of the world are far more aware and worried about Global Warming than the politicians.
A Canadian poll in September showed that Canadians, unlike the New Government in Ottawa, are worried about global warming.
A month later we are still worried and we do not believe that the New Government will do anything about global warming.
Tories face environmental balancing act
Nearly two-thirds of Canadians believe the Conservative government will fail to take adequate steps to fight global warming, and blame the oil and gas industry for making matters worse.And a similar number 63 per cent are ''desperately concerned'' that the ''world may not last much longer than another couple of generations'' if drastic action isn't taken immediately.
The poll also found:
Almost 71 per cent of Canadians believe major companies with huge profits should be forced to pay more to clean up the environment, as opposed to taxpayers, even if it means driving them out of business.