Infinite Monkey Theorems 20100816

What’s going on around the web?

Jon Stewart on the “Mosque @ Ground Zero” (here).  Well worth the 6 minutes and highly illuminating.  While all news reports seem to state the same “Mosque @ Ground Zero” it’s more appropriate to say the truth:  it’s an Islamic Cultural Center close to ground zero – not on it.

Maybe it’s just me, but there seems to be a lot of faux outrage on this one.

@ ScienceBlogs.Com they have a bizarre reading of what they are calling a bizarre reading (here):

CNSNews, formerly the Christian News Service, has the most bizarre way to frame Judge Walker’s Prop 8 ruling that I’ve seen yet:

U.S. District Judge Vaughn R. Walker, who ruled last week that a voter-approved amendment to California’s constitution that limited marriage to the union of one man and one woman violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, based that ruling in part on his finding that a child does not need and has no right to a mother. Nor, he found, does a child have a need or a right to a father….

But if you go to the full article on CNSNews, they are specifically disputing claims the judge used in “finding of fact” papers, which ultimately were then used as justification for his ruling.

So while I probably don’t agree with CNSNews 99% of the time, they didn’t frame anything.  They didn’t make any assertions.  A judge, wrote papers which are now considered legal facts (as if a jury had made the same decision) & CNSNews responded directly to those papers.

Even if you disagree with CNSNews, I think the judge is the one who framed the debate, they just followed it by responding directly to them.

In Psychology news, apparently they’re running out of problems.   Even as the DSM has grown from 182 disorders and 34 pages long in 1968,  to 297 disorders in 886 pages in 1994 (via Wiki here), it’s not big enough.

Speakers on Sunday at the 118th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association have a new scourge to talk about:  super heroes in comic books (via EScienceNews here):

Watching superheroes beat up villains may not be the best image for boys to see if society wants to promote kinder, less stereotypical male behaviors, according to psychologists who spoke Sunday at the 118th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association. “There is a big difference in the movie superhero of today and the comic book superhero of yesterday,” said psychologist Sharon Lamb, PhD, distinguished professor of mental health at University of Massachusetts-Boston. “Today’s superhero is too much like an action hero who participates in non-stop violence; he’s aggressive, sarcastic and rarely speaks to the virtue of doing good for humanity. When not in superhero costume, these men, like Ironman, exploit women, flaunt bling and convey their manhood with high-powered guns.”

The comic book heroes of the past did fight criminals, she said, “but these were heroes boys could look up to and learn from because outside of their costumes, they were real people with real problems and many vulnerabilities,” she said….

Even if I were to accept the idea that everything they are stating is true in that a) today’s superheroes are giving superheroes a bad name & that b) this affects some percentage of readers – the numbers are still too low in my estimation to warrant further research.

I mean really, what exactly is the percentage of population who routinely read comic books?

& out of all of them, not all will be effected in the same way, while most will not be impacted either way (other than knowing the comic book material itself).

My point is that while figures aren’t easy to come by, we’re probably talking about less than 1 percent of the population who routinely read comic books and only a very small percentage of them will ever be overly effected by it.

Maybe it’s just mean, but seems like a waste of time and research money.

Side note: for a better understanding of the pressing issues facing pyschology today, there is a great article via FAQs.org via The Skeptic Magazine here.

Lastly, will Israel attack Iran (debate via The Atlantic here):

In the few days since the current issue of The Atlantic came out, Jeffrey Goldberg’s cover story, “The Point of No Return,” has already prompted sharp thoughts, big feelings, and intense discussion. Among the early responses, we’ve seen a quick, widespread recognition of scope of Goldberg’s reporting and the depth of his analysis. Fred Kaplan comments over at Slate….

I don’t always concur with Mr. Goldberg, but his analysis is spot on.  The question isn’t whether Israel will do it, but when (assuming Iran continues forward with their ambitions).  The possible results of Israel having a neighboring country whose leaders have consistently espoused the complete removal of Israel and all Jews from the area, puts them at a risk level where the alternatives are limited.

To put it another way – Israel’s government, the US government, the Russian government…. all of them have the primary responsibility of keeping their nation secure & a nuclear Iran not only makes Israel quite a bit less safe, but increases the risks of a nuclear bomb being released to a degree which is simply too high for Israel to ignore.

GM, Opel, US, Germany, Russia, & Iran

In a story that might have more than it appears, GM announced it will not go through with a deal it announced in early summer to sell their German division Opel.

The story really first appears as the auto company bail-out was in full swing in the US.  GM had pushed a reorganization plan that cut jobs in all countries.  With German Chancellor Angela Merkel getting pressure due to the global economic crisis and facing a re-election, Opel became more important than first assumed (@BusinessWeek):

….On Tuesday, though, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Opel was not a “system-critical” corporation. “There are system-critical financial institutions,” she told her conservative party’s parliamentary group, according to the Rheinische Post newspaper. “But there are no system-critical industrial firms.” It was Merkel’s indirect way of saying that Opel is less important to Germany than its crisis-stricken banks. Her statements were intended to counter earlier comments made by the head of the left-leaning Social Democratic Party that Opel was indeed “system relevant.” She added, however, that Opel should be given a chance to survive and that like all companies, it has the “right to apply for state aid.”…

It not only became more important, but Chancellor Merkel started treating it as imperative to re-election (@France24.c0m):

Just five weeks before German elections, leading politicians are putting pressure on General Motors and the US authorities to choose a candidate to take over GM’s troubled Opel unit. Angela Merkel has called for an urgent decision….

As the German government and GM Opel executives worked hard to save as many jobs as possible, they looked for potential investors.  They had competing bids, but finally accepted a bid from Canadian auto-parts manufacturer Magna, using money from the Russians (@Bloomberg):

May 30 (Bloomberg) — German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government chose Magna International Inc. as the buyer for General Motors Corp.’s Opel and confirmed a financing plan aimed at helping the money-losing unit avert insolvency….

…German state leaders and labor representatives have said repeatedly since bids were submitted on May 20 that they favor Magna’s offer, which includes as much as 700 million euros in investments in partnership with Russia’s OAO Sberbank. The plan also foresees a linkup with OAO GAZ, which said today it could produce 180,000 Opel cars a year at its main Russian site….

Now the simple truth is, that while Russia does have money, it has its own economic problems that would generally preclude it from loaning hundreds of millions of dollars for a fading industry.

But Russia’s decisions highlights aims that are well beyond helping GM’s European division.  Their goal was to use the split in US-German relations caused by, among other things, inflamed rhetoric from Ms. Merkel blaming US mismanagement on Opel’s problems, to increase its international influence.  It also lined up with Russia’s continued movement towards setting itself up as a competing power to the US and expand its control in the former Eastern bloc countries & Europe.

We can see Russia doing this in many ways, including Opel, but none as clearly as Russia countering any attempts from the US and other nations to help with sanctions on Iran (@USAToday):

MOSCOW (AP) — Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Tuesday that the threat of sanctions against Iran would be counterproductive, resisting U.S. efforts to win agreement for measures if Iran fails to prove its nuclear program is peaceful….

Russia has even gone so far as to state they will continue shipping fuel and anything else Iran needs if UN sanctions were passed.  Meeting with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Russia called any discussion or implementation of new sanctions to be “counterproductive”.

So Russia sees it’s relationship with Iran as a point of leverage to use against the US while it tries to expand its influence throughout the former Soviet Bloc and Eastern Europe, while the US sees Iran as a potential source of instability in the middle east.  Sure, the US has no desire to see Iran with nuclear weapons, but Iran does not have the technology to end with a weapon capable of really harming the US anytime soon (probably two decades away).

So the US’s main desire now is to protect allies within the region and minimize Iran’s potential at gaining enough power to potentially affect world oil supplies other than it’s won & the US needs Russia’s help.  Indeed, the decision to remove a missile defense shield from Poland and Czechoslovakia was likely a carrot dangled towards Russia to increase their cooperation.

Enter GM & Opel and GM’s recent decision to forgo the sale (@NYTimes):

DETROIT — The new board of General Motors reversed course Tuesday on the planned sale of its Opel division in Europe and decided that G.M. would retain and reorganize the business itself….

Now, it’s completely possible all this is just many, many coincidences, but with President Obama’s administration hand picking GM’s board, and the international decisions we know of – there’s likely much more here than first meets the eye.