Good News Everyone
House votes to block police from seizing legal guns in disasters
wow two futurama quotes on the front page…
July 22, 2006
Arr!… The Laws of Science be a harsh mistress
There is something that has bothered me for a long time now. It involves the understanding of Relativity. It seems that most people, even “educated” people don’t really understand one of the fundamentals of our modern “understanding”. There are endless theories and models based on this misunderstanding that I believe has it’s roots in math departments that don’t fully understand physics and vice versa…
Take for example the model of the time traveler. In this model one man leaves on a spaceship and travels at the speed of light away from Earth for a number of years… On his return he finds the Earth has aged more than he has. While it is a quaint writing device for sci-fi it no less has absolutely no basis in reality. From what I can gather from this supposed side-effect is really nothing more than a misunderstanding of the math. What would actually occur is this: One man leaves on a spaceship and travels at the speed of light away from the Earth. While traveling at that rate he looks back at Earth to see that it is frozen in time. In reality it is not frozen in time, but by the fact that he is traveling at the same rate as the light that left Earth, the light behind him can not catch up. Now let’s say he stops. The light now begins to catch up. He can now see his child waving at him when he left. Feeling lonely he decides to go home. He starts his travel back to Earth at the speed of light. As he watches Earth he would notice that everything he is seeing begins to speed up. This would occur because the light is now reaching him quicker. When he finally returns home Earth has aged at the same rate as he did. While it may not always appear so,Time is a constant.
Another take on that is the traveler going faster than light. Again things aren’t always as they appear.
Once people begin to undestand relativity then they will begin to understand more about the universe and it’s operation. Until then you’ll continue to hear about wormholes and multidemensional blackhole singularities and the cult of the string…
At some point I’ll go further into detail about the true mechanics of our universe and even give my Theory of Everything… but until then girls and boys… class dismissed…
July 18, 2006
You know your government sucks when…
Discovered this article about China’s move to spread propaganda online in chat rooms and forums…
fun with totalitarianism… my favorite excerpt…
“Beijing has created a special Internet police force believed responsible for shutting down domestic sites posting politically unacceptable content, blocking some foreign news sites and jailing several people for their online postings.”
“full article”
“Beijing — China has formed a special force of undercover online commentators to try to sway public opinion on controversial issues on the Internet, a newspaper said on Thursday.China has struggled to gain control over the Internet as more and more people gain access to obtain information beyond official sources. The country has nearly 100 million Internet users, according to official figures, and the figure is rising.
A special force of online commentators had already been operating in Suqian city in the eastern coastal province of Jiangsu since April, the Southern Weekend said.
Their job was to defend the government when negative comments appeared on Internet bulletin boards and chatrooms, the weekly quoted local officials as saying. Suqian city’s propaganda department recruited the commentators from among government officials, the weekly said, adding that they must “understand (government) policies, be versed in (political) theories and be politically reliable”. “They will guide public opinion as ordinary netizens. This is both important and effective,” Ma Zhichun, one of the recruited commentators, was quoted as saying.
Zhan Jiang, dean of journalism at China Youth University for Political Sciences, did not approve of Internet special forces writing anonymously on the Internet.
“It’s okay if they voice their opinions on the government websites as officials, but it is suspicious if they do it this way,” Zhan said. “It’s not good for the natural expression of public opinion.”
But city governments in at least three provinces were recruiting online commentators, the weekly said.
“We are not the first and won’t be the last (to have online commentators). The whole nation is playing the same game,” Ma was quoted as saying.
The Communist Party’s top disciplinary and supervision body trained 127 officials for such jobs last year to “strengthen Internet propaganda on its anti-corruption undertaking”, the weekly said.
Beijing has created a special Internet police force believed responsible for shutting down domestic sites posting politically unacceptable content, blocking some foreign news sites and jailing several people for their online postings.
In March, bulletin boards operated by the country’s most prominent universities were blocked to off-campus Internet users as part of the campaign to strengthen ideological education of college students.”