February 28, 2003

My page now runs php!

While few will notice the difference (or care), I converted my homepage from .Net to PHP for the heck of it today, thanks to the ASP2PHP converter. Sadly, I don't know how to port my XML quote app to php yet, so it's running from my MySQL database for now.

Sorry, Bill, .Net just wouldn't cut for a high-demand bleeding-edge site like mine :-)

Correction: rationalmind.net still runs .Net but rationalmind.net/David runs php -- which means that I can do some interesting speed tests...

Posted by David at 02:24 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 27, 2003

Check this out: Family of

Check this out: Family of electrocuted thief gets $75,000
I have no pity for the crook, but might there be an argument that the booby trap posed a danger to police, firefighters, etc? I think not -- the clearly posted signs warned them, and if that means that they have to let the place burn down, its the bar managers responsibility. If the signs weren't posted, then I think there is an argument for reasonable expectation of being able to enter a building to prevent crime/fires in a city.

Posted by David at 11:10 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 26, 2003

Random clips from the news...

Story 1: If antiwar protesters succeed

Story 2:

In Brooklyn, N.Y., Ron Dixon and his family were jolted awake by a noise early one morning.

There was a stranger in the house. When Dixon saw the intruder enter his young son's room, he grabbed his 9 mm pistol, and said to the man, "What are you doing in my house?"

Dixon says the burglar then moved toward him, and so he shot him twice.

The intruder survived. He's a career criminal who's been arrested 19 times. He's now being held in New York's Rikers Island jail.

Dixon has also been arrested and charged with "criminal possession of a weapon." He's threatened with up to a year in jail, because his gun was unlicensed.

Prosecutors want to put him in Riker's Island - the same jail where the burglar was sent. Head prosecutor Charles Hynes wouldn't talk to 20/20 but said of Dixon's case, "You get caught with a [unlicensed] gun in Brooklyn, you're going to do jail time."

Dixon will fight that in court March 11.

At the same time that New York Gov. George Pataki, to save money, plans to let criminals out of jail, prosecutors are trying to put Ron Dixon in? When the career criminal, who was in Dixon's house, got his first conviction, he got probation, no jail time. But Dixon has to go to jail?

Posted by David at 06:25 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 23, 2003

Check out the (very brief)

Check out the (very brief) book review of Atlas Shrugged I wrote for my OAC class.

Posted by David at 08:11 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 22, 2003

Check out the shirts I

Check out the shirts I designed for the Objectivist Club.
Sample:

I got criticized by several people for being "insensitive," "offensive" and "negative" with my design. I replied "Please explain what you find offensive about the phrase "irrationality will not be tolerated" and what kind of people you think will be offended by that."

Comments?

Posted by David at 02:13 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 21, 2003

Who's funding the peaceniks?

Ever notice how the media never mentions what groups are behind the protests? They make it seem like the protesters spontaneously come together in a collective orgy of anti-war sentiment, but as this WSJ editorial points out(subscription required, see one of the peacnik sites for their own list of backers), the case is far from it. Many leftist, environmentalist and plain Marxist groups are actually fueling this "popular movement." Here are some of the financiers (Saddam must have chosen to remain anonymous):

Anti-Capitalist Convergence
Americans for Social Justice
Black Radical Congress
Code Pink for Peace
Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism
Disarm
Ecological Options Network (EON
Green Party of the United States
US Peace Council
Greenpeace
House of The Goddess Center for Pagan Wombyn [sic - lol!]
International Socialist Organization
War Resisters League [gee, sound familiar?]
Socialist Party USA
Palestine Right to Return Coalition
Pride At Work, AFL-CIO
Nukewatch

and so on...see any trend here?

Posted by David at 08:29 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack

February 19, 2003

more stupid tricks by the peaceniks

iraq & kids
...and force us to march in the streets to support Saddam's regime!


anti war protesters

PEACE! ...let the doves fly!



and finally,
fight capitalism

what the protesters are REALLY about.

Posted by David at 02:38 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

the peaceniks are at it again...

Check out this photo of this weekend's protest in Houston, from the Houston Chronicle. See the token black guy in the center? (Why else do you think the paper choose a photo of him?) That's none other than Rob, longtime associate of Laurel and I and perhaps the most clueless philosophy major I know. Rob, I know you're a regular reader of my blog, so let me tell you now that of all the stupid slogans you could have possibly chosen, you picked the absolute worst one. "No Blood for Oil" would have been preferable to your "The World Says NO." The world's opinion (as if a whole species could have one) has no bearing whatsoever on whether than opinion is right or not - something I've been trying to hammer into your brain for the last few years. Seriously, there are legitimate and critical questions to ask before a nation goes to war, and while I believe taking out Saddam is necessary and just action, a discussion of these issues would be a
proper thing to do. However NONE of the arguments presented by these new-age hippies have anything to do with the real questions we should be asking (is Saddam a big enough threat to the US to justify the cost of taking him out) and everything to do with typical liberal moral subjectivism, pacifism, and a general distate of western values. There's really nothing more for me to add that I haven't already said in my essay The anti-war protesters: what are they for?.

Posted by David at 02:30 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 17, 2003

A day in the life of...

Check out the photojournal of my day at A&M!



Update: here are some more photos that I didn't get in yesterdat.

Posted by David at 10:28 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Fundies....

A few days ago, I was feeling argumentative so I sent off a scorching rant to an editorial by "Brother Kelly Boggs" a Creationist pastor (see letter a few blogs below.) I didn't really do it for their sake, and didn't expect a reply, but lo and behold, not only did "Brother Kelly" send be rebuttal, but so did a member of "The Baptist Press." The responses aren't really worth mentioning, since they missed the point of the email. The best part though was the "biblical evidence for why we should attack Iraq" in one of the emails (apparently supporting evolution and/or atheism automatically makes you a peacenik.)
Ah, bashing religious fundies by day and liberal wackos by night - are there any sane people left in the world?

Posted by David at 05:45 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 15, 2003

grrr

Someone stole my bike. They didn't just steal it, they snatched it between 6 and 8pm from outside my apartment, with me at home, the windows wide open, and my computer playing music. It was a really nice new and expensive bike too, that I had just been getting used to enjoying. I think any sentiments of what I think of the thieves or the College Station police department would be superfluous.

On a more positive note, I've been working on my art collection. On of the highlights is a gallery of bad art. Half of the pieces are famous examples of modern art, going for millions of dollars, and half are made by amateurs/kids/me. Which is which?

Posted by David at 08:18 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 12, 2003

Sea lions in the NAVY....yes, real ones

On a more positive note, Sea lions are being used to guard U.S. ships in Gulf. I think it's kinda cool: "the animals were trained to mark people but not to kill. The mammals can dive to 1,000 feet, swim at speeds up to 25 miles per hour, as well as see and hear better under water than any human or mechanical device the military has."

Posted by David at 10:14 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Some more thoughts on the Koreas:

MSNBC reports that much of North Korea's income comes from slave labor camps whose products are "filtered" through China and often ends up at U.S. markets. (I wonder if most libertarians support that as "free trade"?) North Korea has basically become one big slave labor camp -- one which many people are deperately trying to escape at the punishment of death (or worse.) As anyone but a Marxist would realize, North Korea's communist economy has been a miserable failure:

"At the end of the Korean War nearly half a century ago, incomes in the North were actually higher than in the South. Since then, average income and living standards have been falling in inverse proportion to their rise in South Korea. Now, according to CIA estimates, the average North Korean exists on roughly $1,000 a year, compared with $18,000 a year for South Koreans."
North Korea's fanaticism however, hasn't diminished:
"Refugees who were picked up in China just trying to make a living are likely to get six months' imprisonment in North Korea, but there is no crime worse than wanting to defect to South Korea.
"It is the severest crime," said one of the refugees who escaped last year through a foreign embassy in Beijing and did not want his name used. "Surely they will be executed. Or even if they are not shot, they will be sent to a political prison, and they will have to suffer there all the rest of their lifetimes, and they will die there."

Posted by David at 09:59 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

"Food Aid Said Diverted to N.Korea Military "

Regular readers of my blogger will know what I think of the groups that send aid to North Korea: they are guiltier of causing mass starvation and supporting genocidal regime than Kim Jong Il himself. If it were up to me, I would have those "humanitarians" sent to die in the labor camps with the rest of the peasants whose torture and slavery they are perpetuating.

The fact is, that without the massive material and diplomatic aid (of which US provides 68%) from the quasi-free nations of the world, North Korea would have collapsed long ago. If any more proof is needed that the sanction of the free world is keeping North Korea's regime afloat, Reuters news reported today that food aid is being diverted to the military instead of the starving peasants. Well, DUH! You don't to be a UN bureaucrat to figure that out. In a decisive condemnation of North Korea's actions, Tony Hall, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. food agencies said "We don't like that. The food is not designed for that. The food is aimed especially at women and children -- people who are hurting." Wow, thanks for clearing that up, Tony.

Meanwhile, Kim continues playing world leader like a fiddle to get his way, by threatening to build nukes, start a war, etc if concessions aren't made. (I'm not sure if the "non aggression" treaty North Korea is pushing for means that the U.S. will standby if the Kim attacks the South, or that we'll sell him arms to better attack the U.S.)

Meanwhile, the bloodsuckers at the UN keeping leeching more money from the productive men in America to support more and more despotic dictatorships abroad. "I can't remember in my experience of working in the humanitarian field when we have had so many crises at one time" says Mr. Hall, Leech #1. Perhaps it's time for a little self-examination.

Posted by David at 09:44 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 10, 2003

"Open letter to Brother Kelly Boggs, Pastor"

(This is in reply to Circumstantial evidence.)

Greetings,

Far be it from me to attack an argument for a war with Iraq, but your piece did not use the terms "theory," "evidence," and most importantly, "belief" properly. The proper approach to determining facts, whether it is the theory of evolution or Saddam's possession of WMD's is to apply the scientific process in order to reach conclusions -- not relying on "faith" or "refusing to believe" something.

In general, the proper method of reaching conclusions is by induction -- making observations about a large number of instances (concrete examples) and then forming a hypothesis (abstract idea) based on those observations. Based on the hypothesis, we make predictions about what the concretes should be, and once again apply that hypothesis to numerous concretes. If the predictions hold, one formulates a theory, if not, one tries another hypothesis. Given enough correct hypotheses, one forms a scientific model, and if the model is supported by a significant body of evidence, one forms a scientific theory.

Why do I bring this up? Well, the fact is that the great majority of people do not understand how this process works, and do not apply it to the various junk-science out there today. Take the common phrase regarding evolution: "it's only a theory." Well, so are the facts that the earth is round, revolves around the sun, and that volcanoes are not caused by angry gods. Like all knowledge, these facts are conclusions reached by forming conclusions (theories) based on observations. The distinction between facts and theories is important to recognize. As Stephen J. Gould explains: "facts and theories are different things, not rungs in a hierarchy of increasing certainty. Facts are the world's data. Theories are structures of ideas that explain and interpret facts. Facts don't go away when scientists debate rival theories to explain them."

This fact has important implications for some of the "pseudo-sciences" out there, like creationism and environmentalism. The difference between these pseudo-scientists and real scientists is that they pervert the scientific method by rejecting the need for evidence. No argument will sway their position because their beliefs rest on faith, not evidence. For creationists, the Bible is the absolute authority, and all scientific evidence to contrary is rejected or ignored. For environmentalists, their interpretation of what is bad for man (technology) is an absolute -- ignoring that it is in fact often the lack thereof that causes more suffering. Because no amount of evidence will convince someone who holds his beliefs on faith, we can reject their claims as soundly (and on the same basis) as the flat-earthers.

Please consider this next time you say "It's only a theory!"

Sincerely,
--David Veksler

Posted by David at 12:35 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 06, 2003

Yet another communist "utopia"

Check out these Satellite photos of North Korean prison camps.

Then read this: Death, terror in N. Korea gulag.

Posted by David at 11:48 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

This is interesting: "State computer

This is interesting:
"State computer with confidential medical data put up for sale.
A state computer put up for sale as surplus contained confidential files naming thousands of people with AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, the state auditor said Thursday."

I've been trying to buy up some old hardware from Texas A&M's surplus auctions myself. Wonder what info I'll find...

Posted by David at 11:43 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Microsofts and standards compliance...

Here is a quote from an email I sent out on the Brazos Valley Web Design listserv regarding Microsoft's lack of compliance with the W3C standards:

I think that it's helpful to realize that Microsoft's browser is in effect a de-facto standard, which by overwhelming user preference is preferred over the W3C-compliant Mozilla. If you think of MS as the U.S. and W3C as the U.N., it's easy to see that the "consensus" of a bunch of undemocratic, oppressive regimes is not any more valid that the individual judgment of the freest, richest nation on earth. The analogy is better than you might imagine, since both the US and MS are being derided precisely because of their virtues (freedom and successful products) by nations/companies that are failures precisely because of their flaws (tyranny/bad products.)

Posted by David at 04:03 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

The Antitrust Racket

Check out this blog from initium:

In 1977, Congress passed the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act, a law intended to make life easier for FTC and Antitrust Division officials in deciding which mergers to prosecute and stop. Under HSR, all mergers worth at least a certain value (approximately $50 million under the current law) must be reported to the government prior to consummation. This "pre-merger notification" grants the government a waiting period to decide whether they wish to act against the merger. In most cases, the waiting period is terminated early, and no official action is taken. In a handful of cases-less than 2%-the FTC or Antitrust Division will seek conditions to allow the merger or attempt to stop it outright. Such official action generally results in a "consent agreement," where the merging companies agree to surrender a portion of their assets to a third-party chosen by the government.

Every Hart-Scott-Rodino "notification" must be accompanied by a filing fee. For mergers valued at less than $100 million, the fee is $45,000; for mergers of more than $500 million, the price is $280,000. The fee is non-refundable, and the monies collected from said fees are what finance the $330-plus million of the FTC and Antitrust Division budgets not financed by direct appropriation.

In other words, the government is forcing businesses to pay for the very antitrust enforcement that is targeted directly against their interests. This is a classic racketeering scheme. A business is forced to pay protection money to a thug who could turn against them at any time.

Posted by David at 01:23 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Comment counts!

If you're a carefull reader, you've noticed that thanks to my genius :-) both Laurel's and my blogs now have comments. I couldn't figure out how to run code in dynamically-generated text, but I randomly came across a tutorial on Using JavaScript Includes to Manage Content and did just that!

Posted by David at 01:16 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

On Columbia

It seems like every single blog on the internet has an ode of some sort to the downed space shuttle. Not all are positive -- Laurel things that it's time to privatize (i.e. close) NASA because it's a waste of taxpayer's money. I think it's important not to confuse the spirit of discovery that allowed man to go to space, and the particular method by which that is being done today.
The International Space Station, (whose massive cost overruns may well have caused maintenance failures that caused Columbia to blow up) is a perfect example of the wrong approach to take to space exploration. The ISS is a typical result of multinational bureaucracies trying to make a political statement (under a scientific cover) and I could have told you with near certainty when this plan was just an idea that the true cost of the ISS was wildly underestimated. In an age when space tourism has become practical (as the Russians have shown) and commercial satellites are launched on a regular basis, a government-run space agency should stick to military applications, and leave the space exploration to businessmen. Skeptics will complain that there is not enough research money for a private version of the ISS, but I bet if the government allowed private enterprise to decide which areas research should go to I am sure that the results would be much better, even if a private ISS takes longer to build.

Posted by David at 12:08 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 05, 2003

Gotta love the UN

Charles Krauthammer of the Washington Post has written a great editorial about the U.N. He mentions how Iraq has been chosen to Iraq to Chair U.N. Disarmament Conference (with Iran as co-chair) while Libya, that great utopia of individual rights was elected to the chairmanship of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights.
Can the U.N. possibly become any more hypocritical? Next, I suppose North Korea will be selected to chair the Democracy Conference, and China to lead the Religious Tolerance Committee, and Cuba to chair the Economic Development Forum. Then, the five chairs can pass a resolution condemning the U.S. for terrorism, hostility to Muslims, human rights abuses, and trade restrictions. (And the libertarians, those great defenders of non-aggression would probably applaud the resolution for pointing out U.S. "imperialism.")

Posted by David at 11:43 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 04, 2003

bleh

My internet access (most of the city's in fact) was down because Cox Internet messed up. Grrr...this just isn't my week. I went to my ECON class today (more on that later) and realized that I had somehow forgotten to go to last Thursday's class...I've missed many classes during my 22 years, but I've never, forgotten about one.

I think I need a "mood" indicator....today's is "Highly Irritable"

Posted by David at 07:16 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

Check out my latest site!

My latest project:

Posted by David at 01:41 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

hacked

Someone hacked my server today. No, they didn't deface my homepage with some porn -- they got into my arg gallery and "ATH" decided to delete my collection of paintings by Tamara de Lempicka. Sadly, I didn't have a backup since that was it was recently added. How pathetic is that? Some peope hack Microsoft, IBM, CIA, etc, but these punks decided to go after my art. Anyway, with the database file safely out of the way (something I should have done as a precaution), this shouldn't happen again. Just shows that you can never be too carefull about your mission-critical...online art gallery.
Edit: They struck again, exploiting a vulnerabilty in the gallery code. I traced the attack to Montevideo, Uruguay (IP: 200.149.0.209) If anyone want's no snitch to ISP (yo no hablo espanol) it's http://www.telemar.net.br/

Posted by David at 12:39 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

February 03, 2003

Arght!

I lost my keys today. I got off the bus and unlocked my bike on my way to get some food but when I got to Taco Cabana for some burritos, the keys were gone. I retraced my path, but someone had definitely taken the keys in the five minutes it took me to come back to the bike rack. Needless to say, I was pissed. I was locked out of my apartment, unable to leave my bike anywhere, and my roommate doesn't come home till late at night. When I got home, I climbed on the rails of my second story balcony, removed the net, and forced the window open, jumped to the ledge, climbed up, opened the window, and barely managed to avoid breaking the computer I landed on inside. It took me five minutes just to clear of my desk enough to step on it, but thankfully, none of the neighbors called the cops for me. Unfortunately, I am still going to have to get new locks for my bike, and keys/locks for my door and bike. Grrr. Lets hope whoever has my keys doesn't use the Net much

Posted by David at 09:13 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack