...Run in Circles, Scream, and Shout.
Extracts from the StarTribune editorial page Tuesday, December 27, 2011:
"Don't experiment with public safety: Towns of Foley, Nowthen pursue dubious policing strategies.
If there's a crime occurring in your neighborhood, or a drunken driver careening through it, whom do you want to respond?
Someone from City Hall? A private security guard who can't make traffic stops, can't pursue fleeing suspects and can use a weapon only in self-defense?
Not likely. With rare exceptions, citizens expect professional law enforcement on the scene as soon as possible when life, property or a community is threatened.
But as the year comes to a close, two small Minnesota towns are on the verge of launching dubious public safety experiments that seem destined to fail these basic citizen expectations…"
"…For centuries, this has been considered one of the most critical responsibilities of local government, a key reason generations of political leaders have shielded it during previous economic downturns.
Foley and Nowthen citizens should also be alarmed that these small communities are bucking warnings from leading Minnesota law enforcement officials and are pioneering this on their own…"
"…The private force would have the power to make citizens' arrests only and could use firearms only in self-defense…"
"…Recent shootings in Grand Marais and Lake City are a reminder that serious crime happens even in peaceful rural communities. Foley and Nowthen shouldn't compromise on the protection citizens deserve."
I encourage you to read the editorial in its entirety.
My response, submitted as a commentary:
Regarding your frantic editorial, “Don't experiment with public safety: Towns of Foley, Nowthen pursue dubious policing strategies,” of December 26, 2011, this is not an argument about choosing whether to have a cop on every corner or giving in to frontier lawlessness. This argument is about whether or not a community chooses to pay extra fees for extra law enforcement staffing.
Residents not served by municipal police departments are entitled to law enforcement services from their County Sheriff’s Office. Service levels and response times are limited by the number of deputies on duty. Depending on the nature of the call, case load, geography, and weather a deputy may be minutes, hours, or days away.
Some communities choose to purchase supplement service – in the form of full-time or part-time uniformed deputies – from their County Sheriff’s Office. This practice creates a visible law enforcement presence and reduces response times. Of course many communities in Minnesota choose not to maintain a police department or pay for extra service from the County Sheriff. Whether funding the County Sheriff’s Office, a municipal police department, or purchasing extra service, public law enforcement has always been funded with local tax revenue.
Professional policing has only been the traditional means of maintaining public order in cities since1829. Before Robert Peel’s London “Bobbies” many communities granted constables limited law enforcement powers. The even older concept of a night watch was a civic responsibility frequently carried out by volunteers.
The small, peaceful communities of Foley and Nowthen have chosen not to pay extra fees for extra services provided by their County Sheriffs’. They have decided to experiment with an idea much like that of the old night watch. Paid protection professionals will patrol, observe, and report incidents of interest to these towns. If these security officers encounter a crime that requires immediate action by deputies with arrest authority they will call 911. These private security officers are not policing, they are providing security services.
Every day security professionals around the world, across the country, and throughout the Twin Cities protect employee populations many times the size of Foley or Nowthen. Even in urban centers security officers routinely accomplish their business objectives without special powers of arrest or the application of deadly force. Unlike relatively recent innovations like public policing, private security personnel have protected private property interests for thousands of years.
It is no surprise that public law enforcement administrators defend their vested interests when asked for advice on these issues. Law enforcement officers and their unions have a clear conflict of interest in this debate that should be obvious to all participants. It surprises me that the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office is at liberty to decide what sort of felonies and misdemeanors it will or will not respond to or eventually investigate. Perhaps this leverage is meant to entice the community to continue to pay for its subscription for added service.
Your lurid editorial closes with the non sequitur “Recent shootings in Grand Marais and Lake City are a reminder that serious crime happens even in peaceful rural communities.” How ironic that these tragic incidents occurred in communities – and in the case of Grand Marais, within the Cook County Courthouse – where the traditional public policing model is still in use.
If Foley and Nowthen are notorious hotbeds of violent criminal activity and public disorder, I have not heard of it, but if the elected representatives in these communities see the need for the sort of services only a sworn law enforcement officer can provide, then they will have find a way to pay for the service. In the meantime the idea of a professional night watch is an interesting one worthy of close examination as we all strive to do enough with less.
UPDATE: The StarTribune published my commentary Thursday December 29, 2011, as an editorial counterpoint titled There is more than one way to protect a town. The minor editorial changes they made are subtle, but interesting. Neat.
Reupdate: Be sure to click on the comments tab. I've taken some shots there by posters challenging my own objectivity, conflicts of interest, and biases. This one is my favorite:
"It is no surprise that public law enforcement administrators defend their vested interests when asked for advice on these issues."
We can't all be as objective as a director at a private security firm.
Thank you, theoko. Well played!
Photo credit: http://www.ci.foley.mn.us/About.aspx
Thursday, December 29, 2011
When In Danger, Fear, or Doubt...
Labels:
civics,
critical thinking,
ethics,
history,
law,
leadership,
politics,
risk,
security,
service
Satirical, Sarcastic, Snarky, or Hilarious?
"An Open Apology to Amy Koch on Behalf of All Gay and Lesbian Minnesotans" is all of the above...
I hadn't though much about Minnesota Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch's political troubles arising from her "inappropriate relationship" until John Medeiros' open letter reminded me that Koch was active in the effort to deny the benefits of matrimony to gay and lesbian citizens. Infidelity is the ruin of many a family and I feel badly for the innocent bystanders harmed by the actions of Koch and her paramour. Still, one wonders if damaging her marriage with heterosexual hijinks has given her any pause with regard to her commitment to protecting the institution of marriage from homosexual commitments to fidelity.
I hadn't though much about Minnesota Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch's political troubles arising from her "inappropriate relationship" until John Medeiros' open letter reminded me that Koch was active in the effort to deny the benefits of matrimony to gay and lesbian citizens. Infidelity is the ruin of many a family and I feel badly for the innocent bystanders harmed by the actions of Koch and her paramour. Still, one wonders if damaging her marriage with heterosexual hijinks has given her any pause with regard to her commitment to protecting the institution of marriage from homosexual commitments to fidelity.
Labels:
civics,
ethics,
leadership,
politics,
religion
The Four Stupids Rule
Courtesy of Steve Ashburn's Paladin Security Strategies blog...
Which I have added to my follow list.
The Four Stupids Rule reminds me of Larry Niven's shorter and coarser Niven's Law 1a and 1b, which is a good thing.
Which I have added to my follow list.
The Four Stupids Rule reminds me of Larry Niven's shorter and coarser Niven's Law 1a and 1b, which is a good thing.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
We Are What We Eat
And I consume a lot of podcasts...
My tastes are varied; I listen to astronomy and science presentations, and to current political events in lectures from the RSA, the LSE, and Gresham College (all UK productions, though I am no Anglophile). I also listen to religious topics; more on that in a moment. But most often find myself listening to skeptical podcasts: For Good Reason, Point of Inquiry, Quackcast, Righteous Indignation, Skeptics With a K, Skepticality, Skeptoid, The Skeptic Zone, The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe, and Token Skeptic.
Skepticism is an interesting term and an unconventional hobby. Most skeptics are not practicing scientists, though many good ones are medical doctors. Most skeptics are not educators, but many engage in public outreach intended to popularize critical thinking and science literacy. Many, if not most skeptics are atheists, but not all aim their critical thinking toward religious topics. There a some skeptics who have hijacked the title to support their denialism of anthropogenic global warming or the efficacy of vaccinations. There are some who regard skeptics as cynics or reflexive debunkers or both.
I listen to a variety of topics from a variety of perspectives because to do otherwise is to invite confirmation bias, tunnel vision, and stagnation. I still listen to On Being, but the rebranding seems to have taken even more of the edge off the extremely even-handed work done by Krista Tippett when the show was called Speaking of Faith. I listen to Reasonable Faith and Unbelievable religion podcasts precisely because I disagree with the hosts on most all issues. If all I listened to was Reasonable Doubts and Chariots of Iron I might find reinforcement for my worldview, but I want to be careful not to climb into an echo chamber and then lock the door from inside. We all know people who have done that, but how many of us are aware that we run the same risk ourselves?
Recently I added two podcasts to my listening queue. MonsterTalk (an official podcast of Skeptic magazine, as is Skepticality) takes a skeptical view of cryptozoology (Nessie, sasquatch, the chupacabra, that sort of thing). It features, among others, Karen Stollznow, who is also one of the hosts at Point of Inquiry.
The other new podcast is especially challenging. Skeptiko is hosted by Alex Tsakiris. His proposed agenda:
"Figure stuff out. Dig into the research data. Explore the possibility that the existing materialistic paradigm might be overturned (and may already be at a tipping point). Talk to really smart people on both sides of the issues. Treat all guests with respect."
Mr. Tsakaris is deeply interested in phenomena such as NDE, OBE, ESP, PSI, PK, and other parapsychology topics. He regards himself as a skeptic of the "existing materialistic paradigm" but most of the time he comes off as a poster child for confirmation bias. Interestingly, Tsakaris is no fan of organized religion or evangelical Christianity, but regards parapsychological phenomena as proof of the existence of the soul and evidence that the mind survives death. He is prone to describe anecdotes and case studies of untestable and unverifiable phenomena as data and evidence.
So why do I listen? Certainly to keep my wits sharp, to make sure my baloney detector is working, and to keep my argumentum armamentarium well stocked. But also to make certain that I do not become set in my ways of thought, that I remain open to new ideas, and the lenses, filters, and blinders of my worldview do not interfere with perceiving my slice of reality as accurately as possible.
Skepticism is an interesting term and an unconventional hobby. Most skeptics are not practicing scientists, though many good ones are medical doctors. Most skeptics are not educators, but many engage in public outreach intended to popularize critical thinking and science literacy. Many, if not most skeptics are atheists, but not all aim their critical thinking toward religious topics. There a some skeptics who have hijacked the title to support their denialism of anthropogenic global warming or the efficacy of vaccinations. There are some who regard skeptics as cynics or reflexive debunkers or both.
I listen to a variety of topics from a variety of perspectives because to do otherwise is to invite confirmation bias, tunnel vision, and stagnation. I still listen to On Being, but the rebranding seems to have taken even more of the edge off the extremely even-handed work done by Krista Tippett when the show was called Speaking of Faith. I listen to Reasonable Faith and Unbelievable religion podcasts precisely because I disagree with the hosts on most all issues. If all I listened to was Reasonable Doubts and Chariots of Iron I might find reinforcement for my worldview, but I want to be careful not to climb into an echo chamber and then lock the door from inside. We all know people who have done that, but how many of us are aware that we run the same risk ourselves?
Recently I added two podcasts to my listening queue. MonsterTalk (an official podcast of Skeptic magazine, as is Skepticality) takes a skeptical view of cryptozoology (Nessie, sasquatch, the chupacabra, that sort of thing). It features, among others, Karen Stollznow, who is also one of the hosts at Point of Inquiry.
The other new podcast is especially challenging. Skeptiko is hosted by Alex Tsakiris. His proposed agenda:
"Figure stuff out. Dig into the research data. Explore the possibility that the existing materialistic paradigm might be overturned (and may already be at a tipping point). Talk to really smart people on both sides of the issues. Treat all guests with respect."
Mr. Tsakaris is deeply interested in phenomena such as NDE, OBE, ESP, PSI, PK, and other parapsychology topics. He regards himself as a skeptic of the "existing materialistic paradigm" but most of the time he comes off as a poster child for confirmation bias. Interestingly, Tsakaris is no fan of organized religion or evangelical Christianity, but regards parapsychological phenomena as proof of the existence of the soul and evidence that the mind survives death. He is prone to describe anecdotes and case studies of untestable and unverifiable phenomena as data and evidence.
So why do I listen? Certainly to keep my wits sharp, to make sure my baloney detector is working, and to keep my argumentum armamentarium well stocked. But also to make certain that I do not become set in my ways of thought, that I remain open to new ideas, and the lenses, filters, and blinders of my worldview do not interfere with perceiving my slice of reality as accurately as possible.
Labels:
civics,
critical thinking,
ethics,
history,
leadership,
religion,
science,
service
Monday, December 26, 2011
Forbes on Leadership
5 Leadership Tips for 2012 leads to other leadership ideas...
Mike Myatt, author of Leadership Matters...The CEO Survival Manual, has some simple ways to improve your life in 2012. His post is worth reading even if the only sentence you read is this one:
"Smart leaders recognize it’s much more valuable to step across mental lines in the sand than to draw them."
While crawling around the Forbes website I encountered another titled "Nine books to read before your organization dies" by Stephen Denning. One of them is free. Denning has his own book, The Leader's Guide to Radical Management: Reinventing the Workplace for the 21st Century, which I am more likely to read than Myatt's.
UPDATE: I posted as follows to Mr. Myatt's blog and at LinkedIn...
Thank you for this thought-provoking list for leaders at all levels. C-level executives have an added burden; they must decide whether they work for the shareholder or the customer. How they think about this issue will affect their approach to these other five items, any other list, and their leadership style in general. They choose this burden voluntarily, but still I don't envy them.
Mike Myatt, author of Leadership Matters...The CEO Survival Manual, has some simple ways to improve your life in 2012. His post is worth reading even if the only sentence you read is this one:
"Smart leaders recognize it’s much more valuable to step across mental lines in the sand than to draw them."
While crawling around the Forbes website I encountered another titled "Nine books to read before your organization dies" by Stephen Denning. One of them is free. Denning has his own book, The Leader's Guide to Radical Management: Reinventing the Workplace for the 21st Century, which I am more likely to read than Myatt's.
UPDATE: I posted as follows to Mr. Myatt's blog and at LinkedIn...
Thank you for this thought-provoking list for leaders at all levels. C-level executives have an added burden; they must decide whether they work for the shareholder or the customer. How they think about this issue will affect their approach to these other five items, any other list, and their leadership style in general. They choose this burden voluntarily, but still I don't envy them.
Labels:
critical thinking,
ethics,
leadership,
service
More Leading Edge Wisdom From The Security Executive Council
The Nine Practices of the Successful Security Leader...
If you're a business security professional this brief paper published by The Security Executive Council ought to be required reading for everyone on your security teams, your peers, and your superiors! All nine are excellent, but I especially like "Winning respect by refusing to exploit fear, uncertainty and doubt." Read this today as you prepare for a successful 2012.
Labels:
critical thinking,
ethics,
leadership,
risk,
security,
service
Saturday, December 24, 2011
The Reason For The Season
From the able mind of Razib Khan...
photo credit: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a8/NASA-Apollo8-Dec24-Earthrise.jpg
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Grenades and Guns and Knives, Oh My!
The TSA is very proud of their recent detection of artfully concealed daggers and inert grenades in carry on bags...
...but why did they let the passengers carrying these items pass through the checkpoint and board their flights after confiscating the contraband?
In November of this year TSA administrator John Pistole touted the detection of thousand pistols in 2011 alone, to defend his organization's mission and its value to the traveling public. But how many cases resulted in criminal prosecution at the federal, state, or local level? How many were forgetful cops and other lawfully armed citizens? How many of these offenders were terrorists or wanted criminals? If none of the detected and confiscated items were in the hands of criminals or terrorists precisely what harm has been averted? If those who violate these rules are not hijackers or terrorists who precisely is the TSA defending us against?
I reiterated my question to the TSA personnel administering their blog: Has there ever been an arrest, indictment, prosecution, conviction, or imprisonment arising from the detection of a prohibited weapon at a TSA checkpoint? Certainly there must be some they can point us to. I look forward to their response and will share it when it arrives.
UPDATE: Here's one I found. Anyone else?
Reupdate: Here we go. 1080 firearms, 689 firearms arrests. Much better. Perhaps the TSA should emphasize the arrests arising from their stops rather than parading the grenades and artfully concealed knives, then explaining why passengers carrying them were allowed to board their flight anyway.
Updates continue, with cupcakes: The TSA is same outfit that prevented a cupcake from passing through the security checkpoint at Las Vegas International Airport because the frosting was gel-like, possessing an almost liquid character because it conformed somewhat to the inside of its container, which meant the entire confection exceeded the three ounce limit, plus it wasn't presented in a one quart ziploc baggy...oh never mind!
Photo credit: TSA
...but why did they let the passengers carrying these items pass through the checkpoint and board their flights after confiscating the contraband?
In November of this year TSA administrator John Pistole touted the detection of thousand pistols in 2011 alone, to defend his organization's mission and its value to the traveling public. But how many cases resulted in criminal prosecution at the federal, state, or local level? How many were forgetful cops and other lawfully armed citizens? How many of these offenders were terrorists or wanted criminals? If none of the detected and confiscated items were in the hands of criminals or terrorists precisely what harm has been averted? If those who violate these rules are not hijackers or terrorists who precisely is the TSA defending us against?
I reiterated my question to the TSA personnel administering their blog: Has there ever been an arrest, indictment, prosecution, conviction, or imprisonment arising from the detection of a prohibited weapon at a TSA checkpoint? Certainly there must be some they can point us to. I look forward to their response and will share it when it arrives.
UPDATE: Here's one I found. Anyone else?
Reupdate: Here we go. 1080 firearms, 689 firearms arrests. Much better. Perhaps the TSA should emphasize the arrests arising from their stops rather than parading the grenades and artfully concealed knives, then explaining why passengers carrying them were allowed to board their flight anyway.
Updates continue, with cupcakes: The TSA is same outfit that prevented a cupcake from passing through the security checkpoint at Las Vegas International Airport because the frosting was gel-like, possessing an almost liquid character because it conformed somewhat to the inside of its container, which meant the entire confection exceeded the three ounce limit, plus it wasn't presented in a one quart ziploc baggy...oh never mind!
Photo credit: TSA
Labels:
civics,
critical thinking,
ethics,
law,
leadership,
politics,
risk,
security,
service
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
The Winter Solstice 2011
Will not be noticed by the cold and ancient stones on the Salisbury Plain...
Best wishes all.
Photo Credit (such as I could find it): http://england-visit.blogspot.com/2010/04/stonehenge.html
Friday, December 16, 2011
Hitchens' Voice Stilled
One of the four horsemen of the new atheist apocalypse, succumbed to cancer Thursday...
Christopher Hitchens, the author of God is Not Great, writer of wicked diatribes against Mother Teresa, and the only journalist I'm aware of who elected to be waterboarded to prove it wasn't torture - and then promptly and publicly changed his mind, died Thursday 15 December 2011, aged 62 years.
Blogs written by persons who knew him better are doing a fine job of eulogizing the man, his courage, and his voice.
Bad Astronomy
Why Evolution Is True
The Rogue's Gallery
Neurologica Blog
Pharyngula
Token Skeptic
Sam Harris, another horseman, the youngest
Dan Dennett, another of the four horsemen, the least offensive
Richard Dawkins, the senior horseman (the "Witch-king of Angmar" if you will)
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Christopher Hitchens, the author of God is Not Great, writer of wicked diatribes against Mother Teresa, and the only journalist I'm aware of who elected to be waterboarded to prove it wasn't torture - and then promptly and publicly changed his mind, died Thursday 15 December 2011, aged 62 years.
Blogs written by persons who knew him better are doing a fine job of eulogizing the man, his courage, and his voice.
Bad Astronomy
Why Evolution Is True
The Rogue's Gallery
Neurologica Blog
Pharyngula
Token Skeptic
Sam Harris, another horseman, the youngest
Dan Dennett, another of the four horsemen, the least offensive
Richard Dawkins, the senior horseman (the "Witch-king of Angmar" if you will)
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Labels:
civics,
critical thinking,
ethics,
leadership,
politics,
religion,
risk,
service
Can You Hear Me Now?
The NTSB gets surprisingly serious about distracted driving...
In the aftermath of their investigation of a 2010 fatal accident involving a semi, a pickup, and two school buses, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has come down very hard on cellphone use while driving. Their refreshingly crisp recommendations include:
To the 50 states and the District of Columbia:
(1) Ban the nonemergency use of portable electronic devices (other than those designed to support the driving task) for all drivers; (2) use the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration model of high visibility enforcement to support these bans; and (3) implement targeted communication campaigns to inform motorists of the new law and enforcement, and to warn them of the dangers associated with the nonemergency use of portable electronic devices while driving.
The response has been prompt and predictable. It's unenforceable, it's not fair to me, and my gut tells me the science is wrong.
I'll bet none of us are in favor of drunk driving. Yet, in many studies drivers are as impaired by the use of personal electronic devices (including hands free) as they are by an illegal blood alcohol concentration. Distracted driving has joined DUI and speeding as a major risk factor for accidents, injuries, and fatalities. Impairment is impairment.
I agree a ban on hands free devices is all but unenforceable. It's pretty hard to tell if the driver in the next car is on a conference call, singing along with Lady Gaga, or yelling at their kids in the back seat. But what part of not allowing people to drive as though they're drunk or traveling at 20 miles per hour over the speed limit strikes us as unfair or unreasonable?
What we choose to do on our own time in our own cars is between us, our screaming passengers, our insurance company, and perhaps the local police. But now that the NTSB has taken a stand it seems to me the challenge will arise when an employee is involved in an accident attributed to PED use while on the job or operating a company vehicle. If company business practices require use of a PED while in motion then OSHA and/or DOT will get involved, insurers run for cover, and litigators will have a field day. If company policy prohibits PED use in motion - and business practices reflect a commitment to the policy - then perhaps the employer will have some legal recourse.
I suppose the precise text of the NTSB recommendation "Ban the nonemergency use of portable electronic devices (other than those designed to support the driving task) for all drivers" give law enforcment and other emergency services personnel some wiggle room with regard to radio handsets.
As for the science, we know that speed enforcement reduces the number and severity of accidents, even though there are some drivers who are safe as houses at 160 mph. We know that DUI enforcement reduces highway carnage, even though almost all of us know someone who once had too many drinks and still got home safe. Yeah, my gut tells me texting is obviously worst, hand held next, and then hands free, but the research suggests they're all pretty distracting.
After reading some of the studies that support the NTSB's new recommendation I'm going to try to hang up and drive. If you call me and get a message saying that I don't answer the phone while I'm on the road I hope you'll understand. There's way too much data out there telling us we're not nearly so good at multitasking as we think we are.
Some of us are old enough to remember life before personal electronic devices became 24 hour leashes. We managed to survive without cellphones then, just like our parents did before telephones, or our grandparents did before cars. We're going to be okay even if we have to unplug for an hour or two a day while we pay attention to the road and our neighbors on it.
Photo Credit: AP Photo/Jeff Roberson
In the aftermath of their investigation of a 2010 fatal accident involving a semi, a pickup, and two school buses, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has come down very hard on cellphone use while driving. Their refreshingly crisp recommendations include:
To the 50 states and the District of Columbia:
(1) Ban the nonemergency use of portable electronic devices (other than those designed to support the driving task) for all drivers; (2) use the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration model of high visibility enforcement to support these bans; and (3) implement targeted communication campaigns to inform motorists of the new law and enforcement, and to warn them of the dangers associated with the nonemergency use of portable electronic devices while driving.
The response has been prompt and predictable. It's unenforceable, it's not fair to me, and my gut tells me the science is wrong.
I'll bet none of us are in favor of drunk driving. Yet, in many studies drivers are as impaired by the use of personal electronic devices (including hands free) as they are by an illegal blood alcohol concentration. Distracted driving has joined DUI and speeding as a major risk factor for accidents, injuries, and fatalities. Impairment is impairment.
I agree a ban on hands free devices is all but unenforceable. It's pretty hard to tell if the driver in the next car is on a conference call, singing along with Lady Gaga, or yelling at their kids in the back seat. But what part of not allowing people to drive as though they're drunk or traveling at 20 miles per hour over the speed limit strikes us as unfair or unreasonable?
What we choose to do on our own time in our own cars is between us, our screaming passengers, our insurance company, and perhaps the local police. But now that the NTSB has taken a stand it seems to me the challenge will arise when an employee is involved in an accident attributed to PED use while on the job or operating a company vehicle. If company business practices require use of a PED while in motion then OSHA and/or DOT will get involved, insurers run for cover, and litigators will have a field day. If company policy prohibits PED use in motion - and business practices reflect a commitment to the policy - then perhaps the employer will have some legal recourse.
I suppose the precise text of the NTSB recommendation "Ban the nonemergency use of portable electronic devices (other than those designed to support the driving task) for all drivers" give law enforcment and other emergency services personnel some wiggle room with regard to radio handsets.
As for the science, we know that speed enforcement reduces the number and severity of accidents, even though there are some drivers who are safe as houses at 160 mph. We know that DUI enforcement reduces highway carnage, even though almost all of us know someone who once had too many drinks and still got home safe. Yeah, my gut tells me texting is obviously worst, hand held next, and then hands free, but the research suggests they're all pretty distracting.
After reading some of the studies that support the NTSB's new recommendation I'm going to try to hang up and drive. If you call me and get a message saying that I don't answer the phone while I'm on the road I hope you'll understand. There's way too much data out there telling us we're not nearly so good at multitasking as we think we are.
Some of us are old enough to remember life before personal electronic devices became 24 hour leashes. We managed to survive without cellphones then, just like our parents did before telephones, or our grandparents did before cars. We're going to be okay even if we have to unplug for an hour or two a day while we pay attention to the road and our neighbors on it.
Photo Credit: AP Photo/Jeff Roberson
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
A Day That Will Live In Infamy...
December 7, 1941...
In a geopolitical sense the attack on Pearl Harbor was predictable, perhaps even inevitable. The precise timing was certainly a surprise though. The war in the Pacific was a vicious conflict waged against a brutal foe. The good guys won, but not without paying a heavy price.
These days Americans drive cars and watch TVs made by Mitsubishi, the same company that manufactured the infamous A6M Zero fighter. And Japanese travelers fly around the world on airliners made by Boeing, who also made the B17s destroyed at Hickam Field that morning, and the B29s that delivered the atomic bombs that ended the Second World War four years later.
We honor the dead, who are forever young. We pay our respects to the living, who number fewer and fewer with each passing year. The wheel turns...
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
In a geopolitical sense the attack on Pearl Harbor was predictable, perhaps even inevitable. The precise timing was certainly a surprise though. The war in the Pacific was a vicious conflict waged against a brutal foe. The good guys won, but not without paying a heavy price.
These days Americans drive cars and watch TVs made by Mitsubishi, the same company that manufactured the infamous A6M Zero fighter. And Japanese travelers fly around the world on airliners made by Boeing, who also made the B17s destroyed at Hickam Field that morning, and the B29s that delivered the atomic bombs that ended the Second World War four years later.
We honor the dead, who are forever young. We pay our respects to the living, who number fewer and fewer with each passing year. The wheel turns...
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Monday, December 5, 2011
Charley's Aunt
Now showing at the Guthrie's McGuire Proscenium Stage...
The Guthrie does a very nice job with this family friendly farce. I'd never heard of Charley's Aunt or its playwright Brandon Thomas, but I'm glad to now be acquainted. Many of the actors are younger than the usual Guthrie production and they seem to have a fine time with it. Among them Thallis Santesteban is especially winsome. Remember, you can purchase rush seats at a deep discount a half hour before showtime.
Photo credit: T Charles Erickson
The Guthrie does a very nice job with this family friendly farce. I'd never heard of Charley's Aunt or its playwright Brandon Thomas, but I'm glad to now be acquainted. Many of the actors are younger than the usual Guthrie production and they seem to have a fine time with it. Among them Thallis Santesteban is especially winsome. Remember, you can purchase rush seats at a deep discount a half hour before showtime.
Photo credit: T Charles Erickson
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Hugo by Martin Scorsese
Which is titled Hugo Cabret in more sophisticated markets, is simply wonderful...
Words fail me, but here are a few: kind, gentle, wondrous, jaw-dropping, clever, lovingly crafted, magical, and the nicest movie I've seen all year. If you love movies see Hugo.
Monday, November 28, 2011
Says What It Does And Does What It Says
The infamous Lars von Trier delivers in Melancholia...
Melancholia is the first film by Lars von Trier I actually wanted to see and the only one I've ever been able to sit through. Presented in two parts, the first begins with an opulent and disastrous wedding reception featuring Kirsten Dunst as the horridly dysfunctional bride, the second ends with the destruction of the earth when it collides with the titular rogue planet. No, that's not a spoiler, unless you arrive late for the prologue. Dunst and Charlotte Gainsbourg play sisters dealing with depression, fear, and anger one can easily credit to their upbringing when we are subjected to their estranged parents at the reception. Gainsbourg is very interesting to watch but most of her work - other than the unwatchable Antichrist - has been in French cinema so this is the first performance of hers I've watched all the way to the credits. Kiefer Sutherland is present but has little to do and...well, let's just say he's no Jack Bauer when it comes time for the end of the world. Dunst plays a severely depressed woman who comes to terms with her impending fate with a firm resolve. She's always been an interesting actress but she wades into this rather surreal material and demonstrates some serious depth in Melancholia.
Photo Credit: Christian Geisnaes
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
John, John, John...What Have You Done?
From Lt. John Pike, U.C. Davis Police...
Regardless what you think of the Occupy Wall Street movement (or whether it will ever get its act together and come to mean anything) this was not an escalation of force scenario, this was civil disobedience and passive resistance. If peaceful protesters must be removed you bring in enough officers to pick up each one and remove him or her to the paddy wagon. If anyone actively resists then the officers making the arrest apply sufficient force to proceed. At least that's the way it's suppose to go ever since the Birmingham cops quit using German Shepherds and fire hoses on civil rights protesters and the Ohio National Guard quit using live ammo on Vietnam war protesters. Anything less than TLC is a win for the protesters and they know it. It's important that those with responsibility for public order understand it too. In this case, regardless whether or not the force applied was strictly legal or within department guidelines, the techniques applied and video collected played precisely into the hands of the protesters. The incident represents a massive fail on behalf of those in authority.
O.C. sprays - like Tasers - have undoubtedly saved many criminals from serious injury or death due to the baton blows, choke holds, or gunshot wounds used to subdue suspects in the days before these non-lethal force alternatives were developed. Likewise, their use reduces injuries to law enforcement officers and is safer for the public. But non-lethal does not mean harmless, and force is still force. And this force is being applied on our behalf. We had better be sure what objectives we wish to achieve. The Occupy movement couldn't have stage managed a better PR coup had they tried; was that the objective?
Photo by Louise Macabitas by way of Reddit, which is not good if you've been bad.
To "Pepper-Spray Cop" cultural meme in about 72 hours...
From the pointed send-up of the new meme at Wired's Underwire
Yow!
I'm pretty sure Lt. John Pike didn't get out of bed Friday 18 November 2011 intending to become the poster boy for the use of excessive force against passive resistance and civil disobedience. But by the time his Defense Technology MK-9 Pepper Spray was empty he had secured his place in history.
Regardless what you think of the Occupy Wall Street movement (or whether it will ever get its act together and come to mean anything) this was not an escalation of force scenario, this was civil disobedience and passive resistance. If peaceful protesters must be removed you bring in enough officers to pick up each one and remove him or her to the paddy wagon. If anyone actively resists then the officers making the arrest apply sufficient force to proceed. At least that's the way it's suppose to go ever since the Birmingham cops quit using German Shepherds and fire hoses on civil rights protesters and the Ohio National Guard quit using live ammo on Vietnam war protesters. Anything less than TLC is a win for the protesters and they know it. It's important that those with responsibility for public order understand it too. In this case, regardless whether or not the force applied was strictly legal or within department guidelines, the techniques applied and video collected played precisely into the hands of the protesters. The incident represents a massive fail on behalf of those in authority.
O.C. sprays - like Tasers - have undoubtedly saved many criminals from serious injury or death due to the baton blows, choke holds, or gunshot wounds used to subdue suspects in the days before these non-lethal force alternatives were developed. Likewise, their use reduces injuries to law enforcement officers and is safer for the public. But non-lethal does not mean harmless, and force is still force. And this force is being applied on our behalf. We had better be sure what objectives we wish to achieve. The Occupy movement couldn't have stage managed a better PR coup had they tried; was that the objective?
Labels:
civics,
ethics,
leadership,
science,
security
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Whack Another Mole
Power Balance files for bankruptcy!
The woomeisters (actually cynical fraudsters, there's no way they believed this crap actually worked) at Power Balance lost the class action lawsuit filed against them in January and now owes $57 million dollars in refunds to customers duped into buying the spendy yet worthless rubbery bracelets. Now they are filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Power Balance Australia went under last year. Power Balance even admitted the con in January. Now that the class action has been decided against them the corporation has finally run out of track, but not before selling nearly 3 million bracelets at $30 each. Guess baseball players will have to go back to rubbing magic chicken bones on their bats for good luck. So, any ideas for a new name for the Power Balance Pavilion, home of the Sacramento Kings?
All together now: "WOO, Woo, woo, woo, woo..."
Besides, everyone knows the new triple braided titanium ion necklaces are the latest thing in performance enhancing placebo jewelry.
The woomeisters (actually cynical fraudsters, there's no way they believed this crap actually worked) at Power Balance lost the class action lawsuit filed against them in January and now owes $57 million dollars in refunds to customers duped into buying the spendy yet worthless rubbery bracelets. Now they are filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Power Balance Australia went under last year. Power Balance even admitted the con in January. Now that the class action has been decided against them the corporation has finally run out of track, but not before selling nearly 3 million bracelets at $30 each. Guess baseball players will have to go back to rubbing magic chicken bones on their bats for good luck. So, any ideas for a new name for the Power Balance Pavilion, home of the Sacramento Kings?
All together now: "WOO, Woo, woo, woo, woo..."
Besides, everyone knows the new triple braided titanium ion necklaces are the latest thing in performance enhancing placebo jewelry.
Labels:
civics,
critical thinking,
ethics,
law,
science
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Quirky, heartfelt, and sad...
Saw The Descendants last evening at the Uptown Theater...
This drama is not quite so funny as the trailers suggest, dealing as it does with loss, betrayal, regret, terminal illness, death, parenting, aging, responsibility, our desire for second chances and our response when we are denied them. George Clooney does a nice turn, but I was most impressed by the work displayed by young actors Shailene Woodley and Nick Krouse.
This drama is not quite so funny as the trailers suggest, dealing as it does with loss, betrayal, regret, terminal illness, death, parenting, aging, responsibility, our desire for second chances and our response when we are denied them. George Clooney does a nice turn, but I was most impressed by the work displayed by young actors Shailene Woodley and Nick Krouse.
Here We Go Again
Workplace Violence on the Rise?
The following lead-in introduced a story that appeared on 8NewsNow in Las Vegas, NV. It was a tidy little article written by Reporter Jessica Lovell.
"LAS VEGAS -- Violence in the workplace is an unfortunate growing trend. On average, two people a day are killed as a result of workplace violence. That's why more and more businesses are turning to security companies to help educate their employees about the dangers."
In the article she quotes security consultant Steve Albrecht and Tom Donahue of Allied Barton Security among others.
Where have we heard this before?
I wrote to Ms. Lovell:
I read with interest your article “Workplace Violence on the Rise” which was picked up by "The Security Management Daily," a security news summary sent by Security Management to its subscribers worldwide.
There are some errors in your piece, which most likely arise from an unfortunate tendency of security professionals – especially those with something to sell – to use the raw numbers in a hyperbolic manner.
They tell you, "Violence in the workplace is an unfortunate growing trend."
Yet deaths due to workplace violence are near an all time since 1992 when the Bureau of Labor Statistics began tracking the numbers.
They say, "On average, two people a day are killed as a result of workplace violence."
This is only true if we divide the number of workplace deaths in 2009 (the most recent year for which the records have been finalized) due to "Assaults and Violent Acts," 837, by 365, for a daily rate of 2.3. What most don’t tell you is that this BLS category includes suicides and animal attacks in addition to homicides.
Likewise, most alarmists are content to let their listeners believe workplace violence is most frequently perpetrated by customers, coworkers, or family members. In truth 75% of all workplace homicides are perpetrated in course of other crimes – frequently robberies of late night retail establishments, or assaults on police and security personnel.
The last important detail most miss by not considering self destructive behavior, is that unlike those due to workplace violence, suicide deaths at work are on the rise.
This behavior of my peers, whether due to ignorance or in the course of cynical manipulation, is a pet peeve of mine. I have dealt with it on several occasions at my blog, most recently here. There you will find links to the BLS statistics I’ve cited in this email...
Ms. Lovell replied within minutes. She was receptive to my criticism and interested in learning more. We'll talk next week.
UPDATE: I haven't heard from Reporter Lovell but it's a busy news week I'm sure, even in Las Vegas. I sent her a note though:
Here are some sources of statistics that are a little more dispassionate than those you were provided the other week.
http://bls.gov/iif/
http://www.bls.gov/opub/cwc/sh20040126ar01p1.htm
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/violence/
The work is hard enough without the security pros getting excited.
Photo credit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Las_Vegas_at_Night.JPG
The following lead-in introduced a story that appeared on 8NewsNow in Las Vegas, NV. It was a tidy little article written by Reporter Jessica Lovell.
"LAS VEGAS -- Violence in the workplace is an unfortunate growing trend. On average, two people a day are killed as a result of workplace violence. That's why more and more businesses are turning to security companies to help educate their employees about the dangers."
In the article she quotes security consultant Steve Albrecht and Tom Donahue of Allied Barton Security among others.
Where have we heard this before?
I wrote to Ms. Lovell:
I read with interest your article “Workplace Violence on the Rise” which was picked up by "The Security Management Daily," a security news summary sent by Security Management to its subscribers worldwide.
There are some errors in your piece, which most likely arise from an unfortunate tendency of security professionals – especially those with something to sell – to use the raw numbers in a hyperbolic manner.
They tell you, "Violence in the workplace is an unfortunate growing trend."
Yet deaths due to workplace violence are near an all time since 1992 when the Bureau of Labor Statistics began tracking the numbers.
They say, "On average, two people a day are killed as a result of workplace violence."
This is only true if we divide the number of workplace deaths in 2009 (the most recent year for which the records have been finalized) due to "Assaults and Violent Acts," 837, by 365, for a daily rate of 2.3. What most don’t tell you is that this BLS category includes suicides and animal attacks in addition to homicides.
Likewise, most alarmists are content to let their listeners believe workplace violence is most frequently perpetrated by customers, coworkers, or family members. In truth 75% of all workplace homicides are perpetrated in course of other crimes – frequently robberies of late night retail establishments, or assaults on police and security personnel.
The last important detail most miss by not considering self destructive behavior, is that unlike those due to workplace violence, suicide deaths at work are on the rise.
This behavior of my peers, whether due to ignorance or in the course of cynical manipulation, is a pet peeve of mine. I have dealt with it on several occasions at my blog, most recently here. There you will find links to the BLS statistics I’ve cited in this email...
Ms. Lovell replied within minutes. She was receptive to my criticism and interested in learning more. We'll talk next week.
UPDATE: I haven't heard from Reporter Lovell but it's a busy news week I'm sure, even in Las Vegas. I sent her a note though:
Here are some sources of statistics that are a little more dispassionate than those you were provided the other week.
http://bls.gov/iif/
http://www.bls.gov/opub/cwc/sh20040126ar01p1.htm
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/violence/
The work is hard enough without the security pros getting excited.
Photo credit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Las_Vegas_at_Night.JPG
Labels:
civics,
critical thinking,
education,
ethics,
leadership,
risk,
security
Monday, November 14, 2011
I can see Canada from my deer blind
Well, you might have to squint a little...
We're just back from a productive and enjoyable vacation hunting whitetail deer north of Badger, MN (aka "Almost Canada").
My buddy Greg shot only one deer, but not for lack of trying; not for nothing was his elevated hunting shack nicknamed "Disaster Stand." My son Erik shot two nice does, one on Saturday, another Sunday, and then went back to school. His Ameristep "Doghouse" pop up blind was in a very productive spot so I sat inside it Monday and Tuesday, harvesting mature does each day. While waiting for my deer to arrive I read Inferno, written in 1976 by sci-fi collaborators Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle ($0.50 at Half-Price Books, Apple Valley, MN). I also got caught up on a variety of podcasts on my iPhone.
Most evenings Greg prepared our meals at the home of our host Kasey, the son of my cousin Rick, but three nights we drove to Roseau, MN, to dine at The Silver Dragon, our favorite Asian eatery north of Minneapolis. Word on the streets of Badger (yes, it has at least two) is that Kasey enjoyed meals that didn't come from the microwave and which were served on plates he didn't have to wash. We even vacuumed before we left.
After sleeping in Wednesday I commenced to skinning, cutting, and wrapping our venison, which took two days. This work was accompanied by Richard Pogge's most excellent Ohio State University Astronomy 161 - Introduction to Solar System Astronomy course on iTunes. I did not get a chance to listen to Astronomy 162 - Stars, Galaxies, & the Universe, which is even more fun. Yes, this in one of the podcast lecture series that I've listened to more than once.
Once I had some spare time I got to engage my most recent book purchase, Religion in Human Evolution: From the Paleolithic to the Axial Age, by Robert Neely Bellah. Be warned, the first chapter or two is a mind-stretching conceptual slog, but then it picks up and becomes very readable.
On Thursday my vacation finally became fully effective - I forgot what day of the week it was.
Minnesota is a party hunting state - we can shoot to fill the tags held by others in the hunting party. On Saturday morning I was asked to join an old-fashioned deer drive. The youngsters and the huntmaster did the pushing through the thick stuff. The elder cousins and uncles sat post - stationary spots where we prevent the deers' escape if they bust out to the left, right, or rear of the drive. It just so happened two ran past me so I made quick work of them with Erik's Kimber 308 (I had loaned my Remington 30'06 to a cousin for the morning). I chose factory loaded 150 grain bullets for both rifles this year as time and money got a little tight. These conventional "cup and core" bullets are too destructive if you hit anything edible up close (despite our scenic vistas our longest shot was 125 yards), and are made of lead, which is less that good. That said all six fell to the hit and our four now reside in our freezer. We will use non-lead and perhaps heavier (slower) bullets in 2012.
All in all, it was a fine season.
We're just back from a productive and enjoyable vacation hunting whitetail deer north of Badger, MN (aka "Almost Canada").
My buddy Greg shot only one deer, but not for lack of trying; not for nothing was his elevated hunting shack nicknamed "Disaster Stand." My son Erik shot two nice does, one on Saturday, another Sunday, and then went back to school. His Ameristep "Doghouse" pop up blind was in a very productive spot so I sat inside it Monday and Tuesday, harvesting mature does each day. While waiting for my deer to arrive I read Inferno, written in 1976 by sci-fi collaborators Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle ($0.50 at Half-Price Books, Apple Valley, MN). I also got caught up on a variety of podcasts on my iPhone.
Most evenings Greg prepared our meals at the home of our host Kasey, the son of my cousin Rick, but three nights we drove to Roseau, MN, to dine at The Silver Dragon, our favorite Asian eatery north of Minneapolis. Word on the streets of Badger (yes, it has at least two) is that Kasey enjoyed meals that didn't come from the microwave and which were served on plates he didn't have to wash. We even vacuumed before we left.
After sleeping in Wednesday I commenced to skinning, cutting, and wrapping our venison, which took two days. This work was accompanied by Richard Pogge's most excellent Ohio State University Astronomy 161 - Introduction to Solar System Astronomy course on iTunes. I did not get a chance to listen to Astronomy 162 - Stars, Galaxies, & the Universe, which is even more fun. Yes, this in one of the podcast lecture series that I've listened to more than once.
Once I had some spare time I got to engage my most recent book purchase, Religion in Human Evolution: From the Paleolithic to the Axial Age, by Robert Neely Bellah. Be warned, the first chapter or two is a mind-stretching conceptual slog, but then it picks up and becomes very readable.
On Thursday my vacation finally became fully effective - I forgot what day of the week it was.
Minnesota is a party hunting state - we can shoot to fill the tags held by others in the hunting party. On Saturday morning I was asked to join an old-fashioned deer drive. The youngsters and the huntmaster did the pushing through the thick stuff. The elder cousins and uncles sat post - stationary spots where we prevent the deers' escape if they bust out to the left, right, or rear of the drive. It just so happened two ran past me so I made quick work of them with Erik's Kimber 308 (I had loaned my Remington 30'06 to a cousin for the morning). I chose factory loaded 150 grain bullets for both rifles this year as time and money got a little tight. These conventional "cup and core" bullets are too destructive if you hit anything edible up close (despite our scenic vistas our longest shot was 125 yards), and are made of lead, which is less that good. That said all six fell to the hit and our four now reside in our freezer. We will use non-lead and perhaps heavier (slower) bullets in 2012.
All in all, it was a fine season.
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