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Monday
Jan072008

Patient power

There's a wonderfully Orwellian article in the Times today:

Brown promises more patient power in vision for NHS of the future.

Great. I'm all in favour of patient power - you know, being able to choose where and when and by whom you are treated. 

Tell me more. I'm all ears.

The Prime Minister unveiled his vision for the future of the NHS, in which he said patients would take greater responsibility for monitoring their own health, for delaying the onset of illness, and for helping to direct their own treatment when they did become unwell.

So by patient power, he means doing work that was previously done by doctors yourself, and for free as well. 

Wouldn't "DIY healthcare" be a better description? 

Sunday
Jan062008

Greens massacring the environment (Part 253)

A small update to what is becoming a regular feature on these pages - still more trashing of the environment by environmentalists.

This time it's the RSPB who have been doing their darndest to make this green and pleasant land just a little bit greyer and duller.

The populations of falcons, kites and eagles have increased sharply in the wake of reintroduction programmes and improvements in their environments. But now the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) has discovered that their success is leading to a decline in ground nesting birds such as the grey partridge, one of the most endangered birds in the UK, the capercaillie, the black grouse and its red cousin.

Will they apologise to all the gamekeepers they've been prosecuting?

Saturday
Jan052008

Food prints

Following on from the previous post, Greenie Watch points us to an article at ICWales which wants us to think about something called food prints.

While buying food produced locally can cut down on carbon emissions used to transport the goods from their country of origin, the benefits may be counteracted by the “food print” of plants grown in greenhouse conditions.

The term is the latest buzzword used to describe the environmental impact of certain types of food production.

But while a carbon footprint refers to the emissions used to transport food across the world, a “food print” describes the amount of land needed to supply a person’s nutritional needs for a year.

So, there is something called the carbon footprint which kind of encapsulates the energy cost and maybe something of the global warming externality. Now there is the food print which sort of encapsulates the land cost. You might say it's all a bit confusing.

But talking about all these different footprints has given me an idea. Let's have a measure which actually encapsulates all the costs associated with production of something. You know - the energy cost, the labour cost, the transport, the raw materials, the taxes, the overheads. Everything. We could even add in the financing cost! That way we've missed nothing and we know that when we assess what the best way of of producing something, we really are working out the most efficient way of making it.

We'll call it "THE PRICE". And hey - if we charge consumers THE PRICE, they'll be incentivised to go for the most efficient, and therefore the most environmentally friendly option! Wow!! I really think I'm on to something here!

Do you think it'll catch on?   

Friday
Jan042008

It wasn't me guv!

Greenpeace biodiversity campaigns manager Andy Tait has a piece up at Comment is Free in which he tells us that the government has got it wrong on biofuels.

We are being sold a pup by governments and by the biofuels industry: a solution to climate change that actually risks making the problem worse.

Bravo Andy. You might also have pointed out to your readers that this is the problem with measuring carbon footprints rather than the full economic cost of something. The carbon footprint is just one cost among many, many different costs (and a small one at that). Unless you take them all into account you end up taking very silly decisions. This is why biofuels are not only associated with destruction of biodiversity but also with causing riots in Mexico and starvation in the third world. It's also why the track record of environmentalists has been to damage the environment rather than to enhance it. But hey-ho it keeps the activists off the streets.

It's also instructive to look at some of Greenpeace's earlier pronouncements on biofuels.

  • Greenpeace today welcomed the Government’s announcement on a mandatory sales target for biofuels as a small step in the right direction. (link)
  • When biomass is used to generate energy in an efficient and sustainable way, it has a role to play in reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and we strongly supports this. (link)

To be clear, they have caveated some of their support with requirements that the production should be environmentally sustainable, but one has to wonder whether they were really so daft as to think that there was a great deal of spare land around that could be converted to biofuels production.

Actually scrub that, of course they were that daft.

It will be interesting to see if Greenpeace will now adopt a position of outright opposition to biofuels. I rather think a veil will quietly be drawn over the whole embarrassing affair. 

Friday
Jan042008

An American's home is not his castle

If you thought the frontiers of nanny statism were to be found in this country, you might have to think again. In Sacramento, the Californian state authorities are proposing that new homes should have thermostats which can be remote controlled by the local power company (which will obviously jump to the tune of the aforementioned Californian state authorities).

What should be controversial in the proposed revisions to Title 24 is the requirement for what is called a "programmable communicating thermostat" or PCT. Every new home and every change to existing homes' central heating and air conditioning systems will required to be fitted with a PCT beginning next year following the issuance of the revision.  Each PCT will be fitted with a "non-removable " FM receiver that will allow the power authorities to increase your air conditioning temperature setpoint or decrease your heater temperature setpoint to any value they chose.  During "price events" those changes are limited to +/- four degrees F and you would be able to manually override the changes.  During "emergency events" the new setpoints can be whatever the power authority desires and you would not be able to alter them.

Original link via NC Media Watch 

Thursday
Jan032008

Plus ca change.....

....plus c'est la meme chose.

Jock Coats, commenting on the previous post, says that he's sticking with the LibDems as he believes they are becoming more liberal.

Meanwhile, Eaten by Missionaries notes that Nick Clegg's first act as leader of the LibDems is to propose banning something. (Advertising directed at children, since you ask).

Tuesday
Jan012008

Libertarian party

The have been rumblings in the liberal parts of the UK blogosphere ahead of the impending arrival of a Libertarian party.

A new website went live on January 1st and a forum has been set up. I've been in two minds about LPUK, as it potentially splits the libertarian support over even more parties than it does at present. You can find people who think of themselves as libertarian in the Tories, LibDems, as well as UKIP. Throw in the Liberal Party and the Classical Liberals and you potentially have a terminally split party.

But with the Tories and the LibDems seemingly irredeemably statist and the others unlikely to reach the dizzy heights of "also-rans", I think a libertarian party might not be a bad idea, if only to draw attention to liberal ideas.

Let's see how it goes. 

Sunday
Dec302007

Still startling

I'd actually read this before, but it's still pretty startling. In Scottish schools, sex education lessons are mandated, but contraception may not be mentioned.

I keep thinking that there ought to be a website to collate all the truly jaw-dropping examples of the way the state "looks after" us. If only there were more hours in the day.

(Via DK - sweary alert)

Sunday
Dec302007

Learning difficulties

Comment is Free has a stark staring bonkers article by someone called Chris Hallam who is calling for smoking to be outlawed.

Ultimately, the ban [on smoking in public places] enacted on July 1 should not be the end of the legislative process but the beginning. The months and years to come should witness a wealth of legislation enacted by the government leading towards one ultimate goal: the abolition of smoking, whether public or private, throughout the land, forever.

You would have thought that after the chaos of the war on drugs and prohibition in the 1930s people would have learned that banning things has unintended and very unpleasant consequences. Mr Hallam obviously feels that tobacco smuggling gangs having gunfights on every street corner is a reasonable price to pay so he doesn't have to sully his nostrils with a whiff of tobacco smoke. Some people just never learn.

Where do they manage to get half-wits like this from? He calls himself a "freelance writer and researcher", although a Google on his name fails to turn up a single example of anything he has written before. He does seem to advise the Joseph Rowntree Trust, however. Which probably explains a lot.

My reading of it is that the bright writers were all on holiday so the Graun thought they'd get in some poor benighted soul with learning difficulties and a list to the left and give them their fifteen minutes of fame.

Well, your time is up Mr Hallam.

Goodbye.   

Friday
Dec282007

Why won't Nature link to Climate Audit?

Some time ago I wrote a piece in which I questioned the wisdom of Nature's approach to blogging, and in particular to the way their climate science site, Nature Climate Feedback, seemed to be turning into something of an advocacy site. I questioned the commercial wisdom of being seen to side so publicly in one side of a politicised debate.

The article picked up a lot of traffic from an internal blog within the Nature organisation, but my impression has been that there has been little change in the way Climate Feedback operates in the six months since I attempted to highlight the problem.

Today, I'm going to point to a further example of how Nature has set its stall out as an environmentalist advocacy site - who do they link to? Apart from a list of official sites, Climate Feedback has a standard blogroll which I reproduce below:

Most readers of this site will know many of these blogs. Anyone who follows the global warming debate will be aware of Real Climate. Some may even be aware that it seems to be linked with green advocacy groups. But it is unarguably written by climate scientists, so there can be no reasonable objection to its inclusion.

The Heat is Online, however, is the webpage of Ross Gelbspan, whose Wikipedia entry refers to him as an author and activist. A Few Things Ill Considered is a "Layman's take on the science of global warming" and features "a guide on how to speak to a climate skeptic". Gristmill is part of an environmentalist publishing organisation. Clearly then, Nature Climate Feedback has no issue in linking to people whose only role in the global warming debate is one of advocacy. They also don't think that their blogroll should be restricted to qualified climate scientists. In fact, they seem quite happy to link to people who are not scientists at all.

How then can we explain the failure to link to any sites which might be considered somewhat sceptical of the AGW (alleged) consensus? Roger Pielke for example, or Climate Audit?

Steve McIntyre's Climate Audit is the only site which can rival Real Climate for traffic, and it is streets ahead on the quality of the scientific discussion. It also has a very good standard of comments from a range of highly-qualified visitors. Here is a (non-exhaustive) list of people who I have been able to identify as people with relevant qualifications who have contributed to the CA conversation:

  • John Christy, U Alabama Huntsville
  • Eduardo Zorita
  • Roger Pielke Snr, U Colorado
  • Rob Wilson, U St Andrews
  • "Eli Rabett" (Prof Joshua Halpern)
  • David E Black
  • Dr. Anthony Lupo, Professor of Atmospheric Science, University of Missouri-Columbia
  • Tim Ball
  • Yang Bao
  • Lubos Motls
  • Louis Scuderi (Assoc Prof, Univ New Mexico)
  • Martin Juckes, British Atmospheric Data Centre
  • Keith McGuinness, Ecologist Charles Darwin U, Australia
  • Sinan Unur, economist Cornell U
  • Ross McKitrick economist U Guelph
  • Isaac Held, NOAA
  • Peter Webster, Professor, School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Georgia Tech
  • Judith Curry, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Staffan Lindstrom, Lunds University
  • Sonia Boehmer-Christiansen, U Hull
  • James Elsner, Florida State University
  • Richard Telford, University of Bergen
  • Demetris Koutsouyannis, U Athens
  • Ian Castles, Asia School of Economics and Government, Australian National University, Canberra
  • David Pannell, Professor, School of Agricultural and Resource Economics , U Western Australia
  • Paul Dennis, UEA
  • David Wratt, NIWA
  • Gerald North, U Wisconsin and chairman of the NAS panel on the "Hockey Stick"
  • and lastly Prof Bjorn Malmgren, Goteborgs U, who left the following comment:
By the way, I am an avid reader of Climate Audit, so from me you receive a proper response. In fact, I download the articles to my cell phone and read them with great interest every day. Many thanks for so relentlessly contributing these articles to Climate Audit.

Whichever way you look at it, there is every shade of opinion in the list, from the firm skepticism of say, Tim Ball, to the out and out enviropmentalism of Martin Juckes (who allegedly manages to combine dispassionate climate science research with his campaigning for the Green party). Climate Audit is indisputably the place where people go to have free debate on climate science. And in passing, we can compare this unfavourably with Real Climate, where the "canon" is recited to those willing to listen and straw men are cast down to the applause of the assembled faithful.

It's therefore pretty hard to explain Climate Feedback's failure to link to Climate Audit, until you look at who they do link to, at which point you wonder if Nature, once powerhouse in the advancement of scientific knowledge, is now just a rather insignificant part of the worldwide green advocacy industry. How the mighty are fallen.  

Tuesday
Dec182007

Media censorship

DK has a video of what happened at the signing of the Charter of Fundamental Rights at the EU Parliament the other day. The Charter is to form an annexe to the new EU constitution (mini-treaty, farrago, call it what you will).

It is depressingly predictable that this would have gone entirely unreported by the British media.  

Tuesday
Dec182007

Flat tax in a developed economy

Via the ASI, the Cato Institute has a piece reporting that one Swiss Canton has introduced a flat tax with a rate of 1.8%.

Yes, you read it correctly, 1.8%. That's One Point Eight Percent.

The new tax regime in Oberwalden was introduced following a referendum in which 90% of voters voted in favour of the change.

One of the main barriers to the introduction on flat tax regimes in the developed world has been the argument, supported by bodies like the OECD, that this kind of system would not work in developed economies. We're about to see this argument tested empirically for the first time, and I've no doubt that the naysayers are going to be proved resoundingly wrong.

Where's a nice place to live in Oberwalden?  

Monday
Dec172007

Rolling back the last ten years

With all the polls predicting a Conservative government at the next election, it's reasonable to question what changes a Cameron government might make when they finally take control. To what extent might they be ready to roll back the last ten years of the expansion of the state, the erosion of civil liberties and corruption of civil society?

Do you think that Cameron will return habeus corpus to three days? Do you think he will privatise the schools or the hospitals, or restore the right to protest in the vicinity of parliament?

Me neither.

Assuming then that he continues with the policies of the Labour party; that the schools continue to decline, that the hospitals are hotbeds of infectious disease (if you can even manage to get an appointment). Suppose that detention without charge gets extended to forty or fifty days and that a whole plethora of new reasons to demand entry to your home are written into law.

What then?

Will people abandon political parties completely, and abandon the polling booth completely. Or will they switch to peripheral and/or extremist parties?

It seems to me that it doesn't actually matter, so long as they do one or the other. Any long-term solution to the political impasse into which the Lab/Con duopoly have driven us has to involve the death of both heads of the political monster which threatens us. Now some people might find this rather alarming - as any vote for an unfamiliar party can unnerve some - but when you think about it, it's not as alarming as being locked up for three months without charge because someone in government doesn't like the colour of your shirt, which seems to be the way things are heading at the moment.

The more I think about it, the more I wonder if I am lost to mainstream politics. They are all crooks, and they are all corrupt, and until they are all strung up from Westminster lampposts, or at least consigned to the political dustbin, we are all in danger.

Wednesday
Dec122007

Worstall on home education

Tim Worstall makes a robust defence of a parent's right to home educate their children, here.

Tim is responding to a piece at the Huffington Post by someone called Russell Shaw whose main objection seems to be that lots of religious people home educate, and that the children will end up being taught creationism. Shaw doesn't explain why this is worse than going to a state school and learning very little at all, but he does feel that home education isn't serving society very well.

Which is odd, because I thought that the point of education was to provide a benefit to the child, rather than to the state or "society". I'm reminded of the theories of John Taylor Gatto, the educational historian and writer, who believes that state education was designed to do just that - to provide dumbed-down workers for the factories of the upper classes, rather than educate anyone.

The comments thread on the Worstall post is also interesting, with some agreeing with the claim that home educators have mainly religious motivations. This may be true of the USA, but it's certainly not right for the UK. The main (if not the only) researcher into the UK home education movement is Paula Rothermel of the University of Durham. She has performed surveys into UK home-ed and has the following to say on why people do it:

Over half of the reasons given for home educating related to school, such as, 'unhappy with current school education', 'class sizes too large' and 'bullying'. Almost one-third of motivations listed were child-centred; 'we wanted to stimulate our child's learning', 'it is the child's choice' and 'meets out child's needs', and one in five parents describe their motivation in terms of their philosophy, referring to their' ideology', 'lifestyle', their 'faith' and the 'lack of morality in society'. When families become acquainted with other home educators, as well as related literature, they adopted a more philosophical approach to education generally, often believing that the present education system needed reform.

Clearly religion is not a significant factor, then. Most people just think that school is crap.

Another criticism given by Tim W's commenters is that home-educated children are "weirdos". Here, I'm less sure of my ground, because I can't say I've ever met a home educated child. I've seen some on the telly, and they do appear different to schooled children. The thing which has always struck me is that they seem rather polite, and very clear-eyed; they look people in the eye and say what they think. They lack the wariness around adults and the emotional ticks and affectations of your average teenager.

Whether this is enough to suggest a categorisation under "Weirdo" is a matter of personal taste.

When people think of home-educated children who have been filed under weird, they often bring up the mathematics prodigy, Ruth Lawrence, who went up to Oxford at the age of eleven, graduated at thirteen, became a fellow at Harvard at nineteen and is now a full professor. Whether she deserves to be called weird is not clear from what I've read. She is certainly gifted, but she seems to have a perfectly normal life (marriage, children and so on). I can remember a minor kerfuffle when she publicly stated some of her views at a debate and rather upset some of her fellow students who couldn't handle someone so young saying what they thought. This seems to me to be more of a criticism of the other students than of Ms Lawrence.

But historically, going to university in your mid-teens was the norm, rather than the exception.  In the medieval period, someone aged fourteen was expected to be able to manage their own affairs and to be able to study independently of family. So to that extent, it's modern schooled children who delay tertiary education until the age of eighteen that are the oddballs, the exceptions, the weirdos.

Perhaps this is why teenagers can be so vile. Underneath it all, they know they should have flown the coop, but the law says they can't.  On top of all the hormones, you get a prison sentence.

It's not really surprising that they can be a bit unpleasant is it?    

Wednesday
Dec122007

Hidden curriculum latest

In the previous post, I bleated about the refusal of my children's school to release the curriculum to me. I've been apopleptic pretty much ever since. Yesterday, however, a few details emerged on some of the innovations in the learning experience that are being promised for the new curriculum, which is being introduced over the next year or so.

From what I can gather, the powers that be in Holyrood are demanding that schools take responsibility for reducing levels of dental caries in children. To that end, my children's school will be extending its tooth brushing programme. We will have to wait for the details of how many days per week will be spent on brushing and whether the more able children will be set courses in flossing and advanced mouthwash.

We also gather that children are supposed to know how to deal with an adult having a heart attack in their presence. Whether this involves the issuing of a defibrillator to every five year old is not yet clear.

I hope nobody thinks I'm kidding about any of this.