Monday, June 26, 2017

Did You Know #59

Statistics...fascinating. Demographics...love them. A study that combines both...does life get any better? A big shout out to the Global Cities Institute at the University of Toronto for this embarrassment of enriching information.

By 2050, there will be almost 10 billion people on the planet. Today, Tokyo is the most populous city in the world, with about 38 million residents, one of the 10 most populous cities in the world is in Africa (Cairo), and two (Sao Paulo and Mexico City) are in Latin America. By 2020, these will be the 10 most populous cities: (10) Mexico City, Mexico: 24.3 million people (9) New York, United States: 24.8 million people (8) Karachi, Pakistan: 31.7 million people (7) Tokyo, Japan: 32.6 million people (6) Lagos, Nigeria: 32.6 million people (5) Kolkata, India: 33 million people (4) Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo: 35 million people (3) Dhaka, Bangladesh: 35.2 million people (2) Delhi, India: 36.2 million people (1) Mumbai, India: 42.4 million people.

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Fredisms on Social Media

Feb 24, 2015 (Facebook):

Freedom of speech is a beautiful thing; something to be cherished for sure, but it sure can be confusing sometimes. You can say whatever you want about anything regardless of whether what you're saying has any basis in fact and that's free speech, my friend...so long as it isn't about yourself. Apparently, a different set of standards apply when it comes to "misremembering" something that you did (or claimed to have done). As far as I can tell, facts are facts, and mistruthes are mistruthes regardless of the forum or context in which they are made. In other words, if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and sounds like a duck...it's probably a duck.

Feb 26, 2015 (Twitter):

Happy 45th birthday to @NPR and founding member station @KQED.

Friday, June 27, 2014

What Caught My Eye Today: Geography, Twitter, Soccer

Geography - If it's related to history or geography, you know I'm all over it, even if the story is a bit dated...in this case dated by 41 years. In 1973, California State University geography professor George Pearcy suggested that the U.S. redraw its antiquated state boundaries and narrow the overall number of states to 38 (see below). His proposed state lines were drawn in less-populated areas, isolating large cities and reducing their number within each state. Pearcy argued that if there were fewer cities vying for a state's tax dollars, more money would be available for projects that would benefit all citizens. I don't know about this dude. All this talk of a more equitable distribution of money sounds suspiciously like an elaborate socialist plot.  Because the current states were being chopped up beyond recognition, part of his plan included renaming the new states by referencing natural geologic features or the region's cultural history. I guess there are worse ways to name a state but, honestly, who wants to live in "Bitterroot"? While he did have a rather staunch support network—economists, geographers, and even a few politicians argued that Pearcy's plan might be crazy enough to work—the proposal lost steam in Washington due primarily to all the work that would have to be done to enact the plan: re-surveying the land, setting up new voter districts, new taxation infrastructure—basically starting the whole country over. Isn't that always the case? Logic and practicality always seem to take a back seat to institutional inefficiencies.


Twitter - The FBI has released an 83-page manual containing a list of almost 3,000 acronyms to decipher Twitter slang intended to help agents navigate the world of social media after a freedom of information request. This is what my tax dollars pay for? Are you kidding me? It includes common shorthand like LOL -- laugh out loud -- and FMTKFYTFO -- for me to know, for you to find out. Beyond the basics, the list features many acronyms that few people have ever seen and, with some level of certainty, an FBI agent never will either.

1. ALOTBSOL (“always look on the bright side of life”)
I'm okay with this one. I like anything that traces its origins to Monty Python
2. BFFLTDDUP (“best friends for life until death do us part”)
3. BMGWL (“busting my gut with laughter”)
For those times when LOL (or some variation thereof) just doesn't capture the sentiment.
4. BOGSAT (“bunch of guys sitting around talking”)
5. BTDTGTTSAWIO (“been there, done that, got the T-shirt and wore it out”)
6. BTWITIAILWU or BTWITIAILWY (“by the way I think I am in love with you”)
If this doesn't "seal the deal" with the target of your affection, I'm not sure anything will.
7. DFLA (“disenhanced four-letter acronym”)
Huh?
8. DWISNWID (“do what I say not what I do”)
9. FMDIDGAD (“frankly my dear I don’t give a damn”)
10. IITYWTMIWHTKY (“if I tell you what this means I will have to kill you”)
11. IOKIYAR (“it’s okay if you are Republican”)
12. NALOPKT (“not a lot of people know that”)
I'm thinking even fewer people are familiar with this acronym.
13. OOSOOM (“out of sight out of mind”)
14. PHAT (“pretty hot and tempting”)
Who know that "phat" actually meant something?
15. QWERTYUIOP (“bored”)
Doesn't an acronym that is twice the size of the actual word sort of defeat the purpose of using the acronym?

My favorite part of of this news item, was the reaction of the author. In conclusion, AYFKMWTS? (Are you f---ing kidding me with this s--t?) I couldn't agree more.

Soccer - The group stage of the 2014 FIFA World Cup is in the books. Besides defending champion Spain getting eliminated from the tournament, the other big headlines include the U.S. managing to advance out of the "group of death" along with Germany (Portugal and Ghana were sent packing) and Uruguay's Luis Suarez getting handed a lengthy suspension and fine for biting an opposing player (The scary thing is that this was the third time he's been caught chowing down on another player).  Eight of the final 16 teams come from the Americas (5 from South America and 3 from North and Central America). Asia didn't manage to send any of its 4 teams into the next round and Europe also took quite a beating with only 6 of 13 teams making it through.  Given that my original prediction of a Brazil / Spain final is obviously not going to happen, my revised pick for the final match up based on the teams that remain is Brazil vs. Argentina.  I'd love to see the Netherlands make it, but the South American countries look really good. Next up for the Americans is Belgium. On paper, this should be a slightly easier match up, what with Belgium only being ranked 11th (Germany is ranked 2nd and Portugal 4th, while the US is 13th).

Did You Know #58?

How much water does it take to produce the beef from one cow?

According to The Pacific Institute it requires 40,000 liters of water to raise a cow. 

Here are some other items and the water it takes to make one of:

  • Beer - 300 liters
  • Orange Juice - 850 liters
  • Wine - 960 liters
  • Coffee - 1,200 liters
  • Bread - 1,300 liters
  • Corn - 1,400 liters
  • Rice - 3,500 liters
  • Chicken - 4,600 liters
  • Cotton Textiles (clothes) - 11,000 liters
  • Microchip - 16,000 liters

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

What Caught My Eye Today - Food, Air Travel, Texas, Soccer, Potpourri

Food - A Silicon Valley engineer has developed a new powdered meal replacement drink called Soylent that could replace traditional food. Pray tell why? Described by the engineer as "Ensure on steroids," Soylent contains 35 essential ingredients - protein, carbohydrates, fats, vitamins and minerals - in one 1,500 calorie packet. Mix it with water and oil and you have a meal that you could live on forever. I presume boyfriend subscribes to the "eat to live" line of thinking as opposed to "live to eat" which camp which I proudly belong to. The beige goo, which tastes like unsweetened cake batter, costs about $4 per meal. Dude, its called goo and tastes like Silly Putty. Why on earth, would someone voluntarily ingest this stuff?

Air Travel - According to surveys, 33% of Americans fantasize of joining the "Mile High Club" while only 4% have succeeded in doing so. A bit of a tangent, but can anyone enlighten me as to how I can get on one of these surveys?  They sound far more entertaining that the political surveys I'm usually subjected to. While the process of entry is straightforward (find a willing partner, wait for the plan to rise to 5,280, then go for it), the logistics of waiting for the right time -- free from turbulence and vigilant flight attendants -- can be frustrating. Hey, if membership was easy, then everyone would be a member. Not exactly an exclusive club if that were to happen. Then there is the issue of moving within a coffin-size bathroom, to say nothing of the mandatory task of sanitizing the toilet seat. Yeah, right.  People wanted to do the nasty in an airplane lavatory really care about sanitation. A handful of private airlines -- Flamingo Air (Ohio), Erotic Airways (Australia), Mile High Flights (England), Love Cloud (Las Vegas) -- are now making it much easier to join this league of sexual adventurers without facing the typical obstacles. While amenities vary by carrier, most offer a short flight (usually 60 minutes), complete with champagne, chocolates and a "discreet" pilot. If I understand the rules correctly, there is nothing that says you can't take one of these "special" flights to "do your thang". Still, it does strike me as taking the easy way out, as it were.

Texas - Texas Republicans adopted a party platform for 2014 that includes support for so-called reparative therapy, which proponents claim can turn gay people straight. I've lost count of the reasons why I don't live in Texas. Suffice it to say, that now I have another reason not to. The American Psychological Association has condemned such "conversion" counseling, and the practice has been outlawed in the treatment of minors in both California and New Jersey. Under the new plank, adopted at the Texas GOP Convention, the state party will now recognize the "the legitimacy and efficacy of counseling" for patients who seek "healing and wholeness from their homosexual lifestyle." How positively humane of them.  Now if you will excuse me, I'm going to go hurl now. The party will also oppose any laws that seek to limit access to the treatment. In fairness, what with me being the lunatic progressive liberal that I am (a.k.a. I voluntarily choose to live in the San Francisco Bay Area), I'm pretty sure the Republican party in Texas wasn't planning on getting my vote any time in the foreseeable future.

Soccer - This just in from the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. Hell apparently has frozen over, at least in Rio de Janeiro. World #1 team and defending World Cup champion, Spain is the first team to be eliminated from the tournament after losing its first two group stage games. Spain lost its opening match to the Netherlands, 5-1, then lost in shocking fashion to Chile, 2-0. Meanwhile, the United States won its opening fixture 2-1 over nemesis, Ghana (which held the distinction of booting the U.S. out of the last two World Cups) in the dreaded Group of Death. A win over either Germany or Portugal (and possibly a draw) could see the U.S. advance into the group of 16.

Potpourri

  • Twitter - The Central Intelligence Agency has joined Facebook and Twitter. The agency's first tweet was "We can neither confirm nor deny that this is our first tweet." It's official. Twitter and Facebook are no longer cool.
  • Fat - According to a recent study, 30% of the world's population -- about 2.1 billion people -- is obese. The United States has 87 million obese people, more than any other nation. Pretty impressive if you think about it. I mean China and India have well over a billion people each, and yet we still manage to have more weight-challenged people than they do.
  • News - The median age of the average Fox News viewer is 68.8. For MSNBC the median age is 62.5 and for CNN, 62.8. Show of hands...who is actually surprised by these age demographics?
  • War - Only one American soldier was classified as missing in action during the 13-year Afghanistan War -- Sargeant Bow Bergdahl, who was recently release by the Taliban. 73,547 U.S. troops are still unaccounted for from World War II, 7,883 from the Korean War, and 1,642 from the Vietnam War. I'm not sure what is more shocking--that after 13 years of conflict, the U.S. managed to have just one (and now zero) MIAs or that 70 years after the fact, there are still more that 73,000 missing soldiers from World War II? 
  • Wealth - According to Credit Suisse's latest Global Wealth report (2013), Americans' median net worth was $44,900 per adult, placing the United States in 19th place, behind Japan, Canada, Australia, and much of Western Europe. Australia tops the list at $219,500 per adult. Australia, huh?  I was totally thinking Monaco or Luxembourg.

Did You Know? #57

How many bubbles are there in a 750ml bottle of sparkling wine?

According to Popular Science magazine, someone did the math and calculated the estimated number of bubbles to be 100 million.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

What Caught My Eye Today - North Korea, Kenya, Saudi Arabia, Canada, Cuba, Potpourri

North Korea - Kim Jong-Un was "re-elected" as North Korea's leader.  Yeah, those incumbents always seem to have luck on their side don't they? Then again, this is the same guy that had his uncle executed to solidify his position of authority, which probably doesn't do much to motivate opposition candidates. The rubber-stamp assembly -- the first under the leadership of Kim who took over from his father in December 2011 -- gathered after North Koreans cast ballots in pre-determined elections where all candidates were unopposed. There's an oxymoron for you..."pre-determined election". Sort of in the same vein as "unopposed candidates". If you are unopposed, what exactly are you being elected to? According to state media reports, Upon his re-election, "all the deputies and participants in the session broke into stormy cheers of 'hurrah!', extending the highest glory and warmest congratulations to him." Avunculicide aside (turns out there is an actual term or killing one's uncle). boyfriend sounds like he'd be a hoot to hang out with. Kim also serves as first secretary of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea and supreme commander of the Korean People's Army.  Busy lad.

Kenya - A new bill was signed into law allowing men in Kenya to take as many wives as they want, legalizing the longstanding practice of polygamy while outlawing the paying of a dowry to a bride's family. No double standard there. The bill, which allows men to marry a second or third wife without the first wife's consent was passed by Parliament following heated debates that saw female lawmakers storm out of the chamber in protest. Imagine that. Women, meanwhile, are not allowed to marry more than one man.  You can see the logic there, can't you?  How complicated with things be if both men and women could have multiple spouses at the same time? Better to give men free reign and screw women's rights.

Saudi Arabia - A deadly new virus is spreading rapidly across Saudi Arabia and terrifying health care workers. 345 people have come down with Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, of whom 107 have died. Many of the infected are doctors or nurses prompting some doctors to resign rather than treat MERS patients. That sort of reaction seems contrary to the Hippocratic Oath, but one can sympathize with their situation. It is a lot harder to practice medicine when you're dead.  The recently appointed health minister is urging Saudis to avoid direct contact with camels, a host of the virus, as well as raw camel milk and meat.  This is one of those times when cultural differences come into start contrast.  Where I come from, you just don't see see public service announcements for this sort of thing.  Avoiding raw camel meat is assumed to be a given.

Canada - The Canadian middle class has passed the United States middle class to be the richest in the world. Those rat bastards! Who do they think they are? After-tax middle incomes in Canada, which were well behind the U.S. just 15 years ago, caught up in 2010 and have now pulled ahead. The U.S. is still the richest nation overall, but most income goes to the wealthiest, while in Canada it is spread more evenly. That's just jibber-jabber for saying that Canada is basically a socialist state, as opposed to the thriving model of equitable income distribution that we have in the lower forty-eight. The poorest 20% in Canada are also better off than the poorest Americans. Sure, but the top 1% are better off than everyone.

Cuba - Cubans are having trouble finding condoms. I had to read the headline twice to make sure this wasn't another story coming out of Venezuela. Cuba and Venezuela have strengthened economic ties in recent years.  How's that working out for you guys so far? The price of a single condom has risen to $1.30, the average daily wage in Cuba. The state-run wholesaler of condoms blamed the shortage on the need to repackage 1 million condoms that were wrongly labeled as expiring in 2012 but are still good through 2014. Re-packaging condoms? Yeah, that seems like the right way to go.  Again, where I come from, if you mess up something like that, you take your lumps and start over.

Potpourri

  • Cost of Living - Between 1989 and 2010, college costs increased by 307%, health care costs by 223% and housing costs by 85%. Over the same period, wages went up by only 70%. I knew it! I knew there was a reason for my increasing bitterness. I'm not getting older, I'm getting poorer.
  • Taxes - Roughly 24% of a person's federal taxes are spent on Social Security, 22% on Medicare and Medicaid, and 19% on defense spending. U.S. taxes are among the lowest in the developed world. As a percentage of GDP, U.S. taxes rank 31st in the world, behind those of Germany, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Pay more, get less. I love my country. On another note, if you add the interest on the national debt to the equation, discretionary spending amounts to about 29 cents on the dollar.

Did You Know? #56

How old is the oldest known star in the universe?

Astronomers using the Australian National University SkyMapper telescope discovered a star that formed 13 billion years ago, only 700 million years after the Big Bang.

Monday, April 7, 2014

What Caught My Eye Today - Venezuela, Air Pollution, Climate Change, Fat, Big Bang, Potpourri

Fred's Note:  With Earth Day coming up later this month (April 22), we have a few more "earthy" news items than normal.  Enjoy, and maybe just a little bit more appreciative of the planet.

Venezuela - As food shortages proliferate, Venezuelans are now being given identification cards, so they can buy groceries. Like a food stamp program, right? The government said the new cards, which can be used only at government-run supermarkets, are intended to track purchases to prevent people from buying up subsidized food then reselling it on the black market. Or perhaps not. Critics say the program marks the beginning of Cuban-style rationing. A combination of currency controls, which foil imports, and price controls, which discourage production, has resulted in shortages of such staples as milk, toilet paper and cooking oil. You have to tip your cap to the Venezuelan government.  It's pretty easy to mess up one's monetary policy (happens all the time in the United States), but these guys managed to foul up their entire financial system in every imaginable way. Bravo. 

Air Pollution - New findings from the World Health Organization show that air pollution was responsible for more than 7 million global deaths in 2012, making it the world's top environmental health risk. I guess gunfire falls into a different category. More than one third of those occurred in Asia, where rapid industrial development has contributed significantly to the problem. If you think about it, given that over half the world's population is in Asia, one-third doesn't seem so bad does it? Of course it does beg the question of where the other two-thirds are occurring. I'll put my money on Africa, as if it didn't have enough going against it. 4.3 million deaths were attributed to indoor pollutants, mainly from stoves that burn coal, wood, dung and crop residues. Toxic air outdoors figured in 3.7 million deaths. The hardest hit countries were low and middle income nations in Southeast Asia and the western Pacific. I would have thought that all those typhoons would have helped keep the air a bit cleaner. Clearly, I was wrong, and clearly these guys just cannot catch a break.

Not to pile on or anything, if the air doesn't get you, it appears that Mother Nature will.

Climate Change - A United Nations panel of leading environmental scientists issued a dire warning on the dangers of climate change, saying that global warming is already affecting every continent and threatens to devastate food supplies, cause mass extinctions of plants and animals, worsen droughts, and raise the risk of wars over resources. Just a second.  Isn't a war of resources already happening...you know, with oil? The panel said that rising oceans and droughts could displace hundreds of millions of people by the end of the century, causing trillions of dollars of damage. Surging temperatures have already lowered corn and wheat yields. The 2,500-page report comes at a critical time, as governments prepare to negotiate a new deal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that is scheduled to be finalized by the end of 2015. 2,500 pages...are you kidding me?  Whose gonna read something that long, when the next Game of Thrones book could be published at any time?  To have any major impact, the agreement would need the cooperation of the United States and major energy users from the developing world, specifically China and India. Yeah, that's gonna happen.

Okay, enough bad news.  Here's a gem we can all stand up and cheer.

Fat - After 4 decades of persistent warnings that saturated fats should be avoided in healthy diets, new research has found no evidence linking the fats found in meat, butter and cheese to an increased risk of heart disease. Woo-hoo!  I'll have 6 double bacon cheeseburgers and a milkshake in every flavor that you have, thank you very much. The same study also found no firm evidence that unsaturated fats, such as omega-3 fatty acids, reduce heart disease rates. More good news. Maybe now we can stop over fishing the oceans. While saturated fats are known to increase "bad" cholesterol, the findings suggest that the relationship between cholesterol and heart disease is more complicated than previously thought. I'm sure it is complicated.  Here something that isn't so hard to wrap your head around...MODERATION!  Give it a try, people. Researchers did confirm that trans fats, such partially hydrogenated oils found in processed foods, do have a direct link to heart disease. Yeah, yeah, you can try to harsh my mellow all you want. Me and my deep-fried everything will be just fine and dandy.

Big Bang - Scientists have discovered gravitational "ripples" that provide strong evidence of the Big Bang. If confirmed, the findings will verify the theory of cosmic inflation, which hold that 13.8 billion years ago, the universe expanded violently from a hot, dense subatomic speck to the size of a golf ball in a trillionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second and then kept expanding. Two questions. First, 13.8 billion years? Are you sure about that? Isn't it possible that this may have happened 13.7 billion years ago, or maybe even 13.9 billion? How can you be so sure, it was 13.8 billion. Was someone there?  Second question, how do you know it was a golf ball, and not a baseball, softball, or even a soccer ball (a football isn't round, so it couldn't possibly have been one of those)? When inflation was first proposed 35 years ago, scientists predicted the event would have been accompanied by waves of gravitational energy -- ripples in the fabric of space-time -- the afterglow of the Big Bang. The ripples also support the theory that the universe may be just one of a vast number that have burst into existence. Honestly, I do find this stuff fascinating (why else would I post so many stories on the subject?), but here's what I don't get.  How can you possibly prove or disprove such theories? It's taken almost 40 years for us to get a man-mad object to get to the edge of our solar system, to say nothing of our ignorance of the galaxy or universe. Now we're speculating that there are multiple universes. It's enough to make your head spin, you know, if the end of the world due to climate change doesn't do it for you.

Potpourri

  • Basketball - None of the 15 million fans who submitted brackets for the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship will bet the 9.2-quintillion-to-one odds and win Warren Buffet's $1 billion prize for perfectly predicting the winning team for every game in this year's tournament. All entries got at least one game wrong in the first round of 32 games. Show of hands, who had Connecticut and Kentucky in the championship game?  Yeah, neither did I.
  • Billionaires - California is home to 111 billionaires, the most of any state in the nation. Collectively, they hold assets worth $485 billion more than the entire GDP of all but 24 countries in the world. The state also suffers the highest poverty rate in the United States at 24%. Here's the thing, none of those guys picked the perfect bracket either. So if you think about it, they aren't any better than us, are they? 
  • College Admissions - A new survey on college admissions statistics show that it is easier to get into an Ivy League college than to land a job at Google or Walmart. Ivy League universities accepted 8.9% of applicants last year, while a Walmart in Washington D.C. hired just 2.6% of 23,000 job seekers. Google, meanwhile hires just 0.5% of applicants. This is one those comparisons that I find amusing and irksome at the same time.  How can anyone draw a meaningful comparison between getting a job at Google and getting admitted to Harvard...besides a Harvard grad who gets that job at Google? On the other hand, I do draw some pleasure from the fact that all those Ivy League graduates will be duking it out to be a greeter at the local Walmart and most of them will be on the losing end of that deal.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Did You Know? #55

What nation reads the most?

According to the World Culture Score Index, India averages 10 hours, 42 minutes of reading per person per week.  Here is the list of top 30.

1. India — 10 hours, 42 minutes
2. Thailand — 9:24
3. China — 8:00
4. Philippines — 7:36
5. Egypt — 7:30
6. Czech Republic — 7:24
7. Russia — 7:06
8. Sweden — 6:54
8. France — 6:54
10. Hungary — 6:48
10. Saudi Arabia — 6:48
12. Hong Kong — 6:42
13. Poland — 6:30
14. Venezuela — 6:24
15. South Africa — 6:18
15. Australia — 6:18
17. Indonesia — 6:00
18. Argentina — 5:54
18. Turkey — 5:54
20. Spain — 5:48
20. Canada — 5:48
22. Germany — 5:42
22. USA — 5:42
24. Italy — 5:36
25. Mexico — 5:30
26. U.K. — 5:18
27. Brazil — 5:12
28. Taiwan — 5:00
29. Japan — 4:06
30. Korea — 3:06