Smart Bitches like me. Just ask my wife.

Who’d a thunk some hot tarantula action would have scored such a hit on the blogosphere. On Monday, Paperback Writer gave me a shout, and Smart Bitches Who Love Trashy Novels did too! Thanks to Gabriele for pointing out that last one to me.

If any of you newbies are wondering why the hell I haven’t written about sex in the last several days, don’t worry. It’s never that far from my mind. (But remember: my sister reads this blog, and I don’t want to totally gross her out.)

D.

Road to Baghdad

If you watch the news, you must have seen reports detailing the deaths of 14 Marines on Aug. 3rd when a roadside bomb destroyed their amphibious vehicle.

The public has become jaded by the steady stream of U.S. casualties but yesterday’s attack was unusual. Besides the large numbers killed, using this vehicle seemed like an odd choice for the Marines. The AAVP7A1 armored assault amphibious vehicle, aka Amtrack or Amtrac, is designed to carry soldiers from troop ships to beach landings. The lack of any water did not deter the Marines from using this transport; the military simply does not have enough appropriate vehicles for Iraq’s environment. Unfortunately, the Amtrack is more vulnerable than the Bradley Fighting Vehicle due to lighter armor.

Not only did the blast kill 14, the entire vehicle was overturned. Photos are posted here. Iraqi insurgents have steadily grown more sophisticated in their attacks, especially in the manufacturing and tactical use of IEDs.

The Amtrack weighs approximately 25 tons, which demonstrates the power of the blast. Previously, insurgents attacked an Amtrack on May 11, 2005, killing two Marines. There may have been other attacks against this type of vehicle but it is quite tedious to compile detailed lists of dead and wounded.

The humvee weighs approximately 0.5 tons (9800 lbs.). Even the armored version has been successfully attacked on numerous occasions.

The Stryker Infantry Vehicle weighs 17 tons. Four soldiers died on April 28, 2005 from an IED. This is a new vehicle which may replace the humvee to some extent.

The Bradley Fighting Vehicle weighs 25 tons. An Army staff sergeant was killed Nov. 8, 2003 when an IED hit his vehicle.

The M-1A1 Abrams Main Battle Tank weighs weighs 70 tons. On Jan. 10, 2005 an Abrams tank was destroyed, killing two and wounding four.

Taking out a heavily armored 70-ton tank is not easy. Even if these tanks were impregnable, they cannot be used indefinitely in a civilian setting. The tanks are too heavy and will tear up roads, bridges, etc.

When I first saw a humvee, I thought they were ridiculous vehicles. In order to use the machine gun, the unprotected soldier must stand up in the hole in the roof and expose himself to enemy fire. Why not just paint a target on your helmet to make it easier for insurgents firing RPGs?

Obviously, none of these vehicles are perfect but the humvees are a travesty.

Intelligent design meets the Hanukkah lobster

Poor Mrs. Heimburger. What do you do when the smallest first grader in your class has the biggest mouth? She couldn’t get it through my skull that she had twenty-three other kids to watch over (yeah, class sizes were that small back then). God bless her, she tried her best to let me be me: the constant center of attention.

Come Christmas time, my big mouth got me into trouble. I told Mrs. Heimburger I was Jewish and didn’t celebrate Christmas. She invited me to the front of the class to tell everyone the story of Hanukkah.

Uh-oh. I didn’t know jack about Judaism, but she didn’t know that.

Like Odysseus, I was a man (well — kid) who was never at a loss. I took the front of the classroom and for the next several minutes held forth on the miracle of the Hanukkah lobster. (That’s not a mound of spinach on his head; it’s a yarmulkeh.)

When those kids eventually learned the story of Hanukkah, they must have realized I was talking out of my ass. I like to think I helped foster a healthy degree of skepticism in each and every one of them.

That’s why we should be teaching “intelligent design” in our schools. If we only teach the truth, how will kids ever recognize the lies? Worse still, they’ll never perceive the lies which are commonly taught in the American classroom, such as: the Californian Missions helped Native Americans; Manifest Destiny was a good thing; the Civil War was fought to free the slaves.

Here’s an idea: let’s teach critical thinking skills to our kids. And let’s begin by teaching them the difference between tenets of faith and scientific hypotheses. Let’s give them the tools they need to see “intelligent design” for what it is: a flabby attempt to dress up religious belief in scientific clothing.

Class motto: Doubt Everything.

Class mascot: the Hanukkah lobster.

D.

PS: I’m not the only person who wants his crazed beliefs taught in the classroom. Thanks to Kate Rothwell’s blog for pointing to the Flying Spaghetti Monster website. And this bloke is way ahead of me in marketing: check out his Cafe Press line of products, too.

Great Bastards in History

Edward Jenner 1749-1823

Do the ends justify the means?In 1979, the World Health Organization declared that smallpox had been eradicated. The death toll for the 20th Century alone had been estimated in the 100s of millions. Over the centuries, smallpox had decimated populations, and had left many more blind and/or scarred for life.

So what can we say about the man who took the first steps towards the death of smallpox? Our cars should all have “What Would Jenner Do” bumper stickers, right?

Edward Jenner was an English country doctor who participated in the practice, common at the time, of variolation. Old, dried fluid from the sores of smallpox patients would be used to vaccinate people in the hopes of preventing smallpox. The variolated patient would develop a mild form of smallpox (usually), survive the disease (usually), and thenceforward be immune to bad-ass smallpox (always). Variolation spelled trouble, however, since the freshly immunized patient could spread the disease to infants and the elderly — basically, anyone with an imperfect immune system. And, as those ‘usuallys’ suggest, the process was not always benign.

Being a country doc, Jenner knew of the widely held belief that women who milked cows were immune to smallpox. He reasoned that these women were developing cowpox, a similar but far less lethal disease, and that this gave them immunity to smallpox. He took this idea and ran with it. First he experimented on his own son, Edward Jr., using swinepox. Later he would focus on cowpox, and his subjects seemed primarily to consist of women and children. (There were a few men in the bunch, but this article suggests the preponderance of his subjects were children and paupered women.) His methods were always the same: he would vaccinate them cowpox, and later try repeatedly to infect them with smallpox.

His theories were sound, his method saved lives, and now, most everyone regards him as a hero. Apologists like Dr. Tom Kerns bend over backwards to prove that Jenner’s methods were ethically sound. But the guy experimented on children, and on women who were pregnant or nursing. This bothered the hell out of me when I first learned about it in medical school. It still bothers the hell out of me.

I’ll ask it again — do the ends justify the means? If you want to torture yourself with that question, I can’t think of a better case than Jenner’s. Think about it: he probably put only a few dozen peoples’ lives in danger. There are no recorded injuries or deaths from his studies. His work resulted in a far safer means of immunization, making life better for the millions of Europeans who adopted his method.

But, did he do the right thing?

D.

PS: Bare Rump is still MIA in Hollywood, but her lover, Lord Valor, AKA Captain Argh, has updated us on his efforts to rescue her from the clutches of the Rabbit.

And you thought I was all serious today ;o)

Lies That Distort and Kill

For those who are interested in Rovewellian techniques, Republican talking points commonly utilize two logical fallacies, the Strawman argument and ad hominem tu quoque.

In the Strawman argument, you mistate and distort your opponent’s position, attack the revision, and then claim you have won. For example, Gore introduced legislation that was vital to the development of the internet. The Republicans said Gore claimed that he invented the internet and therefore he was a liar and self-promoter.

The ad hominem tu quoque logical fallacy uses hypocrisy to “refute” the argument. I.e., your argument must be false because you do it too. When Bush and his minions are caught in a lie, their supporters immediately attack Clinton’s statements concerning Monica Lewinsky. In other words, it doesn’t matter if the Bush Administration’s lies resulted in 100,000s of deaths in Iraq because Clinton said he didn’t have sex with Lewinsky.

The links to Wikipedia give a fuller explanation of these techniques and other variations.

Oil for Blood

Today, Knight-Ridder Newspapers reported:

“The bodies of the dead Nigerian villagers hadn’t yet grown cold when a navy captain presented Chevron with a bill: 15,000 naira, or $165…”.

The Jan. 4, 1999 raid by Nigerian soldiers killed an estimated 74 civilians, giving Chevron the bargain price of $2.23 per dead body. However, Chevron supplied the helicopter and boats used in the attack so presumably the soldiers’ only expenses were the bullets.

Nigeria has been severely criticized for the past decade by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, etc. for human rights abuses in the oil-rich Niger River Delta. Although it has been obvious for some time that oil companies have aided the government and profited from the exploitation, Chevron apparently took it one step farther and gave direct logistical support to the soldiers.

Chevron’s involvement has been known since 1999. However, due to a federal lawsuit filed by the victims, the company has been forced to turn over documents.

I googled the mainstream media and none of them are carrying the story except, of course, the Knight Ridder news chain.

Becoming Human

Let’s say you know this young woman named Angela. Perhaps she’s the niece of your best friend. Angela’s a good kid — never arrested, never even got drunk. Always so serious, too.

You weren’t at all surprised to hear she’d been her high school class valedictorian, or that she’d been accepted to a top university. You’re getting used to hearing regular reports of Angela’s greatness. Roundly praised by her professors; gets straight As, and finds time to do volunteer work; has a boyfriend, but she’s so focused on her studies that their relationship may be in doubt.

Lately, you’ve been hearing some disturbing things about Angela. She fell in with a different crowd, a group that’s taking up all her time. Her mom is worried sick about her. Says Angela lives on fast food and Twinkies, stays up to odd hours with her nose buried in books of arcane lore, never talks to her old friends, and rarely talks to her parents. When her mom does manage to get her on the phone, Angela seems distracted, and often uses language no one can understand. She’s learning so much from her teachers, she says; and yet her mother sees her drifting farther and farther away.

Her parents had their 20th anniversary last week, but Angela missed it. Said she was too busy to even remember to send a card. Her college boyfriend? He’s history. Angela won’t even return his phone calls or letters.

It gets worse. Her parents hear she’s doing things to people now. Hurting them, often with casual nonchalance, and joking about it afterwards with her friends. She has an almost religious fervor when she discusses her experiences — with dead bodies. She goes up to perfect strangers, asks them highly personal questions, then touches them in inappropriate ways. And she has the nerve to call this a history and physical.

On the very first day of my class’s orientation to medical school, we had a formal Grand Rounds presentation. The lecturer, one of our medical professors, presented the history of a young mother recently diagnosed with breast cancer. Her treatment involved a mastectomy and post-operative chemotherapy, and although she seemed to be doing well, her cancer was high grade. He discussed her chances of survival and they weren’t great.Throughout the professor’s monologue, the patient stood at the front of the lecture hall in a hospital gown and jeans. He finished the history, then asked her to take off her gown so that he could examine her in front of us. After he finished, he dismissed her with a simple thank you. She put her gown back on and exited down a side aisle.

The strange thing about this 22-year-old memory: I’m not sure how much of it is real and how much is imagined. I’m certain the woman was present throughout the professor’s third-person run-down of her history, but I don’t remember if she disrobed. But to me, it felt like she’d been disrobed. Is that why I remember it that way?

I also recall wanting to run after her to apologize. I doubt I was the only one who felt that way. A room full of 80 first year medical students on their first day of school, and not one of us ran after her.

I’m not the only one to see medical school as a form of cult indoctrination. This link goes overboard, I think, but the author raises several valid points. Nor is the problem limited to medical school: all graduate programs may share this to some degree.

That Day One Grand Rounds exercise was not accidental. Head first, we were thrown into the objectification mind set. These are not fellow human beings; they’re patients. You care for them, but don’t let yourself care about them (except in the most generic sense of caring). You develop calluses, but you must never appear callused. Empathy is not one of your better human qualities; it’s a healing tool, and it can be honed if you make a deliberate effort.

Most humans don’t touch dead bodies, let alone carve them to pieces. Most humans don’t ask strangers personal questions, step inside their personal space, touch them in intimate places, stab them with needles, cut them with knives.

But us folks in health care aren’t most humans.

Imagine walking up to someone who is barely an acquaintance — perhaps you’ve talked with him five or six times in the past, but never for more than five or ten minutes — and having this discussion with him:

“Your cancer has recurred. Unfortunately, you now have a decision to make. You could undergo a painful and maiming operation which will leave you forever changed, and you might still die from your cancer. You could let the cancer kill you, but it’s an ugly death by slow suffocation or, if you’re lucky, a quick hemorrhage. Or you could kill yourself.”

Many doctors skip this conversation. They tell their patient what they should do and leave the second and third options to the patients’ imagination. I was taught not to dictate to my patients, but give them all the information necessary for them to make a choice. Consequently, I’m sometimes obliged to have the above conversation, more often than I’d like.

But — damn it — it isn’t natural.

My patients like me, most of them. I’ve had few angry letters and fewer death threats. When it comes to bedside manner and patient rapport, I get high marks; I play the game, and I play it well. I’m an accomplished actor — I’m on stage eight hours a day.Medicine is a tight-rope act. Don’t care enough, and you’re a shit heel; care too much, and you burn out like a Fourth of July sparkler. Sometimes, I think I’m pretty damned good at walking that tight rope.

Other times, I want to hop off the rope, run after that young mother with breast cancer, and apologize to her. Like any normal human being would do.

D.

More hot spider action

This is Karen’s favorite tarantula mating story, which she learned secondhand at the ArachnoPets forum.

When tarantulas mate, the male needs to have access to her epigynum* in order to do the deed. This orifice is on the undersurface of her abdomen, so he needs to get beneath her in order to inseminate her. Good technique (from the male’s point of view) requires that he also restrain her fangs with special hooks on his forelegs. Restrained fangs are safe fangs.

Once, a male got beneath his intended and began to push her up and back. Everything went swimmingly — he had her fangs hooked, he had great access to her epigynum — so swimmingly that he got a bit overzealous and kept pushing.

I want you to imagine, for a moment, the first step in building a house of cards: one playing card tilted against another . . . so . . . precariously.

He overbalanced the female. She fell on her back, and he fell atop her, and I’m sure they would have had a good, long chuckle over it, told stories about it to the grandkids, maybe even exaggerated a detail here and there, but for one sad fact: the female, surprised by the fall, flashed her fangs, impaling her hapless lover. The rest, as they say, is dinner.**

D.

*Or, in tarantula-speak, ruby fruit jungle.

**A few of you will recognize this story from my NiP. Bare Rump is still recovering from the emotional scars of that fateful encounter.

Declaring Victory?

According to this Newsweek article, Sec. of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and “the Pentagon [have] developed a detailed plan in recent months to scale down the U.S. troop presence in Iraq to about 80,000 by mid-2006 and down to 40,000 to 60,000 troops by the end of that year”.

Guess what’s wrong with this picture.

The Iraqi Army and police force have been widely criticized as unprepared to take over security duties. Given the grim picture of a well-entrenched and dedicated insurgency and the threat from extremist-controlled militias, how is it possible to withdraw troops and maintain some security? It isn’t. The problem is the U.S. has no other option.

A few months ago, the Pentagon announced they would draw down most of the reservist and guard units by the end of this year due to a mandated two year limit on deployment. These units comprise about 40,000 soldiers. The Army said they would reshuffle their regular active-duty units to make up the shortfall. That’s a good way to grind the troops into the ground by forcing one tour-of-duty after another after another. As it is, some Army soldiers are on their third tour of duty with some Marines on their fourth.

Attentive readers may have noticed that recruitment is in the toilet. At the current rate, the Army will be 7,000 recruits short of their goal by September. That isn’t even taking into account the likelihood that many of those recruits will not make it through basic training. The military has dramatically reduced their standards which means more recruits will have questionable arrest records, drug and alcohol problems, lack of education, mental health issues, etc.

What will happen when the U.S. soldiers start to leave?

If the U.S. tries to occupy the whole of Iraq with fewer soldiers, there will be a dramatic increase in military and civilian casualties. If the soldiers withdraw to the military bases and only protect the oil fields, the rest of Iraq will fragment and explode in genocide, disease, starvation and civil war.

I’m sure that the Bush Admin will try to spin the withdrawal in the most positive way but will the public believe it?

Eating crow

A fellow named Laird Barron found one of my older and snarkier posts (Wonkaphilic Fan Fic, David Gerrold Kills Pound Puppies, &c., from May 20) and left this comment. The first bit is a quote from my blog, the second is his response.

“You might even say F&SF is the Rabbit Test of the spec fiction world, but of course you wouldn’t say it if you still harbored any hope of ever being published by F&SF, would you?”

Probably not. However, I think Gordon has enough class to separate the work from the author. Pity.

Sincerely,

Laird

I said this was one of my snarkier posts. Snarky may be too kind. My tone was petulant and whiny, and not particularly funny, so I can’t even use the excuse, “It’s only humor!” In ragging on the Rabbit Tests of the world, I contributed to the problem. In my defense, I really do find Fantasy & Science Fiction to be a frustrating magazine, and it’s not just because they won’t give me the time of day as a writer. I could have been a lot less pissy in expressing my opinion, however.

But let’s get back to Mr. Barron. It’s hard not to like this guy, or at least respect him. He zinged me with one word: Pity. And zinged me good. I thought about that all night.

I googled him, and have even more respect for the man. He has been published in Fantasy & Science Fiction, Sci Fiction, and other places. His story for Sci Fiction, Bulldozer, looks great, at least from the first few hundred words I’ve read thus far.

So, Mr. Barron, if you’re out there: yeah, I can take a hint. Consider me bitch-slapped. And good luck with your novel.

D.