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Ding Dong (Some) Anti-Evolution Bills Are Dead

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It looks like Charles Darwin can stop turning over in his grave, or at least, slow his roll: Three bills that take aim at widely accepted scientific theories like evolution and climate change died this week, in Indiana, the Oklahoma state Senate, and Arizona, following the earlier demise of similar legislation in Montana and Colorado, the National Center for Science Education reports. But two other anti-evolution bills—one in Missouri and another in Oklahoma’s House of Representatives—are still kicking, and they have more explicit pro-creationist language than the bills that have already been scrapped.

As Mother Jones reported last week, the House bill in Oklahoma, introduced by Republican state representative Rep. Gus Blackwell in February, forbids teachers from penalizing kids for writing papers attempting to debunk the theory of evolution or global warming. That bill squeaked through the Oklahoma Common Education committee on February 19, and is still alive. So is a House bill in Missouri, introduced by Republican state representative Rick Brattin in January, that would require that teachers and textbooks devote equal space to the teaching of intelligent design, “destiny” and any other theories of origin. Brattin’s bill has been referred to the Missouri Elementary and Secondary Education committee, but a hearing still hasn’t been scheduled. Even the Discovery Institute, which supports intelligent design research, is opposing the Missouri bill, saying it goes too far in pushing intelligent design in schools.

In contrast, the dead bills in Indiana and Oklahoma don’t even mention evolution. Instead the Indiana bill merely says “some subjects, including, but not limited to, science, history, and health, have produced differing conclusions,” and both the Indiana and Oklahoma bills say teachers should be allowed to teach the “strengths and weaknesses” of different theories. This is similar to language used in the now-dead Arizona bill—except that Arizona actually names those controversial theories: “biological evolution, the chemical origins of life, global warming and human cloning.” Kathy Trundle, president of the Association for Science Teacher Education, tells Mother Jones that “these types of legislation represent a thinly veiled attack on biological evolution…. Theories are not speculation.”

In Indiana, a spokesman for Rep. Robert Behning, House Education Committee chairman, told The Indiana Star on February 3 that the bill wasn’t going to get a hearing “due to the volume of bills and limited time.” But that doesn’t mean that the bill’s sponsor is giving up. “It might be one of those things that I may file for several years,” Republican state Representative Jeff Thompson told the paper. “My thought process hasn’t changed.”

Trundle says this kind of thinking is exactly the problem: “Legislation that conflates science, religion and politics is confusing and works against efforts to achieve scientific literacy.”

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Ding Dong (Some) Anti-Evolution Bills Are Dead

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Charts of the Day: Doctor Pay in America and Other Countries

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In Steven Brill’s monster healthcare article in Time this week, he argues that hospital executives are overpaid but doctors aren’t. If we paid Medicare rates for all medical services, he says, “no doctor could hope for anything approaching the income he or she deserves.” Felix Salmon pushes back:

Weirdly, in 24,000 words which include a lot of railing against the large salaries enjoyed by hospital executives, Brill never supports or clarifies this assertion: he never says how much money doctors deserve, how much they actually make, or how high physician salaries would need to be in order to make future doctors want to practice. That last one, in particular, seems very unconvincing to me: the world is full of highly-qualified doctors who would love to be able to practice in the U.S. for much less than the current going rate.

In his conclusion, Brill says — again, without adducing any evidence whatsoever — that “we’ve squeezed the doctors who don’t own their own clinics, don’t work as drug or device consultants or don’t otherwise game a system that is so game able”. It’s a bit weird, the degree to which Brill cares so greatly about keeping doctors’ salaries high: he certainly doesn’t think the same way about teachers.

You’d really like to see some data on this score, wouldn’t you? Well, here it is. The two charts below are from an OECD report that compares the average remuneration of GPs and specialists in a selected set of countries. The data is from 2004, and the figures are in PPP-adjusted dollars:

The bottom line is that compared to other rich countries—all of which pay Medicare rates or less for medical services—American doctors are pretty well paid. The report also shows compensation as a ratio of the average wage in each country, and the story is similar (though GPs look a little closer to the OECD average when you compare their pay to average wages).

So is this more or less than U.S. doctors “deserve”? On that score, it’s worth pointing out that most American doctors have to pay their own medical school bills, a cost that’s picked up by the government in most other countries. Despite that, it’s a little hard to argue that American doctors, especially specialists, have been squeezed to the breaking point. I too would be interested in seeing Brill back up that contention.

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Charts of the Day: Doctor Pay in America and Other Countries

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Why Tea Party Gov. Rick Scott Flip-Flopped on Obamacare

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Florida Gov. Rick Scott was elected in 2010 almost entirely thanks to his activism opposing the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. Scott spent $20 million of his own considerable fortune attacking the law, and the Republican backed the state’s lawsuit challenging its constitutionality all the way to the Supreme Court. Scott had declared last summer that Florida would implement the law basically over his dead body, including the optional part that would provide federal funding to expand Medicaid to people making up to 138 percent of the poverty line.

So it was a bit of a surprise Wednesday when he announced suddenly that he had changed his mind: Florida should embrace the Medicaid expansion. We’d like to think that this article might have had something to do with his decision; Scott himself claims that mother’s death inspired his change of heart. But it’s more likely that the decision was a direct result of the US Department of Health and Human Services agreeing to grant Florida a waiver that would allow it to move more Medicaid recipients into private managed-care plans—many of which are part of huge corporate insurance companies waiting to cash in on the latest installment of Obamacare. (The Medicaid expansion is expected to send $66 billion in federal funds to Florida in the next decade.)

Scott has been saying for months that if HHS approved Florida’s waiver request, he might be more willing to take the Medicaid expansion. He was in DC in January meeting with HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius over the issue. But HHS’s decision to grant the waiver was somewhat surprising, given that the state was asking to expand a very troubled pilot project going back to the Bush era. The pilot project, which also required a waiver from HHS, allowed the state to put Medicaid recipients in five counties into private, HMO-type health plans rather than the traditional government health plan for the poor and disabled. Scott has championed the pilot as an innovative way of keeping government spending in check. Health care advocates, though, saw the program as a major disaster.

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Why Tea Party Gov. Rick Scott Flip-Flopped on Obamacare

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Two Years Later, The Florida Bar Takes Action Against Foreclosure Baron David J. Stern

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Way back in August 2010, I sounded the alarm about a fellow named David J. Stern, a lawyer in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, who’d gotten rich off the housing meltdown of the mid-2000s. Stern ran a law firm that handled foreclosure cases as fast as possible for big banks and the quasi-governmental housing corporations Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But as I revealed, Stern’s law firm, paid per case, increasingly cut corners and, in some cases, duped judges in Florida’s overwhelmed court system in the race to foreclose on more people and make more money. (One local judge said a key document filed by a lawyer in Stern’s firm was “fraudulently backdated, in a purposeful, intentional effort to mislead the defendant and this court.”) Stern’s firm, I noted, was among the largest of a thriving breed of law firms profiting off of the housing crisis—and called them “foreclosure mills.”

Days after my 4,600-word investigation into Stern’s operation appeared, the Florida attorney general’s office launched its own probe of three of the state’s largest foreclosure mills. The big banks soon cut ties with Stern, as did Fannie and Freddie. Later, Fannie and Freddie cut ties with all foreclosure mills like Stern’s, after an inspector general report (citing Mother Jones, among others) criticized their use of such firms. Yet through it all, the Florida Bar, the enforcer of ethics for the state’s lawyers, publicly did nothing, to the dismay of homeowners, attorneys, and judges on the other side of Stern’s misdeeds.

No longer. The Palm Beach Post reports that the Bar is looking to bring disciplinary action against Stern resulting from 17 different complaints over the backdating of foreclosure documents, misleading local courts, failing to appear before an appeals court in a class action, and for his attorneys failing to appear in foreclosure hearings. The Bar decided to pursue action against Stern after internal grievance committees—similar to a grand juries—found probable cause in various Bar complaints filed against Stern.

Stern’s attorney, Jeffrey Tew, told the Post that the Bar had already closed 19 complaints against Stern without any repercussions. “David didn’t do anything wrong, ethically or otherwise,” Tew said. “He had a very complete system of supervision and didn’t participate in any of the individual situations.”

There is little left of Stern’s business empire. His law firm shuttered in March 2011 after the banks and Fannie and Freddie yanked their foreclosure cases out of his hands. The next day, DJSP Enterprises, Stern’s short-lived foreclosure processing operation, told investors it would voluntarily delist from the NASDAQ stock exchange. It was quite a downfall for a man whose firm, a few years before, litigated hundreds of thousands of cases for the biggest banks in America, and who was so assured of his abilities and power that he gave T-shirts to investors depicting himself as Superman.

Stern is no longer the Superman of foreclosure lawyers. But for the defense attorneys and homeowners and judges streamrolled by Stern’s foreclosure machine, long-delayed action by the Florida Bar is better than nothing.

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Two Years Later, The Florida Bar Takes Action Against Foreclosure Baron David J. Stern

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Local Natives’ "Hummingbird" Comes Alive

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Local Natives, the mesmerizing, harmonizing, Los Angeles-based four-piece, has successfully avoided the sophomore slump with the release, last week, of its second album, Hummingbird. It follows their bright and bouncy 2010 debut Gorilla Manor, which landed them tours with the likes of Arcade Fire and The National. In fact, The National’s Aaron Dressner was so enamored with Local Natives that he decided to help them produce Hummingbird.

The night after the album’s release, a sold-out crowd greeted Local Natives at Oakland’s 2,800-seat Fox Theater. “This is a big night for us,” vocalist/guitarist Taylor Rice said from the stage. “Our second record came out yesterday. This is the first time we’ve played Oakland. And this is the biggest show we’ve ever played.” He was visibly humbled by the size and reaction of the audience.

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Local Natives’ "Hummingbird" Comes Alive

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Friday Cat Blogging – 1 February 2013

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Here is Domino, looking boldly forward to a future of artificially intelligent robots to cater to her every whim. Not that this would actually make a big difference in her life, mind you. But they’d probably be slightly more responsive when she decides to wake them up in the middle of the night. Her human servants just get grouchy.

In any case, it’s a great day to wander around in the morning sun. 75 degrees today. That’s my kind of winter.

Next week: the return of quiltblogging!

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Friday Cat Blogging – 1 February 2013

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Energy Secretary Steven Chu to resign

Energy Secretary Steven Chu to resign

Center for American Progress Action Fund

In a letter posted at the Department of Energy website, Secretary Steven Chu announces plans to resign his post.

I’ve always been inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King, who articulated his Dream of an America where people are judged not by skin color but “by the content of their character.” In the scientific world, people are judged by the content of their ideas. Advances are made with new insights, but the final arbitrator of any point of view are experiments that seek the unbiased truth, not information cherry picked to support a particular point of view. The power of our work is derived from this foundation. …

I came with dreams, and am leaving with a set of accomplishments that we should all be proud of. Those accomplishments are because of all your dedication and hard work. …

While I will always remain dedicated to the missions of the Department, I informed the President of my decision a few days after the election that Jean and I were eager to return to California. I would like to return to an academic life of teaching and research, but will still work to advance the missions that we have been working on together for the last four years.

In the short term, I plan to stay on as Secretary past the ARPA-E Summit at the end of February. I may stay beyond that time so that I can leave the Department in the hands of the new Secretary.

We’d previously mentioned that a Chu resignation was likely — but we didn’t mention how hard he’ll be hard to replace. This is a Nobel Prize winner who lamented that he couldn’t ride his bike to work once he ascended to the Cabinet. The resignation also means that all three major agencies that deal with energy and environmental issues — Energy, the EPA, Interior — will need a new head.

The Hill has more about Chu and potential replacements:

The 64-year-old, with White House support, backed a larger federal role in R&D and commercialization of renewable, energy efficiency and battery technologies.

But part of the effort — grants and loans to help specific green energy companies take flight — brought big political headaches for Chu and President Obama when a handful of them failed or struggled. …

The long list of potential nominees to replace Chu includes former Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.); former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D); Deputy Energy Secretary Daniel Poneman; and Sue Tierney, a managing principal at the Analysis Group who was DOE’s assistant secretary for policy under President Clinton. …

Chu also focused on two programs that were authorized before his arrival but really got rolling under the current administration.

One was the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy, which funds so-called high-risk, high-reward research into breakthrough technologies. The agency was created in 2007 legislation but did not receive funding until 2009.

The other was the green technology loan guarantee program, which had not finalized support for any companies before Chu’s arrival.

More to come from us soon.

Philip Bump writes about the news for Gristmill. He also uses Twitter a whole lot.

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Energy Secretary Steven Chu to resign

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Am I the Only Person Left Who Hates Anti-Aliasing?

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I’m not trying to pick on the New Republic here, but I’m curious about something. They launched a redesigned website yesterday, and here’s how the main text font renders on my PC:

Why does it look so bad? Because I’m running Windows with ClearType turned off. Does anyone else do this, or am I the only person left on the planet who finds ClearType intolerable for day-to-day use? If I’m the only one, then I understand why some magazines don’t bother optimizing their body fonts for either mode (it’s not just TNR). But if I’m not the only one, then why not use a font that works for everyone?

PREEMPTIVE TECH NOTE: Yes, my monitor is running at its native resolution. Yes, I know how to set up ClearType. Yes, I know that most people prefer the mushy look of anti-aliased type. But I don’t, and never have. I’m just curious about whether I’m a lone holdout at this point. I wouldn’t be surprised if I am. ClearType has been turned on by default in Windows for many years now, and my guess is that very few people these days realize it’s something they could turn off even if they wanted to.

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Am I the Only Person Left Who Hates Anti-Aliasing?

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Apple’s Higher R&D Expense May Not Be Good News

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Apple announced lower gross margins and slower growth this week, leading to a selloff of their stock. But Chris O’Brien reports some good news:

If investors are looking for some reasons for optimism, they might do well to check Apple’s numbers related to its research and development spending. Tucked way down deep in its 10-Q filed on Thursday, the company noted that spending on R&D increased 33% in the quarter ending in December. That amounts to an increase of $252 million to a cool $1 billion.

….So, what’s cooking in Apple’s labs? Ha. You didn’t think they’d actually tell us that, did you? In the filing, the company said, “This increase was due primarily to an increase in headcount and related expenses to support expanded R&D activities.”

This might indeed be good news. But then again, it might not. Part of Apple’s success over the past decade has been its uncanny ability to invent a very small number of blockbuster products. Its R&D expense has been low—less than 2 percent of sales—largely because there was so little wasted motion: first the iPod, then the iPhone, then the iPad. That’s three products, along with a smattering of other stuff, generating $200 billion per year. That’s remarkable.

But as product lines age, they have to be maintained, and maintenance engineering is as costly as the original invention itself. Compatibility problems crop up, both between product lines and with prior versions of software. Old products have to be supported. Bureaucracies swell. Not every new product is a winner. All of that causes R&D expense to go up.

Maybe Apple still has the R&D magic. Maybe they’re spending more because their next product introduction will be even bigger and more amazing than anything they’ve done before. But then again, maybe it’s because they’re turning into an ordinary company. Maybe their improbable run of good luck is over. We’ll have to wait and see.

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Apple’s Higher R&D Expense May Not Be Good News

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15 Surprising Uses for Aluminum Foil

Ayesha M.

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15 Surprising Uses for Aluminum Foil

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