Joe Maller.com

I just noted my fourth or fifth hit in the past few days searching Google for ‘LGF’ and ‘racist’. These disturb me because the results are going to be deliberately slanted, reflecting the presumed intention of the searcher. Searching on foregone conclusions is an effective means of enforcing one’s preconceptions. Try searching on the opposite of what is believed, ideas with merit will survive scrutiny.

This reminded me of an interview with Rupert Sheldrake I heard a few years ago, one of his points seems completely appropriate:

The universe is reflexive — in other words, it reflects what we are looking for. If you believe that the most important thing in the universe is polarity, you can see it everywhere — you know, heads and feet, north and south poles, roots and shoots in plants. If you think that the most important thing is trinities, threes, you can find threes everywhere you look. If you think that it’s fours, you find fours — the four points of the compass, squares, corners, and so on. You’re always meeting people who have philosophies where the secret of life is this or that, and you can find plenty of evidence for all of these philosophies.

To illustrate my point, I checked Google for a few other potentially loaded searches related to LGF:

 480 hits: Google Search: LGF racist
1170 hits: Google Search: LGF caring
4470 hits: Google Search: LGF right
3040 hits: Google Search: LGF left
2760 hits: Google Search: LGF love
1800 hits: Google Search: LGF hate
1570 hits: Google Search: LGF truth
 870 hits: Google Search: LGF lies


I swear I thought of this when I was 11:

The photodetectors on the rear surface are used to record the intensity and color of a source of illumination behind the object. The light emitters on the front surface then generate light beams that exactly mimic the same measured intensity, color and trajectory. The result is that an observer looking at the front of the object appears to see straight through it.

What next, mag-lev pavement? (you remember, don’t you Mark?)


Lots of hits via Google looking for information about re-installing MySQL under 10.2. Here is my posting, which adds a little bit to Marc Liniage’s MySQL update and installation instructions.

side note: Today I noticed that 10.2 seems to install a mysql system user by default, which explains why my MySQL user login is no longer showing in the startup list. Even if you don’t have MySQL installed, you can confirm this by checking available users in the Ownership & Permissions section of the Get Info window. Maybe this means future versions of OS X will pre-install MySQL by default. That would make a lot of people happy.


And just like that, it’s September again.


It seems like the Save Our Streams fight has been pretty much lost (scroll to the bottom). Welcome to the science of unintended consequences.

Radio traditionally served as a filter to help people find music they like from so immense a library they could never began to hear it all. As corporate radio and focus-group-pop diluted contemporary musical choices, listeners turned to smaller independent radio stations and individuals to help find interesting things to listen to. This in part revealed what a wasteland ‘popular music’ and commercial music radio has become.

Listeners will be bored again, and they’ll go looking for music-filters. People who use software like Kung-Tunes to publish whatever music they’re listening to onto their web sites will become the new DJs. Since there will be no streams to sample from, file-sharing services will fill the gap of allowing listeners to find and hear the songs they read about.

Killing Internet radio will promote file-sharing, retrain people away from radio and eventually do more to hurt the very commercial music radio corporations and record companies who pushed for this bill than Internet Radio ever would have. Congratulations, you won. Have a nice legacy.


This morning I woke up and was reluctant to read what I wrote last night, fearing it said something different than I intended. Thankfully, it seems consistent with my thoughts, which is never assured and always a relief.

I did modify the paragraph about my neighborhood because it was unclear. Misunderstandings are at the heart of most of the political discussions I’ve read. Often people are trying to say the same things but imprecise language and preconceptions usually lead to circular shouting matches around misaligned ideas.


I meant to post something last week when Anil first cited my comment on MetaFilter regarding the web site Little Green Footballs. A week later, the discussion has spread to other places. I replied briefly to the wetlog posting, but didn’t trust that comments section with everything I had to say:

Choosing only the most hate-filled postings written by visitors to a site is of course also a definite form of bias. I could easily make a case about illiteracy on MetaFilter, genius on Fark or social graces on Slashdot–if you let me choose the postings.

The American political ideological landscape is a wreck, and the labels ‘right-wing’ and ‘left-wing’ are relics. Many of us arrived at similar conclusions to Charles (LGF) by doing exactly what our ‘liberal’ beliefs have always done, we sought out media and voices from the Arab world to try and understand why we in the west are apparently so hated. What we found was beyond disturbing. Lies, conspiracies, the Blood Libel, hatred of the US, Jews, and the West, all reported by state-run media. Entirely too often, Arab papers publish articles paralleling neo-nazi mainstays. The news in Arab papers often seems to be reporting on a completely different reality than what was being seen and reported by western media.

Of everything he wrote, I’m most troubled by wetlog’s comparison of LGF to ClearGuidance, and I wonder if he had read anything on that site beyond what was pulled out and cited. Though both actions may be repugnant, there is a significant moral distinction between encouraging inevitable (and ongoing) military action and discussing techniques for beheading your neighbors.

I would love to go back to living like nothing ever happened, but my 3000 dead neighbors and the huge fucking crater in the sky downtown keep reminding me that someone is at war with us. At some point I woke up and admitted that, as a result of studying many cultures and visiting a whole lot of places around the world, America, with it’s faults, is a pretty damn close to the best people have done so far. Arab dictatorships and theocracies are close to the bottom. This does not make me a racist. It’s more than possible to be a moderate and come to a strong conclusion about an issue, in fact it’s preferable.

For years I’ve been looking forward to the day the Arab world wakes up to tourism. Arab and islamic culture have contributed a huge amount to the history and knowledge of mankind, and I really wish we could visit and appreciate those places, people and things without worrying about getting killed because of some conspiracy-theory fed hatred against anything seen as American.

Besides living a little over a mile from the World Trade Center, it’s hard for me to get away from these issues. On a recent afternoon, I waved hello to the Brooklyn-accented, Palestinian owner of the restaurant across the street where I had dinner the night before, turned the corner and bought a black and white cookie from the Jewish bagel place with two pictures on the wall behind the register, one of Ariel Sharon with the shop’s owner on First Avenue and the other a clipping of a young Isreali family recently murdered by terrorists. I live in the middle of this and it serves as a constant reminder of why I love New York City, the complexity of political conflict and human emotions, and ultimately why this country and our diversity are worth fighting for and protecting.

I’d like to go back to living in the future.

Abstractly, this is becoming a fascinating meta-discussion between a great number of sites. It’s like rebuilding a conversation from echos.

“Error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.”
– Thomas Jefferson’s First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1801



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