30 April 2009

Media sensationalism makes me sick


  • Apr 30, 2009

Media sensationalism makes me sick

Total # of deaths from "swine" flu: 8

Total annual deaths from regular old human flu: 250-500 thousand

http://tiny.cc/swine511
http://tiny.cc/flu611

Turns out this isn't the first panic over "swine flu"



Only 1 person died from swine flu in 1976.  Hundreds of Americans were killed or seriously injured by the inoculation the government gave them to stave off the virus.

http://www.capitalcentury.com/1976.html

Of course it isn't just about ratings and selling papers. Some of it is human nature.  I think we enjoy panicking.
I understand that people have a hard time taking history into account.  If it didn't happen in one's own lifetime it becomes an abstraction, and therefore not something to learn from.  But "bird" flu was only, what, 3 years ago?  The "global pandemic" of bird flu killed a little over 200 people world-wide over the course of about 5 years. 
Before that was y2k.  It was supposed to shut down every computer, crippling all of modern civilization.
The supposed financial "crises" hasn't even wore itself out, and already we are on to our next one.

I stopped watching/reading "news" a long time ago, and yet somehow I keep hearing about this stuff.
I keep imagining to myself that somehow humanity is going to collectively stop being so stupid.
I know how terribly deluded I am.
I think I should just give in.
Anyone know where I can buy one of those masks?

27 April 2009

Gay Animals, Social Sex, and a Misunderstanding of Natural and Sexual Selection


  • Apr 27, 2009

Gay Animals, Social Sex, and a Misunderstanding of Natural and Sexual Selection

http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/the_gay_animal_kingdom/

At first I was going to comment directly on the article, but couldn't find a place for it.
Then I noticed the article is 3 years old.
Disappointing.
Then it occurred to me; that's exactly what my blog is for!  Remember?  Duh.

On to my comments:

This is a fascinating study and long over due research, which deserves far more attention that it's gotten for both social and scientific reasons.
However, I must partially object to the conclusions of this particular article.

It presents a false dichotomy.  None of the observed activities contradict the basic principals of Darwinian evolution, including sexual selection.  They may seem to contradict some assumed extensions of the basic mechanisms of evolution, but those assumptions are the things which must be thrown out, not the entire theory.

Sex serves a social function.  This is true not only in humans, but in a great many other species as well - generally those that are more complex, intelligent, and social.  This much is clear.
This does not mean sex is not also about reproduction.  It is not an either/or question.  To dispute that sex is primarily about reproduction, the survival of one's genes, is just plain silly.



But simply maximizing number of offspring does not necessarily lead to the greatest number of survivors a few generations down.  Increasing the quality of a few offspring, and improving the environment they grow up in can be an alternate and potentially more successful strategy for grandkids (and greatgrandkids, etc).  In a social specie where individuals are dependent on the group, any behavior which increases the cohesiveness of the group has an adaptive advantage.

Because something has a primary function doesn't mean other useful things can't be gained in addition.
By the same line which suggests non-reproductive sex is a "waste" of energy or sex cells, one could just as easily see play and all other forms of recreation, reciprocal grooming, and pretty much any activity besides acquiring food and mates as a "waste" of energy as well.
But without the assumption that non-reproductive sex is "wasteful" from a sexual selection stand-point, the entire argument breaks down.
Especially since, in the majority of cases shown, the animals being referred to as gay are actually bi.
If female macaques mate with other females 93% of the time, then they mate with males 7% of the time, which is enough to occasionally get pregnant and have offspring.  All-male sheep and giraffe orgies are in addition to mating with females, not instead (even if they are more common).  All that is required for the theories of sexual selection to hold is that when individuals do choose to mate with someone of the opposite sex, they choose the sexist partner available, and that what is considered sexy is not always directly adaptive (outside of being sexy) - such as the classic peacock-tail example.
In the last section of the article it is in fact admitted that in all the examples cited of homosexual behavior in the animal kingdom, the activity was in addition to reproductive sex, not instead.  And while that fact lead to the (otherwise baseless) claim that heterosexuality (as well as pure homosexuality) in humans is a purely social construct, what few scientific studies have been done on the subject have found quite the opposite to be indicated: in human males at least, possibly no one is bi.  Researchers have studied groups of individuals who self-report as gay, straight, and bi, and took direct measurements of physiological response to various images.  Turns out guys who claim to be bi actually show a significant (physical) preference for one gender or the other.  I wouldn't go so far as to say they are "lying" - attraction goes beyond mere sex and physiology - but as far as what is "natural" and what is "social", there isn't much evidence to support that all humans are inherently bi (interestingly enough, the same type of study finds that women - regardless of self-reporting - tend to respond to both genders).  I do know of at least one other specie which, like humans, seems to have individuals who are exclusively gay. Penguins. They share another trait with us as well, one which may be even rarer than homosexuality.  Monogamy.  And it would follow that these two go together, because if you are faithful to one partner, being bi becomes meaningless.

(A brief aside: As I was writing, Pandora played a song by Queen.  The bio caught my eye and I read a little more.  Then I took a break to watch a little of them on Youtube.  I realize I wasn't around in the 70s to see what the culture and style was like, but I am baffled that it was a secret that Freddi Mercury was gay.  I mean come on!  Never mind the hair or the leotards - wasn't the name of the band a clue??  But I digress...)

The apparent selfish/altruism conflict disappears when you consider that the unit of evolution is not the specie, not the individual, not even DNA, but the individual gene.  From an evolutionary standpoint, altruism can be seen as an individuals estimation of how many genes they have in common with the recipient of their assistance.  Any member of the same specie shares 99.5% of their DNA.  So while acting selfishly is advantageous (since you share 100% of your genetic code with yourself), as long as the benefit to another slightly outweighs the cost to yourself, altruism can be advantageous from a natural selection standpoint as well.  Someone from the same group/pack/heard is likely to have even more genes in common, a close relative even more so, and willingness to sacrifice reflects this (in humans no less than any other social specie).

Overall, the main problem is just that this view of sexuality - much like the one it is hoping to displace - is reductionist and over simplistic.  You don't need to force fit the oystercatcher into a simple theory to explain its behavior: a consistent minority of humans are polygynous too, and in those families most are cooperative with both mother's getting along and helping each other.  But in some cases personalities conflict, or jealousy is an issue. In humans you wouldn't expect anything different. It would be like calling either happy or dysfunctional (monogamous) marriages an anomaly.  They both exist.  People are like that.  Apparently so are oystercatchers. Neither conflict nor cooperation is the "true" default.  Game theory shows many many different combination can be stable.  Different things work for different situations, and for different individuals.  Claiming that conflict is an anomaly, as often as it occurs, presents the exact same problem as calling homosexuality an anomaly does.  It may not be the norm, but it isn't rare either, and if a theory has to explain it away, the theory is more likely to be flawed than reality.  Reality is never flawed.  Reality just is.  It isn't debatable.

I tried that once.  I found a cactus in the middle of a deciduous forest in the mountains on a lonely road in southern Mexico. I told it that cacti should live in desert.  I told it plainly and simply, as a statement of fact.  I told it more firmly: cacti don't grow in the mountains.  I yelled at it.  I got upset, and flung rocks and sticks in its general direction (mind you, I had been bicycling, solo, in a country where I didn't speak the language, for weeks at that point, I had been climbing the same mountain for days, and was many miles from civilization).  And after all my pronouncements of science, for all my certainty, the cactus was still there.  It's probably there now, on that mountain in between Taxco and Mexico City, among the pine trees. 
Whenever the theory diverges from actual reality, reality wins.  That was one of the points of the article, but then it tries to do the same thing with human behavior and intra-species conflict.  In the end it does seem to stray from pure science to trying to push a particular socio/political agenda, which is unfortunate because the information, presented without bias, really is important for its implications for human society, the idea that sex for pleasure is perfectly natural, normal, and acceptable, in all of its various forms.

Sexual selection does not preclude homosexuality, and indeed it can even have an adaptive advantage due to its encouragement of social cohesiveness, so well demonstrated by our closest evolutionary relatives, the bonobos. This would still not explain masturbation, which is also easy to find in the animal kingdom.  It has neither a reproductive nor a social function.
But evolution doesn't work like engineering.  There is no plan set out in advance.  Its just a bunch of stuff that happens, and some of it works.
One thing that works is flexible complex decision making systems (brains) because they can deal with a greater variety of situations than instinct alone can.  With free will an individual can prioritize themselves - not their genes - but genes keep our goals in line with theirs by controlling what feels good.  Things which tend to promote more surviving copies of genes feel good, from eating food to caring for babies to generosity.  But its a pretty imperfect system.  Sugar is a good energy source, but we took advantage of sugar tasting sweet to create things like chocolate cake and Twinkies - even diet soda which has exactly zero nutritive value, but triggers the sensory system in the same way as fruit.  We can experience parenthood through adoption.  We get the thrill of the hunt via sports and games.  None of these increases our chances of having genes survive.  But they are all byproducts of something which does help us survive - a level of intelligence that allows us to create and use technology.  Sometimes an adaption has more than one effect, and one of them is extremely useful.  As long as the other effect isn't destructive, the overall adaptation will be selected for.  Because of that we can safely short-circuit our own pleasure responses with movies and drugs and masturbation and still be fruitful and multiply.  The cost of these pointless activities is negligible.  There doesn't have to be a "why".  It feels good.  The question in this case is actually "why not?"

It shouldn't make one bit of difference what is "natural" and what isn't.  Natural isn't always good.  Getting eaten by a mountain lion is natural.  However, as it turns out all the various "perversions" do happen to be perfectly natural.  So, whatever you are into, stop worrying about it, and enjoy.

Bakari's introduction!

Monday, April 27, 2009

Bakari's introduction!
[from the joint blogging project started by my friend Beth, at http://neapolitanblog.blogspot.com ]

My first step is to figure out this new interface.
If you are reading this apparently I figured it out.

I have been told to write a short bio.

Hello all!
My name is Bakari Kafele (ok, I just misspelled my own name and had to erase and retype it - twice! Maybe should be getting ready for bed instead of typing) but I often go by Jacob Aziza on the internet.
I am not really a writer. I am just some guy who writes stuff sometimes. I don't have any sort of schedule or goal, and no interest in becoming better or more coherent. I do think I occasionally have a sensible idea or two, and enjoy sharing those ideas. Also, this is my one form of self-expression; about as close as I come to art.



I have done a lot of different things for income over the past decade; bicycle messenger, lab assistant, armed security guard, medical research subject, factory worker, carnie... the list is at least 30 long. I have finally settled, running a small independent certified green moving hauling and handyman service, as well as working part time for a non-profit bikeshop.

I consider myself an environmentalist. I lean towards liberal, but I think in some ways fascism is the only way to deal with the tragedy of the commons. I am a businessman (with an econ degree) who opposes capitalism. I live in an RV. I have a big truck, a small motorcycle, 3 and a half bicycles, a good pair of skates, and a wheelchair. I was married for almost 7 years (in practice at least, legally only for the last 2 of them), and started dating for the first time in my life at the age of 28. I have a cat named Fushi who is sleeping on my lap as I write this. Sometimes I call him Chairman Meow.

I started blogging as a way to keep me away from the Craigslist RnR and discussion groups, where I was reading and posting compulsively for a while. Sometimes I get ideas stuck in my brain. Then I have to write them down in order to get them out of there.
I have opinions on lots of stuff. I try to be objective. I try to shake up universally accepted but totally unfounded assumptions. If not for being totally obscure and unknown, I bet I could generate a fair amount of controversy, but it is always for the sake of stimulating thought, and almost always something I really do believe to be accurate.
I may add to or change this in the future. Or I may not.

23 April 2009

On Becoming a Twit




  • Apr 23, 2009

On Becoming a Twit



I notice a good number of people have set to follow me.
I have absolutely no intention of becoming a Twit.

I signed up to Twitter so I could follow other people.

Ok. I'll be honest. So I could learn more about one specific person. And I figured while I was here why not follow all of my friends?

The best way to learn of the various things going on in my life and mind would be my blog. I only update it once or twice a month, but when I do they are (usually) much more in depth, (or, to look at it another way - you have to read more than 140 characters, but I only write once or twice a month).
You can sign up for it using the little box in the corner, and it will email you when there is something new.
For short blips there is my Gmail-integrated-chat-status-message. Surely you are using gmail by now? Add me to your chat list and there you will get my random character limited thoughts and quotes and updates and such.

17 April 2009

Excellence in the most unexpected of places


  • Apr 17, 2009

Excellence in the most unexpected of places


Sometimes when I'm working at the bikestation I go up to the Walgreens just outside the BART for an orange juice.

One day I went up and the line was just ridiculous. They brought in a 2nd checker, but the line still kept growing faster...

And then this guy comes back from helping a customer, back to his checkstands.

Not a typo. Checkstands.
He unlocks two registers.

He calls someone up, scans the purchases and gives them the total. And then as that customer goes through their wallet for change or waits for the credit machine to process, he calls someone else up to his other register.
This guy is a joy and a wonder to watch. He makes it look smooth, almost effortless.
His co-workers were stressed, not smiling, barely speaking or looking at their customers, but he was right in his element, all smiles and politeness and eye contact. He could talk to the person at one register while processing the items on the other, with no signs of confusion or hesitation.
He did the work of two people, and make it look easier than it takes most people to do the work of one.

I worked as a cashier part-time when I went back to college, just before I started BioDiesel Hauling.
It wasn't the worst thing I've ever done, and I was decently good at it, to the point where if a manager wasn't handy I was the person my co-worker came to with questions. But it certainly wasn't much of a challenge. It never even occurred to me that being a checker was something it was even possible to excel at. I have been shown otherwise.

You know, in general I am not particularly in favor of maximizing potential, or doing one's best, I think the whole concept stems from a manipulative puritan work ethic imposed on the populace. But given that one has to be at work some set hours anyway, you may as well do a good job of it while you're there. So often I have seen just the opposite - people putting in as many hours as possible, but working slow and slacking off, as if they are somehow getting over on someone. I never thought much about cashiers one way or another, but here is one I admire.
This checker doesn't get paid twice as much, but he does his job beyond expectation, and seems to enjoy it a hell of a lot more than anyone else working there. The line disappeared. And if that weren't enough, now all the people who reads this blog (all 6 of them) will know that there is one very amazing checker at one particular Walgreens in downtown Berkeley.



12 April 2009

Bringing it to the masses



  • Apr 12, 2009

Bringing it to the masses




My friend/co-worker, upon hearing about my truck project, encouraged me (repeatedly) to do a write up for the do-it-yourself website Instructables.com
As it happened, I was working on consolidating my blog posts on the topic for the hypermiling websites from which I had originally gotten most of the ideas I've been implementing.
So I followed the link he sent, signed up, and reformatted the posts to be appropriate for the popular how-to site.

The site was new to me, so it took basically all day figuring out the features and making changes to the content and pictures and tweaking various things. Comments started coming in, and I responded to the comments, and then a site administrator must have seen it and liked it because before the first day was over I was promoted to a "featured" item, which meant my post was put on the site's homepage.

And the views took off. By day two there had been over 4000 views, and it was moved to the "popular" section of the homepage.
Right now (3 and half days since I published) its up to 6415 views and over 50 comments.
One of which was: "I think I might play the aero game on my car now!"

That's the best compliment I could get. If I encourage just one person to drive a little slower, or even do some mods, writing all this up will have all been worth the effort.

It's one thing writing on my own blog, or on a hypermiling website, but introducing these ideas to the general population, that is gratifying.
http://www.instructables.com/id/Vehicle-efficiency-upgrades/

08 April 2009

Upgrade update

  • Apr 8, 2009

Upgrade update



If I really wanted to accurately determine how much difference any particular change made, I would make upgrades immediately after filling the tank, and then do only change at a time, going the entire tank and calculating mileage before doing another.
I don't have that kind of patience.

When I wrote last about it (the post with the pictures) I had begun those mods several days into a new tank of gas.

I looked up what was typical for the same model and year of truck online (there are no EPA estimates for it) and found people reporting anywhere from 10mpg to 18mpg.
Myself, loading it to it's max for work, but being a generally gentle driver, before I had ever heard of hypermileing I was getting between 15 and 17mpg.

By changing just my driving habits, driving slow, accelerating gently, coasting when coming to a stop, I raised it to 19.7mpg.



After the first stage of changes to the truck (the tank I was on when I wrote about them March 21) I ended up getting 21.75 miles with a gallon of gas.

Once again, I filled up, and then several trips into the new tank, got around to starting my next series of upgrades.
I still have yet to go to the salvage yard to try to find a manual steering gear and electric vacuum pump (so the brakes work when the engine is off). I was planning to go today, but the rain had me change my mind.

I did make it down to Al Lasher's last week for some switches.

Nobody makes a wiring diagram for this year for the diesel engine.
I spent many hours over several days upside down under the steering wheel, trying to trace and test various wires.

-If you happen to own a 7th generation (80s) Diesel F-250, and you want to wire in a kill switch or remote starter: The thick red wire with a green stripe goes to the injector pump (for a kill). The thin red wire with a blue stripe goes to the ignition relay (for a start).

The switches are dual purpose: wire them one way and they are momentary open, wire them the other and they are momentary closed. I used one each way, so that one stops fuel to the engine, the other triggers the starter. I mounted them side-by-side in a block of scrap wood, attached to the gear shift with a strip cut out of a steel can lid (mandarin oranges, of course).
As I had hoped, they definitely make the pulse and glide (coasting, etc) much faster, simpler, more precise, and safer, then using the key each time (especially since the ignition on this truck has been very finicky as long as I have had it) which encourages me to do it a lot more often.




-The orange wire running from the external voltage regulator to the alternator controls whether the alternator is charging or idle. If you open the circuit the alternator stops charging. Even though it is still being turned, there is no resistance, it just freewheels.
If anyone is inspired to do a similar project (with any vehicle), DO NOT just disconnect the alternator from the battery w/o disconnecting the smaller wires. It will continue to produce current, but since that charge has nowhere to go, the alternator will self-destruct.
At first I just disconnected the wire, but now I have it on a switch so that if the battery ever does run too low, I can charge it with the engine just by flipping the switch.




-Another point of note: diesel trucks tend to have very large batteries. Mine has two. This gives me a lot of reserve power to tap into without draining them too much. With an ordinary car battery you will damage it by cycling it too deeply. Once it finally dies, replace it with a deep-cycle (RV or marine) type battery and you'll be fine.

These have been my only changes. They facilitate they way I have already been driving, but do not, in them selves, reduce engine load or increase aerodynamics at all.

This most recent tank included jobs such as moving a full truck bed of bikes, bike parts, and tools across the windy Dumbarton Bridge




and hauling over a ton of concrete blocks, scrap wood, and plant debris on the freeway to the transfer station





As of my last fill up, my average mileage is 23.75mpg

Higher than the national average for all passenger cars on the road.
Higher than the average for model-year-2008 light trucks.

Next stop, eclipsing the average for all new passenger vehicles.

07 April 2009

No, the garden hasn't been started yet

  • Apr 7, 2009

No, the garden hasn't been started yet



Building the planter bed was the agenda for today, but there turned out to be a lot of little tasks to get out of the way first.
It wasn't long before I accepted that I wouldn't be constructing the raised container today.

First thing I did was to take down the sheets of wood from the roof of the shed (which I used to angle rain water off and keep my shed from rotting), so I could reuse the wood to make the raised planter bed.
Then I replaced it with a sheet of plastic (from a wardrobe move in the rain months ago) raised in the middle like a tent, metal taped to the sides of the shed.

Then I was distracted by the rain system. The tubing on both sides need a bit of adjusting. The barrel was almost full and it rained today, so I used my new watering can to transfer 4 gallons of water stored from the last rain to my potted plants. Then I remembered that when I purchased this RV trailer it came with an external waste water tank which I have never used. It holds 32 gallons. I filled it from the storage barrel to make room for today's rain.

With the barrel half empty, I had a chance build a better and higher platform for it. Wood which I had kept from dump runs years ago because it might come in handy someday, finally came in handy. My new 18v cordless jigsaw made short work of custom fitting the wood to the barrel.



Watering the plants, I noticed that some which had grown a lot last year weren't doing so well, so it was time to give them some more room. Three were replanted, using soil from my compost bucket behind the house to fill in the extra volume in the bigger pots (the pots came from a dump run; they've been sitting behind the house waiting for this day). Having one simple compost bucket, there is no place to separate recently added material from finished compost, so extracting soil to use meant going through it one handful at a time and separating out the food scraps and worms, (and then going back through the soil twice more to get all the scraps and worms I missed the first time).
As I suspected, the roots were totally compacted.

Last fall I happened to be up in Joaquin Miller Park on the day of the last sale of the year for the native plant nursery. I bought a CA strawberry plant. The strawberry was one of the ones which got replanted today. I have two strawberries already! They are very tiny, and may not make it to edible size for months, if ever. But still, they are very clearly strawberries already. There is also another blossom which should join them as fruits before long.







Also, my lupine has blossomed.


These are exciting times :)

02 April 2009

trailer park vehicles


  • Apr 2, 2009

trailer park vehicles

I'm not the only one here in the trailer park putting a lot of work into an old dented vehicle that looks kinda like a piece of crap by most people's standards.

Many a night I pass by the neighbors place as they weld and hammer out the damage from the last race.

They spend weeks, months, turning this thing into something capable of moving under its own power.
And then they take it out and smash it up all over again.

Best of all, it is designated as the official High Street Trailer Park car.  We have demolition derby representation.  Its kinda like our own sports team.





01 April 2009

From one dishonest company to another



  • Apr 1, 2009

From one dishonest company to another


WTH? I just received the 3rd notice in 2 years of a class action lawsuit against a former employer.

Was I for some reason bouncing from one dishonest company to another?


I realize I have had a lot, and so statistically that ups the chances a little, and also that this is a very litigation happy place (owing to our severe lack of meaningful regulations and enforcement). And it shouldn't be all that surprising, given that the ultimate goal of any corporation is, by law, maximization of profit, which means that even following the law becomes a matter of calculating potential loss vs. potential gain: 10 years of unpaid overtime may be worth a 4 or 5 million dollar lawsuit.

I'm just hope I never receive one of those notices for my most recent job.  If all the employees of BioDiesel Hauling file suit against the owner, I have some serious problems, and not just the financial ones.