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January 2002 Entries
I'm in Denver this week so updates have been a little hard. I thought I'd leave you this article though: Second-hand aircraft parts scam linked to 10 air crashes. Linked is a little strong based on the actual article though.
posted @ Wednesday, January 30, 2002 3:36 PM | Feedback (0)
It appears the latest suicide bomber in Israel was a woman. That would be a first.
posted @ Sunday, January 27, 2002 8:18 PM | Feedback (0)
I'm a GenXer. How did I miss out on the starter marriage trend? One person who went through it said
"I view the marriage as a rehearsal," Mobley told Good Morning America. "Now I am ready to play the part better because I can expect more of people and they can expect more of me ... We, as generation Xers, live in a culture of new beginnings where we can fix anything."

Let me translate for you non-GenXers: I didn't know what the hell I was doing in my first marriage but I'm too stupid too admit it. There aren't really people out there like this are there?

posted @ Sunday, January 27, 2002 5:27 PM | Feedback (0)
I've updated this site to use Microsoft's .NET framework. You shouldn't see many changes. If you have the default web page (default.asp) bookmarked you'll need to update your bookmark to default.aspx or just bookmark http://www.billgraziano.com/ (without any default document). And if you're reading this you made it to the new site.
posted @ Sunday, January 27, 2002 3:08 PM | Feedback (0)
I think I'm pretty smart. Well, sometimes anyway. If I wasn't smart would I know it? Apparently not.
posted @ Tuesday, January 22, 2002 10:18 PM | Feedback (0)
I'm pretty sure national identification cards are a bad idea. I still want a way to get through airport security quickly. How about a "Trusted Traveler" ID card?
One that is getting some particularly serious attention is having passengers submit to extensive background checks in order to get what has been called a "trusted traveler" identification card. One aviation expert who loves this El Al concept is Robert Crandall, the former chairman and chief executive officer of American Airlines. After the background checks, he told me, El Al gives the passengers some sort of "biometric" identification that is unique to that passenger -- "a thumb print, an iris print, a voice print, so that that person can be identified absolutely when he or she gets to the airport."
posted @ Tuesday, January 22, 2002 10:15 PM | Feedback (0)
Does the world really need an artificial womb? Is this a good thing? Are men even allowed to have an opinion on this?
While the plastic womb is still only in development, Kuwabara predicts that a fully functioning artificial womb capable of gestating a human fetus may be a reality in less than six years.

It would certainly herald some interesting changes in society.

posted @ Tuesday, January 22, 2002 10:12 PM | Feedback (0)
They did the crime, they did the time, now they're going online. Cons and ex-cons are revisiting the days they spent counting the days. A new site, ConvictsReunited.com, is an online gathering place for those who want to catch up with their peers from the pokey. It was the "time" of their lives after all! The site was originally set up as a joke -- a spoof of all those high school and college reunion sites. But some 3,000 people signed up! (Thanks Lance!)
posted @ Tuesday, January 22, 2002 10:10 PM | Feedback (0)
96% of Internet voters agree that Bernard Shifman is a Moron Spammer. This guy has been spamming his resume around the Internet and is getting fairly famous for it. The web site has some hilarious email exchanges with Mr. Shiffman as well as some MP3's of answering machine messages. And don't forget the techno remixes of those answering machine messages.

You've just got to scroll down and read through some of his responses. This guy just doesn't know when to quite. I just can't imagine someone being so stupid! Anyone who interviews him and types his name into Google receives "Bernard Shifman is a Moron Spammer" as their very first page. And if that isn't enough the Chicago Tribune has written a funny, unflattering article on the situation. Bernard Shifman may become a meme to rival All your base are belong to us!

posted @ Monday, January 21, 2002 10:30 PM | Feedback (0)
How much is inside?
posted @ Sunday, January 20, 2002 9:02 PM | Feedback (0)
Tonight 60 Minutes had a segment on Air Force Lt. Col. Martha McSally. She's the highest ranking female fighter pilot in the Air Force. She's suing Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld over the military policy requiring her to wear an abaya off base. An abaya is the traditional female Muslim garmet that covers women from head to toe.
McSally, one of the few women on track to make general in the armed forces, says the dress code requires female military personnel to dress while off the base in "host nation attire" - a traditional Muslim head-to-toe garment called an abaya. This is unconstitutional, she says, because military men are not required to dress like local men.

As a matter of fact men are prohibited from dressing in Muslim garb. Women at the US embassy aren't required to wear an abaya. They are only required to "dress conservatively". Madeline Albright certainly didn't wear one we she visited Saudi Arabia. Saudi policy doesn't even require women to wear them. The Air Force gives conflicting reasons for the requirement. Their main reason seems to be that American women won't stand out for terrorists. Of course, she's required to be escorted by a male in civilian clothes at all time. I'm sure a crew cut man in collared shirt and jeans with a woman in an abaya woudn't stand out at all. I'm sure the terrorists would never figure out they're Americans.

If this is something you feel strongly about, please write your elected representative. You can do so on the Internet at www.house.gov/writerep/. All you need to know is what state you live in and your zip code. Take a second and tell them what you think of this policy.

posted @ Sunday, January 20, 2002 6:53 PM | Feedback (0)
I have a feeling I might be publishing quite a bit more about Enron. The NY Times (free registration required) has an article that sheds further light on Enron's partnerships.
Getting to the bottom of Enron's 3,000 or so partnerships and subsidiaries, nearly 900 of which are offshore, will not be easy. What is known is that the dealings between Enron and the various partnerships were not conducted at arm's length, as the company contended until questions arose last fall. In some partnerships, Enron's shareholders were responsible for partnership debts even though they did not benefit from the entities.
The bolding is mine. Where's the shareholder line to sue CEO Ken Lay? I'm hoping it's pretty long. Some of these partnerships were partially owned by Enron management. They were using shareholder value to enrich themselves. I'm just awe struck that Enron had so many of these partnerships. I've read about four of them so far. How many others are as screwed up as JEDI, Chewco, Condor or Raptor? At least they have cool names!
posted @ Friday, January 18, 2002 9:26 PM | Feedback (0)
It looks like England is investigating the type of public transportation system I wanted Kansas City to get.
posted @ Thursday, January 17, 2002 11:36 AM | Feedback (0)
I've been doing a little reading about Andersen's audit failure in the Enron case and it's just amazing. In August 2000 Enron had a market capitalization of $60,000,000,000 (yep, that's 60 billion dollars). Sixteen months later 99% of that is gone. Enron's stock dropped from a high of $90.56 to $0.67 as I write this. Time published Enron: Who's Accountable? which discusses the audit failures of Arthur Andersen. I think they're just called Andersen these days. At the request of their lawyers, they had auditors shredding documenets related to the audit. They may have even continued shredding documents after the subpeona arrived. That could lead to some jail time.
Just four days before Enron disclosed a stunning $618 million loss for the third quarter -- its first public disclosure of its financial woes -- workers who audited the company's books for Arthur Andersen, the big accounting firm, received an extraordinary instruction from one of the company's lawyers. Congressional investigators tell Time that the Oct. 12 memo directed workers to destroy all audit material, except for the most basic "work papers." And that's what they did, over a period of several weeks.
Andersen is going to be sued for up to $20 billion by creditors and up to $60 billion by investors. If even just a few of those suits get though Andersen is done. As in chapter 11 bankruptcy done. There are a couple of interesting (but more technical articles) at AccountingMalpractice.com and Newsweek also published Lights Out: Enron's Failed Power Play.
posted @ Wednesday, January 16, 2002 12:09 PM | Feedback (0)
I've always wondered why alcohol and cigarettes are legal. In this age of protecting us from ourselves, these products don't seem to help society much. It's illegal to not wear a seat belt but not illegal to smoke a cigarette. Of course, alcohol and tobacco do have strong entrenched special interest groups that support their continued legalization with campaign donations. But what about cannabis? The wacky weed. Mary Jane. Is toking up worse than smoking? Or having a drink? New Scientist published a special report on cannabis. They don't take a side in the debate, they just want to get the facts straight. They also cite a The World Health Organization (WHO) report on cannabis -- the first in 15 years for the WHO.
According to a document leaked to New Scientist, the analysis concludes not only that the amount of dope smoked worldwide does less harm to public health than drink and cigarettes, but that the same is likely to hold true even if people consumed dope on the same scale as these legal substances.

Apparently those findings didn't fly with the U.S. and it helped get the report edited. They removed a section that compared marijuana to tobacco and alcohol. And the wacky weed didn't look so bad.

posted @ Monday, January 14, 2002 6:07 PM | Feedback (0)
I don't understand how radio stations can spend more and more money finding out what consumers want and still not have any radio stations that I like? The article is an interesting look at the process of changing radio formats.
posted @ Monday, January 14, 2002 12:58 PM | Feedback (0)
I've been wanting to use a PC as a digitial media player for my stereo for quite a while. There just hasn't been a good interface for a PC though. Amazingly enough it looks like Microsoft may solve this problem with a product code-named "Freestyle".
posted @ Sunday, January 13, 2002 9:19 PM | Feedback (0)
When Heather Higgins went to Reagan National Airport, Delta Airlines selected 15 passengers for complete searches. Though all terrorists involved in Sept. 11 were young Middle Eastern males, Delta picked three elderly men (one an Asian), six Caucasian women, including one with two children, and two Hispanic women. Yet in the line of 70 or so passengers, there were six individuals who were not only Middle Eastern but young, male and traveling alone. Not one of them was checked. When asked, Delta said the only searches they would do were at random.

So what happens when fighting terrorism meets racial equality? Jesse Jackson vs. my safety? Can I sue an airline if they don't screen those statistically most likely to commit a crime? When I've flown in Israel I always get stopped. I'm a middle aged single male traveling alone. If I happened to speak Arabic I'd be as close to the "statistical model" of a terrorist as you can get. Shouldn't they be obligated to check me a little closer? The article is titled It Isn't Easy Being Screened and it's on WSJ.com.

posted @ Sunday, January 13, 2002 9:00 PM | Feedback (0)
Even the new look Kansas City Star has figured out there are problems in the Arab world. They have an editorial linking illiteracy in Arab countries to their propensity to generate terrorists. This really shouldn't come as a shock to anyone.
posted @ Sunday, January 13, 2002 10:10 AM | Feedback (0)
Why the Muslims Misjudged Us talks about how little the Muslim world understands about America.
Few in the Middle East have a clue about the nature, origins, or history of democracy, a word that, along with its family ("constitution," "freedom," and "citizen"), has no history in the Arab vocabulary, or indeed any philological pedigree in any language other than Greek and Latin and their modern European offspring.

They also have some interesting thoughts on the Palestinian Authority.

Israel does not really know to what degree the Palestinian authorities have a real constituency, because the people of the West Bank themselves do not know either -- inasmuch as they cannot debate one another on domestic television or campaign on the streets for alternate policies. Mr. Arafat assumed power by Western fiat; when he finally was allowed to hold real and periodic elections in his homeland, he simply perpetuated autocracy -- as corrupt as it is brutal.

This is one more article on the moral and political failures of Islam. There seem to be alot of these lately. There was also a great article the December 24th Time magazine by Charles Krauthammer titled How to Win a Holy War (don't bother to click -- it's $2.50 to read the article). I think I'd vote for a President who vowed to clean up the Muslim world. I'm not sure how we'd do that exactly but it would be a noble goal.

posted @ Saturday, January 12, 2002 11:19 AM | Feedback (0)
I'm not sure what to make of this one. It seems Congress passed a law requiring the Department of Transportation to link your state-issued driver's licenses into some type of searchable database for law enforcement personnel. As "The National ID Card That Isn't, Yet" states, this is kind of an end run around the National ID card controversy. I'm not exactly sure what to think of this yet. If you think your information is safe just remember that Oregon managed to lose their entire database of registered drivers.
posted @ Wednesday, January 09, 2002 6:52 PM | Feedback (0)
I use Blogger to publish this page and they've been down quite a bit the last few days. I'm able to enter articles into their database but I can't publish them out to the web site. They say it will be fixed "soon." I guess if you're reading this it got fixed.
posted @ Wednesday, January 09, 2002 4:30 PM | Feedback (0)
The United States and the Big Three automakers launched a joint program called Freedom CAR to develope a fuel cell vehicle. This replaces the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles (PNGV) program which was designed to produce a family sedan that got 80 MPG by 2004. Unfortunately they don't have any specific goals or funding levels yet. They say we'll know more when the Bush Administration funds the program. As for their funding of PGNV,
The Bush administration proposed last year to slash the program's $141 million research budget within the Energy Department by $40 million, but Congress restored most of the funding.

The Bush Administration sure likes it's oil! I never thought I'd be on the side of Congress in a funding debate.

posted @ Wednesday, January 09, 2002 4:27 PM | Feedback (0)
Three week of peace was all the Middle East had. Four Isreali soldiers were killed by Hamas. Does this mean the cease-fire is over? Does Arafat control the Palestinians? It should be an interesting couple of weeks.
posted @ Wednesday, January 09, 2002 2:03 PM | Feedback (0)
An asteriod came within a half-million miles of earth Monday. That might sound like a long way off but it's only twice the distance to the moon.
"It's a fairly substantial rock. If it had hit us at that sort of speed, you would be taking out a medium-size country, France, I suppose, or Texas, or something of that order,' said Jay Tate, director of the Spaceguard Center in Wales. (MSNBC)
We've just got to get off this planet. I don't know if we're alone in the cosmos or not. I do know that all our hopes are pinned on this planet right now. We've had extinction level meteors hit our planet before. We can again. It sure would be nice to have a backup planet.
posted @ Tuesday, January 08, 2002 11:33 PM | Feedback (0)

Is this the car of the future? This is the chasis of the GM Autonomy concept car. It contains a fuel cell and brakes. You can plug whatever type of car you want on top.

Tired of driving a minivan? Convert it to a sporty car, or a sport-utility, or back to a minivan. Just keep the chassis, with its embedded fuel cell and electronic steering and braking systems. Change the driving and handling characteristics by plugging new computer software into the vehicle's command module.
You can read more at Hybrids becoming auto show regulars.
posted @ Tuesday, January 08, 2002 10:27 AM | Feedback (0)
I highly recommend A Beautiful Mind. It's the true story of a brilliant mathemetician named John Nash. It has a couple of suprising plot twists and a really satisfying ending. It's hard to believe this is the same Russell Crowe that was in Gladiator. He does an amazing job in this movie.
posted @ Monday, January 07, 2002 12:29 PM | Feedback (0)
Francis Fukuyama, author of The End of History and the Last Man, has written an interesting article titled Fighting the 21st century fascists.
More than 10 years ago, I argued that we had reached the "end of history": not that historical events would stop, but that history, understood as the evolution of human societies through different forms of government, had culminated in modern liberal democracy and market-oriented capitalism. It is my view that this hypothesis remains correct, despite the events since September 11: modernity, as represented by the US and other developed democracies, will remain the dominant force in world politics, and the institutions embodying the West's underlying principles of freedom will continue to spread around the world.

The September 11 attacks represent a desperate backlash against the modern world, which appears to be a speeding freight train to those unwilling to get on board.

It provides an interesting look at Western culture vs. Islamic culture and the role of separation of church and state. It disucsses Saudi Arabia's role in creating Islamo-fascists. This ties in nicely with a recently linked article (Looking the World in the Eye) on Samuel Huntington.

posted @ Monday, January 07, 2002 11:56 AM | Feedback (0)
It had to happen sooner or later. I remember flying for the first time after 9/11 and seeing the National Guard troops in the airport. I distinctly remember one that looked very, very young. Not exactly someone that would strike fear into the heart of a terrorist. And it seems their reputation is getting worse. One of the Guardsmen managed to shoot himself while cleaning his weapon.
A National Guardsman stationed at San Francisco International Airport to protect against terrorist attacks accidentally shot himself in the hip last week while trying to remove a pistol from his holster, officials said Wednesday.
I feel safer.
posted @ Friday, January 04, 2002 7:40 AM | Feedback (0)
People typically look at the ESPN rankings to determine who's the best college basketball team in the country. I'm a fan of the RPI ranking. It gives an unbiased look at the teams. It's also used by the NCAA for tournament seedings. The site is updated daily during the college basketball season.
posted @ Thursday, January 03, 2002 9:33 PM | Feedback (0)
I had an interesting discussion with a friend this weekend. The universe is full of "stuff" and I wanted to know where all this "stuff" came from. Lee didn't have a great answer. I didn't either. We also couldn't find a physicist at midnight since Dad was asleep. Now I find The Economist has a handy series of articles on the origins of the universe.
IN 1900 physicists were feeling pretty smug. Many of them thought they had the universe taped. The majestic clockwork wound up by Isaac Newton was running exactly as predicted. Subsequent discoveries in fields as diverse as heat, light and electricity all seemed to fit into the grand scheme of things. New telescopes were mapping the heavens and revealing that the earth and its sun were part of a huge but measurable star system, the Milky Way, that seemed to encompass the whole universe . . .

A few years later, it was all over. People realised that far from knowing everything, they knew almost nothing. Two hypotheses, quantum theory and relativity, and two discoveries, the atomic nucleus and the fact that the Milky Way was not alone, but was one of a zillion similar galaxies, did not merely upset the apple cart, they scattered its contents right over the road. It has taken a century to pick the apples up and order them neatly again.

The articles cover some of the different theories of the origin of all this "stuff". It's written at a level that we can understand although getting your head around some of the ideas is interesting.
posted @ Thursday, January 03, 2002 9:22 PM | Feedback (0)
The Mayo Clinic is experimenting with a new lie detector for use in airports. It scans your eyes to determine minute temperature changes. Years ago I read a great book by James Halperin titled The Truth Machine. It's about a man that invents a 100% accurate portable lie detector. Outside the main plot line of the book, the author discusses some of the social changes it would bring. Imagine a world where you can't lie. Not even just a little. Buying a car would certainly be easier :)
posted @ Wednesday, January 02, 2002 1:52 PM | Feedback (0)
The Kansas City Star has an article about the growing popularity of windmills in Kansas to generate electricity. Kansas ranks third in the nation in terms "wind energy potential" behind North Dakota and Texas. Maybe Bush is paying attention to this. MIT Technology Review also wrote an article on the status of wind generation. This is the technology we need to use to generate hydrogen for our fuel cells.
posted @ Wednesday, January 02, 2002 9:09 AM | Feedback (0)
How about a little feel good piece to start off the New Year? Way back on September 27th, 2001, Sterling Rome (Walter Cronkite's assistant) wrote Stop Blaming America First:
Now, virtually every "panel of experts" includes some stuffed-shirt from a liberal university campus somewhere who - surprise! - wants to blame the whole thing on a unilateral U.S. foreign policy. Even a cursory study of the history of civilized nations reveals that there is no such thing as a foreign policy designed to benefit everyone else.
It's a puff piece but an enjoyable read all the same. Just remember -- there really are good guys and bad guys -- and we're the good guys. (Thanks Karen)
posted @ Tuesday, January 01, 2002 10:10 AM | Feedback (0)