Well, we have deep ties to the Hillary Clinton e-mail scandal. Oh, yessiree!
Well, maybe not deep, but perhaps a shallow connection, and rather remote.
But here it is:
1) Xiaolin Cheng, here was a postdoc with Andy McCammon at UCSD, as is presently our ex-postdoc, Yinglong Miao. Tongye Shen also worked with Andy. Andy himself was a postdoc with Martin Karplus, as was I. And we have a paper in press together. So we have several connections with the McCammon group.
2) In the seventies Andy was a grad student of John Deutch, a chemistry professor at MIT.
3) Deutch became Director of the CIA in May 1995 but stored and processed hundreds of files of highly classified material on unprotected home computers that he and family members also used to connect to the Internet, according to an internal CIA investigation. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor for this, and was only few hours away from signing a plea bargain when Bill Clinton pardoned him on his last day in office!
4) As a result of that presidential pardon the FBI today could find no precedent for indicting Hillary for storing secret information on her personal computer. So they didn't recommend indictment, thus paving the way for her presumed victory in November.
Ta-da! Cool, huh? Not.
This is Jeremy Smith's blog about life in Tennessee, local science and other topics of interest. Is not endorsed by and does not, of course, represent the opinion of UT, ORNL or any other official entity.
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
Friday, July 1, 2016
Frank Munger
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Frank Munger |
Yesterday Frank Munger, the local journalist who wrote about Oak Ridge science for the Knoxville News Sentinel and in the associated "Atomic City Underground" blog, retired.
His blog kept us informed daily about what was going on at Y12, other areas of ORNL and the region. He was also a strong supporter of Club Mod. He was given the "Muddy Boot Award" yesterday for his contributions to building the local community's economic base.
We're all sad to see you go, Frank! We wish you a fulfilling and rewarding retirement! Maybe you'd consider writing a book about Oak Ridge. Nobody would be better positioned to do so.
Labels:
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Friday, June 17, 2016
Personal Thoughts on the Brexit
In 1970 my postdoc advisor, Martin Karplus, considered leaving the US for a professorship in France. However, professors there were civil servants, and all civil servants had be French. Karplus' colleague at the time was Jacques Dubois, who was well connected politically, and he lobbied President Pompidou for a change in the law. Thus was the law indeed changed, but it all took too long, and Martin went back to Harvard.
Ten years later everything was different. Europe had come closer together. Britain had joined in. As soon as I reached adulthood in the UK I thought to myself - hup, lets get outta here, let's explore. So in 1982 I moved to France to start my Ph. D, at the Institut Laue-Langevin in Grenoble, which, together with CERN, was a model of how Europe can work together to achieve greater goals. Then, after 4 years in the States I came back to work in Saclay, as a French civil servant, for 10 years. After that, I moved to Germany, again as a civil servant, a Herr Professor. Now, I can't say all this was made possible specifically by the EU - there are plenty of Swiss and Norwegians who have done the same thing. But European integration in the broader sense, and globalization in the even broader, are indeed responsible.
BUT....
The Brexit debate is part of the ongoing worldwide tumult pitting forces of integration and globalization against those of nationalist isolation. We have it here in the States, with the immigration ruckus and both the Trump and Sanders campaigns promoting trade barriers. I get what the isolationists are saying, indeed. Globalization has spawned income inequality in developed nations (although has it perhaps reduced global income inequality?). And I favor a relatively restrictive line on immigration myself, although there is no xenophobia in my reasoning, it being simply resistance to local population growth (more on that later, maybe).
AND...
The EU has become divorced from its population. It doesn't listen to them. Its high-minded prescriptions have alienated far too many. The average Brit feels nothing good from it. It elicits no pride. It's a deeply frustrating entity. While at Heidelberg University I received an EU science grant. It was a huge amount of dosh, accompanied by infuriating instructions written in prescriptive 'Euro-babble'; the national science agency, the DFG, got far more bang for the buck in my opinion, reinforcing my view that the EU wastes too much money on bureaucracy and idealistic spending. When I arrived in Heidelberg, in 1998, the Euro was being contemplated. Juergen Siebke, the university Rektor and an economist, was very skeptical of it. 'You can't have monetary union without political union' he told me at a reception. And he was right, as the Euro debacle, Greece and fighting the recession have proven.
SO....
The UK should stay in the EU...just, but all the while scratching and clawing. It should keep needling them, restraining them, defying them. Break a few EU laws, just as the Eastern EU countries are doing with regard to border control. Refuse flatly to pay in as much money. Be a spanner in some of the works.
But stay in.
BECAUSE..
Otherwise Scotland will leave the UK. Jobs, trade and exports will suffer. Globalization will hit even worse as the multinationals will have little incentive to negotiate with the rump of the UK. Little England will be powerless and rudderless, sinking in the mid-Atlantic. And, worst of all, God help us, all the professors in the sinking English universities will end up having to be English.
Saturday, June 4, 2016
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Peter Kollman
Peter Kollman died 15 years ago today, at my age, 56.
He was a giant in our field, yet wholly unpretentious and purely enthusiastic.
And he was the subject of one of the most moving obituaries I have read, by Fred Cohen.
Here's an excerpt:
"Peter told me more than once that he had no regrets. He had the good fortune to work on problems he loved with colleagues that he enjoyed. At a time when many of us would focus on all that we had not made time for, Peter displayed a rare sense of contentment as he listened to the music he loved and sent out a few extra e-mail messages. In the last few weeks of his life, the bone pain from his tumor required morphine. When discussing mundane subjects, he had a difficult time staying focused. But, when his thoughts turned to science, he was as lucid as ever. Science clearly held a privileged spot in Peter's mind, a spot that was not subject to ephemeral or biochemical distraction."
Saturday, May 21, 2016
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Healthcare in the USA (II)
Seven years ago I wrote a blog entry about Obamacare. It
basically expressed a feeling - that the system in Europe, problematic as it
is, at least gives one the feeling of security when it comes to healthcare. If
you get ill, you go to the Doctor’s, period.
There is never any question of not being treated.
Now Obamacare has been tested I think it was an improvement on the previous situation, with about 10 million more insures, I believe, but we could, eventually, aim to replace it. Thinking
about things, in an idealistic world, the ‘individual mandate’ would indeed not
exist. That is, one should really be able
to opt out of buying health insurance if one wishes. People should have the
right to take a big, maybe stupid, risk, keep their insurance premium money, and not pay health
insurance, even if they can afford it; just as they have the right to not
insure against damage of their own car.
Now, the problem is, that if that right - to not buy
insurance - is going to be given, for it to work you really have to not treat someone who is sick or
injured, could afford insurance but decided not to pay for it, and doesn't have the money to pay for their treatment. You really have
to leave them to their own devices, and even, if necessary, to die. And that's, of
course, not what happens, even in the bad old USA. Emergency rooms always treat patients; it’s basic compassion. And thus, a large
part of the motivation for getting insurance in the first place disappears, and
on top of this we get the consequences of enormous
unpaid costs, medical bankruptcy nonsense etc.
So the USA really needs to decide. Either you make insurance
compulsory, as does the rest of the first world, or you don't treat people who
don't get it. Having it both ways
doesn't work. Either we have the individual mandate or dispassionately insist
on no treatment for the uninsured. The US individual mandate, as in Europe, works better than the pre-Obamacare zoo.
However, although I know of no precedent, the insurance-or-no-treatment model
could conceivably work better, while
giving people more freedom of choice. What you’d find, maybe, is that, the
extra motivation might even lead to an even larger proportion of people getting
insurance, and voluntarily, than they do under Obamacare. But it would be scary
as hell. So guys, keep the individual mandate for now, but work to building a
system where it is no longer necessary i.e.,
where health costs are so low that everyone voluntarily buys insurance
anyway. This requires bringing bring costs down, through increasing
flexibility, introducing cross-state and international competition, dissociating
insurance from employment, tort reform, preventive care incentives, analytics,
targeted therapies, innovation etc. But
that discussion, as they say, is another kettle of fish.
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