There isn’t a god, but if there was one, he probably wouldn’t care about your sex life.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Sex! Sex! Sex!, Thought of the day | 1 Comment »
There isn’t a god, but if there was one, he probably wouldn’t care about your sex life.
Filed under: Misc | Tagged: Sex! Sex! Sex!, Thought of the day | 1 Comment »
Psychology is far from my primary interest in science, but I was fortunate enough to come by a story on negative thinking that I found highly interesting. There’s a lot of stuff out there that goes contrary to our intuition but ultimately makes logical sense.
Here’s how [John] Cloud explains the psychology of Hayes and like minds:
Hayes and other third wavers say trying to correct negative thoughts can, paradoxically, intensify them, in the same way that a dieter who keeps telling himself “I really don’t want the pizza” ends up obsessing about … pizza. Rather, Hayes and the roughly 12,000 students and professionals who have been trained in his formal psychotherapy, which is called acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), say we should acknowledge that negative thoughts recur throughout life. Instead of challenging them, Hayes says, we should concentrate on identifying and committing to our values. Once we become willing to feel negative emotions, he argues, we will find it easier to figure out what life should be about and get on with it. That’s easier said than done, of course, but his point is that it’s hard to think about the big things when we’re trying so hard to regulate our thinking.
Filed under: Science | Tagged: John Cloud, Joshua Shenk, Negative thinking, Positive thinking, Psychology, Stephen Hayes, Therese Borchard | Leave a comment »
If there’s one phrase that has framed virtually all my education in biology the best, it would be “It’s all about shape.”
Probably the easiest way to think about this is with an analogy of a key and a keyhole. That’s how biological and chemical interactions occur – one thing fits into another. And so that’s the case with what researchers have done with the restoration of the activity of a particular enzyme.
The enzyme, called ALDH2, plays an important role in metabolizing alcohol and other toxins, including those created by a lack of oxygen in the wake of a heart attack. It also is involved in the metabolism of nitroglycerin, which is used to prevent chest pain (angina) caused by restricted blood flow and oxygen to the heart.
The problem is that a lot of people have a mutation in the gene which codes for this enzyme. This presents a couple of options. One is gene therapy where, in effect, a small piece of the genome (just a single gene) is altered, usually using an adeno-associated virus to introduce the correct DNA sequence into a nucleus (as happened with the spider monkeys recently cured of color blindness). This presents some problems because there isn’t a one-to-one correspondence with genes and proteins or enzymes. Alternative splicing means that a single gene can code for several different proteins. Sure, a correction may be just right for making one correct protein, but it may not also be correct for other proteins. This can result in serious side effects (though it didn’t in the spider monkeys). There are other reasons gene therapy can go awry, too, so it isn’t necessarily the best choice, however promising the field is for curing innumerable afflictions.
Then there’s the option these researchers took. Instead of messing around with anything to do with the genome, they looked at the proteome. Specifically, they looked at the enzyme ALDH2. Its mutated form doesn’t perform very well. It still works because it maintains some of its shape, but its active site does not comport to the appropriate substrates of the other molecules its trying to act upon as well as it should. So in effect, researchers took a compound (Alda-1) and injected into test subjects. In turn, this compound altered the shape of ALDH2, putting it back in proper working form.
“Because of the mutation in the gene, parts of the protein structure become loose and floppy. Alda-1 reactivates the enzyme by propping up those parts of the structure so they regain normal function,” said Dr. Hurley, director of the Center for Structural Biology on the Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis campus.
It’s an elegantly simple idea with a complex execution.
Incidentally, this all can be related to evolution in that if an enzyme has a given shape which catalyzes something even a little, it can be sculpted by natural selection to better catalyze that reaction, eventually getting to a relative optimum in shape.
Filed under: Science | Tagged: Alda-1, ALDH2, Center for Structural Biology on the Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis campus., Daria Mochly-Rosen, Nature Structural Biology, Thomas Hurley | 1 Comment »
Sen. Harry Reid recently was quoted as saying Obama’s electability comes in part from being relatively “light-skinned” and having no “Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one”. Naturally, the political spin machines are going crazy.
One thing missing from all this is that Reid was right. His terminology was dumb, but the essence of what he was saying was correct. Obama’s skin tone and lack of identifiable accent have helped him. If he talked like Gary Coleman from back in the day, he would have been rejected rather promptly. Something similar can be said of accents from the deep south. There’s the on-the-border Fred Thompson accent that gets a pass, but the slack-jawed yokel accent would be unacceptable. Granted, that’s more a caricature than anything, but there are associations people make the more a person has an accent. How many politicians are there in England with thick cockney accents?
All that aside, this whole fiasco is being compared with the past political transgressions of Republican leaders. Trent Lott, for instance, said the country would have been better had Strong Thurmond been elected in ’48. He probably should have realized that Thurmond ran on a segregation platform, but there shouldn’t have been too much to say about his comments. It’s obvious he was trying to be nice to an old man on his birthday. Honestly, if Lott really is a racist, I think he would be either far more careful with his wording in all situations or he would have been found out much, much earlier.
Then there’s the case of Georgia Republican Rep. Lynn Westmoreland who said Obama was “uppity” during the last presidential campaign. He was roasted because the term has been used to trivialize blacks whenever they’ve argued for civil rights (sort of like “militant” gets applied to atheists who dare speak an ill word toward religion). Of course, Westmoreland claimed he had no idea what the racial connotations were of the word. I find this credible. Plenty of people didn’t know anything of the word (myself included). What’s more, it fit in with the political rhetoric of Obama being an elitist. But no one cares about truth when politics are involved.
So now there’s Reid. The GOP is calling for his resignation and just won’t shut the hell up. The talk shows are whining about Democratic hypocrisy in light of reactions to similar past Republican missteps. Okay, there’s a point there. The Democrats did put up a big political stink over a number of trivial issues. They’re politicians; we should expect as much. But don’t the Republicans agree that those past issues really were trivial? Don’t they agree (especially on the talk shows) that Lott et al shouldn’t have faced the sort of criticism they did? So why is it that two wrongs make a right? Their argument is essentially that Democrats should not be hypocrites by demonstrating that they can do something wrong once again. It’s entirely stupid and only politically motivated.
But if any Republican is interested in why more people may care about this sort of thing when they say it over when a Democrat says it, it’s obvious. The Republican party does not support policies which tend to favor minorities. There’s a strong feeling that George Bush and other Republicans really, in fact, don’t care about black people. Furthermore, Republicans aren’t necessarily going to be racists, but racists are likely to be Republicans. That’s why Democrats get more slack. They’ve tended to earn it by not having the same history as Republicans (more specifically, liberal trends don’t have the same track record as conservative trends, and Republicans are conservative and Democrats are (relatively) liberal, by and large).
Filed under: News | Tagged: Georgia Republican Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, Harry Reid, Negro dialect, Obama, Trent Lott | 2 Comments »
Maine and Vermont are currently the only states which allow inmates to vote. A number of other states have laws allowing those convicted of felonies the right to vote after release or after probation is over. Still, several states don’t allow it no matter what. Commit a felony at 18, serve 3 years, and you still can’t vote at 85. The Supreme Court has ruled that the constitution allows this in the 14th Amendment, but the scenario I just gave would seem to at least violate the 8th Amendment. But that may be changing in Washington based upon a federal decision.
The 2-1 ruling by a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday overturned the 2000 ruling of a district judge in Spokane. That judge had ruled that Washington state’s felon disenfranchisement law did not violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and dismissed a lawsuit filed by a former prison inmate from Bellevue.
The two appellate judges ruled that disparities in the state’s justice system “cannot be explained in race-neutral ways.”
I’m not sure I find the reasoning here very convincing. These laws do disproportionately affect minorities, but that would seem to be an issue of law enforcement in the first place, not voting rights. One could say bans on ex-cons carrying guns also disproportionately affect minorities, but that doesn’t mean the ban should be overturned.
There is one caveat to that, however. Some states (especially in the south, surprise surprise), specifically did institute these laws to disenfranchise black voters. I’m not sure how a court decision could tease everything out, but it would seem that the appellate court’s reasoning would apply to those states.
But under all this is a more important question: Why aren’t felons allowed to vote? Isn’t the goal to rehabilitate prisoners? Don’t we want to better integrate them into society? Even for lifers, don’t we want them to be a part of a process that isn’t self-destructive and destructive to the lives of other prisoners (and prison officials)? If anything, voting should be encouraged for felons. Disallowing their votes seems to be nothing more then petty revenge, not something remotely helpful to either the prisoners or society.
Filed under: News | Tagged: 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Felons, Felony voting, Maine, Vermont, Washington | 1 Comment »
You’ve got your younger Earth creationists and then the old Earth creationists. The YECs have their story laid out pretty clear. Humans and everything else came into existence 6,000 years ago with no evolution. Okay, got it. Stupid, but I’ve got it. But what I don’t get is the OECs. What dates do they propose for the introduction of animals? When did humans first appear? We certainly haven’t been around 4 billion years. Not 3 billion. Not 10 million. It’s more like 100,000. But how do these crazies match up all the evidence? What was walking around 100,000 years ago? Was it human? How about 40,000 years ago? Human? If not, then what? If so, then why did God wait another 37,000 years to start getting chatty?
Filed under: Creationism | Tagged: Old Earth Creationists, Young Earth Creationists | 1 Comment »
You’ve got your younger Earth creationists and then the old Earth creationists. The YECs have their story laid out pretty clearly. Humans and everything else came into existence 6,000 years ago with no evolution. Okay, got it. Stupid, but I’ve got it. But what I don’t get is the OECs. What dates do they propose for the introduction of animals? When did humans first appear? We certainly haven’t been around 4 billion years. Not 3 billion. Not 10 million. It’s more like 100,000. But how do these crazies match up all the evidence? What was walking around 100,000 years ago? Was it human? How about 40,000 years ago? Human? If not, then what? If so, then why did God wait another 37,000 years to start getting chatty?
Filed under: Creationism | Tagged: Old Earth Creationists, Young Earth Creationists | 1 Comment »
A federal case is set to start in the coming days. At issue is the federal constitutionality of California’s Prop 8 bill that passed, damaging the lives of thousands of Californians and ignoring the rights of every last one of them. I’m sure it will be some time until this reaches the Supreme Court (where Scalia will not consider any legal issue), but it will certainly get there.
Interestingly, one of the opponents of equal rights has asked to be dropped from the lawsuit. Since Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Attorney General Jerry Brown correctly refused to mount a defense for California, others had to step in. One was Hak-Shing William Tam, an official bigot and proponent of Prop 8.
On Friday, Tam told the court that he was harassed and his property vandalized during the campaign, and feared similar retribution if he continued to represent gay marriage foes’ interest in the lawsuit and trial, which is scheduled to start Monday in San Francisco.
“In the past I have received threats on my life, had my property vandalized and am recognized on the streets due to my association with Proposition 8,” Tam said in a court filing. “Now that the subject lawsuit is going to trial, I fear I will get more publicity, be more recognizable and that the risk of harm to me and my family will increase.”
While the guy is a scumbag, he doesn’t deserve that. Dare I say, the actions toward him represent, gasp!, bigotry! No one has to accept Tam’s beliefs, but tolerance is required.
Filed under: News | Tagged: Attorney General Jerry Brown, California, equal rights, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Hak-Shing William Tam, Same-sex marriage | 2 Comments »
Chiropractors in Connecticut are fighting against a proposal that would require them to inform ‘patients’ about the link between cervical manipulation and strokes. The article here is more or less an op-ed, but it had one part that especially stood out.
I just can’t believe that chiropractors are against informing patients because they fear losing business.
Really? Really? They’re chiropractors. They range from offering vaguely effective physical therapy (which is a manner of non-chiropractic training) to being expensive masseuses to causing strokes. Maybe worst of all, they are always attempting to raise their status.
“This measure would be redundant,” Pagano said, because it would be “singling out” chiropractors. Under state law, all doctors must inform patients about potentially risky treatment.
Since chiropractors are not doctors, it would not be redundant.
Filed under: News, Pure bullshit | Tagged: Chiropractors, connecticut, Hartford Courant, Malarkey, Matthew N. Pagano, Rick Green | Leave a comment »