Slashdot Mirror


Study Claims Cellphones Implicated In Bee Loss

krou passes along word from Telegraph.co.uk that researchers from Chandigarh's Punjab University claim that they have proven mobile phones could explain Colony Collapse Disorder. "They set up a controlled experiment in Punjab earlier this year comparing the behavior and productivity of bees in two hives — one fitted with two mobile telephones which were powered on for two 15-minute sessions per day for three months. The other had dummy models installed. After three months the researchers recorded a dramatic decline in the size of the hive fitted with the mobile phone, a significant reduction in the number of eggs laid by the queen bee. The bees also stopped producing honey. The queen bee in the 'mobile' hive produced fewer than half of those created by her counterpart in the normal hive. They also found a dramatic decline in the number of worker bees returning to the hive after collecting pollen." We've talked about the honeybee problem before. Today's article quotes a British bee specialist who dismisses talk of cellphone radiation having anything to do with the problem.

542 comments

  1. Independent studies warranted by assemblerex · · Score: 4, Funny

    Before I BEE-lieve it

    1. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I agree. One study involving 2 hives does not conclusively prove causality.

    2. Re:Independent studies warranted by fotoguzzi · · Score: 1

      Oh, BEE-have!

      --
      Their they're doing there hair.
    3. Re:Independent studies warranted by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      One study involving two hives doesn't even prove correlation, as it could be just random chance, as one hive will always do better than another hive. It is interesting and maybe worth doing some real studies.

      But are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    4. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Four fields of bee hives, one with Faraday cages installed on each hive, one with nothing (control), one with cell phones on/in the box, and another with the phone 2m away. That'd generate the kind of data we're actually looking for wouldn't it?

    5. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you call tons of finger pointing at all kinda of things with conclusive evidence rarely presented?

      BEE-S!

    6. Re:Independent studies warranted by XanC · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Four fields of bee hives, one with Faraday cages installed on each hive, one with nothing (control), one with cell phones on/in the box, and another with the phone 2m away. That'd generate the kind of data we're actually looking for wouldn't it?

      If you set that up a hundred times, yes.

      Individual hives can fail for any number of basically unpredictable reasons.

    7. Re:Independent studies warranted by spazdor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I got three words for you: inverse square law.

      If it takes putting a phone into the hive, then we're not really testing the effects of cellphones(as they are used IRL) on bees anymore.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    8. Re:Independent studies warranted by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      We are BEEing haved.

    9. Re:Independent studies warranted by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      Individual hives can fail for any number of basically unpredictable reasons.

      Which is probably why he wrote "[f]our fields of bee hives," dontcha think?

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    10. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Winner winner! Chicken (with honey) Dinner!

    11. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Stupid bees. They should be making honey, not talking on their cell phones! By the way, I blame Google Buzz for this whole Bee/mobile phone situation.

    12. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inside Bee Hive...

      Can you hear me now?

    13. Re:Independent studies warranted by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?

      No, but here's some food for thought:

      If commercial agriculture relies on bees to pollinate commercial crops ... and if the cell phones are killing the bees ... what happens when there's no bees left?

      We stand to lose a lot if we lose bees. Research into their health is important to our ability to grow food.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    14. Re:Independent studies warranted by oldspewey · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Several countries (most notably China) already use armies of human workers wandering around with pollination brushes in order to pollinate crops that used to be taken care of (for free) by bees.

      This sort of thing falls squarely in the realm of "ecological services" provided by the various natural systems we humans are busily degrading or outright destroying.

      --
      If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
    15. Re:Independent studies warranted by erroneus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No doubt. That was my first response. Please, someone do this same experiment in different parts of the US and around the world.

      A sad reality is that even if we proved the mobile phones are the cause, we would sooner die than give up our phones. On the other hand, if someone came up with a nice short-range, low-power strategy that utilized our old copper lines and power polls everywhere, we could reduce the amount of radiation quite a bit. The remaining problem would be service in the country areas, which I am sad to say would likely need to be managed through things like mobile satellite repeaters or some such thing... city coverage wouldn't bee as much of a challenge.

    16. Re:Independent studies warranted by maxume · · Score: 2, Informative

      It is probably worth pointing out that lots of grains self pollinate, so the threat is more to food variety than it is to food supply.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    17. Re:Independent studies warranted by Barrinmw · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      But the only way America could get that manpower is to let even more mexican immigrants in.

    18. Re:Independent studies warranted by SnowZero · · Score: 4, Funny

      No, if the study proves repeatable, we just need to stop storing our cell phones inside beehives. The inverse square law will take care of the rest.

    19. Re:Independent studies warranted by chromas · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well we have kids. What are they doing?

    20. Re:Independent studies warranted by Runaway1956 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Study, yes. Jumping to conclusion, no.

      Somehow, I find it terribly hard to believe that cell phones are responsible for the GLOBAL decline in bee populations and bee productivity. The same problems are being witnessed in developed countries, as well as undeveloped.

      If you were to do a search on my posts about cell phones, you would quickly learn that I don't much like them, and I am also suspicious of health hazards that are little understood at this time. But, anyone who is even trying to be rational will recognize that bees dying off in backwoods areas with little or no cell phone service can't be blamed on cell phones.

      If cell phones were to blame, we would be seeing huge dye-offs in Florida, New Jersey, California -but states like Montana and Idaho would be virtually unaffected.

      As far as I can determine, that is not the case at all.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    21. Re:Independent studies warranted by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      Couple things we might do:

      1) Change the frequencies. While this is a pain, it could be done in the event of something this serious. Honey bees are important for more than just honey. They pollinate plants as well. It is quite clear that if indeed CCD is caused by electromagnetic radiation (it doesn't look like it is, but if) then it caused only be it in a certain band. We have long had radio and TV stations transmitting at powers up to 100,000 watts. Given that CCD is a new phenomena, it is pretty clear that these haven't been causing problems. So we could test and find out what frequencies are problematic, and stop using those. Cellphones could be 600MHz instead of 900MHz or 2.5GHz instead of 1.9GHz and so on. While the way the waves propagate and the bandwidth changes with frequency, small changes aren't problematic. You could shift around the frequencies the cell net uses by a fair amount and still have everything work pretty much as before. It would be expensive to do and not done unless absolutely necessary, but it could be done if needed.

      2) Shield areas from cell transmission. In areas where there are important honey bee populations, we could have them not covered by cell service (at least not normal cell frequency service) as well as directionally shield antennas to keep transmissions away from certain areas. We could ensure that the level of signal is below the thermal noise level and as such isn't causing any problems.

      Wouldn't have to get rid of phones, just make changes. However, that all seems unnecessary as there has been no good evidence to show that CCD is caused by phones. It was a pseudo science theory more or less, but one that has been looked at seriously. There are plenty of studies that show that no, it is not caused by phones and then this one, non-peer reviewed, poorly conducted study that claims it is.

    22. Re:Independent studies warranted by Runaway1956 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, America would have all the manpower needed, if we ended most welfare. Children 18 and under should be fed, as well as children 18 - ~25 who are attending college, and so should the elderly. Let's empty our prison cells, our ghetto projects, and everyplace else we are warehousing deadbeat do-nothing bums, and put them to work.

      Yeah, the idea is HIGHLY unpopular - but I say that people who produce nothing, should consume nothing. All able bodied persons who are not otherwise gainfully employed can start pollinating the strawberries, peaches, apples, and all the other crops that we enjoy. Let me emphasize - ALL able bodied people. And, that will include a lot of people that we have classified as "handicapped". It doesn't take a mental giant to do a few hours of menial labor out in the field each week, nor does it take a lot of stamina.

      Maybe we can reduce the number of tons of fat that Americans are carrying around with them at the same time!

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    23. Re:Independent studies warranted by pspahn · · Score: 1

      I would rather have bees than cell phones any day. I remember life before cell phones and I prefer it. Nothing irritates me more than seeing someone almost cause an accident while talking on the phone, and I see it several times a week.

      If they are indeed affecting bees, then I say we arm the bees with cell phone nuking super powers so they attack anyone acting like a damn fool while driving.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    24. Re:Independent studies warranted by twoDigitIq · · Score: 0

      But the guy that sold me my phone promised me it would keep tigers away, and so far it's worked like a charm. I think there must bee something to this bee research as well.

    25. Re:Independent studies warranted by cyn1c77 · · Score: 1

      But are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?

      Probably not. But maybe we could figure out exactly what component of the cell phone usage is bothering the bees and change it so that they stop dying. Maybe all that is needed is a small frequency shift...

    26. Re:Independent studies warranted by fru1tcake · · Score: 2, Interesting

      True. But cell phone towers have much higher signal strength than mobile phones. IANAPhysicist, but might a close-range phone be used as an analogue for a longer-range tower?

      A more interesting alternative experiment taking into account the inverse square law would be:

      1. Place dozens of hives around a mobile/cell phone tower at varying distances
      2. Ensure main food sources are not close to the tower
      3. Ensure the site would is low in other influencing factors such as pesticides
      4. Track the hive activity/productivity over time
      5. Turn the tower on, and continue tracking, and check for...
      6. profit!
      --
      It's not a bug, it's a lepidopter!
    27. Re:Independent studies warranted by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 4, Funny

      But are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?

      No. We are going to end up fitting each of them with a little foil coat and hat though...

      --
      You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
    28. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What ring tone did they use?

    29. Re:Independent studies warranted by plover · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nope. All the bees in a single field could be impacted by a nearby external uncontrolled stimulus: anything from an early frost, drought, pesticide applications, diseases, mites, fungi, competing colonies of nearby bees, or even dirt on the shoes of the guy changing the cell phone batteries. You'd need a really large set of samples to figure out if there was even a measurable impact by using a Faraday cage. I seriously doubt that a hundred fields would provide enough samples.

      Four samples would yield nothing more significant that the current article, which is another way of saying "worthless".

      --
      John
    30. Re:Independent studies warranted by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      Remember that industrially productive bees on which we rely for farming are routinely transported under stress from site to site, often via major public roads with good cell phone service. As we know from other examples of radiation exposure, the effects of exposure need not be instant to be substantial.

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    31. Re:Independent studies warranted by ZosX · · Score: 1

      I can see the future now! Genetically modified foil bees!!

    32. Re:Independent studies warranted by grcumb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Let's empty our prison cells, our ghetto projects, and everyplace else we are warehousing deadbeat do-nothing bums, and put them to work.

      Either this modest little proposal of yours is a case of an epically poor sense of the mechanics of satire, or you're actually serious about this. Forgive me if I assume that it's the latter.

      Before you embark on the journey towards that lofty goal, you might want to do a bit of research into this historical social phenomenon called Indentured Servitude and workhouses. They were, after all, some of the means by which the US economy operated in its early days. (The other was slavery, but that meddler Lincoln made sure we'd never get that back.)

      You know, Charles Dickens, the Methodist movement and entire generations of the best and brightest in England, Europe and North America devoted their lives to ending this practice. If they knew you were proposing it again, they'd no doubt be rolling in their graves.

      Shame on you for even considering this. Shame too on the moderator(s) who thought this was in any way insightful.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    33. Re:Independent studies warranted by tyrione · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, America would have all the manpower needed, if we ended most welfare. Children 18 and under should be fed, as well as children 18 - ~25 who are attending college, and so should the elderly. Let's empty our prison cells, our ghetto projects, and everyplace else we are warehousing deadbeat do-nothing bums, and put them to work.

      Yeah, the idea is HIGHLY unpopular - but I say that people who produce nothing, should consume nothing. All able bodied persons who are not otherwise gainfully employed can start pollinating the strawberries, peaches, apples, and all the other crops that we enjoy. Let me emphasize - ALL able bodied people. And, that will include a lot of people that we have classified as "handicapped". It doesn't take a mental giant to do a few hours of menial labor out in the field each week, nor does it take a lot of stamina.

      Maybe we can reduce the number of tons of fat that Americans are carrying around with them at the same time!

      You have a much higher probability of seeing pigs fly before your fantasies about America becoming a pack horde of farm pollinators ever happens.

      The research should focus on communication wave patterns that Bess rely on and to see if disruption zones are happening with the RF waves; and if so how we can adjust our communication signal patterns to accomodate them. It's a far cheaper solution.

    34. Re:Independent studies warranted by Capsaicin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nope. All the bees in a single field could be impacted by a nearby external uncontrolled stimulus.

      Now that was my first thought in regard to his experimental design. Why have the four conditions separated into four fields, much better to mix them up. But that's not what I was responding to. I was responding to someone talking about "individual hives" who concluded by telling us that "[f]our samples would yield nothing more significant that the current article."

      I seriously doubt that a hundred fields would provide enough samples.

      You're just pulling that figure out of a hat. How many hives per field for a start? Beyond that we'd need some measure of variance in the data before we could go about calculating the required sample size. It seems unlikely to require thousands of hives (assuming >10 hives per field) for each condition though.

      Even as late as the 70s they made us read this the bastards. I just wish I could remember more so I could cut you down with my astounding knowledge of experimental design. ;)

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    35. Re:Independent studies warranted by cyn1c77 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You need to read your own link! What the GP is talking about is not indentured servitude. There is no forced period of employment.

      He's saying that people should have to work for their welfare checks. Is that really so onerous? I don't think so. I don't even think it is that new a concept...

      Most of us call it a job.

    36. Re:Independent studies warranted by repapetilto · · Score: 2, Informative

      I dunno if anyone else has posted this... but its one of the worst studies I've ever seen. Theyve even got a picture as part of the article showing how they failed to blind themselves, not to mention the data doesnt make sense, (means outside of the range reported..at least I think, its not clear). "Current Science" appears to be a terrible journal, there should be a separate word for that kind of journal so as not to confuse the general public.

      http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/25may2010/1376.pdf

    37. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, America would have all the manpower needed, if we ended most welfare. Children 18 and under should be fed, as well as children 18 - ~25 who are attending college, and so should the elderly. Let's empty our prison cells, our ghetto projects, and everyplace else we are warehousing deadbeat do-nothing bums, and put them to work.

      Yeah, the idea is HIGHLY unpopular

      Because it is slavery couched in the terminology of an Ayn Randroid.

    38. Re:Independent studies warranted by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      I should note too, that the significance they are claiming is in terms of numbers of eggs laid and numbers of worker bees returning, so it's the eggs and the bees which constitute the sample (and the size). Putting aside the validity of this measure, however, the study is still flawed for the reasons you give above. The uncontrolled variables which apply to a single field apply, a fortiori, to a single hive.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    39. Re:Independent studies warranted by inKubus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, you are correct. It's fairly likely that Colony Collapse is caused by feeding bees High Fructose Corn Syrup contaminated with hydroxymethylfurfural. Probably what happened was the phone uses a capacitance system to scan the buttons on the front. This scanning results in a high pitched sound that bees can probably hear and are probably annoyed by. Other things might be the phone smelled funny becuase a person had touched it, or the phone circuit board was treated with something toxic to bees. The only true test would be to put a sterile wire right in the hive and pump out 50W of power and see that nothing happens.

      --
      Cool! Amazing Toys.
    40. Re:Independent studies warranted by leoaloha · · Score: 1

      If it involves not eating because honey bees account for a very large part of the insect pollination scheme.

    41. Re:Independent studies warranted by dr.+chuck+bunsen · · Score: 1

      A sad reality is that even if we proved the mobile phones are the cause, we would sooner die than give up our phones.

      Speak for yourself. I'd much rather live than have a cell phone, thank you. I would probably be much happier without one too.

    42. Re:Independent studies warranted by grcumb · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You need to read your own link! What the GP is talking about is not indentured servitude. There is no forced period of employment.

      He's saying that people should have to work for their welfare checks. Is that really so onerous? I don't think so. I don't even think it is that new a concept...

      Most of us call it a job.

      No, it's called forced labour and it always ends in abuse. Read your history before recreating its worst excesses, please.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    43. Re:Independent studies warranted by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      err.. uncontrolled stimuli, that is. The uncontrolled (dependant) variable is the number of eggs, of course.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    44. Re:Independent studies warranted by Surt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We're not going to lose bees, thank you evolution. There are plenty of hives that have survived CCD, and while it may take a few years for populations to fully recover, we can be confident that Darwin has left us with the bees that naturally resist whatever the cause of CCD turns out to bee.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    45. Re:Independent studies warranted by erroneus · · Score: 1

      I speak for all of mankind. I know quite well how we operate. We believe that, for the most part, global warming is our fault. We are more willing to question whether or not it is actually our fault or not than to actively combat it. When there was concern about the condition of the ozone layer, we ignored the obvious causes in favor of reducing hair spray and refrigerant. While you are more interested in living, it won't be your decision to make. It will be all of industry who will be unwilling to wean itself from the public's money to shut down. It will be the public who believes it needs to be able to call anyone at any time while driving anywhere.

      And frankly, in the days before I had a mobile phone, I had always wished I could do that and now that I can, I don't want to miss that convenience. I hope we can figure out quantum transportation bits sooner rather than later so that we can replace our current radio signal communications with that. Then there won't be any radiation from our phones to speak of.

    46. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One study involving two hives doesn't even prove correlation, as it could be just random chance, as one hive will always do better than another hive. It is interesting and maybe worth doing some real studies.

      But are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?

      Why would we need to give up our cellphones? Shouldn't taking them away from bees be enough? And just think about the extra safety benefits... it's a well proven fact that bees who use bluetooth headsets are found to be a major contributing factor in 6 out of 10 deadly mid-air bee collisions. (Citation: "An Inconvenient Truth" by Al Gore)

      On a more serious note- it's also quite possible that it wasn't the cell phone radiation which caused a problem, but the phone itself. Possibly some kind of outgassing issue, or maybe just the fact that someone stuffed a strange object in the hive. After all, would you really stick around if you woke up and found a black Monolith just chillin' in your living room?

    47. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If cell phones were to blame, we would be seeing huge dye-offs in Florida, New Jersey, California -but states like Montana and Idaho would be virtually unaffected.

      I live in MT, and cell towers aren't as rare as you might think. It's looks pretty sparse if you view a coverage map, but that's because we have a lot of areas which are very mountainous or are National Forest, Wild Life Refuges, etc. But most of those areas aren't prime bee-keeping country. Most areas which have bees are the same areas which grow crops, and those tend to have roads and small towns scattered all over the place. There are a lot of farmers and ranchers who get paid to have cell towers on their land, which are often located in close proximity to the bee hives.

      We DO have a fairly large problem with hives here in MT, but focusing on specific states is rather misleading. You see, most beekeepers take the bees from MT to CA during the winter season, and bring them back in the spring. It's not just here that we do it, either- beekeepers used to keep their hives fairly stationary, relatively speaking, but over the last couple decades the collapse of small family operations has meant that the keepers now have to travel & transport the hives all over the country just to stay in business.
      My point being that, in addition to possible travel-related problems, the bees are being exposed to environmental factors all over the place, which really makes narrowing down the cause a huge problem.

      Even developing countries have a lot more cell coverage than you might think... many developing nations are skipping landline communications & going straight to cell technology. It's a lot cheaper to deploy some towers connected with a few trunk lines (or even via microwave relays) than to build & maintain thousands of miles of wire infrastructure.

      I personally don't like this so-called "study" at all; it lacks any semblance of scientific method & there are a host of factors which need to be isolated. But I'm not going to dismiss the effects of cell radiation outright, either. The situation merits some actual scientific study using some well-chosen methods and of course reliable control groups.

    48. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about instead ditching the cellphones AS THEY ARE USED TODAY?
      make them p2p instead of relying on big transceivers. Make all carriers a common pool (all phones can connect to all carriers).
      Curb voice calls and let people only send SMS and paging requests.
      Make phone booths that dub as APs.

      There are tons of other things that people on welfare and fat ones could do for society than replacing what bees do - did - pretty well.

      Of course a world which need political and social control just to pollinate crop is the wet dream of the average ruling class so this will never happen.

    49. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Awesome. Healthy psychopaths with no manpower to monitor them, running around our farms messing with the food supply. Where do I subscribe to your newsletter?

    50. Re:Independent studies warranted by profplump · · Score: 4, Informative

      As far as we know with other examples of non-ionizing radiation, there are virtually no effects, immediate, delayed, substantial or otherwise.

      Even in the case of ionizing radiation, the effects *are* immediate. One might not notice the effects right away if they are mild, but the tissue damage happens when you're exposed, not some time later via radiation time-delay magic.

    51. Re:Independent studies warranted by profplump · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I was annoyed by the design of the test too (ignoring the obvious methodology flaws in the number of samples/etc.) Why did the inactive cell phones need to be dummies instead of just "off"? What if the bees are simply allergic to the batteries in the real cell phones? The test is obviously intended to examine the effects of the radio waves, since bees are not often in close proximity to cell phones themselves -- wouldn't a better test be to put in identical phones and simply disable the *radio* amplifier in one of the phones, so that the other conditions are as close to identical as practical? Or as you suggested, to simply pound the hives with radio sans any local electronics installation?

    52. Re:Independent studies warranted by Spacejock · · Score: 1

      I have another data point. Give my kids mobile phones and their output falls too. I mean, those things are distracting

    53. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, making people work before they get paid is exactly like slavery.

    54. Re:Independent studies warranted by meerling · · Score: 1

      Although there have already been studies done on the effects of electromagnetics (both power line equivalent, and cell tower equivalent) done on bees that haven't shown anything significant like that.
      Of course, there are a couple of things to pay attention to here.
      One is, those previous studies didn't stick actual phones in the hives.
      Two, this ones sample size is far too incompetently small for any reliable conclusions to be drawn.
      and Third, it's being reported by a particular 'paper' that has less fact checking than an illiterate and dyslexic flat-earther's blog on orbital mechanics...

      So basically if you ignore anything in that article, it's pretty bloody unlikely that you're missing anything of value to anyone with functioning braincells.
      (Heck, you'd probably be better off getting your science news from the Daily Enquirer or Entertainment Weekly than the Telegraph.)

      That's just my opinion, but if you go over the b.s. they've posted (printed?) in the past, you'll probably agree with me.

      Hmmm, here's an idea, the problem with their hive was the queen kept monopolizing the phone and gossiping about her drones to another queen somewhere.

    55. Re:Independent studies warranted by brusk · · Score: 1

      Do you force people to move to rural areas? What if they have kids, do we forcibly separate them from their kids? Their spouses? How are you supposed to look for a job if you are enslaved (call it what it is) and transported around the country pollinating plants?

      --
      .sig withheld by request
    56. Re:Independent studies warranted by street_astrologist · · Score: 2, Informative

      Prison labor is already huge in the USA and elsewhere, I think we have workhouses by another name.

    57. Re:Independent studies warranted by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Prison labor in the current US isn't really the same as in the older days. In the old days, laws were passed just to get people into prisons and the forced labor netted someone a profit. Now it's mostly volunteer, generally is some remedial task the prison already needs done, and is offered as a reward for not fucking up. There are some businesses that contract out with states in order to help fund some of the prisons but it doens't offset the costs of the prisoner.

      Granted, there are still some chain gangs in some areas, but they cost more to operate then hiring a construction company to just come in and dig the ditches or whatever. Outside of litter pickup which is handled mostly by volunteers or paid employees funded by volunteers (adopt a highway programs), it costs more to use forced prison labor in these areas.

    58. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welfare is intended for those who have no job. If you intend to pay people to work for you, thus creating jobs, then there are more people with jobs and fewer who need welfare. Cancelling welfare does not make job opportunities magically appear.

      He also mentioned prison. People are in prison because they did something they were not supposed to do. Maybe they tried gainful self-employment by proactive redistribution of wealth. Or maybe the accumulated green pocket lint by distributing ostensibly controlled substances. Whatever the case, they are not imprisoned because the did do nothing.

    59. Re:Independent studies warranted by RivenAleem · · Score: 1

      They go about and brush all the plant's lady parts? Perverts :(

    60. Re:Independent studies warranted by mathfeel · · Score: 1

      I want to know what carrier these guys are using. Every time I go out to farm country for fruit picking or wine tasting, I have terrible phone reception.

      --
      The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the 'social sciences' is: some do, some don't
    61. Re:Independent studies warranted by darthflo · · Score: 1

      Many (older) phones have a connector for external antennas. Get four that do plus two matching antennas, set up with a couple of yards of clearance from the control hive and get a better result. Repeat for ten sets of hives or so and it'll start to get real interesting.

    62. Re:Independent studies warranted by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Just a random thought : if the random chance had been the other way around, namely that the cellphone hive had higher productivity, would it be interesting and warrant new studies ?

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    63. Re:Independent studies warranted by Ultracrepidarian · · Score: 1

      Clearly Punjab University lacks any kind of statistics classes. . . or, perhaps they are taught by the Pakistani professor I had for Probablity and Statasticks (his pronunciation). He scored me a zero on the final, then I showed him why each of his answers was incorrect. Then he gave me a B.

    64. Re:Independent studies warranted by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      You're right, making people work before they get paid is exactly like slavery.

      Exactly. The "making people work" part is what leads to slavery.

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
    65. Re:Independent studies warranted by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      You're right, of course, a great deal of effort has been put in extinguishing indentured service and the like. Still, I feel it's worth verifying if that movement has not been too successful, and that it might be worth swinging the pendulum a measure back in the other direction.

      I'm not pro-slavery, far from it, but it's undeniable that there's quite some chaff associated with the current welfare system - and not only in America, here in Belgium, too. I spontaneously think of the family with what, five children who live entirely off welfare, and are not only proud of that, but actually believe that it's their god-given right. Maybe it's time that the system is re-evaluated and adjusted to kill off the more extreme leeches ?

      I'm really having a hard time seeing where the shame is in asking of people on benefits that they perform some public service instead. After all, you're supposedly on benefits (at least where the dole is concerned) just to bridge the time you need to find another paying job, right ? No harm in doing some light-but-necessary work while you've got nothing better to do.

      That being said, it would of course be strongly preferable if we could just manage to not destroy nature, so it can take care of managing itself.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    66. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And will you be paying them ? A fair wage ? When they aren't legally allowed to quit their jobs that is ALREADY slavery. Quite frankly most unfair-wage jobs pay worse than wellfare, or so little more that even the most BASIC profit/effort assesement have people choosing wellfare over them.

      You can't blame them for that.

      You want to solve the problem here ? The answer is not to take away wellfare and it sure as HELL isn't forced labour.

      How about this. Make it really TOUGH to outsource -like say, if you build an offshore factory, it's illegal to import the products there produced back into the corporate host country.
      Voila - end of offshoring WITHOUT removing the viability of local factories for big overseas markets.

      Make labor law have REAL teeth. Set minimum wage to maximum welfare times 3. Declare that any business caught paying less than it, to anybody, ever for ANY job will immediately lose it's business license REGARDLESS OF ALL OTHER FACTORS and that INCLUDES if the workers are illegal immigrants. Same rule goes for safe working conditions etc.

      Suddenly - companies will have no CHOICE but to actually employ workers under decent conditions, local ones too. Employing illegals will lose all appeal. Don't tell me "but we can't risk closing down so many big businesses - think of the poor economy"... you won't NEED to.
      You'll close one -and the others will be far too scared to ever risk violating a single clause.

      There will be a catch - corporate profits, share-values and probably executive salaries will take a massive cut... only it won't - that's an illusion. The money STILL went into the corporation - it's STILL being recirculated. It's just that now it's being much more democratically shared by the people who allowed the company to make that money in the first place.

      The economy will take a major hit when you first introduce it, then it will adapt... and then you'll see the biggest growth era in world history, because all those wellpaid workers will be buying products made by the wellpaid workers of the other companies, back and forth.
      Better salaries and happy, healthy, wealthy employees equals more customers. It's the single most profitable investment a company can make.
      Henry Ford understood that... how come nobody remembers it ? Since they don't and the market has CLEARLY failed the workforce (which is... what 95% of the population)... we have to remind them, by force of law.

      It would be even BETTER if there could be a U.N. resolution to that effect, which effectively makes it international law any country not enacting compliant legislation face guaranteed economic sanctions - 100% ban on trade unless your labor laws meet requirements...

      Now THAT's a world I want to live in.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    67. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Orin Hatch tried that in Michigan... what was it called again... oh right "wellfare to work". You have to hold down a job earning a certain amount of money before you can get foodstamps. Generally, the jobs available to W2W paying so low that most people had to hold down TWO 8-hour-a-day jobs, meaning 16 hours a day of work just to qualify for wellfare... all that work and you still earn so little that you can't feed your kids without help...

      That's not helping the economy (which is supposed to serve the population, not just the business OWNERS). And of course, it has obvious and logical side effects... when a single mother doesn't get to see her kid AT ALL, because she's working 16-hours a day to give him a roof and food, does it surprise you that he ends up shooting a classmate at the age of 7 ?

      It's easy to say "where were the parents ?" apparently they were spending 4 hours a day on busses, to do 16 hours a day of work, and sleep 4 hours a day... for practically nothing.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    68. Re:Independent studies warranted by Chris+Snook · · Score: 1

      I've got another one: inverse cube law. If the problem is somehow related to magnetic fields, putting a cell phone in the hive will really be measuring that more than any non-dipole phenomenon.

      --
      There's no failure quite as dissatisfying as a complete and total solution to the wrong problem.
    69. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Do you force people to move to rural areas? What if they have kids, do we forcibly separate them from their kids? Their spouses? How >are you supposed to look for a job if you are enslaved (call it what it is) and transported around the country pollinating plants?

      Thanks for spelling that out. We TRIED that in South Africa (except it was mineworkers, not plant polinators)... it didn't work. Of course if you would LIKE your next president to come to power via an armed struggle, feel free not to learn from my ancestors mistakes.

      We got really lucky - we didn't have a civil war (though it was close), and we got one of the most wonderful and forgiving leaders in world history so we didn't get a destructive, vengeful time afterwards... do you really want to wager on being as lucky ?

      (Note the first "you" is personal to the parent -the others are plural to the various GP's).

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    70. Re:Independent studies warranted by stonewallred · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Using the physic powers I gained in an accident involving a radioactive robin, a neutrino rifle and a jar of Smucker's strawberry jam, I foresee you being modded into oblivion for saying such things. Some ideas are automatically verboten on /.

    71. Re:Independent studies warranted by Fizzl · · Score: 1

      2.5GHz instead of 1.9GHz...

      Excellent choice! One more category of devices to battle with microwave ovens and WLAN stations! ;)

    72. Re:Independent studies warranted by codeButcher · · Score: 1

      We got really lucky - we didn't have a civil war (though it was close) - YET

      Fixed that for you

      , and we got one of the most wonderful and forgiving leaders in world history so we didn't get a destructive, vengeful time afterwards...

      Wait wait, when did that "afterwards" of yours end??? Because where I live, people still get killed just for being white. You probably also haven't heard Mal Ema recently. I suggest you wake out of your 1994-induced euphoria.

      --
      Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
    73. Re:Independent studies warranted by vlm · · Score: 5, Informative

      We've done that experiment thousands of times in this state for darn near a quarter century here. It's called a ... farm.

      Its almost a stereotype that farmers on the perimeter of town lease a tiny plot of land for a tower, or lease the top of their grain silo, or lease the tippy top of the barn roof, etc.

      Generally the lease payments are enough to maintain the structure and/or the driveway leading up to the structure, not so little as to barely buy a beer and not so much as for the farmer to retire. I have two relatives in the farming business, one in sheep (well, that sounds completely inappropriate) and the other in corn and somewhat in vegetables, I know what I'm talking about here.

      Note that farmers in general and dairy farmers especially are very much tuned in (bad pun) to EMF and electromagnetic fields. First of all because its almost a stereotype that all their heavy electrical gear is in disrepair and they have to keep their wits about them or they'll get electrocuted, and secondly, dairy farmers attach metal/electrical milking machines to a part of the cow anatomy where very few female mammals, humans included, enjoy having even the smallest electrical current flow.

      I suppose it depends a lot on where you live, but around here its "normal" for farms to have a couple hives, or to rent some hives during pollination season.

      Given that base stations run 10 - 20 dB more power than a handheld, any electromagnetic effect would harm the bees/whatever about 10 - 20 dB worse.

      Since the reported effects from the very low power handheld transmitter are terrible, then every time for the last quarter century, simply driving a pollination truck onto a farm that rents basestation space should result in all the bees dying like instantly. But they don't.

      Also most "medium and up" farmers have some form of radio network. Think technology like CBs, maybe a little better, maybe a little worse. Anyway, that RF source seems to have had no effect for at least 50+ years.

      Hmm. I wonder if all of reality is wrong, or maybe, just maybe, the crackpot report is wrong.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    74. Re:Independent studies warranted by vlm · · Score: 1

      Most obvious failure mode is someone called the phone and either:

      1) The ringtone sucks (don't most?) Bees vs loud noise is pretty iffy. Sometimes they don't care, sometimes they get agitated. As a higher mammal (?) I know that most ringtones I hear make me want to punch the owner, and/or stomp their phone, I assume bees have similar, yet simpler, feelings.

      2) It's in ring and vibrate mode and bees REALLY get wound up by vibration. Probably evolved the meaning, "hungry bear is trying to get in, git yer stingers ready!"

      3) The idiot telemarketer whom called left a VM, and now the phone vibrates every five minutes as a reminder. Just when the hive settles down a bit... RUMBLE RUMBLE RUMBLE ...

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    75. Re:Independent studies warranted by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Yeah but then you have to make sure it's not just the presence of a giant plastic lump that's disturbing the bees.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    76. Re:Independent studies warranted by Kijori · · Score: 1

      Surely that depends on what the phones are doing? A couple of phones on idle will only emit a very weak signal, whereas cell phone masts emit much higher power of radiation. It could well be that the phones in the hive approximate the radiation from a phone mast some distance away.

    77. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >>We got really lucky - we didn't have a civil war (though it was close) - YET

      >Fixed that for you

      On a long enough timeframe the probability of any possible event occuring approaches one. In other words, yeah it's possible, and it WILL come - if you are prepared to wait long enough. Right now there is exactly ZERO evidence suggesting one in our lifetime.

      >>, and we got one of the most wonderful and forgiving leaders in world history so we didn't get a destructive, vengeful time >>afterwards...
      >Wait wait, when did that "afterwards" of yours end??? Because where I live, people still get killed just for being white. You >probably also haven't heard Mal Ema recently. I suggest you wake out of your 1994-induced euphoria.

      It hasn't ended. It's true that we got a less adequate government now -actually we're TWO less wonderful governments later. So ?
      Did you expect to get somebody of the calibre of De Klerk and Mandela every time ? Nations are rarely lucky enough to get ONE such leader, we had two. STFU and count your blessings.
      So there's a loudmouth youngster who says horrible things and get in the news... nothing new there. Peter Mokaba used to do everything Malema does... where is he now ? What did it ever lead to ?
      The loudmouths get enough youth support to cement themselves some money, they never have any real power because the big bosses prefer not to shoot themselves in the foot (or should I say wallet).

      Yes there is racial violence sometimes... nowhere in the world is THAT not true, and it's not particularly worse here. Statistically black people are STILL the victims of crime 5 times more often than white people... now seeing as they outnumber us 5 to 1... that suggests that the very large majority of crimes choose their victims for convenience, not skincolour.

      I despise the current government. But I am sufficiently liberated to see it as a government that is incompetent and corrupt, nothing more. Race doesn't exist- it's a scientific fact (the genetics have proven it beyond all doubt) the differences between "races" are as minor as that between two dogs of the SAME breed, where one happens to be a different color. Dog breeds are MORE different than human races...
      So stop thinking in terms of race. I was MARRIED outside my race (and the fact that I'm not married anymore was because of other unrelated issues - race and culture was never a problem - if anything it added spice to our sexlife).

      Cut out the irrational white fear bullshit you get fed by the papers. The papers write what sells, there is NO truth to it. You are NOT being targetted or victimized. In a country with a 40% unemployment rate DESPITE the (racist) affirmative action laws white people STILL have only 5% unemployment, still fill the top 20% of salaried jobs, still make up 60% of business owners (and the next 30% are Indians - not Blacks).

      The only victimization you're experiencing is in your head. This country is doing just great. It has problems and we need to recognize them, be aware of them and fix them - but your kind of bullshit white-complaining is not only blatantly untrue, it makes things worse. The rest of us are trying to make this country better and crap like the shit you talk makes that harder to do.

      You wanna complain ? Complain about the amount of street children starving tonight. NOT about the fact that the cops don't beat them up so they may steal your wallet to survive. Complain about the 40% of people here who have no skills, cannot read or write and have no jobs and are on the verge of starvation every day. Complain about the fact that we pay massive taxes to try and save those lives - and corrupt politicians stick that money in their backpockets.
      But don't come to me with fucked up bullshit about "evil black guys wanna kill me".

      It's funny - a helluva lot of white AMERICAN's say the exact same thing ... and THEY outnumber their black counterparts more than 9 to 1... it's irrational racist fear and it's just

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    78. Re:Independent studies warranted by vlm · · Score: 1

      Change the frequencies. While this is a pain, it could be done in the event of something this serious.

      Big problem. We used to have megawatt class TV transmitters in the upper UHF channels, and those frequencies were given away (more or less) to the hundred watt class cell phone base station towers. AMPS analog (which is now gone), old fashioned digital, nextel, trunked radio service (what the scanner guys listen to) now operate there. Thats why the "UHF over the air TV band" doesn't go up to channel 83 anymore. For like 50 years the TV transmitters at megawatt levels had no effect. Now you're trying to turn the economy upside down because using 100th to 1000000th the power in the last decade or so is "killing all the bees". Unlikely, in the extreme.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    79. Re:Independent studies warranted by vlm · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, because the cell phone were dumping heat into the hive. Everyone already knows bees work better when heated up, at least up to a certain temperature.

      I'm told by my farmer relatives that hives in the winter cannot be killed by anything above antarctic temperatures, but they CAN run out of food, at which point they promptly die. So you can feed them corn syrup, which kills them later rather than sooner. Or so I am told. You actually weigh the entire hive and graph it. Obviously you record the weight on an average spring as the minimum and if the hive weight graph approaches its "lowest point ever" in january instead of the usual april or whatever, then you start worrying, and break out the corn syrup...

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    80. Re:Independent studies warranted by aliquis · · Score: 1

      This sort of thing falls squarely in the realm of "ecological services" provided by the various natural systems we humans are busily degrading or outright destroying.

      "Don't you worry: It's gonna be alright!"
      / David Hasselhoff running by in slow-motion.

    81. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speak for yourself. I can't imagine how I would get through the day without attaching my cellphone to one of two beehives.

    82. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what happens when there's no bees left?

      I guess we'll move to Cees.

      Or maybe improve the breeding program for dogs that shoot bees from their mouths when they bark.

      Really, though, only 2 hives doesn't make much of a control and having to put a cell phone in a hive does not model the real world very accurately unless beekeepers are really clumsy and irresponsible.

      Here's an experiment: find an island, with or without hatches, and build a cell tower that only covers 1/2 the island. Place a bunch of hives, in the hundreds, to cover the island and map out which hives do well and see if a pattern emerges.

      Not to mention the fact that you have to deal with other "uncontrolled" variables: disease, parasites, pollen availability, the bees abilities to manage their hives and the health of the queen.

      I believe 2 hives is just too small of a sample because you're not dealing with an individual but a small colony and ecosystem, a sample of 100 hives for the control and 100 hives for the cellular would help average out the variables.

    83. Re:Independent studies warranted by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      How is it forced, you can choose to work or not if you choose to do nothing you won't get paid.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    84. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Study, yes. Jumping to conclusion, no.

      Somehow, I find it terribly hard to believe that cell phones are responsible for the GLOBAL decline in bee populations and bee productivity. The same problems are being witnessed in developed countries, as well as undeveloped.

      If you were to do a search on my posts about cell phones, you would quickly learn that I don't much like them, and I am also suspicious of health hazards that are little understood at this time. But, anyone who is even trying to be rational will recognize that bees dying off in backwoods areas with little or no cell phone service can't be blamed on cell phones.

      If cell phones were to blame, we would be seeing huge dye-offs in Florida, New Jersey, California -but states like Montana and Idaho would be virtually unaffected.

      As far as I can determine, that is not the case at all.

      The study might not stand up to scrutiny but your own ability to jump to conclusions is also impressive.
      "Backwoods areas with little or no cell phone services" are nearly non-existant these days.

      Reminds me of a documentary I saw the other day, where mr. TV personality was talking to a Masai, contemplating how close they are with nature, blablabla....and suddenly there's the instantly recognizable Nokia tune...coming from somewhere in the folds of the Masais clothing.
      Says it all, really.

    85. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Are you aware that cell phone towers have directional capability? By placing a phone in a hive, it may cause a tower to increase its signal in that area.

    86. Re:Independent studies warranted by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      And of course, it has obvious and logical side effects... when a single mother doesn't get to see her kid AT ALL, because she's working 16-hours a day to give him a roof and food, does it surprise you that he ends up shooting a classmate at the age of 7 ?

      Actually just being a child of a single mother will increase the chances that the kid goes to jail. 70% of juveniles in detention centers come from fatherless homes, and 43% of inmates. ref- William Barr, "Crime, Poverty, and Family,"

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
    87. Re:Independent studies warranted by calzakk · · Score: 1

      If they didn't like it, they could either get a proper job or stop claiming benefits.

      It wouldn't be forced labour, they'd still have a choice.

    88. Re:Independent studies warranted by yyxx · · Score: 1

      RTFA, they controlled for that.

    89. Re:Independent studies warranted by jonadab · · Score: 1

      Frankly, I don't think it's worth an independent study.

      I mean, come on, the sample size was *one* (in the experiment group, and one in the control group). If that doesn't scream "statistically insignificant", I don't know what would.

      If they want anyone else to take their research seriously enough to consider reproducing it, *they're* going to have to take it seriously enough to conduct it with a larger sample population. If they themselves can't be bothered to actually run the experiment for real, why would anyone else?

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    90. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most developing and un-developed countries actually have quite a lot of cell phones. These days if you travel anywhere in Africa most of the people you meet will have one.

    91. Re:Independent studies warranted by yyxx · · Score: 1

      He isn't talking about "indentured servitude", he is talking about ending welfare. I think it's a bit extreme, but it's not the same thing.

    92. Re:Independent studies warranted by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Cell phones get hot when they're turned on, and when they're transmitting. My Motorola V3 RAZR was nice and cold all the time; but when I talked (rather than texting) for more than 3 or 4 minutes, it started to melt my face off. The damn thing would make me sweat profusely-- and I never sweat.

    93. Re:Independent studies warranted by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I mean, come on, the sample size was *one* (in the experiment
      > group, and one in the control group). If that doesn't scream
      > "statistically insignificant", I don't know what would.

      I feel I should elaborate on this.

      My sister uses a cellphone, and I don't. She has severe ADHD, and I don't. Therefore, cellphones contribute to ADHD. Also, she has two X chromosomes, and I only have one, so we can further conclude that X chromosomes contribute to ADHD.

      When "studies" are based on extremely tiny sample populations, the results aren't just questionable: they're totally meaningless.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    94. Re:Independent studies warranted by yyxx · · Score: 1

      No, America would have all the manpower needed, if we ended most welfare

      Yeah, a good start would be to end welfare to residents of Republican states, because on average, residents of red states get thousands of dollars more in federal services and benefits per year than they pay in federal taxes, services and benefits like agricultural subsidies, roads, schools, flood protection, and others. If you want to live in the country, you should pay for it yourself.

      In the end, the Republican and Democratic parties are both means redistributing wealth; however, welfare-Republicans are much better at it than welfare-Democrats.

    95. Re:Independent studies warranted by rainmouse · · Score: 0, Troll
      A famous politician tried something like this, forcing the unemployed into newly created jobs in construction, farming and building his countries infrastructure, though he also stipulated that those still refusing or unable to find work would end up drafted into the army. Unsurprisingly most of them found jobs. I'm trying to remember the name of this politician again, what was it? Oh yes Adolf Hitler.

      Is that who you would like to be?

    96. Re:Independent studies warranted by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Orin Hatch tried that in Michigan

      Orin Hatch is a Republican Senator from Utah. How exactly did he get a different state to try different state laws on welfare? And obviously, how did this get mod'ed Interesting?

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    97. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Generally, the jobs available to W2W paying so low that most people had to hold down TWO 8-hour-a-day jobs, meaning 16 hours a day of work just to qualify for wellfare

      Then it wasn't structured correctly.

      Personally, I'm mostly a libertarian. Paying welfare for people who could be working irks me something fierce.

      Still, I don't want people starving on the streets or so desperate they turn to crime.

      My first plot was simply to take welfare, and if you got a job reduce your benefits by 50% of what you earn. That way you always benefited. Then I learned a bit more about life and opportunity cost and such, so my plan has altered some. Especially with a low paying job 50% might not be enough to pay for the vehicle, gas, insurance, clothing, food, etc...

      First, come up with a *MINIMUM* standard of living. It SHOULD be shitty, not include gamestations, cable TV, etc... That's the welfare level. One problem you can get here is that a Healthy Diet costs $$, while a unhealthy(but cheap) one can cost $, and people WILL chose the unhealthy to put the money elsewhere. This was part of the original reason to give out food stamps rather than cash.

      Then, if somebody gets a job, decrease benefits by 1/4 to 1/5th the earnings. Be fairly generous with subsidizing education, but keep it real - one region I read about basically trained *EVERYONE* in the program to be welders; they oversaturated the market with welders, resulting in un and under employed welders. Still, you should be able to pick 'hot' job fields that need more people, just pay attention to how many you train. North Dakota might be able to do with a hundred or so extra wind turbine maintainers, but a couple thousand?

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    98. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Right and the fact that with a single parent there is only half as much parental time to go around has nothing to do with why that might be right ? The fact that having a single parent gives you more challenges in life is an excuse for society/the government to make things WORSE ?

      If you're not saying either of those things.... then how is your post in the least bit relevent to anything I said ?

      Oh - and somehow, I don't think juvenile crime statistics APPLY to trying to figure out how an 8 year old boy got access to an unsupervised gun and shot a little. Chances are - he had no idea that it was a real gun, no real understanding of the concepts of death or murder and the shooting was more likely a case of playing gone bad than malice. But ALL of it preventable by a a parent able to spend time with her child.

      There was a case here in my country a few years ago where a 6 year old boy picked up a pistol which his father had forgotten to put in the safe, pointed it as his dad and said "Daddy, I'm robocop, you're under arrest" ... and then shot his father.

      I don't think you can blame either the child or the parents here - the specific example I cited is just one typical of the disaster that is wellfare-to-work.
      I would, in fact, be incredibly surprised if wellfare-to-work states do not contribute the vast majority of the statistics your summarized anyway.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    99. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Sorry, missing comma in the sentence. Orin Hatch started it in Utah, then I related events that occurred in Michigan after they copied the idea. First part was about original credit, second was about events. I can see it's a bit unclear from my sentence structure what I meant so I apologize but I rather assumed most slashdotters would be familiar enough with their own government systems to know what I meant.

      Either way -yes you are correct, it doesn't actually change anything about the point I made - that wellfare-to-work is inhumane and it's consequences significantly worse than the problem it tries to address.

      That wellfare leeching is always a problem in wellfare states is true, but wellfare-to-work (which has been tried in most republican states) has caused far bigger problems than the wellfare-leeching was.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    100. Re:Independent studies warranted by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Before you embark on the journey towards that lofty goal, you might want to do a bit of research into this historical social phenomenon called Indentured Servitude and workhouses. They were, after all, some of the means by which the US economy operated in its early days. (The other was slavery, but that meddler Lincoln made sure we'd never get that back.)

      Before you get all up on your high horse, you should realize that we have plenty of indentured servitude today. Except, instead of having people locked up to contribute to society, we just lock them up in a box and let them rot for profit! The longer they're in there, the more the company running the prison makes, so they have every motivation to lobby for longer prison sentences. If we put these people to work, and paid them their profits if they were later cleared of wrongdoing, what is the harm there?

      You know, Charles Dickens, the Methodist movement and entire generations of the best and brightest in England, Europe and North America devoted their lives to ending this practice. If they knew you were proposing it again, they'd no doubt be rolling in their graves.

      If we can attach a generator, perhaps we can derive some energy from it. Perhaps we can use it to light some of these privatized prisons.

      Shame on you for even considering this. Shame too on the moderator(s) who thought this was in any way insightful.

      Shame on you for your manipulative language. Shame, shame, shame!

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    101. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's nothing forced about it. They are free to leave when they like. They just don't get to eat. This is no more forced than the rest of us. I dislike my job occasionally. But if I stop going, I wont' be able to buy food or pay my mortgage. I guess my labor is also forced.

    102. Re:Independent studies warranted by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      When there was concern about the condition of the ozone layer, we ignored the obvious causes in favor of reducing hair spray and refrigerant.

      What do you mean by this? As I understand it hair spray and refrigerant were the obvious causes, and having replaced the CFCs with marginally more expensive substitutes the ozone layer is now on the long slow road to recovery.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    103. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about this. Make it really TOUGH to outsource -like say, if you build an offshore factory, it's illegal to import the products there produced back into the corporate host country.
      Voila - end of offshoring WITHOUT removing the viability of local factories for big overseas markets.

      Then what simply happens is that you get a seperate company to do it. A different company builds a factory in the cheap country, then starts importing the product. The in-country company ends up shuttering the factory because they can't compete.

      Otherwise you're looking at tariffs and blockades, and those generally harm the country doing more than it does the foreign country; indeed it's worse all around.

      Make labor law have REAL teeth. Set minimum wage to maximum welfare times 3. Declare that any business caught paying less than it, to anybody, ever for ANY job will immediately lose it's business license REGARDLESS OF ALL OTHER FACTORS and that INCLUDES if the workers are illegal immigrants. Same rule goes for safe working conditions etc.

      Increasing minimum wage simply ensures that people who's labor is worth less than minimum wage don't get employed. I saw it when I was working around people getting close to minimum when it increased - stores economized more on labor. People got less in service. We went from toasting buns(and employing a person to do it) to buying 'pre-toasted'.

      For other manufacturing, it'll increase the cost of the product and result in MORE outsourcing.

      Illegal immigrants - we can't enforce the laws we have now, how is this going to help?

      Personally, I take a different tact - get rid of the minimum wage, but pay welfare on a sliding scale.

      Let's say welfare pays $10k if you have no job. Get a job earning $10k and your welfare drops to $7500, so you're now earning $17.5k, you're MUCH better off, whereas the current situation would have you now with a job earning $10k and NOT getting any welfare, thus you're actually better off on welfare.

      Get a job earning $40k a year and your benefits completely cease, but at that point do you really care?

      It would be even BETTER if there could be a U.N. resolution to that effect, which effectively makes it international law any country not enacting compliant legislation face guaranteed economic sanctions - 100% ban on trade unless your labor laws meet requirements...

      Like the USA is going to sign off on something like this, much less China or India. Well, China might, but then just ignore it like they do so many other regulations. Technically China's environmental protection laws are more stringent than the USAs, but they more or less ignore them, thus they have worse air quality than the USA.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    104. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Wow, I've had multiple debates with libertarians and usually - I DESPISE their social views as much as I admire their views on limited government.
      You are quite a pleasant surprise... the idea of a libertarian with that much humanity irks something terrible in me.

      I don't fully agree with your views - or rather I think they run into most of the same problems that all wellfare reform runs into - recreating the very problems that led to needing wellfare in the first place, but I appreciate that you at least consider the reality of those problems.

      But that is why my solution is based on making even the worst possible job so much more attractive than wellfare that you take away the MOTIVATION to leach on it. The single parent who THEN chooses to live on wellfare is the one who believes his child needs his presence MORE than he needs the (significant) extra money. It's also why my idea makes outsourcing effectively impossible while also removing the "hire an illegal and pay less than minimum wage" problem.

      Don't remove the wellfare, remove the desire for it. And the only way to do that - is to make working more attractive than sitting at home for wellfare. That requires a certain minimum amount job satisfaction and income even for the janitor or it just won't happen.

      When you make working that attractive, and ensure there IS work - you'll great reduce your wellfare burden -and still have it available for those who cannot work - whether from an injury, disability or social difficulty of some sort (like a single parent who actually wants to see her child a few hours a day).

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    105. Re:Independent studies warranted by ekgringo · · Score: 1

      It was probably that annoying crazy frog ringtone keeping the bees up at night.

    106. Re:Independent studies warranted by yyxx · · Score: 1

      As far as we know with other examples of non-ionizing radiation, there are virtually no effects, immediate, delayed, substantial or otherwise.

      That's wrong. Go check the literature, there are numerous effects of non-ionizing radiation. The only thing that's not clear yet is whether it's harmful.

      Even in the case of ionizing radiation, the effects *are* immediate. One might not notice the effects right away if they are mild, but the tissue damage happens when you're exposed, not some time later via radiation time-delay magic.

      That's totally wrong, too. The main effect of ionizing radiation that's of concern here is DNA damage; DNA damage often has no immediate effect at all, either because it is in genes that are not currently used, or because the cell compensates. Only if there is enough exposure so that all the alternative pathways and repair mechanisms are overwhelmed do you actually see an effect. Those effects often occur long after the initial exposure. For ionizing radiation, there is delay and there is no magic in it either.

      For non-ionizing radiation, nobody knows what the mechanisms of its action on biological cells are. However, as with ionizing radiation, observable effects are likely neither proportional to dose nor necessarily immediately observable.

    107. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Welfare is intended for those who have no job. If you intend to pay people to work for you, thus creating jobs, then there are more people with jobs and fewer who need welfare. Cancelling welfare does not make job opportunities magically appear.

      Note: Just passed Microeconomics CLEP, studying for Macroeconomics one.

      There's opportunity costs involved with work - some people, for whatever reason, don't like working, do enjoy sitting on their ass watching TV.

      So there are people out there who are perfectly willing to get welfare at $X, when they could be out working at $2X. They're comfortable that way.

      Eliminate welfare, their options become $0 or $X while working. They find jobs, relatives to mooch off of, go somewhere else, something. You push them out of their comfort zone, they change. Unfortuantly you HAVE to push many people out of their comfort zone before they'll change. Heck, my brother lost his job due to the construction bust in Florida- it wasn't until his savings ran out that he got another job. He was happy to work when he had a job, but go through the effort of finding a job, especially a lower paying one when he could be at home(parent's house) playing WoW? Heck no!

      Still, you're increasing the labor supply, so average wages will probably drop some(among unskilled labor; until you hit minimum wage), but by the same token lower average labor costs will result in more labor being used.

      I'll note that when states imposed caps on the time people could be on welfare, a large number of people got off welfare, but the number of homeless and such didn't go up significantly, so they were finding options. I remember reading that some moved out of state specifically to get welfare elsewhere.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    108. Re:Independent studies warranted by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      No harm in doing some light-but-necessary work while you've got nothing better to do.

      There's plenty that needs doing. The streets (in fact, all public places) in Brussels are the dirtiest I've seen anywhere in the world.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    109. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > These days if you travel anywhere in Africa most of the people you meet will have a stolen one.

      FTFY,FS

    110. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      RE: Your sig - I started doing your poll, but I stopped a few questions in. I can recognize a loaded poll when I see one. It sets up strawmen, most questions do NOT include the OBVIOUS right answer proposed by people who believe in gun-control, all of them IGNORE the problems we point out with those scenarios as if they do not exist (in my country more than 50% of all shootings occur to steal the fire-arms of the victims - most common TARGET for such attacks are policemen. Shoot him in the head from behind while on patrol, steal his gun to use in other crimes) or force you to choose one answer when CLEARLY there are two that BOTH matter.

      To take two examples: for the question - "The proper response to an arson is..."
      Well obviously is option 3... but that doesn't mean we do NOT require a pyrotechnics license to possess dynamite - and we damn well should. Assuming all arson is committed with fuel that is primarily used for a legal and safe purpose is a flawed assumption. So is assuming that all guns are used primarily for legal and safe purposes.
      Only a criminal would ever have any use for an assault pistol with finger-print resistant grips. It's utterly stupid to imagine that such a weapon should be classified and legal treated the SAME way as a deerhunting shotgun since the two have completely different design-goals.

      2nd: If I choose to resist, my primary concern would be...

      Well this was the one I stopped on. It forces me to choose between "my safety" or "my attacker's safety" as if they are mutually exclusive. The law in the full developed world for THOUSANDS of years have CLEARLY felt differently.
      It says "self defense with MINIMUM NECESSARY FORCE" is justifiable.
      That's a clear requirement to priorities BOTH those factors - equally. It's the same restriction we put on police officers. Shooting an attacker who has a knife is STILL murder - it would only become self-defense if he is already in knife range. Gun-against-Gun - that's justifiable.

      In reality of course, guns for self-defense is a myth. People who really KNOW guns (my dad is an ex-cop - he owns several firearms ranging from a 9mm glock through a number of hunting rifles to a full-military .33) tend to advise against even trying - and certainly against carrying or owning - as he does.
      In very situational cases, a gun could be a good defense, if you're driving through a hijack-notorious area, and give it to a passenger who may get a shot off and let him drive BEFORE the 4 other hijackers can fire a killing shot, maybe.

      The reality though - being armed means that you now FORCE the attacker to use deadly force, when he would usually be quite satisfied to use threats to get what he wants - and chances are, he's better at it than you.

      That guns for self defense is stupid, and in fact people who carry fire-arms have a greatly reduced survival rate during crimes is beside the point of gun control though. That's a matter of choosing ones safety planning as smartly as possible.

      Having laws that mean before you can get a gun you have to proof you can use it, and use it safely. Having laws that restrict the kind of guns that exist exclusively to kill people and commit crimes with... well that's a legal concern the two are barely even related so using the one to justify the other (pro or con) is a fallacy.

      I am personally still a borderilne case. I believe that gun-ownership is a right - but I also believe that it should be a limited right. We license people to drive and require them to drive road-worthy vehicles. Licensing people to own a gun ,and requiring them to own an approved one is in the same book for me - besides NOBODY hunts deer with a submachine gun.

      This post is now utterly offtopic but what the hell, I got karma to burn - I wanted to tell you, you may have convinced me with a well-researched article, or a balanced poll with fair options if it made me ask critical questions of my philosophy - and forced me to revise it... instead the poll was so clear

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    111. Re:Independent studies warranted by God'sDuck · · Score: 1

      It's not forced at all to associate welfare with labor. Nobody is forced to go on welfare. Recipients in such a system would be free to not work and not collect a welfare check. They could appeal to charity or family to survive. All it means is welfare would change from "subsistence money to tide you over until you find work" to "government-paid work of final resort if you can't find a better job."
       
      Now, I agree that it's not that simple -- impoverished mothers with multiple children would not receive enough money to pay childcare, people with certain mental disabilities are better left idle, crippling chronic pain is a real disability, etc. There would need to be careful exceptions, some of which would look exactly like the current system. But if you approach the problem of poverty as "people should always be able to put food on the table without resorting to inhumane activities" instead of "people should always be able to put food on the table, even if they don't show up for work," many entirely non-abusive options appear.

    112. Re:Independent studies warranted by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, you are correct. It's fairly likely that Colony Collapse is caused by feeding bees High Fructose Corn Syrup contaminated with hydroxymethylfurfural.

      No, it isn't. Bees are dying en masse on Organic farms where the bees aren't being fed anything but minimally-environmentally-contaminated pollen as well.

      The only true test would be to put a sterile wire right in the hive and pump out 50W of power and see that nothing happens.

      That would be stupid. The only true test is to keep your control group in a faraday cage, because ambient EM spill from cellphone communications is otherwise washing over them all the time. However, the only way you could feasibly do this would be to keep the experiment small, effectively keeping the bees inside, which is also unnatural.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    113. Re:Independent studies warranted by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Oh, BEE-have!

      You mean bee hive?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    114. Re:Independent studies warranted by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Orin Hatch tried that in Michigan... ?

      Since when does Orrin Hatch govern in Michigan?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    115. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Still, I feel it's worth verifying if that movement has not been too successful, and that it might be worth swinging the pendulum a measure back in the other direction.

      I agree; moderation in all things. Slavery, indentured servitude, both are bad. On the other hand, having multiple generations of people who think that getting food, housing, and money from the government for doing nothing is their right, is also bad.

      And the problem isn't just in America. It being a problem in Belgium is new to me - but then I don't speak Dutch or French, and my german is atrocious. Still, I tend to hear the most 'welfare abuse' stories from England.

      Maybe it's time that the system is re-evaluated and adjusted to kill off the more extreme leeches ?

      Personally I'm more in favor of reform and re-education. Maybe they WILL need to get a bit hungry before they're willing to change.

      And yeah, I'd like to see nature better taken care of. There's plenty of work to be done that's not replacing the bees.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    116. Re:Independent studies warranted by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      That is why the non-EM exposed group had "dummy models installed" in their hives.

    117. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it helped the economy when welfare rolls dropped over 50%.

      Wait what? People respond to incentives? GTFO!

    118. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >Then what simply happens is that you get a seperate company to do it. A different company builds a factory in the cheap country, then starts importing the product. The in-country company ends up shuttering the factory because they can't compete.

      >Otherwise you're looking at tariffs and blockades, and those generally harm the country doing more than it does the foreign country; indeed it's worse all around.

      These are valid critiques, but I think more practical than philosophically wrong - and practical problems can be solved.

      >Let's say welfare pays $10k if you have no job. Get a job earning $10k and your welfare drops to $7500, so you're now earning $17.5k, you're MUCH better off, whereas the current situation would have you now with a job earning $10k and NOT getting any welfare, thus you're actually better off on welfare.

      >Get a job earning $40k a year and your benefits completely cease, but at that point do you really care?

      I like your idea to an extent... except how on earth do you finance it ? I cannot imagine ANYTHING more stupid than a person paying tax AND getting a wellfare bonus (of any sort at all) - why not just let him keep the tax and lose the wellfare then ? Which means your cut off point needs to below the lowest income-tax bracket to make sense (sorry - I have NO idea what the tax-brackets in the US are).

      Then the question becomes - can 30% or 40% of people pay enough tax to fund the running of the country AND pay those sliding scale wellfare checks ? Well possibly - in my country only 20% of people earn enough to pay any taxes at all- and we manage a fairly successful welfare state with 40% unemployment (but that 20% pay between 35 and 40 percent tax on average).

      It's quite harsh to lose half your income to taxes.

      The only practical way to reduce it however would be to significantly reduce that 40% number - and THAT will take at least one more generation, because almost ALL of that 40% are illiterate and this economy simply doesn't HAVE that much manual labor.

      Mind you -when a minimum wage law for all workers here were first proposed, the rich 20% vocally complained... until they heard what the minimum wage WAS - then they all supported it. For the vast majority of them - it was LESS than they were paying their maids and gardeners before.

      I always thought that little bit of history said sooo much about human nature.

      I must say I do like your proposal in principle, it seems like a suitable one - but like mine I see practical problems with - and I am not sure what the sollutions for either would be (yet).

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    119. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your right! instead we should just cut off the wellfare because it is not the governments job to take care of people. then they could spend all day with there children instead of working to provide for them like a real parent should.

    120. Re:Independent studies warranted by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Allow me to point out that slavery and indentured servitude are entirely separate things. In fact, there have historically been more than one kind of slavery - but I'll not get into that here. Slavery, as practiced in the United States meant that you were "owned", and that your children were "owned", and that everything YOU might ever own, was actually the property of your master.

      Indentured servitude, however, almost always had a term limit, and you were not "owned". You had certain rights, you could own property, you could even earn money that was YOURS while you were indentured. The two most important differences, though, were that servitude had a definite, set period of time, and your children were free, no matter how much time you may have had to serve.

      Please, let us not confuse servitude and slavery.

      I already mentioned that there were various laws throughout time, regarding slavery. I'll state here, for the record, that slavery as practiced in the United States was the ugliest, most obscene form of slavery ever practiced anywhere. No form of servitude ever was, or ever will be as bad as our slavery was.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    121. Re:Independent studies warranted by torstenvl · · Score: 1

      Orrin Hatch is a U.S. senator from Utah. I don't think he tried anything in Michigan. Not very "informative" if you ask me.

    122. Re:Independent studies warranted by idontgno · · Score: 1

      It's the bees. They're absorbing your bars.

      Oh, sure, they pay the price. Unproductive workers, non-laying queens, colony collapse. But YOU GET FEWER BARS.

      I'm telling you, it's the bees.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    123. Re:Independent studies warranted by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Adolph Hitler was no libertarian. He didn't believe in any personal responsibility, except that everyone was responsible to him. No work, no eat. I wouldn't force a man to work - never. He can sit in the shade, and watch me work all day long. When I break for lunch, and he asks for a bite of my sandwich, I'll happily tell him to eat the south end of a north bound skunk, 'cause he ain't gittin' none o' my sammich.

      But, Godwin away. Nothing is stopping you making a fool of yourself. In fact, it's quite common to compare an unpopular point of view with Nazism. Knock yourself out.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    124. Re:Independent studies warranted by Runaway1956 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      See - this happens in almost every discussion on the web. Someone has to see the issue as a partisan issue. Instead of asking, "How can we fix the problem?" you choose to point your finger, and say, "Well, the problem is THEIR fault!" Blue state, red state, it doesn't matter. Far to many people are sitting on their asses, playing music and video games all day, on the taxpayer's dime, when the COULD find a job.

      Oh - did I mention that I have two stepsons, and 3 sons, all of whom are legally adults? Of those 5, only the youngest is actually paying his own way in life. Do I blame our former Democrat governor, or do I blame our current Republican governor for that? DUHHHH - it has almost nothing to do with either party. Or, more accurately, it has a lot to do with BOTH parties currying favor at voting time.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    125. Re:Independent studies warranted by jDeepbeep · · Score: 1

      are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?

      If we can't give up cell phones in the car due to them causing problems with road safety involving humans, then I imagine bees don't stand a chance.

      --
      Reply to That ||
    126. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orin Hatch tried that in Michigan.

      Are you sure? Isn't Senator Hatch from Utah?

    127. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      RE: Your sig - I started doing your poll, but I stopped a few questions in. I can recognize a loaded poll when I see one.

      Not my poll... Just liked it and stuck it in my sig. Unfortuantly with the sig character limits being for the raw code, I can't add a disclaimer that it's not my site. However, I DO possess concealed carry permits for two states. Oh how I wish they were treated like driver's licenses(get one for the home state, good in all 50). I DO carry, but I'm don't tell random people that I do.

      (in my country more than 50% of all shootings occur to steal the fire-arms of the victims - most common TARGET for such attacks are policemen. Shoot him in the head from behind while on patrol, steal his gun to use in other crimes) or force you to choose one answer when CLEARLY there are two that BOTH matter.

      Man, what country are you in if shooting police officers for their weapons is common? In the whole USA on average just over a hundred police officers die 'in the line of duty' each year, and that includes things like car accidents.

      Well this was the one I stopped on. It forces me to choose between "my safety" or "my attacker's safety" as if they are mutually exclusive. The law in the full developed world for THOUSANDS of years have CLEARLY felt differently.

      Are you sure about that? I'm pretty sure the law has normally been on the side of the 'noble' party, and failing that, on allowing the defender to use any means, up to and including killing their attacker. Heck, 'cattle rustling' carrying the possibility of the death penalty wasn't a new thing for the 'old west', it was hallowed tradition from europe.

      In reality of course, guns for self-defense is a myth. People who really KNOW guns (my dad is an ex-cop - he owns several firearms ranging from a 9mm glock through a number of hunting rifles to a full-military .33) tend to advise against even trying - and certainly against carrying or owning - as he does.
      In very situational cases, a gun could be a good defense, if you're driving through a hijack-notorious area, and give it to a passenger who may get a shot off and let him drive BEFORE the 4 other hijackers can fire a killing shot, maybe.

      Depends on the threat, as you mention. This starts to make me think you're in Mexico, though I'm not familiar with any military that uses a .33 caliber weapon.

      In the USA, we don't have to worry about hijackers, and generally speaking, if, on average, most people were armed and willing to use their arms in self defense, hijacking would be a thing of the past. It's a predator-prey thing. The predator has survive, normally without significant injury, every attack. The prey has every motivation to survive. Ergo, the predator normally goes after prey in situations where the prey is least likely to be able to effectively target back. The sick, the wounded, the old, and the extremely young. To move it into a human realm; the motivation is a bit less - hijackers normally don't kill, but the predator relation remains - they'll go after people with bodyguards less frequently than people without. They'll target those with the best payoff-risk ratios.

      Part of carrying for self defense is avoiding known high-risk areas.

      The reality though - being armed means that you now FORCE the attacker to use deadly force, when he would usually be quite satisfied to use threats to get what he wants - and chances are, he's better at it than you.

      At least in the USA, the average CCW holder is up there with the cops. Most CCW holders are enthusiests who practice on their own regularly; many cops only shoot to qualify. Note that I'm talking about average cops - the low drag types are better, and there are enthusiests in the ranks of the police as well.

      In addition, many criminals are experts on the threat - not the execution. Their equi

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    128. Re:Independent studies warranted by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      Then, if somebody gets a job, decrease benefits by 1/4 to 1/5th the earnings.

      One problem with your approach is that economically it doesn't work very well. If you decrease benefits by 1/5 of your earnings (just to pick a number), you are in effect taxing those earnings at 20%, which is far higher than the income tax rate paid by poverty level workers otherwise. It's the equivalent of taking the $8/hr job and turning it into a $6.50/hr job. It's not hard to see that this might disincent many people that would be eligible. Add to this the costs of transit, child care, and work clothes, and it's possible that working may be a zero gain for some of these people.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    129. Re:Independent studies warranted by Phoghat · · Score: 1
      OK, first we had a brain cancer scare, now we have a "it's the cause of the bee population declining".

      The first one I believe is pretty much groundless, but the second I'm not sure. First of all we DO have a problem with a decline in bee population which is causing a problem in agriculture. We don't know what is causing that decline, but I think we better find out damn quick.

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    130. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      You are quite a pleasant surprise... the idea of a libertarian with that much humanity irks something terrible in me.

      irks something terrible? You hate that you found a libertarian with an ounce of compassion?

      But that is why my solution is based on making even the worst possible job so much more attractive than wellfare that you take away the MOTIVATION to leach on it.

      Took me a bit to find the post with your plan on it, and I've already responded to it.

      It's also why my idea makes outsourcing effectively impossible while also removing the "hire an illegal and pay less than minimum wage" problem.

      Actually, I don't think it does, as I stated in the other post. You're proposing a protectionist system, and historically those don't work well. My proposal is to lower the cost of labor such that manufacturers choose to stay here and can remain in business.

      When you make working that attractive, and ensure there IS work - you'll great reduce your wellfare burden -and still have it available for those who cannot work - whether from an injury, disability or social difficulty of some sort (like a single parent who actually wants to see her child a few hours a day).

      Thing is, you're effectively ensuring that there WILL be less work by artificially raising the cost of labor; therefore businesses will attempt to minimize it. It's economic law.

      I view disability(injury counts even if temporary) as a different matter from 'welfare'. Just being 'handicapped' such as confined to a wheelchair doesn't mean you can't work. As for the single parent - well, it's a sticky thing for me, single parents bring all sorts of sub-optimal situations to the board; sometimes it's unavoidable(death), sometimes it's better than a dual parent(where one is abusive, for example). I prefer households to be complete, women to wait until marriage to have kids, etc... On the other hand, kids need to be taken care of. Yet we also have people in the states who have more kids specifically to get more benefits. They view state supported procreation as a right. The kids need to be taken care of(very very important). Sticky Sticky Sticky...

      Still, with my idea the kids will have medical care, the woman can work part time, and even with a 40 hour a week job would be able to spend lots of time with her kids. I'm not going to require her to work 60-80 hours a week for benefits.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    131. Re:Independent studies warranted by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Some of his views might be libertarian, but not those that support welfare.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    132. Re:Independent studies warranted by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I have friends of friends who are actually bee keepers for a living. I am told the problem with bees is not quite as bad as it was 5 years ago, when mites where the issue. Still, knowing if cell phones are a problem or not is worth finding out, as the reason he keeps bees isn't the honey (honey income is just extra income). He makes pretty big bucks moving his bees around the country, pollinating crops. In particular, almonds in California, but many crops require bees to pollinate. These huge farms with hundreds or thousands of acres per tract have no place for bees to naturally live and without bringing in bees, they would not produce fruit/nuts at all.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    133. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      One problem with your approach is that economically it doesn't work very well. If you decrease benefits by 1/5 of your earnings (just to pick a number), you are in effect taxing those earnings at 20%, which is far higher than the income tax rate paid by poverty level workers otherwise.

      So what? They're still effectively paying a negative tax rate. Remember, I originally planned on decreasing benefits by 50%, then decided that was too much.

      It's the equivalent of taking the $8/hr job and turning it into a $6.50/hr job. It's not hard to see that this might disincent many people that would be eligible.

      Which is why I knocked it down from 50% in the first place. $6.50/hr is still good money when you have your other basic needs taken care of. Don't forget that the purpose is to get them off of welfare.

      Let's take that $8/hour job. At 40 hours a week, that's $320/week, $16,640 a year. Let's say that 'welfare' is indeed $10k. That means that the individuals welfare payments are reduced by $3,328 over the course of a year.

      He goes from 'earning' $10k for doing nothing to $23,312 by working that $8/hour job, earning the equivalent of $11.21 an hour.

      Add to this the costs of transit, child care, and work clothes, and it's possible that working may be a zero gain for some of these people.

      Which is why I mentioned dropping it from 50%... 20% is a much more gradual slope, and if the job costs that much that the marginal gain isn't worth it at 20%, maybe they shouldn't take the job. Personally, I don't think that employers that are that cheap should have an easy time getting workers...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    134. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >>RE: Your sig - I started doing your poll, but I stopped a few questions in. I can recognize a loaded poll when I see one.

      >Not my poll... Just liked it and stuck it in my sig. Unfortuantly with the sig character limits being for the raw code, I can't add a disclaimer that it's not my site. However, I DO possess concealed carry permits for two states. Oh how I wish they were treated like driver's licenses(get one for the home state, good in all 50). I DO carry, but I'm don't tell random people that I do.

      Fair enough

      >>(in my country more than 50% of all shootings occur to steal the fire-arms of the victims - most common TARGET for such attacks are policemen. Shoot him in the head from behind while on patrol, steal his gun to use in other crimes) or force you to choose one answer when CLEARLY there are two that BOTH matter.

      >Man, what country are you in if shooting police officers for their weapons is common? In the whole USA on average just over a hundred police officers die 'in the line of duty' each year, and that includes things like car accidents.

      That would be South Africa - officially the most dangerous not-at-war country in the world. I have personally been a crime victim twice, once stabbed during a mugging in broad daylight- no warning, no threat, guy just walked past me on the side of the road and knifed me in passing and then grabbed my girlfriends handbag.
      Once I was kidnapped by three people at gunpoint and dropped in a dark street after having my wallet and cellphone removed. In both cases - I am quite sure that if I had been carrying - I would be dead.

      >>Well this was the one I stopped on. It forces me to choose between "my safety" or "my attacker's safety" as if they are mutually exclusive. The law in the full developed world for THOUSANDS of years have CLEARLY felt differently.

      >Are you sure about that? I'm pretty sure the law has normally been on the side of the 'noble' party, and failing that, on allowing the defender to use any means, up to and including killing their attacker. Heck, 'cattle rustling' carrying the possibility of the death penalty wasn't a new thing for the 'old west', it was hallowed tradition from europe.

      Im quite sure - both the Dutch Roman and Anglican legal traditions require minimum necessary force. Though in case of DOUBT the court is allowed to accept the word of the noble party over the attacker (assuming both are alive to testify).

      >>In very situational cases, a gun could be a good defense, if you're driving through a hijack-notorious area, and give it to a passenger who may get a shot off and let him drive BEFORE the 4 other hijackers can fire a killing shot, maybe.

      >Depends on the threat, as you mention. This starts to make me think you're in Mexico, though I'm not familiar with any military that uses a .33 caliber weapon.

      The SA Police used them during the riot years in the 80's as did some branches of the Military. That particular rifle is a good 30 years old now.

      >In the USA, we don't have to worry about hijackers, and generally speaking, if, on average, most people were armed and willing to use their arms in self defense, hijacking would be a thing of the past. It's a predator-prey thing. The predator has survive, normally without significant injury, every attack.

      Four against-one is the typical MO, follow the chosen target home from a mall, hijack it in the driveway. Two stay out of sight and keep a gun trained on you. If you so much as move funny, they kill you.
      Trust me - being armed REDUCES your survival rate by a massive margin in this country. You can be the fastest drawer in the west all you want, it's useless against a sniper you can't see.

      >hijackers normally don't kill, but the predator relation remains - they'll go after people with bodyguards less frequently than people without. They'll target those with the best payoff-risk ratios.

      In South Africa they do. Hell even if you fully cooperate they will S

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    135. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Faraday Bee Hives

    136. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have to keep in mind that having a job generally costs money. You have to transport yourself there, clothe yourself appropriately, and then pay taxes. At some jobs you might even need to provide your own tools.

      So it really isn't as simple as saying "welfare is $X and he could work a job for $2X, so that guy is just lazy". It could be that it actually makes economic sense to just collect welfare. (I'm not arguing that there aren't truly lazy people out there, but I do think there are less than anti-welfare people believe)

      There's also the issue that there aren't a bunch of jobs just waiting to be filled by unskilled labor, like many anti-welfare advocates seem to believe.

    137. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Allow me to point out that slavery and indentured servitude are entirely separate things.

      Which is why I listed both. Even in your examples there were different forms of indentured servitude, and some were indeed heriditary.

      Still, both were abused to the point that we want to avoid them. Indeed, they're banned by the constitution except in cases of conviction by trial.

      I'll state here, for the record, that slavery as practiced in the United States was the ugliest, most obscene form of slavery ever practiced anywhere.

      While I'll agree that it's probably worse than 50% of slavery practices around the world, I'd disagree that it was the worst. There's some nasty, nasty examples if you get into history.

      By the same token, slavery got WORSE leading up to the civil war - the ability to free slaves being removed, criminalizing literacy, etc...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    138. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >irks something terrible? You hate that you found a libertarian with an ounce of compassion?

      In the sense that nobody likes having their comfortable prejudices challenged :D

      >Actually, I don't think it does, as I stated in the other post. You're proposing a protectionist system, and historically those don't work well. My proposal is to lower the cost of labor such that manufacturers choose to stay here and can remain in business.

      You're stating THAT they historically don't work well - but not considering WHY that is. Do the same issues that led to past failures still apply today ? Can we change them ? These are questions one needs to ask - you cannot learn from history without being able to view it in the context of the present.

      >Thing is, you're effectively ensuring that there WILL be less work by artificially raising the cost of labor; therefore businesses will attempt to minimize it. It's economic law.

      That's what unions do as well. If it wasn't for unions American's would STILL be sweatshop workers. Why would you DENY the people of China, Indonesia and India the right to make the same progress towards their own pursuit of happiness that you have ? Instead their stuck in the England of Charles Dickins !
      What happens when they do figure it out ? I have nasty suspicion what will happen is a revolution - that will end up with a group of people in power over these 2 billion people (a third of all humanity) that absolutely despise us - we're the enablers of their oppression. How can it NOT lead to World War 3 ?
      Every other time in history when laborers felt abused it led to revolution or war if they could not find an amicable middle ground (which seems to have consistently failed without government backed labor laws). Right back to the peasants revolt and probably even earlier.
      Most of the time - these failed because the barrons (ceo's, kings, pick your era) had better weapons ,lances against rice-flails, arrows against scythes, guns against knives... well this next revolution will have peasants with nukes... I don't know about you but I don't want to take my chances on them.

      >I view disability(injury counts even if temporary) as a different matter from 'welfare'. Just being 'handicapped' such as confined to a wheelchair doesn't mean you can't work. As for the single parent - well, it's a sticky thing for me, single parents bring all sorts of sub-optimal situations to the board; sometimes it's unavoidable(death), sometimes it's better than a dual parent(where one is abusive, for example). I prefer households to be complete, women to wait until marriage to have kids, etc... On the other hand, kids need to be taken care of. Yet we also have people in the states who have more kids specifically to get more benefits. They view state supported procreation as a right. The kids need to be taken care of(very very important). Sticky Sticky Sticky...

      Facing the same questions in my country - I agree, sticky. That's why I believe the only viable way to shift it is to make having a job sufficiently more attractive than wellfare that people go back to seeing it as it should be- a last resort.
      I am just as in favor of dual-parent households, frankly - it's a job better done by two people than one and we know all the reasons why. But we have to deal with reality - a lot of parents are single. Death, a bad choice in boyfriends, a worse choice in spouse - this stuff happens, and the children that result need to be cared for.
      The alternative is to go back to the Dickins' England and have 90% of children die before age 10 from working in unsafe factories... frankly I'd rather have 6 year olds living on my tax money than working a job.

      >Still, with my idea the kids will have medical care, the woman can work part time, and even with a 40 hour a week job would be able to spend lots of time with her kids. I'm not going to require her to work 60-80 hours a week for benefits.

      That was one of the reasons I said I liked it - th

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    139. Re:Independent studies warranted by Chris+Snook · · Score: 1

      There's no mention in TFA of distinguishing electrical from magnetic fields, the latter of which grows much faster as distance decreases. One group had an EM emitter, and the other did not.

      --
      There's no failure quite as dissatisfying as a complete and total solution to the wrong problem.
    140. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      These are valid critiques, but I think more practical than philosophically wrong - and practical problems can be solved.

      Actually, I think the very idea is flawed. You can certainly work around issues - but you end up having to keep working around issues. It just snowballs, basically, you need regulations to keep people from working around the regulations that were put in place to prevent the first round of work arounds. The end result is a protectionalist economy; and those end up with people worse off than in the open economy. The extra job growth from an open economy ends up outweighing the jobs saved by protectionalism.

      I like your idea to an extent... except how on earth do you finance it ? I cannot imagine ANYTHING more stupid than a person paying tax AND getting a wellfare bonus (of any sort at all) - why not just let him keep the tax and lose the wellfare then ? Which means your cut off point needs to below the lowest income-tax bracket to make sense (sorry - I have NO idea what the tax-brackets in the US are).

      Finance it - through taxes, of course. The idea though is to keep as many people as possible above the earning ceiling for welfare as possible, and even for those you have to subsidize to have them cost the government less because they're at least working for some income

      As for both paying taxes and getting welfare, well, look up 'Earned Income Credit'. It allows federal income taxes to be net negative(IE the person gets back MORE than they paid in), for certain people. Generally low income with kids. Heck, that could be used as a vehicle for our reforming of welfare!

      At the moment, for a single individual that nobody else can 'claim' as a dependent you already don't pay income tax on the first 9,350 of income (5700 standard deduction claiming 1x$3650). After that, it's 10% for the first, $8,350 of income, 15% up to 33,950.

      It's deliberately set a bit low so that congress can mess around with people's decisions by offering deductions and write-offs and such. Oh, and as a military member I pay federal income taxes; we used to be exempt.

      So somebody 'Earning' $17,500 would pay $815 of tax, assuming almost a worst case*, making an effective tax rate of 4.7%. If you don't count the welfare as taxable, that would have him paying $65 in taxes.

      It'd actually be higher, can't forget FICA - think of it as the USA's mandatory retirement/disability plan. Social Security(retirement) is 6.2%, Medicare(disability) is 1.45%. So $765 of our hypothetical $10k of earnings would go towards FICA.

      In either case, a relatively minor reworking of tax law to go along with the reforming of the welfare system wouldn't be out of line.

      Then the question becomes - can 30% or 40% of people pay enough tax to fund the running of the country AND pay those sliding scale wellfare checks ? Well possibly - in my country only 20% of people earn enough to pay any taxes at all- and we manage a fairly successful welfare state with 40% unemployment (but that 20% pay between 35 and 40 percent tax on average).

      As you mention, it's actually possible for the top 20% of earners to pay to have 40% of the population on welfare. With 60% of people paying something, or at least not being negative, 30% receiving often token sums, and only 10% or less getting the 'full amount', you should be good. Sure, you're going to have to mess with the tax rates and deductions and such a bit, but for such a comprehensive welfare reform, it'd be expected.

      The only practical way to reduce it however would be to significantly reduce that 40% number - and THAT will take at least one more generation, because almost ALL of that 40% are illiterate and this economy simply doesn't HAVE that much manual labor.

      We don't have that problem here in the states, literacy is somewhere over 90%(depending on how you measure 'functional literacy') and I remember mentionin

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    141. Re:Independent studies warranted by yyxx · · Score: 1

      See - this happens in almost every discussion on the web. Someone has to see the issue as a partisan issue. Instead of asking, "How can we fix the problem?" you choose to point your finger, and say, "Well, the problem is THEIR fault!"

      No, I point out an actual problem: the transfer of hundreds of billions of dollars from productive, industrial states to rural states for creating infrastructure and agricultural products that our nation does not need.

      The consequences are horrendous: it distorts prices for foods, hurts developing nations, and bankrupts states like California.

      Blue state, red state, it doesn't matter.

      No, it doesn't matter per se. It just happens to be the case that the states that get more than they contribute are all Republican, while the states that contribute more than they get back are mostly Democrat. And that's not a coincidence: the Republican party has become a party of big government and redistribution of wealth. And realizing that does matter because it means that you can view them differently at the next election.

      How can we fix the problem? Simple: end agricultural subsidies and ensure that federal taxes and benefits/investments are generally balanced across states.

      Oh, and put pressure on Republicans to stop getting federal welfare for their states, and put pressure on Democrats to stop handing over their money so freely.

      Far to many people are sitting on their asses, playing music and video games all day, on the taxpayer's dime, when the COULD find a job.

      Many people simply can't contribute usefully to the economy; hiring them and training them takes more money than they add in productivity. The basic needs of Americans are met by a small core of workers, and we could probably retire a double-digit fraction of current workers with no ill effect on anything.

      You need to stop thinking of our economy as one of scarcity and instead one of potential: the hundreds of millions of people in our nation aren't there to work, they are there to occasionally produce a brilliant artist or scientist. Ass sitting and video game playing is what our economy is going to be increasingly about.

    142. Re:Independent studies warranted by skarphace · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Prison labor in the current US isn't really the same as in the older days. In the old days, laws were passed just to get people into prisons and the forced labor netted someone a profit. Now it's mostly volunteer, generally is some remedial task the prison already needs done, and is offered as a reward for not fucking up. There are some businesses that contract out with states in order to help fund some of the prisons but it doens't offset the costs of the prisoner.

      I'd say it's closer to the older days than you think. I would argue that plenty of laws are passed just to get people into prisons. It may not be blatant, but consider our prison population per capita and how many non-violet offenders we have incarcerated. However, I hope that is unrelated to our use of prison labor.

      While yes, most prison labor is volunteer(as-in, they have a choice), but they are not just completing tasks that the prison or state need done. They are also getting paid. Though the prison gets a cut, and the wages are traditionally VERY low. So it doesn't especially offset the cost of housing the prisoner, but it gives the hiring company an incredible profit compared to hiring minimum wage workers.

      Up in washington, they're making US armed forces uniforms[1]. Apparently even Victoria's Secret clothing is being assembled by some prison labor now. And the practice is growing. The United States prison population is potentially an incredible underutilized workforce and can make some serious profits for the companies that take advantage of it.

      However, we really need to be careful of the profit motive in using prison labor. Would it be benificial to society as a whole to lock up more of our population to have a cheaper workforce? Should judges be provided with more kickbacks for longer sentences for viable workers? It is a potential downward spiral.

      Here's an article that sums up how some states are using their prison workfroce.

      [1] - Last time I researched that was about 10 years ago. This may have changed since then.

      --
      Bullish Machine Tzar
    143. Re:Independent studies warranted by yyxx · · Score: 1

      Why don't you read what I responded to?

      The controlled for the presence of a "giant plastic lump". OK?

    144. Re:Independent studies warranted by x2A · · Score: 1

      "Hmm. I wonder if all of reality is wrong, or maybe, just maybe, the crackpot report is wrong"

      Or if they've forgotten about the speaker/microphone in the phones which contain magnets (you sound like you're likely to know better than I, my vague impression is that bees have a sense of magnetic north/south, could placing magnets in the hive screw with this in a non conducive mannor?) ... I guess actually this would also come down to whether the 'dummy' phones put in the other hive were just the plastic casing, or were proper phones that were just never switched on.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    145. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      That would be South Africa - officially the most dangerous not-at-war country in the world.

      Ouch, I used to follow Kim Du'toit, who emigrated to the USA from SA, who holds much the same views as I do.

      I am quite sure that if I had been carrying - I would be dead.

      Different situations; part of the problem you have is that you don't have effective police. In the USA the police are mostly effective at suppressing armed gangs; ergo most of my self defense needs would be against solitary or small groups of non-experts, because the experts end up dead or in prison, generally sooner than later.

      Four against-one is the typical MO, follow the chosen target home from a mall, hijack it in the driveway. Two stay out of sight and keep a gun trained on you. If you so much as move funny, they kill you.
      Trust me - being armed REDUCES your survival rate by a massive margin in this country. You can be the fastest drawer in the west all you want, it's useless against a sniper you can't see.

      Tough, tough situation. As a military member I'm trained to accept a loss of personal survival chances in return for an increase in group survival chances. Kind of a prisoner dilema. An individual resisting such an attack is much more likely to die than one that is passive. However, if ALL individuals resisted heavily, the odds would catch up with the 'professionals', they'd be dead/disabled/in prison, and group wise individuals would have a lower chance of being victimized.

      Still, I'd follow it up with a 'concealed means concealed'. Don't deploy your weapon unless you have the advantage.

      The average soccer mom isn't. Where you lie in between no study can tell you.

      Mom's not a 'average soccer mom' then. She owns more handguns than me AND dad, and is nastier to boot. The thing is, in the USA the lowest rate of injury for rape attempts, including successful completion of the rape, is when the potential victim resists with a firearm. These are studies of 'average people'. Well, average americans.

      I don't think a fully-automatic is a good self-defense weapon, nor is armor piercing bullets. A semi-automatic 45 cal has all the stopping power and accuracy you could ever realistically need for self defense because the only realistic time when it's an option is if you manage to alter the odds BEFORE you draw. A 9-mill is probably better as 45's are heavy and sluggish if you're not strong enough to handle it well and it's heavy kickback it's useless.

      Depends on the situation. Personally, I think a quality semi-automatic is sufficient. .45 vs 9mm is an eternal debate for gunnies that I solve merely by saying 'carry what works for you'. My 9mm has a 'sharper' recoil than my .45. I carry the 9mm because the gun itself is more accurate for me.

      Shooting a criminal in the back when he runs away AFTER he took your weapon is NOT self-defense (shooting him in the leg could probably be considered justifiable but if he was armed you can be DAMNED sure he's going to shoot you after he falls and he'll aim for a killshot)

      I'm not a SA self defense expert, but here in the USA shooting somebody deliberately in the leg will get you up on attempted or even actual murder charges; a shot to the leg is both less likely to disable/prevent an attack and almost as likely to kill(hit the artery they'll bleed out quick), while being a harder shot in general.

      In the USA criminals are generally very hesitant to kill because the police bring down a shitstorm in comparison to a 'mere' robbery. I'll note that in none of the cases you mentioned did you say whether the criminals were caught, or even if you bothered to contact the police regarding it. Mr Du'toit's posts gave me the impression that the police are less than effective.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    146. Re:Independent studies warranted by turtledawn · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes you can blame the parents. It is so stupidly easy to teach your child never to pick up a firearm that there is no excuse for not doing so, and while they're too little to be trusted with one in their own hands you demonstrate nothing but impeccable firearms safety. Children learn by example and repetition. And you start teaching them safe handling as soon as they are strong enough to pick up your smallest gun.

      --
      Uh, "if it looks roughly mouse-shaped according to my infra-red sensitive pit, eat it"? --Chris Burke 09-08-10
    147. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, I like totally know someone who is like a rocket scientist, so I'm REALLY qualified to make pronouncements about what's the safest propellant, and I can calculate the best days to fly to Mars in my head. I also know a doctor, so please hold still while I start carving into you

    148. Re:Independent studies warranted by omnichad · · Score: 1

      It's not forced labor if you can decide to forgo the income instead.

    149. Re:Independent studies warranted by x2A · · Score: 1

      As does my laptop, which is not communicating with cell towers. When you're using it, you're drawing a lot of current from the chemical battery attached to it. Pushing this current back into the battery (ie, charging it) also produces a lot of heat. The heat that you feel is a much higher frequency than the frequency that the phones transmit on, otherwise the signal would surely struggle to get through on a cold day.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    150. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      That does rather depend on NOT being away from home working for 20 hours a day !

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    151. Re:Independent studies warranted by x2A · · Score: 1

      Learning why god would never let this happen to us :-p

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    152. Re:Independent studies warranted by Snaller · · Score: 1

      "If commercial agriculture relies on bees to pollinate commercial crops ... and if the cell phones are killing the bees ... what happens when there's no bees left?"

      We stop eating the shit they make from bees?

      Next!

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    153. Re:Independent studies warranted by Mr.+Competence · · Score: 1

      Or it has do do with the fact that the Federal Government owns 50% or more of the land in red states. For example, the Feds own over 60% of the state of Utah. (Google it if you don't believe me).

      --
      Those who open their minds too far often let their brains fall out.
    154. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      I reported both, the first guys were caught, the second ones - never found.

      The police is a LOT better now than they were even five years ago and improving - but there is still a lot of bad apples, too many cops who basically think of their job as a bribe-collection service. The results are becoming more visible though. More and more hijackers are ending up in prison and less and less are happening.

      Murderers are getting away less and less often - and robbers are starting to find life harder too. The days of the gangsters paradise does seem to be ending slowly.

      One major change in recent years have been the upcoming of major drug villages. In Johannesburg it's hillbrow - overrun by Nigerian druglords - if you're light skinned you don't go near the place - because if you're not black you're shot on sight, and even a black man's life is forfeit if he's not identifiably part of a gang. They basically own the neighbourhood.
      Just 5km north of my house in Atlantis is a series of blocks of flats filled with tik dens (tik is a local variant of meth) -the cops refuse to run raids there without army protection !

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    155. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      solitary bees are unaffected by ccd and surprisingly effective pollinators

    156. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orin Hatch tried that in Michigan...

      Orrin Hatch is the Senator from UTAH, so I find the rest of your post less likely to contain facts.

    157. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      You're stating THAT they historically don't work well - but not considering WHY that is. Do the same issues that led to past failures still apply today ? Can we change them ? These are questions one needs to ask - you cannot learn from history without being able to view it in the context of the present.

      It's a reduction in efficiency; results in slower growth.

      The alternative is to go back to the Dickins' England and have 90% of children die before age 10 from working in unsafe factories... frankly I'd rather have 6 year olds living on my tax money than working a job.

      Like I said, kids need to be taken care of; it's better they be getting an education anyways. Educated adults are more valuable production wise than the few extra production years child labor provides.

      The biggest problem in the world of capitalism is this - without a minimum level of unemployment, there is no economic growth. No new workers for new businesses.

      You'll still get this; more efficient use of labor will increase business, but if you need additional labor, especially skilled labor, you'll have to pay to get it.

      The downside is - that means that salary earners are always and forever on the wrong side of the supply and demand law -and that's why we will always lose. Fix that- and you've made the perfect economy.

      For unskilled labor this is true. There are many career fields where people can almost name their price if they have the skills and experience.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    158. Re:Independent studies warranted by hoggoth · · Score: 1

      Top story tonight: Researchers show there is a 50% chance that a beehive with a cellphone will do worse than a beehive without a cellphone. Notably, opposition researchers claim there is actually a 50% chance that a beehive without a cellphone will do worse than a beehive with a cellphone. Further study is warranted, but in the meantime it is recommended that 50% of you stop letting bees use your cellphone.

      --
      - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
    159. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I reported both, the first guys were caught, the second ones - never found.

      Good! I like seeing criminals caught. Of course, as a libertarian gunnut, I also like seeing them shot*, but that's a personal quirk. ;)

      *Remember that in libertopia it takes a victim for it to be a crime.

      The police is a LOT better now than they were even five years ago and improving - but there is still a lot of bad apples, too many cops who basically think of their job as a bribe-collection service. The results are becoming more visible though. More and more hijackers are ending up in prison and less and less are happening.

      Very good. I'm very anti-corruption because of stuff(other s word initially used) like this. Police corruption = vastly more crime, and more damaging crime at that.

      One major change in recent years have been the upcoming of major drug villages. In Johannesburg it's hillbrow - overrun by Nigerian druglords

      So they've essentially ghettoized(in the original 'ethnic groups get their own section of the city' way) themselves? Well, if you can put an effective blockade up that would solve some of the crime problems. ;)

      Now, as a libertarian I'm rather free with the drugs - but I also require responsable use. As a military type I'm not adverse to suggesting that killing X% would make a whole lot of lives easier. Preferably the worst X%, of course.

      When the problem is so bad you need the military to face it, it's time to start considering military options.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    160. Re:Independent studies warranted by EdIII · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself. I'd much rather live than have a cell phone, thank you. I would probably be much happier without one too.

      Testify Brother!

      I would much rather live without a computer, without servers, without CSS,HTML,SAAS,SOAP,XML,VPN,IPSEC,IPV4,DNS,RFC'S,GCC, etc. Think of the silence.

      For 15 minutes every day I have a little bit of Ted Kaczynski and that guy from Office Space in me, "I'm going to poison the guacamole, but first please read my Manifesto".

    161. Re:Independent studies warranted by jd · · Score: 1

      Never mind the magnets, who wouldn't produce less if there were dozens of cell phones blasting at point-blank every few minutes? My guess is that if you did a repeat study, using the Crazy Frog ringtone, you'd not only get a colony collapse but an all-out riot as well.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    162. Re:Independent studies warranted by emt377 · · Score: 1

      The main effect of ionizing radiation that's of concern here is DNA damage; DNA damage often has no immediate effect at all, either because it is in genes that are not currently used, or because the cell compensates. Only if there is enough exposure so that all the alternative pathways and repair mechanisms are overwhelmed do you actually see an effect. Those effects often occur long after the initial exposure. For ionizing radiation, there is delay and there is no magic in it either.

      Absolutely. And it's all additive - genetic damage simply adds up, from all sources be they chemical, ionizing, non-ionizing, or physical (e.g. asbestos). Also, an exposure to e.g. X rad (ionizing) for N days is the same as X/K rad for N*K days. It causes the same damage. I forget off hand, but figures for e.g. lung cancer seems to linger around 30k mutations before a cell goes bonkers. Most cells die, but the exposure is across a LOT of cells and the distribution is a bell curve. Different types of exposure tend to affect different tissues, but for a given cell it's cumulative. Typically carcinogens also have no lower threshold where they cause no damage - meaning there is no 'safe' exposure.

      One thing often ignored is that cell phones don't transmit continuously, instead they burst a few watts for milliseconds. So it's more like a microwave spark. This might perhaps screw up bees, especially those close to the antenna. If there also is a lower threshold where genetic damage occurs from microwaves the same burstiness could conceivably overcome that.

    163. Re:Independent studies warranted by QuietObserver · · Score: 1

      >Actually, I don't think it does, as I stated in the other post. You're proposing a protectionist system, and historically those don't work well. My proposal is to lower the cost of labor such that manufacturers choose to stay here and can remain in business.

      You're stating THAT they historically don't work well - but not considering WHY that is. Do the same issues that led to past failures still apply today ? Can we change them ? These are questions one needs to ask - you cannot learn from history without being able to view it in the context of the present.

      >Thing is, you're effectively ensuring that there WILL be less work by artificially raising the cost of labor; therefore businesses will attempt to minimize it. It's economic law.

      One of the issues with this type of proposal (that is raising the cost of labor, such as through "Minimum Wage" laws) is the worth of some labor will always be low; a job that requires few skills, for example, is not worth as much as a job that requires a master's degree. Forcing employers to pay their employees an artificially high wage for low skill labor causes that employer to look for people who are worth the pay (people who are reliable, efficient, etc).

      Eliminating a minimum wage, however, provides employers much greater latitude in hiring decisions. They can hire more people to perform the same low skilled labors, and promote those who show they have good work habits. Artificially raising wages does not increase the amount of capital available to distribute to employees, and that is one important reason your type of proposal inevitably fails. Would you rather pay seven eager teenagers 3.00 an hour, with the flexibility to replace them as needed, or three desperate, college graduates 7.25 an hour for the same labor?

    164. Re:Independent studies warranted by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Uhhh - you lost it when you claimed that California is bankrupt due to the distribution of wealth - then forgot all about ILLEGAL ALIEN INVADERS. Yes, of course Cali is bankrupt, but not because they are sending money to other states. They are bankrupt because they have welcomed an invading hoard that eats money like locusts eat crops.

      "You need to stop thinking of our economy as one of scarcity and instead one of potential: the hundreds of millions of people in our nation aren't there to work, they are there to occasionally produce a brilliant artist or scientist. Ass sitting and video game playing is what our economy is going to be increasingly about."

      That sounds about as asinine as the Communist manifesto. Ass sitters don't deserve to eat. No work, no eat. Produce, or die.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    165. Re:Independent studies warranted by QuietObserver · · Score: 1

      To plagiarize and misquote two of my favorite TV series, (Red Dwarf, then M*A*S*H):

      An excellent plan sir, with just two minor drawbacks. That would be efficient and it would make sense.

    166. Re:Independent studies warranted by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's closer to the older days than you think. I would argue that plenty of laws are passed just to get people into prisons. It may not be blatant, but consider our prison population per capita and how many non-violet offenders we have incarcerated. However, I hope that is unrelated to our use of prison labor.

      And I would say look at how many nonviolent offenders that are incarcerated that are also forced to work. It's almost negligible if you discount the one who volunteer.

      While yes, most prison labor is volunteer(as-in, they have a choice), but they are not just completing tasks that the prison or state need done. They are also getting paid. Though the prison gets a cut, and the wages are traditionally VERY low. So it doesn't especially offset the cost of housing the prisoner, but it gives the hiring company an incredible profit compared to hiring minimum wage workers.

      No, hte company will pay a premium wage, more like hiring a temp worker instead of a full blown worker. The state picks up or forgives certain taxes and so on because making criminal into good workers is part of a healthy rehabilitation process. Make no mistake, setting up shop in a prison is not the same as moving to some third world country as far as labor savings go.

      I have some personal experience in this area too. I hired the local (county) jail facility to do trash cleanup after a benefit I helped organized. (a mother and father of two were killed by a drunk driver and the surviving children would have been separated and placed in foster care if the only known next of kin- a disabled grandmother on a fixed income- couldn't find a means to support them). Anyways, it costs us close to $12.00 an hour per inmate plus the costs of sheriffs and guards at overtime rates to get about 40 inmates out to a 20 acre plot and dump trash cans, pick up litter, and help deconstruct two of the stages. My understanding is that the inmates only received about $3.50 an hour from the sheriff's department. Thankfully, a 3 local law-firms picked up the tab for that and it didn't come out of the collections.

      Granted, this is a local experience but my understanding is that it's a standard practice.

      Up in washington, they're making US armed forces uniforms[1]. Apparently even Victoria's Secret clothing is being assembled by some prison labor now. And the practice is growing. The United States prison population is potentially an incredible underutilized workforce and can make some serious profits for the companies that take advantage of it.

      This may be true, but I don't think it means what you want it to mean. Federal law requires that prison labor (prison industries) operate the prison shops that no single private industry shall be forced to bear an undue burden of competition from the products of the prison workshops, and to reduce to a minimum competition with private industry or free labor. Rules set forth on this require that inmates or goods and services in direct competition with open markets (not goods or services provided to the government) can't be sold unless a prevailing wage is paid to the inmate.

      I have heard rumors and stories of ways to get around this though.

      However, we really need to be careful of the profit motive in using prison labor. Would it be benificial to society as a whole to lock up more of our population to have a cheaper workforce? Should judges be provided with more kickbacks for longer sentences for viable workers? It is a potential downward spiral.

      I don't think that happens. Certainly the federal laws suggest it shouldn't be happening.

      As far as judges are concerned, they should be open and disclose all contributions or connections with anyone related to any of these prison industries. If there is a connection, th

    167. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orrin Hatch is a Senator from Utah. Where did you get your info? Not very insightful.

    168. Re:Independent studies warranted by sjames · · Score: 1

      Or you could just make sure the job pays a living wage.

    169. Re:Independent studies warranted by sjames · · Score: 1

      That isn't in itself a problem. The problem is that the sorts of jobs that tend to be handed out in such programs are for whatever nobody would do in a million years unless coerced by the threat of imminent starvation and they tend to not really pay enough to let the person ever get out of the situation without breaking the law.

      If, indeed, those jobs are really THAT important, then they should pay a lot more. Make sure that viable employment opportunities always exceed the number of people available to work and you might be surprised how few people would actually rather collect welfare.

    170. Re:Independent studies warranted by codeButcher · · Score: 1

      On a long enough timeframe the probability of any possible event occuring approaches one. In other words, yeah it's possible, and it WILL come - if you are prepared to wait long enough. Right now there is exactly ZERO evidence suggesting one in our lifetime.

      Oh, not ZERO evidence, as there are enough reports in the last 2 or 3 months of weapons stockpiled in Natal & Zimbabwe, "soldiers" reporting for "training", talk on grassroots level, talk in (black-owned) media. But yeah, in the end I haven't seen the goods with my own eyes, so one can close your eyes and make it off as second-hand rumours. I'm no prophet either, so I'm quite happy for us to take a wait an see approach.

      Did you expect to get somebody of the calibre of De Klerk

      I was holding out for someone of a higher calibre and with some backbone, as one can't go much lower IMHO. But yeah, perceptions... As for Mandela, he did what he believed in (which I believe is to my detriment) and the media blew his image up (because it sells, as you rightly mention).

      (Long race diatribe, and how enlightened you are)

      I believe the black:white ratio is closer to say 20:1 (to be on the conservative side), taking into account the brain drain and the african invasion, which Stats SA seem not to have very accurate figures on. I'll concede that SOME people with light skins (not necessarily all even of european descent) screwed up - that doesn't warrant generalisations. I'll be the first to concede that perhaps a small minority of black people are militant against whites, that does not however solve various problems in the african mindset of absolute leadership (which plays right into the hands of a marxist movement with aspirations to consolidate power, frowns upon any criticism of leaders, accepts self-enrichment of leaders, and expects "the government" to dole out prosperity). Since you are so liberal I imagine the circles you moving in to be also mostly english-speaking, insanely wealthy and liberal, but I can assure you that in the circles I move in most (white) people are middle class, a large part of them in the lower end. Also, of the last 3 companies I worked for one was black-owned and the other two where formed after the transition of regimes - I hardly see any reason for the newly "liberated" blacks not to have done the same. Yet the expectation is to take away from the (roughly 2 million) whites (who are perceived to own everything) and give to the (roughly 40 to 60 million) blacks (who are perceived to have nothing). The maths tell me that in the end everybody (not counting the fat cats in government) will have next to nothing, at least not enough to pull themselves up. Let's just say that since the welfare gap between those who manage to make a living for themselves, and the majority of those who feel cheated out of that life although they feel entitled to be given that life, is still growing, the probability of that event of which we speak not happening, is also increasing.

      --
      Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
    171. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >For unskilled labor this is true. There are many career fields where people can almost name their price if they have the skills and experience.

      That's an illusion that only exist over short term periods. It was like that in I.T. in the 80's and early 90's -now it's not, the market is flooded with poorer but cheap skills. To earn a decent salary now you have to find a highly specialised niche.
      And every such niche gets flooded eventually.

      The trouble is that the period it takes for new graduates to enter a given field - cheap, is around 5-10 years from it's formation, the average CAREER however is more than 30 years. You pick a high-earning career, you can be quite sure by the time you get into it, it won't be anymore.
      Supply and demand requires that supply will rise to meet demand, and because we're talking about human beings here (a potentially infinite resource that can be mass-produced by unskilled labor [in fact production rate seems to be inversely proportional to the education of the laborers...]) the supply will always come to significantly exceed the demand - and as markets change - demands change.

      Until around 1950 the average quality of life of every person had consistently gone up with every generation. The reason was better production methods and thus new business opportunities creating new employment markets - which provided huge demand.
      Since then it has consistently gone down again now up to where we are now - where middle-class relative income is only marginally higher than it was during the depression -and expected to go down, and the poverty rate is higher than it was in the depression (in the richest country on earth - 50-million people live BELOW the official poverty line), the limited wealth there is has reached the most concentrated level in human history.
      There was always a small group of wealthy people and a large group of poor people -but never before in all of human history has the wealthy group been this small, or the difference between them this vast.

      It can be safely said that as soon as the production spurs of new methodologies were established, supply rose to meet demand, exceeded it and is now being consistently outcompeted by suppliers who are - effectively prepared to run at a loss.

      That's the salary-workers economic state of the world today. I'd be buggered if I knew what to do about it- but I'm damn sure that the current system is so inherently unstable it MUST collapse, if we're lucky it collapses into a depression - if we're not, a war.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    172. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >>On a long enough timeframe the probability of any possible event occuring approaches one. In other words, yeah it's possible, and it WILL come - if you are prepared to wait long enough. Right now there is exactly ZERO evidence suggesting one in our lifetime.

      >Oh, not ZERO evidence, as there are enough reports in the last 2 or 3 months of weapons stockpiled in Natal & Zimbabwe, "soldiers" reporting for "training", talk on grassroots level, talk in (black-owned) media. But yeah, in the end I haven't seen the goods with my own eyes, so one can close your eyes and make it off as second-hand rumours. I'm no prophet either, so I'm quite happy for us to take a wait an see approach.

      That's your evidence ? The boeremag idiots ? The last time they tried something it turned into a massive joke and they really WERE the best the militants could offer. I've read the NIA report on them. These guys were organized, trained and efficient. They had insider knowledge of all military facilities in the country - everything they needed to know to find every weak spot and disable them.
      They had all the potential you need for it - and they failed quite miserably. Why ? Forget the "they were a joke" news reports - that was deliberately how the authorities chose to spin it in order to demoralize the movement and remove trust in it's leaders - the truth is, they had everything needed for a revolution to succeed - except one thing, mass support.
      The operation against them started almost two years before the first arrests, and literally waited for the first planned "no deaths" attacks to happen so they could be arrested and charged with more crimes. By the time they made their first "announce ourselves" moves, there was an undercover cop in every single cell of the boeremag.
      When you base your recruitment on race, you inevitably lose the ability to tell a supporter from somebody who just looks the right color and speaks the right language.

      205 undercover policemen blew their cover on the same night- arresting every leader, and most of the middle-men in the entire operation at a perfect culmination. The ISS's report is even more detailed. These reports read like a spy novel - except it details real events of which almost nothing made it into the news (on purpose).

      Now as for your second paragraph. I'm FROM a middle-class white Afrikaans family. I remember as a 12 year old putting up posters urging a yes-vote in the '92 referendum, and my dad was concervative party in the early 80's. We learned, we grew - we adapted and the few remaining racist black-people-hate-us-and-want-our-stuff complainers... well please DO leave.
      Only YOU call it a brain-drain - WE prefer complain-drain. We don't NEED negative people fucking up our efforts at building ONE nation.

      The best country I ever saw (and I've lived in more than 25 of them for no less than 3 months at a time now) was Brazil. The only country where EVERY couple is a mixed couple, same-race couples just... don't happen. The ethnicities are mixed, so people mix... logically, in a few generations, brazil will only have on race, a super-mixture of all gene-pools which will probably be immune to more diseases than any other humans on the planet, smarter and stronger too - genetic mixing is GOOD for the gene-pool every farmer who breeds cattle knows this. Every dog breeder who watches their thoroughbreds suffer through excema that mongrels NEVER get knows this.
      Why are we so stupid as to think it doesn't apply to OUR species ?

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    173. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "had no effect for at least 50+ years"

      No, bees are on the decline world wide (for whatever reason). You can't claim its had no effect because we simply don't know.

    174. Re:Independent studies warranted by codeButcher · · Score: 1

      Oh, an all-knowing spook. No, I was not talking about the Boeremag, what made you think that? Well, I'll not try to convince you, as you seem to be quite capable of making your own reality.

      --
      Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
    175. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Their the only source of arms caches I've heard of in the news.

      Either way - there's a huge difference between arms caches and evidence of an intended civil war. Storage rooms for gunsmugglers is actually a MUCH more likely explanation - some of the most notorious arms smugglers of all time operate from South Africa, and that's been the case for a long time. Remember Dirk Stoffberg ?

      A civil war requires two distinct sides wanting power. We can't be expecting the black-on-white civil war that Mandela prevented (he had it in his power to unleash one with a word - and he chose a different path, NOT recognizing the nobility of THAT action - when the whole world would have thought him JUSTIFIED if he unleashed it... now THAT is making your own reality). A black one white civil war makes no sense, the whites aren't in power.
      A white on black one ? Well as I've shown ... that's essentially impossible now. The best effort that those who believe in such things could put together came apart at the seams - and not a all-knowing spook, an extremely well orchestrated task-force between the NIA and police.
      But oh right, the complainers think that because we have some corrupt incompetent policemen, that means there aren't ANY good ones in there, let alone the reality that MOST cops here really are good cops doing their best in what is probably the hardest country on earth to do that in.

      A civil war between two black tribes ? Well the only two with the numbers for THAT is the Zulus and the Xhosas respectively, but their sharing power right now. The governing party which is traditionally a particularly Xhosa supported party, is being led by a Zulu president...

      Sorry - but... I can't FIND the other force to make war on the government... who on earth did you imagine could possibly have anything to GAIN by it ?

      But now explain something to me... I pointed out that were incredibly LUCKY to be as well off as we are after the forced removals of appartheid. You're trying to make a case that were are a lot less lucky than I think... if you're right - you do realize that you are massively STRENGHTENING my argument right ? The whole point is that it's highly unlikely another country would BE that lucky if they tried it now. If we are so much less lucky than I think... doesn't that make the odds off it really backfiring on any other country that tried even HIGHER ?

      In short... why the hell are you fighting so hard to prove that I am right and that forced removals for labor purposes is a terrible policy ? What is the point you're making... what purpose does your argument serve except to sound like another typical white complainer - how dare anybody express positive sentiment about this country, everything's gone to shit here right... otherwise how could you NOT concede that 99% of all the expats did NOT leave because of crime.
      They left because they were the 33% who voted NO in '92. That vast majority left because they are racists no matter how much they deny it. They left because they couldn't STAND the idea of a black government, even if that government had been the most competent and successful one ever - they would STILL have left, and complained that the country has gone to hell to justify it.

      As we say in WoW... QQ-moar, nobody's impressed.

      You often hear black people say "every white guy I meet is a liberal who always opposed appartheid... so how did it happen, where did all the people who voted for it for 40 years GO ?"
      By which they are trying to say that they don't believe these white people who aren't racist, and don't want to reconcile because they think it's a facade. Well... I got their answer. All THOSE white people are in Perth and Sydney.

      Don't believe me ? In 1978 a poll was held at Potch University, probably the most conservative university in the country. 87% of the students declared that they were OPPOSED to appartheid. That was in 1978 already.
      Ten years later when that generation was the majority of the VOTERS - the system changed.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    176. Re:Independent studies warranted by lasouris · · Score: 1

      Maybe not immediately. But if all the bees die then possibly in a few years....

    177. Re:Independent studies warranted by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Other way around. Heat (IR) is identical to Microwave radiation, except it's much lower frequency. Mind you, you can absorb any gamma radiation as thermal.

    178. Re:Independent studies warranted by codeButcher · · Score: 1

      A black one white civil war makes no sense, the whites aren't in power.

      Yet, a few posts back you claimed: white people STILL have only 5% unemployment, still fill the top 20% of salaried jobs, still make up 60% of business owners (and the next 30% are Indians - not Blacks).

      No comment at the moment on the other possibilities you mention.

      Don't believe me ? In 1978 a poll was held at Potch University, probably the most conservative university in the country. 87% of the students declared that they were OPPOSED to appartheid. That was in 1978 already. Ten years later when that generation was the majority of the VOTERS - the system changed.

      One of the main gripes I have with the current political debate is that it's an either/or situation. Either pro-ANC or pro-apartheid (especially the sort of system it became when you and I grew up).

      Neither is a long term solution. But today it's just Not PC to be anti-ANC, so there's no room for lateral thinking.

      --
      Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
    179. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >>A black one white civil war makes no sense, the whites aren't in power.

      >Yet, a few posts back you claimed: white people STILL have only 5% unemployment, still fill the top 20% of salaried jobs, still make up 60% of business owners (and the next 30% are Indians - not Blacks).

      >No comment at the moment on the other possibilities you mention.

      Right - holding wealth != holding political power.
      A protest against employers is known as a "strike" not a "war" civil or otherwise. So the two statements are entirely consistent.

      >>Don't believe me ? In 1978 a poll was held at Potch University, probably the most conservative university in the country. 87% of the students declared that they were OPPOSED to appartheid. That was in 1978 already. Ten years later when that generation was the majority of the VOTERS - the system changed.

      >One of the main gripes I have with the current political debate is that it's an either/or situation. Either pro-ANC or pro-apartheid (especially the sort of system it became when you and I grew up).

      I don't agree. I'm not pro-ANC. I'm not pro-DA either and I'm definitely not pro-appartheid. My philosophies are, in fact, utterly UNrepresented in current politics. It's true that a number of politicians try to paint it that way - but that's racism on THEIR part, or more accurately - it's an attempt to deliberately CREATE racism to secure votes.
      I'm definitely not in favor of that behavior. But that is a RECENT development, it didn't exist in Mandela's government.
      A much more ACCURATE assesment is that people are either racist or not - there really CANNOT be any middle ground. Either all people are equal in your eyes, you are utterly colorblind, would marry a women you love without ever asking her ethnicity... or you're a racist.
      Sorry, "cultural separatism" is STILL racism, it's just racism with a politically correct jacket on.

      >Neither is a long term solution. But today it's just Not PC to be anti-ANC, so there's no room for lateral thinking.

      Again - you're drinking the kool-aid. That's the propaganda that ANC officials try to use to secure votes - they are wrong, it's not how most people of any race think. I spent most of my career working in the townships. I never felt in any danger - on the contrary, I felt significantly more welcome than among the white world of high walls and razor wire. I discussed politics with many people from across the realms of South African cultures and the ONLY place I EVER heard racism among normal average citizens was among whites - a scathing slap in the face of my own people. Now you could claim that of course the racist blacks won't even BOTHER to discuss politics with a white guy - so I admit my sample space is skewed, but the vast majority of people in this country now only want to survive and build a better country, they just don't CARE what color you are anymore.
      The small fringes who do are in fact just the loudest. If the average black person WAS still angry at white people (and by god do we deserve it) then the ANC politicians wouldn't NEED to build propaganda about it. The NEED to recreate that animosity as it's the only way to secure their powerbase.

      Their constant harping on the race card only proves how little it still matters in the real world.

      That said -there is a huge difference between being anti-ANC and being anti-South Africa. Leaving the country because you don't like the party that got the votes is pretty much guaranteed to be a lie. The leavers leave for other reasons - usually ones that they refuse to say out loud because they know their not supposed to think them.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    180. Re:Independent studies warranted by skarphace · · Score: 1

      I have some personal experience in this area too. I hired the local (county) jail facility to do trash cleanup after a benefit I helped organized. (a mother and father of two were killed by a drunk driver and the surviving children would have been separated and placed in foster care if the only known next of kin- a disabled grandmother on a fixed income- couldn't find a means to support them). Anyways, it costs us close to $12.00 an hour per inmate plus the costs of sheriffs and guards at overtime rates to get about 40 inmates out to a 20 acre plot and dump trash cans, pick up litter, and help deconstruct two of the stages. My understanding is that the inmates only received about $3.50 an hour from the sheriff's department. Thankfully, a 3 local law-firms picked up the tab for that and it didn't come out of the collections.

      Interesting. I have never really seen any information on the business side. Lots of information on how poorly the inmates themselves get paid, but I never heard of companies paying into the system at reasonable cost.

      Doing a bit more research, I ran into the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program enacted by congress. It's restrictions seem reasonable, as long as oversight is done properly.

      However, most everywhere I look keeps stating that it's a VERY low cost option for many companies and I can't find any real cost breakdowns. If you know of a place that would show this kind of info, I'd appreciate it if you'd share. I just keep finding conflicting reports

      "Anything that creates a market incentive to lock people up undermines the very purpose of our criminal justice system," says Sheila Bedy, executive director of the Justice Policy Institute

      --
      Bullish Machine Tzar
    181. Re:Independent studies warranted by codeButcher · · Score: 1

      Right - holding wealth != holding political power. A protest against employers is known as a "strike" not a "war" civil or otherwise. So the two statements are entirely consistent.

      Yes, to you and me they are not the same. To some poor uneducated devil, who's told otherwise by some talking pumpkin, they are the same. It's quite easy to kill say a farmer just because you are angry that you don't have a microwave or run-down 15-year old Hilux like his, and when the killing is done state to your peers that now you are the boss (because you killed the "king" and "inherited" his powers) - totally oblivious to the fact that a farm, or any business for that matter, does not make money fall out of thin air.

      I might not have gotten into townships much, I grew up in a rural area and learned just enough sepedi to realise I'm no expert. But I did learn that, while more traditional black societies do have laws, morals and value systems, they are far removed from my own, and it would be a grave mistake to presume my values apply to them. Issues like peer pressure, democracy, leadership, cruelty, killing, etc. simply do not mean the same to them than to me or you. And you know what? Why should I try to change that? It works for them - let them use it. But what's good for the goose.... I don't want that to be applied to me, just as strongly as they don't want my values applied to them.

      As to you original point about forced labour: while yes, I do not condone one group forcing another into servitude, I think our reasons for saying so differ vastly. And I can hardly compare Nelson Mandela and Govan Mbeki chipping stones in Robben Eiland's quarry, to Kolisile from Transkei coming to Johannesburg to work in the mines and send money back home every now and then. For the record, when my grandparents arrived in the country, my grandfather went to work in some mine in the Free State, leaving my grandmother alone to run the farm in the Lowveld. They saw it as an opportunity, instead of begrudging the hardship of it.

      --
      Free, as in your money being freed from the confines of your account.
    182. Re:Independent studies warranted by geekoid · · Score: 1

      yes, you know 2 farmers. Clearly you are an expert.

      Sure, you're correct about RF, but that line just makes you sound like a douche.

      ", I know what I'm talking about here."

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    183. Re:Independent studies warranted by yyxx · · Score: 1

      Uhhh - you lost it when you claimed that California is bankrupt due to the distribution of wealth - then forgot all about ILLEGAL ALIEN INVADERS. Yes, of course Cali is bankrupt, but not because they are sending money to other states. They are bankrupt because they have welcomed an invading hoard that eats money like locusts eat crops.

      Oh, stop your stupid ideological posturing and assumptions. I am strongly opposed to illegal "immigration", and I want to see Arizona-style laws in California. But, there is not a shred of evidence that illegal aliens are bankrupting California. In fact, one reason California has been pretty tolerant of them is that California growers like the cheap labor for harvesting.

      However, the California budget shortfall (about $26b) is about the same amount of money that Californians pay more in federal taxes than they get back in federal services. You can simply look that up.

      That sounds about as asinine as the Communist manifesto. Ass sitters don't deserve to eat. No work, no eat. Produce, or die.

      What's "asinine" is your lack of understanding of the free market. I'm not saying that it's good that people are sitting on their asses, I'm saying that increasingly, people will not be able to find jobs because it makes no sense to employ them; they cost more to employ than they create. And the US isn't going to let them starve, no matter what.

    184. Re:Independent studies warranted by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      You're talking to a man who employed himself between ages 10 and 15, at which time he was legally permitted to enter the "labor market". I've also employed myself twice since then. There is ALWAYS work to be done, for a person who wants to work. It may not pay as much as you would wish, but there is work to be done. That work puts food on the table, clothes on the kids, gas in the car. My youngest son graduated high school this past month. Like his dad, he has employed himself for years. The kid has ALWAYS had money - money that wasn't handed to him because he's a cute little fart.

      A man without gainful employment is nothing but a drain on society, and he deserves to eat rice, beans, and 'taters all his life.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    185. Re:Independent studies warranted by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Low cost is a relative term. What is low to you may be high to me because we live in different parts of the country and their is different costs expectations. So if we were to compare low cost alternative to outsourcing to China, it's probably not a true statement, but if we compare it to buying a facility in the same state, setting up the resources needed to operate the facility like phone service and plumbing, and paying taxes that you wouldn't necessarily need to pay if you used the prison labor, it can be a low cost alternative.

      Now I do freely admit that companies can make money from these schemes. They get tax breaks, don't have all of the same business expenses, and so on. Sometimes they have to build a facility, sometimes it can be housed within the prison. It is an advantage to a company in most cases but they also take a reputation hit- especially when the public finds out they are talking to con artists already locked up. But there are benefits for the state too. Inmates get real world training that they can apply outside of prison after release. Because working is more of a reward system, inmates have better behavior reducing stress and staffing needs for the prison. And it offsets a lot of the costs of housing the inmates.

      Sadly, I can't find any exact breakdowns either. That is why I offered my one personal experience. I haven't really found much outside of regulations that show the company side of the arrangement which is completely different from what the inmate side is.

      "Anything that creates a market incentive to lock people up undermines the very purpose of our criminal justice system," says Sheila Bedy, executive director of the Justice Policy Institute

      I agree with this statement. I just don't think the current system has that incentive. It did in the past, but those days are gone. The current system is more of a rehabilitation program then anything. You can educate someone all you want, but they are still going to be pretty knowledgeable when they attempt to apply that new found knowledge fresh out of school. This situation not only gives knowledge but creates real world experience that can translate into a real world job when they get released. Drug dealers who chose to deal drugs over working at burger king now have a third option that may be enough to bypass the pull to return to dealing drugs. It creates honest opportunities for people that may not have had too many before getting busted for whatever it was. It's still up to the inmate to pursuit, but at least they aren't being dumped into the same hopeless situation that drove them to whatever crime got them busted in the first place.

    186. Re:Independent studies warranted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahahaha, you should visit Beijing once. Not uncommon to see people defecating or urinating in the side streets and alleyways. Talk about dirty.

    187. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Since then it has consistently gone down again now up to where we are now - where middle-class relative income is only marginally higher than it was during the depression -and expected to go down, and the poverty rate is higher than it was in the depression (in the richest country on earth - 50-million people live BELOW the official poverty line), the limited wealth there is has reached the most concentrated level in human history.

      Do you happen to have a study on the quality of life thing? Because I believe it's just the opposite. Sure, you have some aspects of life where it's worse than in the '50s, but on the whole I believe quality of life is a whole lot better than the '50s.

      People living in poverty today often have cell phones, when in 1950 such a person wouldn't even have a phone. They are also more likely to own a vehicle, TV, computer, have internet access, etc...

      Even for people NOT in poverty, home sizes have increased, as have TV sizes. Computers have entered the home. Medical care, for the quality/amount of treatment, hasn't actually really gone up in price. What has happened is that we're able to do so much more, but at additional cost. Restrict yourself to 1950 levels of care and the cost would be really, really cheap.

      The trouble is that the period it takes for new graduates to enter a given field - cheap, is around 5-10 years from it's formation, the average CAREER however is more than 30 years. You pick a high-earning career, you can be quite sure by the time you get into it, it won't be anymore.

      I think the idea here is that you get into a developing field, and by the time that glut of new graduates show up you already have those 5-10 years of experience and are therefore their supervisor/manager. If you've kept up with improving yourself, of course.

      There was always a small group of wealthy people and a large group of poor people -but never before in all of human history has the wealthy group been this small, or the difference between them this vast.

      Sure it has. Just go back to the medieval period... Not that it's necessarily a good thing.

      Fix actions? A number of little things, I think. Simplify the tax system so that Buffett doesn't pay a lower percentage of net income in taxes than his secretary. Adjust corporate policies to reward longer term thinking. Making hiring people cheaper, playing paper games with money more expensive. Stuff like that.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    188. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >I think the idea here is that you get into a developing field, and by the time that glut of new graduates show up you already have those 5-10 years of experience and are therefore their supervisor/manager. If you've kept up with improving yourself, of course.

      That is a nice theory... too bad it never works. The employee promoted to management just never happens, which is why so many employees are overseen by incompetent managers. Nearly all managers START OUT as managers - with an MBA or related degree instead... and even they will still be on the losing side of salary scales.
      Who makes the real money ? The guy who started a successfull business, or who gets employed as CEO... everybody else ALWAYS works for less than they are worth. Much the same way that a farmer cannot sell raw wheat for the price of produced pasta.

      Like it or not - there is only one type of business structure where the employees actually gain - and that's worker's collectives.
      The rarest type as it turns out, yet ironically the fairest and probably the most well run in general - certainly among the most productive because the people producing the wealth are the same people GETTING the wealth.

      >>There was always a small group of wealthy people and a large group of poor people -but never before in all of human history has the wealthy group been this small, or the difference between them this vast.

      >Sure it has. Just go back to the medieval period... Not that it's necessarily a good thing.

      Nope, look it up - it was NEVER this bad. The percentage of rich people even in medieval times was far larger (ulitmately the gentles were closer to 30% of the population than the current 1%) and more importantly - the wealth-gap was exponentially smaller.
      They may have been far wealthier than the people working their share-cropped lands, but very few people actually starved, and they weren't THAT much wealthier.
      Not even relatively speaking was there ever a time when the gap between rich and poor was even CLOSE to what it is now... seriously, there are single individuals in the world today with more money than some entire countries !

      Literally - people who can single-handedly invest more cash tomorrow than some nations entire GDP. Who can, at a whim, make a country rich or poor. It took just one man on a pissed off day to bring the bank of England to the verge of bankruptcy, just so he could make a killing on the suddenly cheap pound. Of course he didn't take it all the way back... he wanted the pound to recover after all.
      Look up George Soros and the bank of England sometime... and Soros decent person as he seems to be ... has never produced a single thing in his entire life. He has become one of the wealthiest and most powerful men alive by doing nothing but shifting imaginary money around. Nothing he has ever done has done anything to actually contribute to the economy, every penny he has made has been effectively leeched from it at our expense - and nothing, no goods, no services, no skills, not even proper cashflow circulation has been given back.
      That's the world we live in - that's where capitalism has gone seriously wrong. When you can make MORE money by leeching the system than you can ever make by being a productive member of it - the system is already doomed.
      The rich people don't even pretend otherwise. Hell in "rich dad poor dad" he explicitely states that production is a doomed means of wealth generation - you don't get rich by making things, you get rich by NOT making things, by not producing and certainly by not producing quality. The only way to actually gain WEALTH is to "let your money work for you" ... to literally (the system is described in detail) live off your assets - not by creating anything.
      That's why the only people in business who get wealthy are the owners - they aren't producing anything- they are leeching off the asset that is the business's production. Nobody gets rich by making something good.
      Who here on

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    189. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Somehow my post got chopped, didn't notice until now...

      That's what unions do as well. If it wasn't for unions American's would STILL be sweatshop workers. Why would you DENY the people of China, Indonesia and India the right to make the same progress towards their own pursuit of happiness that you have ? Instead their stuck in the England of Charles Dickins !

      And the England of Charles Dickens progressed to the England of today.

      Thing about sweatshops in China and such is that, believe it or not, they're actually better than the alternatives the workers there would otherwise have. To the point that they'll fight you to KEEP that sweatshop job.

      With the extra money they gain they do things like send their kids through more schooling. Even one factory can raise the standard of living for a quite substantial region.

      I remember a story about a sneaker factory that opened somewhere, most likely India. The workers started by walking to work. Within six months most had bicycles. Within 3 years many had mopeds. Meanwhile, the completion rate of their children for primary school went up by like a factor of 5 - something like 10% to 50%. Stores opened to service their additional wants - bicycle stores, moped stores, repair shops, etc...

      By US standards it was a 'sweatshop'. By local standards? It was a job, even a career, to be proud of.

      [quote]What happens when they do figure it out ? I have nasty suspicion what will happen is a revolution - that will end up with a group of people in power over these 2 billion people (a third of all humanity) that absolutely despise us - we're the enablers of their oppression. How can it NOT lead to World War 3 ?[/quote]

      So they're going to attack us, the country that owes THEM the most money? The ones that funnel money to them, allowing them to go from subsidence farming to something better?

      [quote]Every other time in history when laborers felt abused it led to revolution or war if they could not find an amicable middle ground (which seems to have consistently failed without government backed labor laws). Right back to the peasants revolt and probably even earlier.[/quote]

      China has labor laws and their average wages are rising. Yes, there's lots of violations of even China's low minimum wage, but won't most workers(rightfully as far as I'm concerned) blame the local company/local corrupt government?

      [quote]Most of the time - these failed because the barrons (ceo's, kings, pick your era) had better weapons ,lances against rice-flails, arrows against scythes, guns against knives... well this next revolution will have peasants with nukes... I don't know about you but I don't want to take my chances on them.[/quote]

      I don't think China is going to face another revolution, at least not a hugely violent one. They're coming at a mixed economy from a different angle, but they're still heading to arrive there.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    190. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Aside - just passed macroeconomics CLEP - woot. Also, fairly relevant here.

      That is a nice theory... too bad it never works. The employee promoted to management just never happens, which is why so many employees are overseen by incompetent managers. Nearly all managers START OUT as managers - with an MBA or related degree instead... and even they will still be on the losing side of salary scales.

      Did you catch the part about continuing education? I have an associates and am working on my bachelor's. I've been working for quite a few years at this point. Mom didn't get her bachelor's until she was in her 40's.

      The rich people don't even pretend otherwise. Hell in "rich dad poor dad" he explicitely states that production is a doomed means of wealth generation - you don't get rich by making things, you get rich by NOT making things, by not producing and certainly by not producing quality. The only way to actually gain WEALTH is to "let your money work for you" ... to literally (the system is described in detail) live off your assets - not by creating anything.

      Indeed - that's why later on I mentioned making 'paper shuffling' more expensive, IE more marginal means of making money. 'Traditional' asset and investment management is indeed a positive, contributing career path, because you're helping to ensure that the most potentially profitable, the most likely to succeed business ventures get funded.

      They make more money out of property rental in a day than all the hamburgers they've sold have made in 30 years.

      Source?

      The fact that, that works - is what means capitalism is doomed. Communism and Capitalism are equally doomed by design - communism just happened to fail first and it's faillure delayed the faillure of capitalism, but it did not prevent it, and nothing short of a radical redesign could.

      Current scheme in the world right now isn't capitalism, it's 'mixed economy'. Call it managed capitalism if you must.

      Those are band-aids on a broken bone... we need to reset the bone and splint it. And that won't work while we keep pretending the bone is not broken, which must take some serious wishful thinking by now because frankly the two halfs are well past right-angles with each other.

      Difference in opinion here - I don't believe the bone is broken, we just need to relieve the strain.

      As a libertarian, I believe that people should be able to enjoy the fruits of their labor. Including paper shuffling if it's profitable. On the other hand, I'm not a supply sider, nor a classical economist. I'm more Kenesian, even as a libertarian. On the other hand - I don't think that governments, by and large, have successfully implemented kenesian economics - they don't recognize a boom well and act to moderate it. The idea is to level the peaks to fill the valleys, governments are forgetting the 'level the peaks' part.

      Problem with supply side: Comfort zone. People aren't [i]that[/i] likely to work more/harder if you give them more money. They're certainly not going to spend the entire increase(big part of macroeconomics), though extra capital investment makes it easier for businesses to exploit opportunities.

      Classical: Sure, the markets might eventually be self regulating, but ultimately so isn't our food supply, and I don't like the idea of people starving to death or sitting unproductive for years because of a depression.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    191. Re:Independent studies warranted by x2A · · Score: 1

      "Other way around"

      Not on this planet it's not. Think about it, we can quite easily take something from ambient temperature and heat it until we push it out the top of infra-red and into the visible spectrum, where we call it "red hot". If heat radiated at a lower frequency then to achieve red hot we would have to push whatever we're heating through the microwave spectrum before it got to red, and as we do that quite a lot, it would be impossible to use a phone at all with all the interference.

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    192. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >And the England of Charles Dickens progressed to the England of today.

      Despite, not because off.
      More importantly - the (very violent) transition AWAY from that system in the west established as a basic inalienable human right the idea of a fair wage for a fair job, and free labor (meaning the right to quit and find a better job if you want).These basic rights are not recognized, enforced or or available to those Chinese workers anymore than the right to freedom of thought is.
      Such a system of oppression according to history is inherently unstable and always fails -usually violently. Do you really think everybody in China will drink that mandate-of-heaven kool-aid for EVER ?

      >Thing about sweatshops in China and such is that, believe it or not, they're actually better than the alternatives the workers there would otherwise have. To the point that they'll fight you to KEEP that sweatshop job.

      I've heard that rationalization before. It's bullshit. Subsistence farmers are BETTER off than sweatshop workers, have a higher life expectancy and a LOT more freedom. I'm sorry, when you have to PISS in a plastic bag because you don't have the right to take a bathroom break - you have EARNED the right to protest for better conditions - and it's only a matter of time before they do.
      The truth is much closer to what did happen in England. People leave their poor but decent lives in the countryside on false promises of wealth in the big city - only to live in squalor - too ashamed to go home. Many times - they don't even get as FAR as sweatshops - a hell of a lot of them are simply unpaid slaves: http://gvnet.com/humantrafficking/China.htm

      >With the extra money they gain they do things like send their kids through more schooling. Even one factory can raise the standard of living for a quite substantial region.

      Really ? That only works if there is enough actual extra money to afford that. When it takes your entire meager paycheck to pay the rent and the food - that isn't going to happen. The only reason a significant part of China's kids go to school at all is because their authoritarian government figured out that schooled workers can be sold more expensively - don't imagine for a second that they EARN better.

      >I remember a story about a sneaker factory that opened somewhere, most likely India. The workers started by walking to work. Within six months most had bicycles. Within 3 years many had mopeds. Meanwhile, the completion rate of their children for primary school went up by like a factor of 5 - something like 10% to 50%. Stores opened to service their additional wants - bicycle stores, moped stores, repair shops, etc...

      http://www.google.com/images?hl=en&source=imghp&q=Dharavi&btnG=Search+Images&gbv=2&aq=f&aqi=g9g-m1&aql=&oq=&gs_rfai=

      You were saying ?

      >By US standards it was a 'sweatshop'. By local standards? It was a job, even a career, to be proud of.

      Like I said, that's a western rationalization -hell it's a rationalization THEY often come up with - because humans are really good at making themselves feel better, it never lasts and it isn't going to last this time. Their lives are shit- and the reason they are shit is so that Calvin Klein can pay a very small amount of money for a pair of jeans, stick a lable on it and sell it for a lot. Considering what those jeans cost, there is absolutely NO justification for not making it in a country with real, enforced, labor laws at a decent wage. The price to US won't go up - his margins would go down but quite frankly he is way beyond rich enough.
      Excessive greed is an evolutionary unstable trait... it disrupts society and as such, it must inevitably lead to an unstable society.

      [quote]What happens when they do figure it out ? I have

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    193. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Aside - just passed macroeconomics CLEP - woot. Also, fairly relevant here.

      Congratulations. Now you can start critically doubting what you were taught, and doing so informedly. That's never a bad a thing.

      >>That is a nice theory... too bad it never works. The employee promoted to management just never happens, which is why so many employees are overseen by incompetent managers. Nearly all managers START OUT as managers - with an MBA or related degree instead... and even they will still be on the losing side of salary scales.

      >Did you catch the part about continuing education? I have an associates and am working on my bachelor's. I've been working for quite a few years at this point. Mom didn't get her bachelor's until she was in her 40's.

      Good for you... and do you expect to be C.E.O. of your company one day ? Maybe when you're 60 ? Didn't think so.
      Well here's the truth... the odds of you even becoming a director are hundreds-to-one against.
      Why ? Because there's a LOT of people at any low level of an organisation - most of them working hard and studying for the dream of 'advancement' - but there is an order of magnitude LESS positions in middle management and and another order of magnitude less in upper management. The vast majority has no hope of ever advancing. They aren't psychophathically greedy enough to be good directors anyway.
      The psychpaths who DO become directors never pass through the middle ranks first. Hell most of them spend less than a year at the bottom because directors aren't chosen for skills, they are chosen for utter lack of conscience. There are some very good studies out there about this, and if you'd like the same facts in a more fun presentation... I give you Dilbert.

      >>The rich people don't even pretend otherwise. Hell in "rich dad poor dad" he explicitely states that production is a doomed means of wealth generation - you don't get rich by making things, you get rich by NOT making things, by not producing and certainly by not producing quality. The only way to actually gain WEALTH is to "let your money work for you" ... to literally (the system is described in detail) live off your assets - not by creating anything.

      >Indeed - that's why later on I mentioned making 'paper shuffling' more expensive, IE more marginal means of making money. 'Traditional' asset and investment management is indeed a positive, contributing career path, because you're helping to ensure that the most potentially profitable, the most likely to succeed business ventures get funded.

      So now you're regulating the market - and hoping to regulate that section with by far the most current cash, and thus political clout. It's just not going to happen, and no amount of regulation will really change the fact that arbitrage always pays more than production - it's a fundamental flaw in the capitalist structures. To change it, you have to move away from capitalism alltogether.
      By all means, learn from it the things that WORK - competition is good, rewarding effort and innovation is good. Who the hell says the only way to do it is with a ladder made of the backs of your fellow man ? It's incredibly uninformed to imagine that there is only two ways an economy could work... there are infinite many possibilities we've never even written down let alone tried.
      Statistically, almost any of them could be better than this... hell BARTER TRADE would be better than modern capitalism in some ways (it has no ability for arbitrage for one). The people with a vested interest in the system will never easily let it be changed to benefit more people. That's human nature, doesn't mean we should let them get their way - and it certainly doesn't mean we should believe a word they say.

      >>They make more money out of property rental in a day than all the hamburgers they've sold have made in 30 years.

      >Source?

      Same as the entire paragraph: Rich Dad, Poor Dad.
      Which in turn quotes Kroch as saying exactly that when he addressed a gro

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    194. Re:Independent studies warranted by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Lower frequency has less energy, as the particle is moving slower. The "Infra Red" wavelength is the wavelength of an oscillating particle moving at constant linear speed of C. By adding more energy (i.e. heat), the oscillation frequency increases, decreasing the wavelength (because it oscillates perpendicular to its path of motion). Microwaves, X-Ray, and "Gamma" radiation are all situated at higher frequencies than Infra-Red, Visible, and Ultra-Violet; if you keep heating a red-hot chunk of metal it will eventually glow orange (starting to emit yellow, still emitting red), then white (emitting red, yellow, green, blue...).

    195. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I've heard that rationalization before. It's bullshit.

      Then they're not sweatshops by the definition you're going by.

      You were saying ?

      You also have a rather idyllic view of subsidence farming.

      I'm not saying that industrialization is clean, easy, or even vastly better for most individuals than staying in the country. But it's a stage, one that China is working through, perhaps, hopefully, more rapidly than did the USA and Europe.

      Yes, stuff sucks in China for many, many people. Yes, it's not fair. It's also mostly NOT the USA's fault. You seem to blame the USA for everything, I don't.

      Yes, it will make the people suffer if we do that. Yes the government will make them hate us for it. Sooner or later though. That government will have to give in... when they do, the average Chinese person will actually KNOW what happened at Tiananmen square... and then they will love us for it.

      Are you being sarcastic? Again, why should a country be so concerned about blaming us over the actions of their own government? Did hte French revolution spread a bit? Perhaps, but that wasn't covered when I was in school, so I doubt it reached the level it did in France. Besides, we're already a democracy. Well, federal republic.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    196. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      I didn't blame the USA ... I blamed the entire western world.

      And the French revolution didn't 'spread a bit' - it changed the face of politics globally more massively than any prior event in human history. Moreso than the roman empire. Just because it wasn't covered in your syllabis doesn't mean it didn't happen. I can imagine it not being much in the US syllabis because frankly - you were the one country not really affected.

      On the other side of the world it directly led to the Cape Colony becoming a British Colony (it had been dutch... but the Dutch monarchy at the time got overthrown by a revolution).

      Most of the countries in Europe had revolutions. Unlike France itself though, most returned to monarchy later - but this time as constitutional rather than absolute monarchies.

      On the final bit- nope, I was being utterly serious. And they SHOULD blame us because it is NOT just the actions of their government. It's the actions of our corporations. Their government allowing those corporations to act this way, for the sake of self-enrichment is something they will blame their government for. The corporations doing it... is something the parent countries of those corporations will be blamed for (at least, if they have any sense of blaming whose responsible).

      And finally - yes, they owe a pretty major debt of blame to us, the citizens of those country, who live of their suffering. The best I can do for them - is refuse to buy sweatshop labor. No nikes' for me, no CK jeans. I buy locally made clothes, locally grown food. Sometimes it costs a lot more, often a lot less (because locally made clothing doesn't charge me for a label) - but I don't buy anything "made in china".
      Because I want to do a little bit - to make it MORE profitable to pay those workers properly - by sending a message, pay them properly and people like me become customers instead of haters of your brand.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    197. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Congratulations. Now you can start critically doubting what you were taught, and doing so informedly. That's never a bad a thing.

      Taught? It was a CLEP, IE I self studied and took a test to get the credit.

      It's also pretty basic stuff.

      Good for you... and do you expect to be C.E.O. of your company one day ? Maybe when you're 60 ? Didn't think so.

      Don't need to be CEO to make mucho dinero. Could rather easily though - just start my own business. Huge 5 year failure rate though.

      So now you're regulating the market - and hoping to regulate that section with by far the most current cash, and thus political clout. It's just not going to happen, and no amount of regulation will really change the fact that arbitrage always pays more than production - it's a fundamental flaw in the capitalist structures. To change it, you have to move away from capitalism alltogether.

      We're already regulating the market, that's part of the whole 'mixed economy'.
      So what's your replacement? I figure managed capitalism is the worst system possible - except for every other one we've tried.

      Some would say that the capacity to reach a comfort zone is a basic human right and the economy OUGHT to be structured in such a way that for all who are willing to work towards it, it's a guarantee. In theory - that's what retirement is SUPPOSED to be... but oh that lovely inflation...

      I happen to agree - those willing to work should be able to have a 'comfortable' life. Still, that's not exactly what I meant by 'comfort zone'. A person in their comfort zone may not be happy or even pleased. It's what I use to explain why somebody getting $15k/year in welfare might not want to go to work for $30k. Why somebody doesn't want to change jobs, even if they'll get more money. Why people who've lost their job due to a factory closure will sit on their butts until they're almost completely out of money before they move.

      these days nobody GET'S a comfortable retirement anymore.

      No, they gotta plan and work for it.

      Fundamental to Maltus's law is the reality that there are always too few resources... that being true isn't the absolutely STUPIDEST thing we can EVER do to let the little there is be concentrated among an elite few ?

      Thing is, it's more difficult than ever to actually liquidate those amounts of resources without their 'value' dropping substantially.

      And it's difficult to 'use them up' as well. Sure, they can hire servants and such - but said servants have to be paid, and that puts the money in the economy.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    198. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      >>these days nobody GET'S a comfortable retirement anymore.

      >No, they gotta plan and work for it.

      Except that's not true. What happens these days is people spend their lives saving... and then get to retirement age to discover their savings have lost value faster than their investments grew - and all the money they put away for all those years can't pay the bills for 5 years, let alone the 20 they were planning on.

      >>Fundamental to Maltus's law is the reality that there are always too few resources... that being true isn't the absolutely STUPIDEST thing we can EVER do to let the little there is be concentrated among an elite few ?

      >Thing is, it's more difficult than ever to actually liquidate those amounts of resources without
      their 'value' dropping substantially.

      I think we spoke past each other. I was referring to physical survival resources - particularly food and the assets to produce them rather than capital per se.

      The thing is - no matter how much money there is in the economy - the value in it doesn't change from day to day (year to year and decade to decade yes, but no day to day). There's X amount of products on the market. They have a value of Y. Z is the amount of money in the world. As long as X and Z is the same things are fairly okay...
      If Z however is increased... X doesn't increase, all that it means is that the money becomes worth less. Money measures value but doesn't HAVE value. Keep it up enough, and you end up with Zimbabwe, but pretty much every country is doing the exact same thing - only slower.
      And of course, if you want to see something REALLY ugly - try taking a peek at what happens when Z is signifanctly LOWER than X... because there is no faster way to destroy an economy and impoverish everyone than deflation...
      You'd think keeping X and Z at roughly the same value wouldn't be THAT difficult.

      I'd say, that considering this, allowing currency trade is one of the stupidest ideas we ever had... you're now trading and influencing the amount of Z, in a way that is entirely disconnected from the value X...

      I've lived through what that can do. A few years ago, a number of investors worldwide decided to cash in via South African Rand. So they dumped it... lots... in a week they drove it from a fairly realistic (at the time) R5.50 to the dollar to under R14 a dollar.

      Our export industries appeared to boom (their rates suddenly looked WAY cheaper in dollar) so they got some business they may not otherwise have... except the money they got for it was worthless of course.
      Our import industries suffered, price of computers went up by 150% for example, food did the same (even locally produced food needs to be moved around - primarily with foreign oil).

      It was the worst period of internal inflation in South Africa's history and massively impoverished the population. Of course as it hit the low, the speculators stocked up - but nice and slowly this time - so it didn't spike again.
      Wait six months and normal trade has it recovered - and you've made a killing... while your actions have driven thousands of people to bankruptcy and left hundreds of thousands suddenly starving.

      And people wonder why we're not impressed with capitalism.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    199. Re:Independent studies warranted by x2A · · Score: 1

      Yep, you've got the theory right, but think you're getting mixed up with some of the labels or are just picturing microwaves in the wrong place of the spectrum.

      Here's an image just found using Google Images that shows it quite well:
      http://galileo.phys.virginia.edu/classes/USEM/SciImg/home_files/introduction_files/EMSpec.gif

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    200. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Except that's not true. What happens these days is people spend their lives saving... and then get to retirement age to discover their savings have lost value faster than their investments grew - and all the money they put away for all those years can't pay the bills for 5 years, let alone the 20 they were planning on.

      That's part of the 'plan' part - far too many had their investments in risky investments too late in their career; too close to their retirement. Bush not doing what he should have done encouraged the house market boom and the following bust. You had a LOT of people counting on their homes giving an unreasonable part of their retirement.

      Part of Keynesian economics is discouraging the boom as well as supporting during recession. The goal is an even keel, not ultimately unsupportable growth.

      If Z however is increased... X doesn't increase, all that it means is that the money becomes worth less.

      Have you studied macroeconomics? They even have a specific graph for this. While resources are still being unused, it's flat; no inflation. Near the end, you start encountering inflation as the last bits of resources are used. Once they're all used increasing the money supply simply increases inflation.

      I'd say, that considering this, allowing currency trade is one of the stupidest ideas we ever had... you're now trading and influencing the amount of Z, in a way that is entirely disconnected from the value X...

      ??? Allowing currency trade is essential to freeflowing international trade. Otherwise you're reduced to the level of barter for it, and that's really inefficient.

      Without such trade the US wouldn't be able to easily buy from Brazil, Brazil from China, China from Russia, Russia from Germany, and Germany from the USA. For example, of course.

      It's HOW you connect currency values together.

      I've lived through what that can do. A few years ago, a number of investors worldwide decided to cash in via South African Rand. So they dumped it... lots... in a week they drove it from a fairly realistic (at the time) R5.50 to the dollar to under R14 a dollar.

      Ouch... That's why you generally want a central bank that acts as a kind of brake on that sort of stuff. So those traders end up losing money. ;)

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    201. Re:Independent studies warranted by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      [quote]Ouch... That's why you generally want a central bank that acts as a kind of brake on that sort of stuff. So those traders end up losing money. ;)[/quote]

      We've got one - they failed then - it led to a bunch of new regulations. On the upside, there hasn't been a repeat. But it also brought out how human nature acts -which is often overlooked.

      There was ZERO recovery in prices as the rand recovered. Even though import costs came down again - local shop prices STAYED where they had been, and the shops were happy to now just write a much bigger margin. They've been going up ever since. With the occasional spike when international events made import costs rise above average (like the Iraq war starting).

      But basically - when your currency value recovers from an undervalued position - your prices do NOT improve. That means retailers get benefit from that recovery - but the entire rest of the economy never does, because the effective value of the currency (that which it can buy) is devalued PERMANENTLY.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    202. Re:Independent studies warranted by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Huh interesting. I thought microwaves were up above visible. My grasp of physics is almost entirely handled by modeling the whole universe in my head; sometimes I mix up the documented science.

    203. Re:Independent studies warranted by x2A · · Score: 1

      Well, it's only a label, look at Pluto, even if you get the label right there's no guarentee someone's not gonna just decide to start calling it something else! The model's still the same tho so, all good :-)

      --
      The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
    204. Re:Independent studies warranted by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      But basically - when your currency value recovers from an undervalued position - your prices do NOT improve. That means retailers get benefit from that recovery - but the entire rest of the economy never does, because the effective value of the currency (that which it can buy) is devalued PERMANENTLY.

      ouch... Sounds like you don't have enough competition.

      On the other hand, it looks like the situation in China is improving: http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=10/06/07/1624239

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  2. Wait, what? by Karganeth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They only had 2 hives in their experiment?

    1. Re:Wait, what? by clang_jangle · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not only that, but they put the phones in the hives. I can see how that would be quite disruptive to the little critters; generally we don't go to a beehive to call people on our cell phones. Surely the likelihood of a proximity effect renders this study kind of useless?

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    2. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was the first thing I thought too, Hardly "proof" as they claim is it?

    3. Re:Wait, what? by buchner.johannes · · Score: 3, Funny

      Exactly, maybe one queen had poor leadership.

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    4. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. A serious problem with the experiment. Sure, it's an interesting result from 2 hives, but that's a pathetic number from which to draw any conclusions. All it shows is there may be justification for doing a similar experiment with a much larger number. Like, say, 50 or 100. Then the results will start to be meaningful. But I'll lay odds that at that point there won't be any statistically significant difference.

    5. Re:Wait, what? by dwarfsoft · · Score: 1

      To make the extrapolation far more interesting perhaps?

      --
      Cheers, Chris
    6. Re:Wait, what? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's also the whole "inverse square law" thing. Power drops off with the square of distance. So if something is outputting 3 watts right at the transmitter, you are not receiving 3 watts when you are 100 feet away. Even if the energy from mobile devices is what has an impact, you need to test it in the levels yo actually see in the real world. As an example: My phone currently shows 4 bars, which is the max for the model (Curve 8330). When I ask it how powerful the signal it is getting, it says -80dBm. That is 10 picowatts, or 0.00000000001 watts. The maximum output for a class 1 mobile phone is 33dBm, which is 2 watts. I should note this is a strong signal. The phone works fine with signals less than -90dBm.

      So, when you are talking about being right next to the transmitter, as opposed to a normal distance away, you are talking many MANY orders of magnitude of signal difference. The signal of cell towers is extremely weak at the average location in the city (and weaker still in the country). They work with low signal strength and low SNR. That's the reason they work with low power devices.

      Even if the physical presence of the phone doesn't fuck with the results, the power very well could. If they want to test this properly it would require multiple hives, and transmitters that bathed the area in the kind of energy you'd see from the actual network.

    7. Re:Wait, what? by cain · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not really. Both hives had phones in them. In one of the hives, the phones were powered on for two, 15 minutes periods per day. In the hive with the active phone, the bees stopped producing honey and there was a "dramatic" decline in the bee population for that hive. That seems like something, not nothing and seems like it'd be worth further study. This is the first step. If nothing had happened, they could dicard the thesis, but something did happen. Maybe the next step is hive near cell towers and hives not near cell towers.

    8. Re:Wait, what? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Or maybe she was secretly gay? Damn gays, ruining the sanctity of bee marriage with their... gay rays.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    9. Re:Wait, what? by buchner.johannes · · Score: 4, Informative

      You both are wrong:
      1. they actually used 4 hives
      2. the control group had phone dummies installed. So the "proximity effect" was controlled.

      It is unfortunate to see that the paper -- http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/25may2010/1376.pdf -- does not include a statistical test to evaluate that the results are due to chance, but it seems significant ... anyone care to do a ANOVA?

      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    10. Re:Wait, what? by arkenian · · Score: 1
      have to agree. I would assume the bees were annoyed by trace vibrations, the lights, the extra heat . . .

      There really is no mechanism here. Cell Phone radiation is the wrong wavelength to do much of anything.

    11. Re:Wait, what? by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      The ring tone was "Flight of the Bumble Bee." It drives them BEE bats.

    12. Re:Wait, what? by shawnap · · Score: 1

      It is unfortunate to see that the paper -- http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/25may2010/1376.pdf -- does not include a statistical test to evaluate that the results are due to chance, but it seems significant ... anyone care to do a ANOVA?

      On what? The numbers '9' and '5'?
      Umm....they're different.

      Don't waste your time thinking about this paper; it's garbage.

    13. Re:Wait, what? by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

      Have they not heard of "science," or are they completely untrained and new to it? *TWO* hives, with the phones *IN* the hives, and we're supposed draw conclusions? Good lord, how do this ever get printed? Hello, peer review? Oh, I suppose there is no peer review process for idiot pseudo-scientist quacks. The Telegraph needs a new editor, I think.

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
    14. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not significant if you apply inverse square law...

    15. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the control group had phone dummies installed. So the "proximity effect" was controlled.

      I do hope you've read the rest of this discussion so you can see how silly that claim is. :)

    16. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not significant at the 0.10 level. If you sort the hives by some variable, there are 24 different orderings, so if no effect is operative the chance of getting any particular ordering is 1/24. In this case, there are 4 different orderings that would have yielded a positive result (the two treatment hives failing to thrive, in either order relative to the control hives in either order), so p = 0.16.

    17. Re:Wait, what? by Plekto · · Score: 1

      In this case, there are 4 different orderings that would have yielded a positive result (the two treatment hives failing to thrive, in either order relative to the control hives in either order), so p = 0.16.

      Still, considering that we have no other even semi-plausible reasons that we have found to date, having it be significant at even a .20 level should at least warrant further study. Its not like it's going to cost millions to put a few hives near a few cell phone towers and see what happens.

    18. Re:Wait, what? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      They had four of them, still a small sample size of course though that doesn't mean results are necessarily wrong. If the two sets behave almost identical (both controls thrive, both test hives perish, and not much difference within the pairs) and very different from the other set, then the results are very significant. That part they had correct. Putting the phones inside the hives is also not too bad an idea to increase the radiation level and get clearer results that way.

      However there are several control experiments that I am missing here:

      • The hives with the phones but then in all four hives the phones off. Look over a few months, see what happens.
      • I would not use dummies in the control, but identical phones, just switched off all the time. Maybe the phones give off chemicals such as solvents or flame retardants used in the PCB production, or chemicals from the battery.
      • After the results come in, switch the pattern. Start switching on the phones in the hives instead, and see if the results reverse. If it is really the phones, the original hives should start to thrive, and the original hives should start to perish.
        • And how about the display light of the real phones? Most phones switch on their display when switched on, or when called. The light they give off is yet another difference between the two sets.

        While the experiment is interesting I miss these controls. And the fact they used dummy phones means to me that it is highly possible that chemicals given off by the real phones are the culprit. There surely looks like an effect of the phones in the hive, but it needs more testing. There are too many flaws in their methods: using dummies instead of actual phones in the control, not reversing them, the display light... maybe more that I don't think of right now.

    19. Re:Wait, what? by 3dr · · Score: 4, Funny

      As a bee that was part of the "mobile" hive (and I resent the assumption that we were not "mobile" before this unfortunate test), I can attest that the researchers got what they were looking for. Of course we're not going to linger around the hive, nor will the queen lay eggs, as long as they keep calling us with some mobile phone company tag line. Can you hear me now? Can you hear me now? Yeah yeah, how about I sting your lab coated ass?

      It's one thing to have a periodic interruption from our "keeper" even though he has a horrible smoking problem. But jeez, phone calls at 3am from a drunk whiner complaining about his love life and apologizing ... is that part of your thesis? Of course the phone's presence will impact us, dumbass.

      Oh, and the text messsages: seriously not funny. Just stop.

    20. Re:Wait, what? by pspahn · · Score: 1

      Tell that to MacCauley Caulkin.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    21. Re:Wait, what? by Vellmont · · Score: 5, Interesting

      4 WHOLE hives you say? Wow.. just wow.

      I'm a beekeeper. Any beekeeper knows that hive productivity and queen laying varies quite a bit. Why? Queens aren't all the same, and the genetics obviously varies. Some queens lay more than other queens. As queens get older, they start to lay less eggs (and eventually the workers give her the boot and make a new queen). The queen will produce all the workers, and her genetics combined with the genetics of the drones she mated with will determine the behavior of the workers produced. There's probably a dozen other factors at work as well.

      The idea that you can take only 4 hives, average the results, and expect any kind of meaningful answer out of that is ridiculous. If they did this with 40 hives I might start listening. But 4? Beyond stupid.

      --
      AccountKiller
    22. Re:Wait, what? by atamido · · Score: 1

      Still, considering that we have no other even semi-plausible reasons that we have found to date

      Please see this:
      http://news.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1670636&cid=32414112

    23. Re:Wait, what? by fru1tcake · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One thing that seems to be missed in the discussion (not that I have read all the research or anything) is the factor that bees forage. They don't just stay in the immediate vicinity of their hives, they go and hunt, then go and tell their workmates where to look. So if the food is rarely very close to the towers (which is likely since many towers, at least in cities, are on the top of tall buildings, not in lush gardens), they will rarely get particularly close to them. But suppose a forager happens to find a good food source with a tower nearby - but far enough that he can still find his way back? Many of the worker bees head to the area and start collecting happily, but gradually get closer and closer to the tower as they progress through the area. The initial find might be a "safe" distance, but the bulk of the hive could end up disoriented by the end of the day and never make it back to the hive.

      --
      It's not a bug, it's a lepidopter!
    24. Re:Wait, what? by plover · · Score: 1

      I don't think extra controls would have make a whit of difference in the validity of this particular study. There's simply too much variance in the environment to draw a conclusion. Valid results would be drowned in the noise of other potential natural causes of CCD: toxins, pesticides, fungi, viral infections, feral bees, predators, parasites, etc.

      A proper experiment would require hundreds if not thousands of hives. And yes, they'd need better protocols for handling the phones (I like your theory about outgassing), although the idea of having the phones actually inside the hives is still absurd as a potential cause of CCD, as this experiment likely provided the world with the only two hives ever to actually have cell phones inside them.

      --
      John
    25. Re:Wait, what? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wouldn't matter. Individual bees are unimportant. Their society is structured much like ants in that the individual worker matters little. After all, a bee kills itself to attack a predator. When they sting, their stinger becomes embedded in what they attack, and it results in their death.

      So if a few bees got disoriented and couldn't make it home, wouldn't do anything to the colony. Bees don't make it home all the time. They die for various reasons (they are food for a number of creatures). It would have to be something that had a much wider effect to kill colonies (especially multiple ones).

      Also, one of the consequences of the square part of the inverse square law is that power drops very quickly at first. If you look at a graph of the general function (f(x) = 1/x^2) you notice that is plummets very quickly then goes around a bend and levels off. This means that the difference between 5 inches away from a transmitter and 5 feet is much larger than the difference between 50 and 100 feet.

    26. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And furthermore, there's no word on which ring tones were used in the study. I know what effect some of my co-workers' ring tones have on my productivity...

    27. Re:Wait, what? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      It is easy enough to keep the other variables at bay, really.

      How to set up the experiment: take four hives from a beekeeper, same hives, same colony size, etc. Ask the beekeeper to continue to take care of those four as normal. Position them say 10m apart: far enough for the phone signal to become sufficiently weak for non-exposed colonies; close enough to be in the same microclimate.

      Install a phone in each of them: four phones, connected to the charger to keep them working, all connected to a remote control system to switch them on/off. Disable or remove any lights from the phone.

      Leave them for a while with the phones off, just connected, look at the results (the beekeeper will know how long that has to be). Have the beekeeper keep daily records of colony health, including any fungus infection or other serious issues that he may spot. If you have a disease well that would kill part of your experiment.

      Then without telling the beekeeper when and which start switching on two of the phones (double-blind).

      See if there is any difference.

      After a period of time, start switching on the other phones, keeping the original two off.

      See if there is any difference.

      This really should do the job. If there is colony collapse when the phones are on, but they restore when phones off and then the other two start to collapse, then the chance of other environmental variables is so slim. Remember we are taking hives that are fairly close together, so weather/food supply/etc is basically the same.

      The main thing you have to be looking for here is reproducibility: do the colonies thrive with phones but no RF? Do they always collapse when it is switch on? Do they restore as soon as the signal is gone? If that is the case, and reproducible so, then you have a scientific result. And no need for hundreds or hives.

    28. Re:Wait, what? by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      They had four of them, still a small sample size of course though that doesn't mean results are necessarily wrong.

      No, it means the results are meaningless (quite literally).

      If the two sets behave almost identical

      Except they don't, and anyone with a lick of sense about bees knows that. This isn't a carefully controlled machine made in a factory assembly line where nothing varies much. It's a box sitting out in a field somewhere that each contain a different queen which determine the behavior of the rest of the colony through genetics. Not only that, bees are subject to a bunch of diseases we already know about. Colonies are infected with mites, foulbrood, and a host of other different diseases. 4 colonies is nowhere near enough to adjust for this natural variability.

      It's exactly these reasons and many others that you need LARGE sample sizes to have any hope of trying to produce meaningful results in science. This kind of variability in samples has been known about for a LONG LONG time, and is certainly nothing to be surprised about. The researchers who wrote this study should be sacked, and the journal that published it should lose all its subscribers.
           

      --
      AccountKiller
    29. Re:Wait, what? by Plekto · · Score: 1

      And what does using 40 or 100 hives cost? It's not like there's a shortage of eccentric backyard scientists and engineers in the U.K.

    30. Re:Wait, what? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      What kind of journal publishes an article like that with no statistical test? Funny, Current Science looks like the leading light of Indian journals, not a bunk journal. Worse, the authors say "significantly" without a p-value to back it up. Very shoddy. And suspicious.

    31. Re:Wait, what? by Surt · · Score: 1

      The ANOVA with 4 samples will tell you you can't make the 95% rejection of null hypothesis.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    32. Re:Wait, what? by brusk · · Score: 1

      The "dummy phone" control sounds like it was done stupidly. (A) it wasn't blind (the researchers knew which hive had the dummy) and (B) if it didn't "ring" -- light up, warm up, make a sound, just not transmit and receive radio transmissions -- the experiment isn't separating the effect of having an active electronic device inside the hive from one specifically that transmits radio waves.

      --
      .sig withheld by request
    33. Re:Wait, what? by captainpanic · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but they put the phones in the hives. I can see how that would be quite disruptive to the little critters; generally we don't go to a beehive to call people on our cell phones. Surely the likelihood of a proximity effect renders this study kind of useless?

      The strongest signal doesn't originate from the phones though. It originates from the large masts scattered through the land. Those will affect a significant area. Especially the masts in rural areas have a higher power (I think - need to find a source though) because they serve a much larger area.

      But seriously - how hard can it be to do a serious worldwide experiment with a bunch of bees? It's so important, that you'd think there would be some small funding available? There is no need to involve the phone companies - just some small government funding for an independent group of researchers... to do some, you know, science... stuff researchers do all the time.

    34. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *fewer* eggs. "eggs" is a noun, and a countable one at that, because you can count individual eggs. Therefore, it is correct to use "fewer" when comparing quantities of countable nouns, like "eggs": "As queens get older, they start to lay *fewer* eggs...." On the other hand, "less" is correct when you are comparing quantities of uncountable nouns, like milk in a glass: "That glass has less milk in it than this glass."

      FTFY

    35. Re:Wait, what? by quintesse · · Score: 1

      Besides the fact that installing dummy phones supposedly takes care of the "proximity effect". As if bees are influenced by the same psycholigical effects as humans. Talk about "beyond stupid".

    36. Re:Wait, what? by vlm · · Score: 1

      The maximum output for a class 1 mobile phone is 33dBm, which is 2 watts.

      I find it highly unlikely you own one. Maybe you do, but probably not. Most people own phones limited to about 28 dBmW peak. Which doesn't mean they ever operate at full power, either.

      For those whom don't understand decibels, (almost certainly including the original experimenters) that 5 dB difference is almost a factor of 4 of power, and would seem to result in almost a factor of 4 lower effect on the bees or whatever.

      Unless the original experimenters had a religious or magical belief / outlook on life, in which case there is no point reasoning with them. Which generally seems to be the case with "cellphones cause X" crusaders.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    37. Re:Wait, what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Jean Luc Picard voice

      There are 4 hives!!!

    38. Re:Wait, what? by emt377 · · Score: 1

      Even if the physical presence of the phone doesn't fuck with the results, the power very well could. If they want to test this properly it would require multiple hives, and transmitters that bathed the area in the kind of energy you'd see from the actual network.

      The test clearly was to determine whether cell phones - for whatever reason - can affect bees. If this experiment had shown no difference whatsoever it would have been fairly conclusive that cell phones don't affect bees. With some follow up studies this would have been case closed. However, instead they found some particular aspect of cell phones - which is yet to be determined - affects bees. Maybe it's the plastic casing, or it smells funny, or emits high pitched sounds, or whatever - but something about it clearly affects bees. Now further experiments and studies have something to follow up on. This is how science works.

    39. Re:Wait, what? by emt377 · · Score: 1

      By the way, I agree that a sample of four hives is silly and negates the results. But it's worth following up IMO with a larger sample size.

  3. HEHE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FIRST!

  4. Easy to fix by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 5, Funny

    Tell the damn queen to stop texting and get back to work.

    --
    No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
  5. Sample size by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

    It sounds like a very possible cause thing to investigate, but it would have been nice if there were more than just two hives involved in the experiment. I hope a follow-on experiment is done with more hives.

    It will be very interesting if cell phones and bees come into conflict. Considering all the jack-assery that I've seen associated with cell phones, there's a part of me that would love to see then banned.

    1. Re:Sample size by Hikaru79 · · Score: 1

      I think it's so cute that you think that -- even if cell phones were proven beyond any reasonable doubt to be singlehandedly responsible for killing bees and twenty other varieties of non-cute animals -- they would ever be "banned" for that reason. Seriously, you're adorable :)

    2. Re:Sample size by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just for that, I'm going to shoot a puppy.

    3. Re:Sample size by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bees are one of the most, if not the most, important animals on this planet. They pollinate almost every plant.

    4. Re:Sample size by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Considering all the jack-assery that I've seen associated with cell phones, there's a part of me that would love to see then banned.

      I'm posting as AC because I already modded in this thread. I'm also feeling cranky because I have to go to work tomorrow so I'll take this to the ridiculous extreme.

      I see comments like this from time to time and I'm not going to jump on DOD but instead depersonalize it. Whenever someone makes a comment about cell phones being banned, I would ask them to lead by example. Get rid of their phone and ask everyone you're with to turn theirs off or leave them at home (wife/husband/sig other/kids/parents/friends/whatever). I don't miss the days of staying home while on-call or using a two way pager and then having to find a phone. I laugh at the "old" movies where the chase is on but they stop to make a call to get backup or alert the victim to their impending doom. Or the cliche of waving down a passing car on a dark rainy to get assistance with (insert what you can't fix here). Or the time I walked to a farmhouse and instead of Frank N. Furter doing the Time Warp I was met by a pack of dogs. And the other things... GPS/maps/Internet/email/etc. I could go on but I'm not that clever. You get the idea. I'm not willing to give all that up because someone on the bus thinks they are important and they want me to think that too.

      Oh, and for all the vaccine haters out there, I also don't miss polio.

    5. Re:Sample size by spazdor · · Score: 1

      Yes, all of that is true.

      But when have we ever let things like that trump small technological conveniences?

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    6. Re:Sample size by hedwards · · Score: 1

      I'd shoot a puppy if I could get the next generation of iPads right now.

    7. Re:Sample size by spazdor · · Score: 1

      We all would. That is why Earth is doomed.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    8. Re:Sample size by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

      It sounds like a very possible cause thing to investigate

      Why is it possible? Cell phones operate on fairly low power radio frequencies that have never been shown to have any effect on anything living unless perhaps they are within a foot of it, and even that is debatable and not agreed upon. Why would honeybees possibly be affected by this? I say it could be unicorns eating all the bees, does that make it possible? Or maybe it is grey ETs stealing them in order to produce honey on the planet Zebularious. God doesn't like bees?

      You have anti-technology conspiracy theorists making claims without any evidence and before studies have been done, and people believe these nut jobs and jump to conclusions. Perhaps we should do some good, scientific studies (rather than this crap with only two hives that gives us absolutely NO statistically relevant data) just to prove the wackos wrong, though they won't believe anything that contradicts their magical thinking anyway. You don't like cell phones, so you are looking for reasons to ban them, and your prejudice is showing. We don't need a "follow up," we need something that is designed from the ground up to follow good scientific methods and that will result in usable data. Until then, business as usual. Gotta go, my cell phone is ringing, and I need to text my mom because we're out of Hot Pockets - I'll check this thread later, from my phone.

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
    9. Re:Sample size by MoralHazard · · Score: 1

      Damn, wow, I never realized that before. Terrible architectural choice, there. I mean, really, what self-respecting omnipotent overbeing would *intelligently*, *intentionally* design the entire ecosystem around a single-source provider like that? It's either incompetence, or it's a sign of organizational problems--maybe a lack of unified management vision from the top?

      Either way, somebody fire the moron who built this crap heap infrastructure. And I don't care it it's his first goddamn time--why should our organization have to suffer through his little "learning experiences"? HR has got to filter those resumes better, or this shop is a sinking ship.

  6. two hives by mkavanagh2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    that's a sample size that even andrew wakefield would have considered ridiculous

    1. Re:two hives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Four actually, but yeah. Paper.

    2. Re:two hives by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      Probably why it was published in a non peer-reviewed journal. Zero chance it would pass peer review.

    3. Re:two hives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong, it is a peer-reviewed journal. Read the instructions to authors: http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/publish.pdf

    4. Re:two hives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good enough for a pilot study. But barely.

    5. Re:two hives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know it makes you feel all "sciency" and bad ass to make that comment but it actually elucidates total unfamiliarity with Wakefield's work. He published a case study, dumbass, not an empirical study.

      So not only have you not read what you deride you don't even seem to have a grasp of the basic practice of the scientific method.

      Call me a denialist next so we can certify your membership in the industrial-psuedoscience-is-my-religion cult.

    6. Re:two hives by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It's ok for a preliminary investigation. Obviously they have found nothing conclusive. Too bad the media doesn't understand that.

      --
      Qxe4
    7. Re:two hives by shipbrick · · Score: 1

      Yeah. It looks and reads like a science fair project...

    8. Re:two hives by repapetilto · · Score: 1

      Science for babies or something. Hypothesis: What are teeth made of? Conclusion: Bone.

  7. This is actually a very serieus problem. by santax · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The grandparent from ms. Santax is a bee-keeper. He told me about the many losses of complete hyves in recent years, not only at his place, but with the 'competition' also. If this is truly the reason or of an influence of this magnitude as suggested by the article, then we really really really need to shut down those GSM-freqencies and fix it or find a better alternative. Cause else there won't be anybody left to call in about 40 years.

    1. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Compholio · · Score: 2, Informative

      The grandparent from ms. Santax is a bee-keeper. He told me about the many losses of complete hyves in recent years, not only at his place, but with the 'competition' also. If this is truly the reason or of an influence of this magnitude as suggested by the article, then we really really really need to shut down those GSM-freqencies and fix it or find a better alternative. Cause else there won't be anybody left to call in about 40 years.

      I haven't raised bees in a while, but I remember "mites" being the really big problem affecting most hives (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varroa_destructor)

    2. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by santax · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah mites and parasites are both causes that they at least 'suspect' to be also responsible. I am in no way saying: oh look we found it. I'm just saying that this is at least very interesting and imho should be researched again. With bigger and more populations. It really could prove to be an important factor... or not.

    3. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it were mites, it would be detected easily. However, mites can't explain the strange disappearance of bees.

    4. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      maybe people from the future are abducting the bees?

    5. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you should offer to build a faraday cage around his hives, and see how he does compared to the competition.

    6. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by budgenator · · Score: 1

      It seems to me if "electro-smog" was the problem, the problem would be seen decreasing with increasing range of cell towers. In my neck of the woods I can literally ride my bicycle out of cell phone range, so it shouldn't be too hard to find apiarists in low EMF locations to compare with apiarists in high EMF areas for comparison.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    7. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not a very interesting cause. If not cell phones, then it should be some other ill of modern society.

      I blame Facebook.

    8. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by RoFLKOPTr · · Score: 1

      I haven't raised bees in a while, but I remember "mites" being the really big problem affecting most hives (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Varroa_destructor)

      And because mites are smaller, cell phone radiation must have an even greater effect on them. Therefore, cell phones kill mites at a greater rate than bees, therefore cell phones save bees!!

      Save the bees! Build more cell towers!

    9. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although I don't personally believe cell phone radiation is a danger to bees any more than it is to humans, the effects of any possible EM radiation should be mitigated by the fact that as we move to 3G (WCDMA) and 4G (OFDM), the energy is distributed across a wide frequency band and therefore energy per frequency band decreases ever more until it is really no more energetic than background radiation already is.

      For example, 3G won't cause your badly shielded speakers to do the tat tat tah tah taaa tat tat tat taah sounds when connecting a call like GSM does. Furthermore, the switchover to 3G is going to be quite fast because GSM is already getting old and carriers in Finland are talking about shutting down GSM networks starting in 2015. If GSM radiation is harmful (which I seriously doubt), it won't matter anyway in a couple of years.

    10. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Sulphur · · Score: 2, Funny

      We have ways of making them explain.

    11. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      If it where as simple as mites, US scientists would have noticed them.
      Big veterinary pharmaceutical interests would have a product out that does not really harm the bees or the honey and is IP lawyered up for years.
      Think of the deals going on then:
      Well, baby, me so honey. Me so honey. Me protect you long time. You apiculture?
      Yeah, we might apiculture. How much?
      Fifteen dolla.
      Fifteen dollars for both of us?
      No. Each you fifteen dolla. Me protect you long time. Me so honey.
      Five dollars is all my subsidy allows me to spend.
      Until then someone in India is thinking and with funds can expand their testing.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    12. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Funny the bees had no problems back in the 70s when the GSM band was UHF television channels 70-83. Because you'd think that if little 3-5 watt transmitters are killing the bees, then high power broadcast antennas would have had some noticeable effect.

    13. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by repapetilto · · Score: 1

      People walking outside disturb bees and cause them to fly in directions they otherwise woudlnt, at which time they may detect flowers and report this back to home base. People walk around outside less if they have something to do on the internet. Most people spend most of their time on the internet on facebook. Theoretically facebook could be a contributing factor here.

    14. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by fezzzz · · Score: 1

      Depending on the inverse square law, these transmitters may be very far away from the hives in question and their effect very small, but I am interested in the bees' activity near these transmitters as they do transmit 10 or 20 times more power than cell phone base stations. Though the frequency is different, so is the frequency of high tension power lines in which other studies were performed.

    15. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many stations actually transmitted on 70-83 back in the 70s?

      How many cell towers now transmit on that frequency?

      I would bet the affected area is now MANY MANY times greater.

      I know a guy who field serviced cell towers and he noted about 5 years ago that he had found many dead bees at the base of the towers. I think this has been suspected for a while now.

    16. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      Likewise I think, the global decline in Piracy the last few centuries has been directly correlated with Bee death (among other environmental issues).

    17. Re:This is actually a very serieus problem. by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

      List of former TV stations with channel numbers above 69: http://www.w9wi.com/articles/gt69.html Note that some of them were quite large, such as KGIN in Nebraska which has a transmitter on channel 70 in Gothenburg that transmitted more than 11 thousand watts.

  8. Soo by Dyinobal · · Score: 1

    So how do they know mobile hive didn't catch something that had nothing to do with a freaking cell phone, like bee stds or something.

    1. Re:Soo by MChisholm · · Score: 1

      RTFA - mobile hive wore a condom.

  9. No no. by Colin+Smith · · Score: 3, Funny

    There were millions of bees. The results are highly significant.

    Clearly we are seeing a great contribution to science.

     

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:No no. by zippthorne · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Millions of bees, but all daughters of one of two queens.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    2. Re:No no. by Dolphinzilla · · Score: 4, Funny

      I say we ban cell phones from bee-hives immediately - let them use old fashioned land lines instead

    3. Re:No no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Land lines?! That's the most ridiculous thing I've heard all day - imagine the cost of installing them! No, I say, let the bees use public phones if they indeed must call somewhere.

    4. Re:No no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's a public phone?

  10. Inverse-square law of radiation says no by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm sorry, but if you have to place the cell phone right in the hive there's no way a hive more than five feet away from a cell phone 24x7 is going to be impacted by this.

    Perhaps the bees just got really into texting to the exclusion of pollen gathering.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Inverse-square law of radiation says no by stokessd · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can see it now, they kept trying to text the other hive and when they didn't get a response, the first hive realized that they weren't BFF and got depressed and stopped collecting pollen, making honey and doing the nasty with the queen...

      Sheldon

    2. Re:Inverse-square law of radiation says no by electricprof · · Score: 1

      Exactly! AND ... reading all those text messages in the dark gave the queen a headache ...

    3. Re:Inverse-square law of radiation says no by mikeb · · Score: 1

      It's only the drones (male bees) that do the nasty with the queen, and they only do that at the beginning of her career when she makes a small number of mating flights prior to laying eggs. After that she's kept so full of eggs and food that her formerly trim figure disappears and she's too fat to fly and her mating days are over.

      The drones have a modified sting for a penis and when they mate with the queen several hundred feet high, it's ripped from their body along with half their guts and they fall dead to the ground. Some people report having heard an audible 'pop' as the poor/lucky devils consummate their desire.You do wonder why they bother ...

  11. CCD Overblown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Waitaminute... I thought I read in Scientific American or somesuch that the recent CCD scare was actually just a surge in reporting in the media, not an actual dramatic increase in rates. Furthermore, most of the real cases were attributed to more mundane causes pesticides or the stress of a colony being moved...

    Someone back this poor AC up with a link.

    1. Re:CCD Overblown by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      the problem is there's so much bullshit on blogs and environmental sites you can't find any good info on the subject - they are all trying to out do each other predicting the end of the world.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  12. should have used Googles Android by AffidavitDonda · · Score: 4, Funny

    then the bees could have used the gps and google maps

    1. Re:should have used Googles Android by fustakrakich · · Score: 4, Funny

      But then they would all be smashed on somebody's windshield..

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    2. Re:should have used Googles Android by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'd probably spend too much time on buzz though.

    3. Re:should have used Googles Android by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      But then they would be too wrapped up in figuring out how to tweet a waggle dance.

    4. Re:should have used Googles Android by pspahn · · Score: 1

      I actually just drove through a swarm of bees on my way home from work last week. Several dozen splat marks are still there.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    5. Re:should have used Googles Android by AffidavitDonda · · Score: 1

      I volunteer to write them an app that creates a waggle pattern based on gps data

  13. Disregarding poor methodology... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Bees do find their way back to the hive by observing polarized light from the sun's rays scattering in the atmosphere, the frequencies involved are far, far different than the ~1GHz used in cell phone bands.

    1. Re:Disregarding poor methodology... by tagno25 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So a more likely cause would be pollution?

    2. Re:Disregarding poor methodology... by vsage3 · · Score: 1

      (I was the GP) More likely than cell phones, definitely. Pollution causes less incident light to be polarized, and therefore makes it harder for bees to use it for travel. see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polarized_light_pollution

    3. Re:Disregarding poor methodology... by pspahn · · Score: 1

      When I first heard about CCD, my first instinct was that it was due to all the smoke and haze in the atmosphere from wildfires. I learned about it while near Santa Cruz and it was not long after they had some serious fires. I'm sure my theory is not really the cause, but it does make sense, bees don't like smoke.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
  14. This crap gives science a bad reputation by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I mean, seriously.

    And the bloody media come up with crap like "Mobile phones responsible for disappearance of honey bee" based on it.

    "Study says", "scientists say". It's tealeaf reading. Crystal ball gazing. Science is nothing more than a marketing term to convince people to buy whatever they're selling.

    We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not.

     

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by skelterjohn · · Score: 1

      We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not.

      It's called FUD.

    2. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by The+Wild+Norseman · · Score: 5, Informative

      We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not.

      Um... pseudoscience?

      --
      "A government is a body of people usually -- notably -- ungoverned." -Shepherd Book
    3. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by ckaminski · · Score: 1, Troll

      We have some. Quackery, Snake Oil, religion, etc.

    4. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      religion?

    5. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by rodarson2k · · Score: 1

      Science is nothing more than a marketing term to convince people to buy whatever they're selling.

      The scientists just wanted to see if there was any merit in studying the effect of cellphones on bees. They chose an experiment which would disprove the hypothesis: "cell phones have no effect on bees". They succeeded. (as well as they can with n=2, at least) They now have reasons to continue investigations, with more hives, multiple levels of radiation, different distances, etc etc.

      The person who wrote the article, on the other hand, is trying to sensationalize, overreach, and overconclude. The scientists just want more studies, the journalist just wants to convince people that the status quo is wrong.

      Science is not to blame. Science journalism is to blame.

    6. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by The+Grim+Reefer2 · · Score: 1

      We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not.

      I vote "Scientology".

    7. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by fyoder · · Score: 1

      We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not.

      They saw a problem, came up with an hypothesis, designed an experiment to test it -- sounds like science to me. You can blow holes in their experimental design easily enough, especially since not many beehives are equipped with a pair of phones (I believe bees communicate through some sort of dance, if some vague memory of an old tv documentary is correct), but the worst you can call it is bad science.

      I suppose you could say that bad science gives science a bad reputation, but I'm pretty sure the philosophy and the method will survive it. If you're concerned about science as a belief system, well, I'm not a believer so will refrain from comment.

      --
      Loose lips lose spit.
    8. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by masterwit · · Score: 1

      Quote from the article that should have been in bold at the top:

      "Previous work in this area has indicated this [mobile phone use] is not a real factor," he said. "If new data comes along we will look at it."

      He said: "At the moment we think is more likely to be a combination of factors including disease, pesticides and habitat loss."

      On a more serious note, however,

      It is time to bring back the guillotine.

      perhaps the article's author Dean Nelson is a candidate?

      --
      We should start a new Slashdot and return control to the geeks. It actually wouldn't be that hard to get some users to
    9. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the worst you can call it is bad science.

      I'm going to go with "Science Fail."

    10. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      A theory awaiting funding.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    11. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by multipartmixed · · Score: 1

      > We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not.

      I propose the term "Junk Science"

      --

      Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    12. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Phrogman · · Score: 1

      "We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not."

      We have one: Fox News :P

      --
      "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
    13. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "bullshit"

    14. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by shipbrick · · Score: 1

      Pseudoscience is the word you are looking for. Sadly though since it has the suffix science in it, some people might see that word as a credential...

    15. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I say we coin the word "pseudoscience".

    16. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by sakonofie · · Score: 1

      Psuedoscience is I believe the word you are looking for.

    17. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by repapetilto · · Score: 1

      No they wasted their time and whatever money this ended up costing them. This study was a waste of time besides what little it taught whoever was doing it about the scientific method and statistics. Since they appeared to get so little guidance, actually getting a "publication" out of it may have done more harm than good even on that front.

    18. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We need a term to describe things which appear to be science but in fact which are not.

      You mean like pseudo-science?

    19. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by quintesse · · Score: 1
    20. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i thought that term was front page news?

    21. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Science is nothing more than a marketing term to convince people to buy whatever they're selling.

      Really? Nothing more? Nothing at all? It's 100% completely false promises, that have never yielded any advances in human well-being?

      I won't deny that there is a large component of marketing in science. There definitely is. It's still the *only* method we have of understanding the world that has worked even a little. Would you rather we be listening to witch doctors?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    22. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > They chose an experiment which would disprove the hypothesis: "cell phones
      > have no effect on bees".

      No. They chose an experiment that would neither prove nor disprove anything.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    23. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have several terms:

      * Science-Fiction
      * Pseudo-Science
      * Religion
      * Scientology

    24. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Creedo · · Score: 1

      Pseudo-science seems to apply nicely.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    25. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      science fiction

    26. Re:This crap gives science a bad reputation by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      bullshit is a much better descriptive term

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
  15. It doesn't explain losses at remote apiaries... by puppetman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was talking to a fellow beekeeper on Quadra Island, which is in a very rural part of the province, with a population of about 2000 people. This beekeeper lost 470 hives out of 500 this year.

    There aren't many people, and cellphone service is poor... I doubt there are many phones there.

    I'm skeptical until a lot more research is done.

    1. Re:It doesn't explain losses at remote apiaries... by PhoenixFlare · · Score: 4, Informative

      I just came back from a stay at a bed & breakfast in rural Virginia, where the innkeeper's husband also happens to keep 10 hives of bees on the property - very poor cellphone service in the whole area, 1 bar of EDGE reception, if even that much. He lost 8 of the 10 hives to apparent Colony Collapse a few years ago, but completely back to normal now.

    2. Re:It doesn't explain losses at remote apiaries... by The+Grim+Reefer2 · · Score: 1

      Maybe they heard about the situation at Foxxcon and thought they'd take it to the next level.

    3. Re:It doesn't explain losses at remote apiaries... by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      According to articles I have read, the main culprit is two mites. One affects the breathing apparatus of the bee, while the other one sucks it's blood. The blood sucking mite is the more devastating one, since relative to the bee it is fairly large (if you make fist with your hand and place it anywhere one your body, that's the size comparison). Once a couple of those mites attach themselves the bee becomes severely weakened allowing the other bacteria and fungi that the parasite carries to infect the bee.

      Currently there is no known effective treatment for the blood sucking mite (it's native to Asia so has no natural predators here).

      --
      ~X~
    4. Re:It doesn't explain losses at remote apiaries... by dorre · · Score: 1

      Poor reception might actually raise the background noise from phones. You see when a phone dont get a strong signal it "cranks up the volume".
      So if you're a bee keeper, running around the hives with a phone without reception might produce more background noise than in an area of good reception...
      But also I am skeptical to this research...

    5. Re:It doesn't explain losses at remote apiaries... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The magnetic north pole is shifting at a rate of 40 km per year. This is a recent event and is accelerating. Honey bees magnetically orient themselves. The effects would be felt more in Canada than in Florida, for example. That's my hypothesis. Unfortunately, I don't have enough money or skill to test this. To me it seems far more plausible than weak electromagnetic radiation.

    6. Re:It doesn't explain losses at remote apiaries... by petgiraffe · · Score: 1

      I sprinkle powdered sugar on my bees. It's remarkably effective at getting rid of Varroa mites (the blood suckers you mention). For some reason powdered sugar makes them fall right off. Also, bees LIKE sugar. So it's win-win.

      --
      -- The reader anything less than completely failing to not misunderstand this sig is cursed.
  16. ROFL - by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey guys! I put a radiation source directly adjacent to a beehive! The bees got sick! MICROWAVES BOOBOO BAD!

    Fucking. Idiots. And you know what else? The greens, hypochondriac 'electrosensitives', and the tabloid media will eat this garbage up when all that it proves is that DIRECTLY IRRADIATING A BEEHIVE is a bad idea.

    A better experiment that wouldn't have been a fearmongering, attention-whoring, complete and utter waste of fucking time would have been to place hives in the vicinity of large static radio and microwave radiation sources and then measure their behavior, and at different ranges. But no, that would be actual worthwhile science, which is something that pants-wetting Luddites can't do.

    By the way, bees do have a sensitivity to magnetism, which can completely explain why placing radio antennae in the hive would cause unusual behavior. I want to know what objects in the environment can cause the same behavior and at what distances. My guess is that outside of utility transformers and high tension lines, the number of potential 'culprits' is going to be pretty close to zero with hives that are more than twenty-five to fifty feet away. You know what else is awesome? Actually taking care of your fucking bees is a great way to put a stop to CCD. This is an agricultural problem, not a radiological one, and the solution will probably be found through studies of insect nutrition, not half-baked, half-assed experiments with cellphones practically AIMED at the tinfoil hat crowd.

  17. bee hives don't seem to mind GPS devices... by Jadware · · Score: 0

    The very last words of the article: "There has been an increase in the number of thefts of hives across the world and in Germany beekeepers have started fitting GPS tracking devices to their hives." Obviously the bee hives seem to work out even when outfitted with GPS transponders, which would be useless without a cellular or other transmitter. Unless they use carrier pigeons to transport the gps position back to the original owners. That could explain the lack of bees, with them all getting scared away by said pigeons.

  18. No effect on bees by jonfr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    GSM and 3G signals should not have any effect of bees. As the waves are too big to have any effect of them. Wavelength of 900Mhz (and 850Mhz) is about 30 cm. It is slightly less at 1800Mhz and 1900Mhz.

    In fact, the waves are bigger then bee in size in most cases.

    This study needs to repeated few more times before any results can come from it.

    1. Re:No effect on bees by santax · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't know about you mate, but if Discovery thought me one thing it is that it is preferable to get hit by a small wave instead of a big one. Don't you guys watch Deadliest Catch?

    2. Re:No effect on bees by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      This study needs to repeated few more times before any results can come from it.

      That's probably why they only used two hives. Gotta make a living, you know!

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    3. Re:No effect on bees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right! In fact, I see now that these signals are bigger than cell phones, too, which means that ..

      O! M! G!

      Cell phones don't work!!!!!111one

      Or maybe it just means that jonfr thinks bees need to be dipole antennas in order to be affected. Cell phones these days use fractal antennas, which are much smaller than the dipole antennas most people are familiar with. Given how complex evolved systems can be, and nervous systems in particular, I could easily see the nervous system of a bee acting as a weak antenna and being affected, however slightly, by cell phone signals.

      Having said that, when I saw that this study was done in India, alarm bells rang in my head. India has produced some amazing scientists (Ramanujan and Chandrasekar come to mind immediately), but lately it seems that every time the news media report on "science" in India they are really reporting pseudo-science. Google for "Prahlad Jani" to see the most recent example of this.

      Nonetheless, the idea that bees could be affected by cell phone signals is by no means unreasonable, and this ought to be investigated. I can't find any links to the actual study - not even so much as an abstract or a news release, so I can't say that it is a bad study or not. I'll not trust the news reports - reporters frequently write bad articles about good science - but I'm not encouraged by what I'm seeing. This study was from a while ago, and the media have been recycling the story for a year or more.

    4. Re:No effect on bees by SpudB0y · · Score: 1

      GSM and 3G signals should not have any effect of bees. As the waves are too big to have any effect of them. Wavelength of 900Mhz (and 850Mhz) is about 30 cm. It is slightly less at 1800Mhz and 1900Mhz.

      In fact, the waves are bigger then bee in size in most cases.

      This study needs to repeated few more times before any results can come from it.

      GSM waves are bigger than most cellphone antennas, yet they have a pretty significant and measurable effect on them. What's your point?

    5. Re:No effect on bees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At 1800 MHz and 1900 MHz, the wavelength is not "slightly less", it's exactly half.

      While I doubt RF energy has nothing to do with the problem, the fact that the wavelength is larger than the bee (and even larger than the molecules inside the bee), that is no reason to dismiss the RF energy as having "no effect". At about 2.5 GHz (2450 MHz, to be exact), water molecules will heat, even though the water molecule is microscopic compared to the 122 mm wavelength of the RF energy. So it's quite likely that some molecules are indeed affected by the frequencies used in cell phone networks, although there does not appear to be any conclusive evidence that this is the underlying cause of the problem. Very poor scientific method implemented in this experiment.

    6. Re:No effect on bees by jonfr · · Score: 1

      To move a water molecules you need a huge amount of energy. A normal microwave for instance is up to 800W of power that is focused at one point. Signal that is disturbed in all direction does not create this effect. It does not matter if we are speaking about 16 cm band (900Mhz being at 33cm wavelength) or 30 cm band or smaller or larger band used in radio communications.

      Normal transmission power for a GSM/3G transmitter is about 50 to 100W (depending on a location). For GSM/3G phones this power is up to 2W at maximum, but usually is a lot less due to how close people normally are to the transmitters. Wireless AP at 2.4Ghz transmit at 500mW in Europe and up to 1W in the U.S. But that does not have any effect of anything, as the signals are too weak to do so. They can't effect the molecules at this power levels.

      In many places for instance there is more background radiation then radiation from a GSM/3G phones and transmitters.

      I am not buying the "argument" from the anti-mobile people, as there claims don't hold up to testing.

      More on background radiation.

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/science/add_aqa/radiation/backgroundradiationrev1.shtml

      http://energy.cr.usgs.gov/radon/usagamma.gif (map of U.S, this is gamma rays that are way more powerful then normal radiation)

    7. Re:No effect on bees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I rather doubt you're correct here.

      After all, cell phones are also smaller than 30 cm, and those signals seem to interact quite well with the phones.

      Your microwave oven is around 2.5 GHz, yet it does a nice job affecting things smaller than 12 cm.

    8. Re:No effect on bees by jonfr · · Score: 1

      You need to read up on how microwave and radio waves work.

      You can do that here for Radio Waves. It the simple explanation. For the Microwave oven you are on your own, I didn't find any good links for it.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_waves

    9. Re:No effect on bees by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > GSM waves are bigger than most cellphone antennas, yet they have a pretty
      > significant and measurable effect on them.

      Take a pile of cellphone antennas. Expose half of them to "GSM waves". Mix them all back together and shuffle them. Now sort out the exposed ones by measuring the significant effect the "GSM waves" had on them.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    10. Re:No effect on bees by SpudB0y · · Score: 1

      So you are saying that since the wavelength is bigger than the bees that is has no effect on them?
      The wavelength of microwave ovens is about 4.8 inches. Try putting some bees in one and let us know what happens.

  19. Bluetooth! Wait - no! by rueger · · Score: 1

    I was going to suggest little teeny tiny earpieces for the bees, but then I got to thinking - isn't Bluetooth radio waves too? Will nothing save the bees and us from this onslaught of radiation!

  20. Not only that, but they also left them... by PaulBu · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... on the loudest setting AND vibrate mode! :)

    Just kidding,

    Paul B.

    1. Re:Not only that, but they also left them... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      the loudest setting AND vibrate mode

      To make them feel at home, just introduce 2 new settings: buzz and sting. Careful not to mix it up with the human models.
       

    2. Re:Not only that, but they also left them... by PiSkyHi · · Score: 1

      ... with auto-answer on and the number taken off the marketing B-list.
      No seriously, just kidding.

    3. Re:Not only that, but they also left them... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bees probably thought it was the "biggest bee ever", and the vibrations kept saying "huge tracts of nectar to the southwest, only a 30 minute flight", which happened to be in the middle of a parking lot.

  21. I don't believe this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So these guys are making claims based on a sample size of 1.

    1. Re:I don't believe this by fluch · · Score: 1

      Yeah! I just thought the same!

      How big is the chance that the oposite observation would have been the case?!

      Similarly: I just made an controled experiment using a coin. Me and my 1 year younger friend got each a coin and threw it up. We agreed that head would win. He got tail, me head. So now we know, older people win when playing Head or Tails.

      Still wonder to which news site to post this...

  22. I know what really happened by jhoegl · · Score: 1

    Poof!
    Youtube already has it down.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7m5vt07W2n4

    1. Re:I know what really happened by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'd all have to be poofs. It'd only a single straight bee to keep the queen 'happy'.

  23. Why is slashdot accepting stories from Telegraph?? by notommy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Have you no standard? It's a retarded newspaper that prints nothing but idiocy.

    Christ! What's next on slashdot? Healthy eating research article from Burger King's site? That only features stuff from their menu?

  24. Obligitory Doctor Reference... by Admiral+Justin · · Score: 1

    Maybe they're just going back home to Melissa Majoria.

    --
    You will be baked, and there will be cake.
  25. Maybe they just didn't like the ringtones. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or maybe the phones were set to vibrate which stressed out the hive.

    Were the dummy phones close enough in operation to be meaningful? (e.g. they both caused the same amount of thermal and physical disturbance to each hive during phone switch on, charging, etc.)

    I'm betting physical disruptions and induced heat is what really stressed the hive.

  26. Paradigm Shifting Bees by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

    “Worker bees can leave.
    Even drones can fly away.
    The Queen is their slave.”
        -Chuck Palahniuk

  27. Re:Why is slashdot accepting stories from Telegrap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Legitimate news sources:
    - Huffington Post
    - The Guardian
    - MSNBC

    any more to add to the list?

  28. Temperature Alone could be the problem. by gbutler69 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How much additional heat would the 15-minute per day cell phone sessions plus the phone being in "Stand-By" 24/7 produce in the hive? My guess is it might increase the temperature a couple of degrees.

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
    1. Re:Temperature Alone could be the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Luckily you don't have to guess, this is actually something you can calculate ...

      Some people did a similar experiment at my university in their first year. Even after insulating the phone in several layers, the weather outside the building and outside the insulated casing had a larger effect on temperature than the phone.

      And it is actually something you can do calculations for, so no big mystery.

    2. Re:Temperature Alone could be the problem. by Laser+Dan · · Score: 1

      How much additional heat would the 15-minute per day cell phone sessions plus the phone being in "Stand-By" 24/7 produce in the hive? My guess is it might increase the temperature a couple of degrees.

      Bugger all.
      Does talking on the phone for 15mins heat your head up by a couple of degrees?
      No.

    3. Re:Temperature Alone could be the problem. by Culture20 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How much additional heat would the 15-minute per day cell phone sessions plus the phone being in "Stand-By" 24/7 produce in the hive? My guess is it might increase the temperature a couple of degrees.

      Bugger all.
      Does talking on the phone for 15mins heat your head up by a couple of degrees?
      No.

      How often do you stick your phone inside your head while you talk? Have you never used your phone as a hand-warmer in winter? I have. If I can feel the warmth, it must be more than a couple of degrees F (enough to screw with the very temperature sensitive bees).

  29. Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows... by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 0, Troll

    I tend to think that CCD is a combination of several accumulated stress vectors, including pesticides and ticks and the fact that many bees are trucked around the countryside.

    But this does show that cell phones can disrupt living systems. That cell phone radiation can disrupt cellular activity is well established (well, among those anyway, who aren't living in denial due to reality being hard to live with re their cell phone usage. "It can't be true, because if it is then I would be both inconvenienced and wrong, and neither condition is acceptable, so I will argue until I am blue in the face!") A profound truth is that many people stop developing mentally by around the age of about ten.

    Here's a study which details a fair bit of what was known a few years ago. . .

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/12893533/The-Ecolog-Study

    Also, Robert O. Becker's book, Cross Currents is a good collection and summary of what is known about the subject. You can pick up a used copy on Amazon for about four dollars plus postage.

    -FL

  30. Here is a link to the original article... by darrenm · · Score: 1
    http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/25may2010/1376.pdf

    And as another poster mentioned, Current Science Online isn't peer reviewed, it's meant as a means of communication and is fairly open.

    I like the conclusion of the article: "We are fortunate that the warning bells have been sounded and it is for us to timely plan strategies to save not only the bees but life from the ill effects of such EMR."

    They are taking those Nokia GSM cellphones seriously! Set those phasers to stun...

    http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/index.html

    1. Re:Here is a link to the original article... by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      seriously is that what they are claiming, that EMR is the devil?

      it doesn't sound like they even tried to rule out other causes for the problems in the hive with the phone, they just assumed phone = death.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  31. These must be the same Indian rocket scientists... by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

    ... who verified that humans can, in fact, engage in photosynthesis.

  32. Sloppy, sloppy work by shawnap · · Score: 1

    They only had 2 hives in their experiment?

    No, they had four. Two treatment (T1 and T2), one placebo (B, a dummy phone), one control (C). You wouldn't know it though, the data sheet in the paper shows only two columns, one titled control and one titled treatment. No mention of the placebo, no indication that there are two treatment groups, no test statistic (or it's power) is reported, no model is ever described.

    (Direct link to paper: http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/25may2010/1376.pdf)

  33. As a Beekeeper... by xquercus · · Score: 5, Informative

    I say this is simply ridiculous. It's not uncommon at all for a beekeeper to lose half of his hives in a season due to mites, foulbrood, starvation, genetics, poor management or any number of other known and unknown reasons. It's not uncommon for someone with two hives to lose one or both of them over a 3 month period -- the length of this study. The comparison of two queens is bogus too. The variability in quality (genetics) between two queens from even the best breeders can be enormous. Having read many studies about honeybee management I can say beekeepers insist on much better science than this. Proper studies involve groups of hundreds of hives; control for genetics, disease, management practices; and occur over multiple seasons.

    1. Re:As a Beekeeper... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      But... but... cellphones are evil! Even bees know it. Bees are attuned to their magnetic frequencies, man! Like I'm tuned to the CIA's spy satellite transmissions! Ah man, I can tell they're reading me type this and are giving me cancer right now! I gotta go!

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    2. Re:As a Beekeeper... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      We lost both our hives last winter, and we just put in two hives before this run of terrible weather (sigh) and lost them, too. I own a cellphone. It must be cellphones !@$!@$!%!

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  34. Proximity is irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We previously belived there were no harmful effects from this type of radiation, so the study seems quite significant, assuming it can be repeated. Handsets have relatively weak signals compared with the base towers, so a handset up very close is perhaps comparable to a cell tower in the general vicinity. In any case, demand for more bandwidth will continually push up power levels, so any adverse effects are a concern, particularly given the relative importance of the honeybee in our ecosystem. If the science checks out, we will presumably see some limits on wireless transmissions in agricultural areas, or eventually starve.

  35. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    "But this does show that cell phones can disrupt living systems"? No, it fucking doesn't, you scientifically illiterate cunt. This shows absolutely nothing. But keep adjusting that tinfoil hat.

  36. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by MrTrick · · Score: 2, Informative

    The next step is to run more tests with more hives, and more test groups (with - as suggested elsewhere in the discussion - graduated exposure levels)
    Not to run around like a headless chook claiming the preliminary test actually means anything.

    1. Do limited unscientific test.
    2. Profit!
    3. ???

  37. Proof of Fallacy by Penguinshit · · Score: 1

    I used to work with Marty Cooper and that guy is all about buzz.

    There is no way he would hurt bees.

  38. Don't ask don't tell by Capsaicin · · Score: 4, Funny

    That'd generate the kind of data we're actually looking for wouldn't it?

    Definitely not! I like my phone and mobile devices, so any empirical evidence which inconveniences me would have to be rationalised away in any case. I'm pretty confident the study would turn up nothing at all. It's almost axiomatic that what's good for me is good for the world. The research money would better be spent increasing coverage by erecting more transmission towers and the like.

    And yeah, Honey is bad for your health.

    --
    Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    1. Re:Don't ask don't tell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...

      And yeah, Honey is bad for your health.

      [Citation needed]

    2. Re:Don't ask don't tell by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      Citation needed

      Not at all. Let's just deduce this from 1st principles.

      A. I like mobile communications technology
      B. Some people are suggesting mobile communications technology is interfering with honey production.
      From which it follows, without recourse to empirical evidence or to the rules of normative logic that:
      Honey is bad for your health.

      Got it?

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    3. Re:Don't ask don't tell by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Who cares about honey? The reason we want bees is because they pollinate most plants that we use for food. I personally like having vegetables available.

    4. Re:Don't ask don't tell by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      Who cares about honey?

      Yes, my thoughts precisely. Thank you.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    5. Re:Don't ask don't tell by atamido · · Score: 1

      The grandparent was being facetious.

    6. Re:Don't ask don't tell by Mitchell314 · · Score: 1

      Who cares about honey?

      Bears, you insensitive clod.

      --
      I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
    7. Re:Don't ask don't tell by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      The grandparent was being facetious.

      Well I prefer to think of it as lampooning a mode of thought, or sense of personal reality, which is gaining undue prominence. But yes.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    8. Re:Don't ask don't tell by stonewallred · · Score: 1

      Not running bear, unless the honey is younger than 8 years old.

    9. Re:Don't ask don't tell by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      "Gaining"? It's how almost all humans have always "reasoned".

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    10. Re:Don't ask don't tell by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      "Gaining"? It's how almost all humans have always "reasoned".

      My half century on Earth tells me otherwise.

      One of the effects of the social revolution of the late 60s early 70s, imho, has been to undermine traditional sources of authoritative knowledge. This is not itself a bad thing, indeed as I young man I strove ardently towards this goal. My hope that we would replace mere authority with evidence and reason, however, was misplaced. In its place we have this massive sense of entitlement. An entitlement to believe oneself an expert on any matter whatsoever and an almost pathological avoidance anything which might contradict this delusion. We used to be entitled to our opinions. Now we are entitled to the truth of our opinions.

      Well that's my opinion anyway :)

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
  39. Can we sample any smaller? by bkeahl · · Score: 1

    I"m glad to see so many had the same initial reaction as I did. If there were 50 hives rather than two and the trend continued then I'd say they were on to something. In this case it's not all that clear. Was on hive just more efficient and effective than the other? Was on geographically located so it had to cope with different environmental factors? Bad genes?

    Hopefully they'll try this with a respectable sample size sometime soon.

    1. Re:Can we sample any smaller? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > Hopefully they'll try this with a respectable sample size sometime soon.

      Why would they do that? They already got the results they wanted. It would be much more difficult to get "correct" results with fifty hives.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  40. What about fungus + virus? by antdude · · Score: 1
    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  41. Aphorism that should be applied by oDDmON+oUT · · Score: 1

    Correlation does not imply causation.

    See also: Scientific method

    --
    Some days it's just not worth
    chewing through my restraints.
  42. Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pollen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hey guys. Here's the skinny of it all. Posting ANONYMOUS because it isn't worth the libel and slander of any effort against me to waste my time any more of whom I've to blame

    I am an active part-time Apiarist. Been that way ever since a kid, because I'm poor and insects are cheap fun that give me a God-complex of love over helping the little stingy creatures in my hands. From prior ventures in Construction I've accumulated enough window-screen and plastic-polymer sun-screen that I was able to cover my entire backyard into three cube sections each with two colonies in them. In the section with the plastic-polymer sun-screen that gives absolutely no breeze and complete isolation from the environment, I reared two colonies of bees on natural heirloom flowering plants and used air-conditioners to keep the moisture levels steady and supplemented artificial lighting to keep the nectar flowing through more seasons. In the other window-screen enclosure, I planted your Home Depot variety of GMO'd flowers and such that produced plenty of nectar just they are written GMO'd on them. If you ever visit a garden Nursery to buy your flowers, much of the plants being sold today no longer have butterflies and bees swarming them because they've been GMO'd to the point that their odor and nectar is unappealing or poisonous. In the 3rd enclosure, it is completely cut-off from all flowering plants of any kind and the colony is reared on a sugar-cane solution I've developed myself and all the time while aerial-spraying the bees with a Titanium Oxide solution that is apparent as an atmosphere conditioner that I encountered in Los Angeles County.

      You wouldn't believe what the results are.

    The results of my Bees under House-arrest is that the bees that consume Homo Depot potted-plants' pollen and nectar in the open-atmosphere window-screen enclosure proved that the bees are dying from diseases encountered through seriously week Immune Systems all because the GMO'd pollen and nectar physically hurts them; what kills them most is Fungal Infections, no mites in any of my bees because they are under House Arrest in each of their caged cubicles. The next enclosure that is closed-circulation in a Sun-screen plastic-polymer tent is they are thriving like any colony should, rougly 40k bees in the towers. The last enclosure, the one where the bees were again closed-off from the atmosphere like the other ones and fed on a reliable solution of my own making, yet aerial-sprayed with Titanium Oxide, they all encountered almost the same kinds of Fungal Infections as the open-atmosphere bees that were only allowed Homo Depot GMO'd plants.

    That's all there was to it, fellas. The contracts to the Aerial Spraying over Los Angeles is similarly available here as cloud_seeding_draft_mnd_final.pdf.

    It's bad enough that all the CORN Pollen of GMO's plants has killed all the Monarch Butterflies. You'ld think you all would take a hint that Bees aren't the only insects dying.

    It's costed me 4 dead colonies, over $2k of actual materials and 5 months of electricity for the test sites not including rent if were done on another premise, and all I got were obvious results that didn't have any tests to do with cell phone radiation. I would be more concerned with Cell-phone TOWERS and what effects they could have because those frequencies are resonating at frequencies of water that all life forms around them might be affected by. I've heard stories about Army communications officers and technicians, as well as ARRL HAM-licensees, getting all kinds of diminished Immune Systems and cancers from working over 5 hours a day in constant contact with these energy fields.

  43. Sample Size Alert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TWO HIVES. TWO FUCKING HIVES.

    Sample size, anyone? Jesus Christ, what a joke of a study.

  44. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by AceofSpades19 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Umm...no, it is not well established that "cell phone radiation" aka radio waves can disrupt cellular activity. Radio waves don't have enough energy to break carbon bonds, refer to the standard issue electromagnetic spectrum diagram which means they can't affect cells.

  45. Bees from where? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apologies, but if Indian science is as good as Indian programming or customer service, then 'validity' wasn't one of the project criteria.

    (To their credit, at least they cared enough to try, which is more than a lot of places.)

  46. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

    That cell phone radiation can disrupt cellular activity is well established

    Where? Such an amazing discovery would easily make it into a peer-reviewed journal, assuming the science behind it is good. After all, a whole lot of physics indicates that microwaves are too weak to do anything other than heating.

    Oh, I see. You have based this assertion on a rather....eccentric self-published document. One that doesn't really appear to understand much of electromagnetism. AFAICT, they've re-discovered the microwave oven. Gee, that's far less impressive, since those are well understood and require hundreds to thousands of watts of RF instead of milliwatts from those evil cell phones.

    Btw, the journal explains "The Ecolog [sic] Institute in Hannover has produced a remarkable document that carries the independence and decency of the Bioinitiative Report". The Bioinitiative Report was another self-published document without any peer review. So...we're stacking crap upon crap and pretending that means it's respectable.

    As for Cross Currents...Becker's (and your) major problem linking RF to disease is that people are exposed to far stronger electromagnetic effects by going outside. Clothing and hats block high-energy EM like UV and visible light, but don't do anything against the RF coming from the sun. Why didn't that kill us all when we first descended from the trees?

    Nor does he do anything to explain why the people living near TV and radio antennas for the last 90 years or so don't have a higher mortality rate.

    Btw...got a microwave oven? It leaks more RF than your cell phone can produce. How come microwave ovens didn't cause a massive flood of deaths in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s or 2000s?

    Please stop giving science a bad name. Real science is hard, long, and very unlikely to make you famous. "Scientists" (and I use that term loosely) around the world try to short-circuit that process, and they are always wrong. I would be happy if one of the anti-cell phone people actually manage to prove anything, because it's the world-upturning discoveries that make science exciting. But these people are not it....they will, however, sell you cures for the disease they claim to have found.

  47. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mr. Coward, what you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone on Slashdot is now dumber for having read it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.

  48. Amish beekeepers... by antdude · · Score: 1

    From a cyberfriend, "Amish beekeepers are also effected, I know a lot of people who leave their hives up in the hills or prairie area no where near a cell phone, and almost no one in the US keeps GPS units in their hives nor is that consistent with CCD cases. So the cell phone theory is once again wrong."

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    1. Re:Amish beekeepers... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      Amish prefer mobile phones to landlines.

      They are not complete Luddites.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  49. Re:Why is slashdot accepting stories from Telegrap by notommy · · Score: 1

    Seriously, when you posted Guardian under your "legitimate" sources, you lost your credibility.

    And what the hell is huffington post?

  50. PLEASE, I beg you by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

    Tag this story !science, because it certainly does not cite anything scientific, only a huge pile of crap from which no conclusion can be drawn.

    --
    This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
  51. What's the buzz... by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

    ...tell me what's happening.
    Hang on, my iPhone is ringing.

  52. And the Wavelength's are? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because an electromagnetic wave looks like two spheres the size of which are determined by the wavelength

    http://www.larryspring.com/exploration04.html

    Bla bla bla fuck your college educations.

  53. Bees, sea poisoning, increasing CO2 emissions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We lost control.

    Not only that, we lack the means to start any initiative, regardless of the predicted outcome.

    We're going down the hill with no brakes: and some think it's funny like a roller coaster...

  54. I doubt it. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    Considering that last year two different groups, in the US and UK, announced effective biological cures for "colony collapse", I doubt it has much to do with cell phones.

  55. How many explanations does this make? by Len · · Score: 1

    How many different explanations have we heard for colony collapse disorder so far? Five? Six? Is there any particular reason I should believe this one more than the others?

  56. I wouldn't mind... by sycodon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... if they banned cell phones. I made it through the first 35 years of life without one and I can make the rest of the way without one.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    1. Re:I wouldn't mind... by PitaBred · · Score: 3, Funny

      Should I get off your lawn now, grandpa?

    2. Re:I wouldn't mind... by plover · · Score: 3, Funny

      Should I get off your lawn now, grandpa?

      Only after you pollinate some of his flowers.

      --
      John
    3. Re:I wouldn't mind... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should I get off your lawn now, grandpa?

      Only after you pollinate some of his flowers.

      I'm not sure how to do that, but I fertilized a paper bag and left it on his front step... on fire.

    4. Re:I wouldn't mind... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about pollinating some cute granddaughter?

    5. Re:I wouldn't mind... by Bobb+Sledd · · Score: 1

      Oh, is that what you're calling it now... That is so perverted.

      --
      "They said I probly shouldn't fly with just one eye," "I am Bender. Please insert girder."
    6. Re:I wouldn't mind... by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      Should I get off your lawn now, grandpa?

      GP might be 35 and have never owned a mobile phone.

      Or perhaps you were aware of that...

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    7. Re:I wouldn't mind... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since your nose is buried in your BlackBerry, you didn't notice that you're standing in a pile of dog poop. So, please, stand there as long as you want.

  57. Empirical evidence suggests otherwise... by Gage+With+Union · · Score: 1
    I live in New York City. We have a couple of cell-phones here, but there's a move to legalize bee-keeping, and already quite a few people keeping honeybee hives illegally on top of buildings.

    Obviously this isn't conclusive, but I would assume that hives on the top of skyscrapers would be far more susceptible to cell-phone interference, but there doesn't seem to be a lot of evidence of this happening here.

  58. One Big Problem.... by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 1

    Prior to being used for GSM cellphone service, the 800 - 900MHz frequency band was UHF television channels 70-83. So to accept this theory you have to believe bees are affected by the low power transmitters in cellphones but had no problem with massive high power antennas broadcasting in the exact same frequency back in the 70s.

  59. I'd like to see the control... by izomiac · · Score: 1

    This type of experiment needs a very good control. First of all, cell phones tend to carry a lot of microbes, so you don't want to kill off the colony simply by introducing a pathogen that wasn't present on the control. Second, did the phones do anything detectable by bees when they were activated? Noise (ringing or just electrical), lights, etc.? Because I would suspect that if the bees think they need to fend off an intruder deep in the hive twice a day they'll likely be more stressed and less productive. Third, did the phones emit more heat than the control?

    IMHO, a better study would have a group of hives in range of a single tower that can be turned on and off at will. Let them get established, turn it on, see if the numbers change, turn it off, see if the numbers change, turn it on again, etc. (Crossover study.)

  60. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, bunch of prentious morons on here acting like they understand everything about the problem and copying eachother and trying to give these really hollow sounding explanations of what they believe to be the real reality or truth.

    Bottom line is they performed "A" experiment. They didnt do it once and say "YEs this is the problem exactly and this is unrufutable truth. We are 100% certain of this". All they did was show that it disrupted a hive which would be worth investigating further without a doubt. We only understand nature as we see it, we dont fully understand every facet of it and we never will because it has limitless amount of subtleties to it we can not see or put in any kind of pattern. We have only been scientifically advanced for past 100 years with only making real strides in the past 50 years. The planet is billions and billions of years old, its stupid to think we can just know it all so quickly.

    Pull your heads out of your asses. You all sound like kids in college that take some courses and suddenly act like they have the answer to everything and worse yet, cant wait to make sure everyone knows how smart you think you are.

  61. They've already found the cause by indros13 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Nicotine-based neonicotinoids, a broad class of pesticides. A ban on them in Italy restored bee populations.

    http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/05/nicotine-bees-population-restored-with-neonicotinoids-ban.php?campaign=th_rss_science

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    1. Re:They've already found the cause by santax · · Score: 1

      I have entered this discussion but you need to be modded up. Really interesting link you have there.

    2. Re:They've already found the cause by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but the evidence could be caused by other factors. What was the weather? how does a one year increase look along the bee pop. trend in the last 20 years? Where is the study? where is there data? How does it compare to CCD in place that don't use it?

      Just to name some. I can find all kinds of 'evidence' that anything is causing CCD. from Bigfoot, to flyng saucer, to EM, to any one of a 100 chemicals, to the apocalypse.

      This would be ab awesome answer in that it's a fairly easy fix.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  62. The worm in the whiskey by karlandtanya · · Score: 1

    To quote Wolfgang Pauli: "Not even wrong".

    (or rum)...
    A preacher stood up to deliver his sermon, and silently took out two clear glasses. Into one he poured God's clean water and into the other he poured the Devil's brew--hard liquor. From his pocket he produced two worms--one of which he dropped into the glass of water, and one which he dropped into the liquor.
    The first worm sank gently into the water, wiggling about happily for all the congregation to see. The other, on touching the rum squirmed frantically before stiffening and sinking immobile to the bottom of the glass.
    Finally, he stepped back, looked hard at the sinners before him, and challenged anyone to doubt the implications of what they had just witnessed regarding the nature of pure clear water and the Demon, Rum.
    One old drunk in the back row stood up and shouted "Hell no--If you drink whiskey, you'll never get worms!"

    It frustrates me that so many people sincerely believe that this sort of sloppy thought process is how science works.
    And, it frightens me that these people use the same lack of investigative and logical rigor to make decisions that affect all of us.

    You don't have to be intelligent or educated to operate a bullshit detector. We all have one (OK, not that kid with the genetic defect where she trusts everyone, but she's rare). Heck, it doesn't even take that much effort.
    I bet if Wal-Mart sold a cheap Taiwanese model, everybody would buy one. Then use if for a week, and forget about it, though!

    --
    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, it doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
    1. Re:The worm in the whiskey by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The first worm sank gently into the water, wiggling about happily for all the congregation to see.

      But then it drowned, and the first campaign to ban DHMO was born.

      Seriously, I like a joke as much as the next guy, but a flawed premise just ruins the "humor" for me.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:The worm in the whiskey by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like a joke as much as the next guy, but a flawed premise just ruins the "humor" for me.

      The flawed premise is the point.

      Some people find humor in the absurdity of drawing a conclusion despite the flawed premises (several of them), the obvious bias of the investigator, the miniscule sample set, and the model which has nothing to do with the application.

      And some people will laugh at the fact that there was a drunk guy in church.

  63. Were they good dummies? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    What I mean is proper phone dummies would need to be phones in every way, save for the actual cellular radio. You'd want to remove or disable the radio in an actual phone and have it in there. It would also need to be turned on, as the real phones were. This would make sure it wasn't due to the heat, or light, or mechanical vibration, or any of the other things that the phone might do to disturb the bees.

    However, as I noted in my other post, it still isn't a useful test because of power levels. A class 1 phone (which is what you find in most of the world except the US which has lower limits) outputs 33dBm power max. A good signal from cell towers is -80dBm. That means the power you get from being next to a phone is about 20,000,000,000 times more powerful than what you get from the cell net.

    1. Re:Were they good dummies? by atamido · · Score: 1

      What I mean is proper phone dummies would need to be phones in every way, save for the actual cellular radio. You'd want to remove or disable the radio in an actual phone and have it in there. It would also need to be turned on, as the real phones were. This would make sure it wasn't due to the heat, or light, or mechanical vibration, or any of the other things that the phone might do to disturb the bees.

      Large electronics emit a high pitched sound, which is likely present in smaller electronics to a smaller degree. It's certainly possible that bees could hear something like that (this would fall under vibrations).

      Also, while powered on and hooked to a power source for charging, the heat from the battery will be causing the plastic to emit various fumes (you can smell warm plastic if you're close). Small amounts of fumes that have no visible effect to humans can be lethal to smaller creatures (such as birds).

      What on earth made them think that the inside of the hive was better than a foot away on the outside? If they were really desperate to see the effects of the radios used then they could have just hooked up an antenna to the phone, and put the antenna inside the hive.

    2. Re:Were they good dummies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A class 1 phone (which is what you find in most of the world except the US which has lower limits) outputs 33dBm power max. A good signal from cell towers is -80dBm.

      33dBm and -80dBm aren't units of power. They're unitless scalar multiples.

    3. Re:Were they good dummies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there some special math applied to radio power levels where "scalar multiples" aren't valid as a basis for comparing like units? If not your post is meaningless.

    4. Re:Were they good dummies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. The paper provides no evidence the effect is do to RF and jumps to this conclusion. I read the paper and wondered how it passed peer review. I found no mention of peer review on the journal's website. Seriously, there's a reason for peer review.

  64. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This study doesn't show *anything* except that the source is incompetent.

    Two beehives does not give useful results. If they repeat the test with 100, or for gods sake at least 10 hives... then we'll have something to talk about.

  65. No kidding by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think what people need to understand is that yes, CCD is a real, serious thing. However that doesn't mean that the first crackpot theory that comes along is right.

    This is just more of the general anti-radiation paranoia that has been going on for, well, since we knew what radiation was. Another part of that would be humans and power lines. There was a bunch of paranoia that living near high voltage power lines would cause problems in kids because of the radiation. Now never mind that this is extremely long, non-ionizing waves, no people were sure it caused cancer and all kinds of other problems.

    Well, studies were done. I am probably a data point in one of those studies since as a kid, I grew up in a house near high voltage distribution lines. We now have many decades of information and guess what? They don't cause any problems. The kids who lived under them, who are now adults, don't show any difference in cancer rates or anything else from the general population.

    This is the same shit, different field. Bees start dying for some reason that nobody understands so the anti-radiation nuts go "Oh my god it has to be cellphones! All that radiation is killing the bees!!" No proof, just wild speculation.

  66. I hate bees... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, everyone, keep using your cell phones. We can pollinate things without bees anyway.

  67. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

    Umm...no, it is not well established that "cell phone radiation" aka radio waves can disrupt cellular activity. Radio waves don't have enough energy to break carbon bonds, refer to the standard issue electromagnetic spectrum diagram which means they can't affect cells.

    You're clearly not illiterate. You clearly know how to think. So why are you ignorant on this subject?

    There are numerous mechanism by which cells respond to modulated low-power EM well below the range where carbon bonds break. Just as an example, the Lithium ion sympathetically resonates at 60 Htz in conjunction with the Earth's magnetic field, and moves on a vector so that it can more easily penetrate things like the Blood Brain Barrier. Thus when Lithium is present in the blood stream, when exposed to basic wall socket power, the chemical reactions increase in frequency and can do so to the point of mimicking the effects of a larger medicinal dosage of lithium when no EM field is present. The principal is called, "Cyclotronic Resonance". Just as a for-instance.

    The state of knowledge the common people have on this subject is pitiful, and there is SO much information available. You just have to do some reading. Stop playing snotty Walmart Shopper and live up to your potential.

    I've given you two sources to start from. You can find more. Only retards cling to ignorance and corporate PR as though it were some sort of trophy.

    -FL

  68. Nope - it was the Justin BEEber ring tone by rubies · · Score: 1

    Gets them every time.

  69. Different conclusion by LongearedBat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don’t think the experiment is so much about whether mobile phone networks affect bees. Possibly they do, and some proper research is, I think, warranted.

    The experiment tries (with a tiny sample size) to shows something else:

    In the experiment, the phone was as close as it could get to the hive, and was only active for 15 mins/day. This resembles more of somebody talking on a mobile phone for 15 mins/day. And if that could adversely affect bees, then it could also adversely affect humans, right?

    After all, we're all living beeings. (I had to put that pun in somewhere. I just had to. ;)

  70. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by pspahn · · Score: 1

    Which is why you read /. and not websites such as Plant Select, Proven Winners, Monrovia, and so on.

    As someone who is very familiar with the tree and plant industry, the concept of hybridized plants affecting the bees is intriguing and maybe does merit some consideration.

    I spoke to a customer today who wanted to know if we carried Bloomerang Lilacs. I have heard about them (they are an ever blooming hybridized lilac) from others but hadn't read much about them until today. These plants are certainly being modified in ways that make them very different than what nature intended.

    Bloomerang are just one of many hybridized plants that are popular and available today. People love them. Nobody wants those boring old silver maples of 100 years ago, they want Autumn Blaze Maples, designed to grow fast, stay hardy, and have spectacular fall color.

    -1 ignorant.

    --
    Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
  71. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DNA uses Hydrogen bonds

  72. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by Graff · · Score: 1

    I spoke to a customer today who wanted to know if we carried Bloomerang Lilacs. I have heard about them (they are an ever blooming hybridized lilac) from others but hadn't read much about them until today. These plants are certainly being modified in ways that make them very different than what nature intended.

    Don't anthropomorphize Nature, she hates when you do that.

    Hybridization occurs all the time in nature. It's a completely natural process that bees and other creatures long ago developed means to deal with. There certainly is a chance that some odd combination of plants can result in something damaging to bees but it's extremely unlikely to happen and it certainly wouldn't have a widespread, worldwide effect on bee population.

    We should definitely research all angles of this problem but, in the end, it may just come down to natural variation in the bee population or due to a number of small, natural effects. One thing we should do is develop other pollinators so that we aren't relying on a bee monoculture. There are many other types of bees and other critters that can supplement the pollination role of the honeybee.

  73. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

    What's scarier than radio affecting cells is that you had to explain that it doesn't. It doesn't take a lot of common sense to realize that we have been using radio for more than a century and broad spectrum use has been in effect since WWII and the Sun itself bathes the planet in more radiation than any human caused emissions. Had cellular function been impaired by radio, microwave or any of the EM waves bigger than visible light this planet would be barren and devoid of life. The scariest thing is that you would have to explain that, do people not have common sense to think about what they have been told? Is critical thinking dead?

  74. The cel reception was better a couple years ago by bigtrike · · Score: 1

    There's only one way to explain this.

  75. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I find it an enduring source of puzzlement that people are so willing to dismiss documents on the flimsiest of excuses without bothering to read them while at the same time complaining that nobody is able to provide any evidence.

    Ha ha!

    If you want evidence, you'll have to climb out of your foxhole and do some reading, champ.

    Unless you are utterly without a brain, you have no-doubt heard of a little thing known as "conflict of interest". You're not going to get any documents explaining the reality of cell-phone radiation to you because enormously wealthy companies and governments with vested interests don't want you to know. We've seen it happen many times before, most notably with the tobacco industry and we KNOW it's happening here. Further, we KNOW that scientific academia is corrupt and unreliable. Just last month we had a story on Slashdot decrying just such a travesty. Do you REALLY think that the military and telecommunications industry would allow civilian journals to lay it all out in the open without a fight? Don't be such a naive twit.

    But despite that, both those links are filled with peer-reviewed works. The research isn't the hard part. It's the publishing and promotion of the data which is hard to do, and it's compounded by the fact that people like you refuse to read anything but the corporate pap which passes for science these days.

    But it's your assessment of Becker which is jaw-droppingly naive. Sorry, but it is. It's like saying, "Well, if Santa doesn't exist, then where do all the presents come from? There are presents under the tree, so obviously your book which claims Santa is make-believe must be false, therefore I will not read it." That's the circular avoidance logic of a five year-old.

    As for Cross Currents...Becker's (and your) major problem linking RF to disease is that people are exposed to far stronger electromagnetic effects by going outside. Clothing and hats block high-energy EM like UV and visible light, but don't do anything against the RF coming from the sun. Why didn't that kill us all when we first descended from the trees?

    If you want to know why that comment is hopelessly off-base, you'll need to start accepting and reading the documents which contain the answers instead of hiding from them. The answers are amazing, sensible, based on hard science, and anybody who is honest in his love for science should be happy to expose himself to that knowledge. Those who don't are fakes. They don't love science. They love being told what to think and they are afraid of being laughed at by the retarded herd if they dare read anything deemed 'uncool'. Most people are so traumatized by Jr. High School that they wind up mentally stunted and never really advance beyond the age of about 12.

    So read before judging. Start with Becker; his work is seminal.

    Of course, I know you won't. I've run into your type so many times before; Those who demand proof but refuse to read it when it is handed to them, coming up with every excuse under the sun to avoid actually having to look at or process strings of simple text. But more astonishing are the times when people will actually re-boot after seeing some evidence which illustrates that they are wrong. I've watched this happen a few times, (it's rare, because people are so good at not looking when they don't want to), but when a piece of new knowledge does by some miracle become unavoidably placed in a person's awareness, I've seen expressions of fear, shock, re-booting, and then the actual blanking out of the memory the very next day.

    It's amazing how fragile and cowardly people are.

    -FL

  76. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by pspahn · · Score: 1

    Sure, hybridization occurs in nature, but nature doesn't hybridize plants to become sterile as botanists do.

    There are a ton of trees that are engineered to be sterile. Spring Snow Crabapple is a good example. A lot of people love how beautiful they are when they bloom in the spring, but they hate dealing with yard litter once they begin to fruit.

    Of course, this doesn't always work. Some trees that are supposed to be sterile end up producing something. Cottonless cottonwoods occasionally produce cotton, for example. Seedless watermelons sometimes have some seeds.

    Is that what nature meant? I agree with you that sure, nature does hybridize plants as part of evolution, apples are a great example. But these hybridizations occur over the course of a very long time, not over the course of ten years or so in a garden lab.

    --
    Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
  77. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by pspahn · · Score: 1

    ...and I'll add that I know that this is not the likely primary cause of CCD, I just found the ideas interesting.

    --
    Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
  78. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The scariest thing is that you would have to explain that, do people not have common sense to think about what they have been told? Is critical thinking dead?

    Yes. YOUR critical thinking is dead. But the scariest thing is that you are so entirely certain you are right without actually having touched any of the available research. How can you possibly assume knowledge when you haven't got any?

    First of all. . , yes, we've been exposed to EM since WWII. And we've been affected by it since then as well. Do you remember what it was like before WWII? No? Then you really don't know what you are talking about, do you? I however, have done the research, so I know that there are some significant differences.

    Secondly. . , The Sun emits white noise. It doesn't emit steady frequencies which are modulated down to the 10 to 500 hz range where the human nervous system responds biologically to such low power signals in a variety of peculiar and repeatedly observed ways.

    Oh. You didn't consider that, did you?

    What else didn't you consider?

    How about before putting your foot in your mouth again, or letting your Ego stomp all over your keyboard, you do some research rather than watching TV and pretending you know what you are talking about. Hint: The herd is nearly always wrong, and herd logic is what you are tapping into with your broken examples.

    I gave two links. I'd start with Becker if I were you.

    -FL

  79. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

    No, it fucking doesn't, you scientifically illiterate cunt. This shows absolutely nothing. But keep adjusting that tinfoil hat.

    I think this one is my favorite; It's ignorant, rude and wonderfully ironic.

    It demonstrates in its simplicity the very soul of the knuckle-dragging scientifically illiterate hypocrite. "When the results come back with something which rubs your bias the wrong way, throw a tantrum and fling profanities."

    -FL

  80. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forgive my ignorance, but is "breaking carbon bonds" the only way to disrupt cellular activity?

  81. One big problem by overtoperative · · Score: 1

    From the end of the article, "in Germany beekeepers have started fitting GPS tracking devices to their hives." I don't know much about the spectrum used for GPS devices, but it must not be a problem for German bees...

    1. Re:One big problem by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      I'm no beekeeper, but I thought that hives were pretty much immobile objects. You plonk a hive down, and that's where it stays. It's not like yooths are out late at night stealing hives for fun and profit.

      So why the GPS tracking devices? Beekeepers can't be bothered remembering where there hives are? Do all the bees get on the outside and "1-2-3-LIFT!" their hive to another location when they're tired of the view? Is continental drift particularly troublesome in Europe? Curious minds want to know.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    2. Re:One big problem by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > I don't know much about the spectrum used for GPS devices, but it must not
      > be a problem for German bees...

      GPS devices don't transmit. They only receive.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    3. Re:One big problem by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > So why the GPS tracking devices?

      Theft.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    4. Re:One big problem by overtoperative · · Score: 1

      what good would a gps tracker be if it only received? you could go to the beehive to figure out where it is?

    5. Re:One big problem by yerpo · · Score: 0

      They're immobile until someone steals them. So I suggest you tone down your sarcasm if you know so little about these things, because it just sounds stupid.

  82. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

    Just as an example, the Lithium ion sympathetically resonates at 60 Hz in conjunction with the Earth's magnetic field, and moves on a vector so that it can more easily penetrate things like the Blood Brain Barrier.

    Stop. You're killing me

  83. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

    Unless you are utterly without a brain, you have no-doubt heard of a little thing known as "conflict of interest". You're not going to get any documents explaining the reality of cell-phone radiation to you because enormously wealthy companies and governments with vested interests don't want you to know.

    Actually, I'm relying on the laws of physics, and the fact that the same frequencies have been used for 90 years at a lot more power with no ill effect.

    Your cell phone can put out a maximum of 2W, but usually operates in tens to hundreds of milliwatts. Radio stations have been in the 50,000W range for a long time. 10,000W was pretty common going back to the '20s. Lots of people have lived close to these multi-kilowatt transmitters, and shown no ill effect.

    Likewise, basic physics informs us of the energy contained in an RF photon in the frequencies used by cell phones. It doesn't have sufficient energy to break a chemical bond, the only known mechanism by which EM causes cancer.

    Are you now going to claim that the radio industry has managed to keep secret their death rays for 90 years?

    and we KNOW it's happening here

    Only if we're particularly paranoid. Btw, do you own a microwave?

    But despite that, both those links are filled with peer-reviewed works.

    Apparently, you don't know what 'peer-reviewed' means. One of the key elements is you don't get to pick the peers that review your work, unlike the papers you've cited.

    Do you REALLY think that the military and telecommunications industry would allow civilian journals to lay it all out in the open without a fight?

    Only if you think that RF is a new invention of the cellular telephone. Again, 90 years, same stuff, no link to deaths. Have they been hiding it, despite how anemic our military was until WW2? It must have been quite visionary for Verizon Wireless to start covering up the damage caused by cell phones several decades before the company was founded...and before telephones, much less cellular telephones.

    The research isn't the hard part. It's the publishing and promotion of the data which is hard to do

    Only when your science is junk, as in TFA here. Then you of course claim it's a massive conspiracy to bury your experiments. Much like the Anti-Vax-yet-vaccine-inventor who lost his medical license recently.

    Again, we've been using this at a much higher power for 90 years. Where's the pile of bodies?

    If you want to know why that comment is hopelessly off-base, you'll need to start accepting and reading the documents which contain the answers instead of hiding from them. The answers are amazing, sensible, based on hard science, and anybody who is honest in his love for science should be happy to expose himself to that knowledge.

    The fact that you are unable to explain them indicates to me that this is a complete load of crap you want to believe in. If he had such a simple explanation, you'd be happy to share.

    Most people are so traumatized by Jr. High School that they wind up mentally stunted and never really advance beyond the age of about 12.

    I'm an ex-microbiologist. I got well past 12. In fact, I'm absolutely sure I know more about science and living creatures than you do.

    Those who demand proof but refuse to read it when it is handed to them

    No, we've simply wasted enough time reading "proof" from frauds. The last one of these crap papers I bothered to wade through cited advertisements as scientific evidence of a link.

    However you had such proof, you could easily summarize it. These are not hard questions. Let me list them again, so you can neatly summarize the answer:

    1. Cell phones give off much less RF than other sources, includin
  84. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can agree with the radio waves not breaking down carbon bonds, and this study sounds like junk. however is there a possibility or something with the signal could be driving the bees away? im not saying the signal is killing them, its just annoying to them in some way and acting as a repellent. and with vast areas of our county now bathed in these signals, it would be driving the bees away in a way that might make it look like they are dying off?

    Again someone else comment farther up about the 850 mhz spectrum that ATT uses, used to be the upper end of the UHF TV spectum, i would surely think if cell phones and towers barely outputting a few watts, would be nothing in comparison to a commercial TV transmitter blasting out 100,000 watts. The 850 band was also used for AMPS analog cell before it became one of ATT's GSM bands. The article does not say what cellular band or standard they did the study with, as it may not be the frequency of the signal itself, but maybe the modulation of the signal? RF is an electromagnetic wave, and some animals appear to have the ability to sense earth's magnetism.

  85. So Long and Thanks for all the Pollen by MasterLock · · Score: 1

    I think Douglas Adams had it wrong -- it's not the dolphins who are going to exit Earth before we get blasted out of the solar system, it's the bees.

  86. I guess I'm the only one... by IW4 · · Score: 1

    ...who read the headline and thought it had to do with someone sneaking a phone into the National Spelling Bee and getting words texted to them.

  87. Irony by Vahokif · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Isn't it ironic that you guys campaign all day for science but when a scientific study says your gadgets are harmful you scream bloody murder?

    1. Re:Irony by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      This study is lots of things. Scientific is not one of them.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    2. Re:Irony by imakemusic · · Score: 1

      Not really, no.

      --
      Brain surgery - it's not rocket science!
  88. Obvious! by xenobyte · · Score: 1

    The bees in the 'mobile hive' were busy calling other hives (who didn't respond because didn't have a phone) or simply sex-hotlines and thus didn't have time for procreation or food processing... :)

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  89. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, the sun *does* emit a steady stream of 10-500 Hz radio waves -- it emits in a distribution much closer to a black body than white noise -- and has since long before WWII. It's the brightest astronomical source of just about all wavelengths below 1m (i.e. ~300 MHz), and a non-trivial emitter above that. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v161/n4081/abs/161091a0.html

    Second, most human-generated radio is well above 500 Hz. Heck, a significant portion human radio is well above 500 MHz. If you're being exposed to 250 Hz radio you should probably just go and power off your transmitter -- it's incredibly unlikely that you are anyone else is being exposed to 500 Hz radio from artificial sources, even at lower power levels, unless you built the thing yourself.

  90. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by profplump · · Score: 1

    To the best of my knowledge, there's no credible evidence that non-ionizing radiation (i.e. radiation that doesn't break bonds), causes anything other than heating/motion. If you absorb some radiant energy but not enough to break bonds you're just going to end up with faster-moving (i.e. hotter) molecules. This is the basic principle behind all forms of radiant heating, from the sun down to your microwave oven.

    It's possible that certain cells in certain situations are unusually sensitive to heating in a way that's not obvious, and that such a sensitive might make the related organism respond poorly specific applications of RF radiation, but since everything on the surface of Earth is regularly exposed to a quite a bit of RF radiation from the sun this is typically not a concern, because the sun would have killed such organisms long before we discovered radio.

  91. Free talk time by dogganos · · Score: 1

    Did the mobile phones have hours of free talking time?

  92. Grandchild here. Hybrids or GMO? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GMO'd plants tend to be much more than plain cross-polenation to hybridize plants or miscegenate them. I have found no problem with natural hybrids that have little difference between lineage of parent plants. I thought what you compared of the preference for having differing growth seasons with changing reproductive rate to yard waste was applicable, yet I'm just looking at the matter that Bees are not Butterflies because they actually carry pollen in their heat to drink nectar. Bees are not replacable in any shape or form. It isn't only a matter of Bees being injured, it's an environmental toxicity introduced by people that have no business in horticulture and air quality control. The same complications that Bees are incurring is experienced by people. Consider what I said about the main death a Bee dies from is the fruiting body of a fungus impaling their organs right through the exoskeleton. Wouldn't you know it, CancerIsAFungus.Com.

    What people consider to be beautiful more than beneficial is a balance of hedonism with science. If Evolution was true, then we would see Bees growing stronger or mutating into a stronger caste just like how the successors to such environmental and air hazards occurred through meteors clowding the planet. Yet, I don't see any of that happening, because it's possible that life has always been about domestication of essential nature, what you aren't seeing tended today in USDA's bad conduct with BLM as well as all the pesticides and aerial Spraying.

    People aren't dying from old age anymore, just like the Bees and Butterflies. You just don't see any creatures falling over without pity for their selves: they're dying a slow agonizing process, and with the political likes of a serpent on a staff wielded by a licensed drug-dealer Doctor what do you expect but smoke and mirrors by such treachery that all would find liable for remedy in courts?

  93. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  94. obvious problems with the setup by yerpo · · Score: 0

    The study sounds interesting, but I read the original article and its execution [sic] is a bit... naive. They only measured power density. What about active phones radiating heat? Noise? Something else entirely? The number of trials was also extremely low (as already pointed out by others) and therefore vulnerable to chance events. I'm not claiming that electromagnetic radiation doesn't have any effect on bees, I'm just trying to provide a bit of perspective to the hysteria the popular media will inevitably start producing again on the basis of this single article.

  95. Ah!! by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Well, that would explain it all. The queen has been chatting on the mobile all day instead of raising her kids, and of course, if you flash your mobile around in a rough area, you are sure to get mugged, which explains why they don't return home. Case solved!

  96. Then again... by cherokee158 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Did anyone else read the OTHER article in the same paper that totally debunks the theory?

    http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/technology/iandouglas/100005223/mobile-phones-and-bees-shoddy-research-helps-no-one/

  97. barking up the wrong tree? by skoony · · Score: 0

    is it just me.has'nt anyone checked out the coralation between the new hybred insect resistent corn and other crops and how it affects the bee population? when this bee thing came out i had a fleating thought that this may be a likely cause. so far it seems everything under the sun is being looked at.save the obvious for last regards.

  98. Perhaps it wasn't the cell phone... by ControlsGeek · · Score: 1

    They should remove the foosball tables and free coffee and try the experiment again.

  99. it's not about "correlation" by yyxx · · Score: 1

    One study involving two hives doesn't even prove correlation, as it could be just random chance, as one hive will always do better than another hive.

    Many things "could be" random chance. But if the probability of an events is low enough by itself, then even a single event can be sufficient to prove a cause and effect relationship.

    But are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?

    Most people wouldn't have to; just those living outside of major cities.

  100. Different frequencies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But are we going to all give up our cell phones if it turns out that they cause problems with bees?"

    Why does that necessarily have to be the solution? Cellphones are just radios on a specific set of frequencies. If it does actually turn out that the bees are somehow sensitive to RF transmissions in the current cell phone bands, then shouldn't we study whether there are *other* frequency bands which would be suitable for cellphone use, which doesn't cause problems for the bees? Men have been using radio for over a century now. So far as I know, there were no bee problems associated with general radio usage in the 20th century, which suggests that not ALL radio transmissions cause problems for bees.

    But, as you and other posters stated, this 'study' seems to have about the scientific rigor of a poorly supervised junior high science fair project, so I wouldn't put too much weight on the 'results'.

  101. Native bees by pease1 · · Score: 1

    Nothing at all scientific about it, just observations from my backyard in the mid-Atlantic region of the US, while I haven't seen a honey bee since mid-last summer, the native bumble and carpenter bees are all over the place, with my strawberries, raspberries and apple trees having no pollination problems this spring. While I had noticed this, it hadn't registered until I was talking to a naturalist this weekend at a local park who had also noticed and is guessing the collapse of the European honey bees had allowed the natives to expand.

  102. hope they were serious... by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

    I have not RTFA but...I hope that they did not call or vibe the phone to see if it would have effect, because of course it would, put a cell phone in the middle of a wolf den, and call, and guess what ....you will see a family of animals move to a different den....all in all, it would have to have been a useless experiment to do that, they hopefully just turned the phone on, and let it sit there without being used, to see the amount of energy it gives off is high enough to unsettle the colony....but then again I didn't rtfa.

  103. lots of different kinds of RF by yyxx · · Score: 3, Informative

    There are lots of different kinds of RF, and whatever effects there may be are likely to be wavelength dependent. The kind of RF that's used for cell phones now didn't use to exist much in nature. CB radios use completely different frequencies. And given that the devices were placed in the hives, they were not "very low power"; the bees were directly next to the antenna. Any effect in the wild may be more subtle.

    These experiments are not conclusive enough for any action yet, and there's always the possibility of fraud or error, but calling them "crackpot" is not warranted based on what they said and published.

    Actually, it's your analysis and your blanket dismissal of the possibility of these kinds of effects that are "crackpot".

  104. Re:Why is slashdot accepting stories from Telegrap by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Slashdot?

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  105. Re:Grandchild here. Hybrids or GMO? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

    People aren't dying from old age anymore, just like the Bees and Butterflies. You just don't see any creatures falling over without pity for their selves: they're dying a slow agonizing process

    People have just recently started dying of old age. For thousands of years prior, it's been many other things which have killed human beings.

  106. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by cain · · Score: 1

    The preliminary test test *does* mean something. They confirmed that powering on a phone in a hive *may* cause issues. If the test had come out the opposite (in the non-powered-phone, the hive was effected), then they could drop it. But the inverse happened. Can't say it was the phone, but can't rule it out either.

  107. LoL at article... by TrisexualPuppy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I know a farmer who is a beekeeper. I used to be a beekeeper myself. Over the past year, he lost all three of his stationary hives that he leaves out in the woods. I inspected two of them with him

    The latest one that he lost was in March. In a matter of days, all the bees died within the hive as if they had been gassed or poisoned. None of the bees attempted to remove the old bees as normally happens. The "full complement" of workers was there in a pile at the bottom of the hive--nothing had dispersed. There was no smell of disease. And there was plenty of non-rotted honey left. Few predators or scavengers to be found in the hive eating the honey: no yellow jackets, and all the hive beetles were dead. A few spiders. Very, very odd.

    The previous one died in December/January. The previous year, there had been plenty of honey left. This was a very productive hive. We opened it up after noticing the eerie silence near the hive and that the bees were not egressing for cleaning flights. Pushing on the hive, it rocked with ease which normally doesn't happen because these things can weigh well over a hundred pounds when healthy. There was absolutely NOTHING left in this huge hive. No honey, no workers, no brood, nothing. No honey. No dead bees on the outside. A healthy hive had just disappeared during the middle of the winter.

    I find a little conflict here. The service out there is kind of sucky, and I don't see how he could have lost three hives in the last year and none in prior years when probably nothing has changed with the cell service out there aside from maybe a beam direction change.

    1. Re:LoL at article... by sec0ndshooter · · Score: 1

      Miranda...

    2. Re:LoL at article... by petgiraffe · · Score: 5, Informative

      While similar in appearance, neither of the cases you describe are typical of CCD.

      What likely happened here was war (beekeepers call it "robbing"). The hive you describe from March was the defender in an all out war with another hive, the other hive likely took heavy losses as well. The pile of dead contained bodies from both. That was the battlefield. The attacking hive may have also died completely during the war, which is why there was still honey in the victim hive.

      The winter loss you describe is indicative of the attacking hive in a similar war. An attacker that didn't win. Or perhaps did, but didn't gain enough honey for the queen to survive the winter. For some reason they lost all their honey stores (This can happen if yet another hive robbed them, or if the queen kept laying too many workers for the stores to support for too long after the nectar flow stopped). After the hive eats all its stored honey, it turns on neighboring hives.

      CCD looks similar to these losses, but both honey remains (until it's scavenged by others) AND there are no dead bees to be seen. Such that it looks as if a perfectly functional hive just up and left.

      My two hives went to war last summer, and the carnage was unbelievable. Hundreds of thousands dead in a pile in front of the "victim" hive. I didn't know why they went to war at the time, but now I know that 70,000 bees can consume a massive store of honey pretty quickly if they have no work to do. And I've also learned that if 3 days don't go by without rain, flowers don't produce enough nectar for bees to have any work to do. (It was VERY rainy here last summer)

      --
      -- The reader anything less than completely failing to not misunderstand this sig is cursed.
    3. Re:LoL at article... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where can I buy the video game?

    4. Re:LoL at article... by TrisexualPuppy · · Score: 1

      Interesting. He didn't have any feeders, so there were no alternative sources of food. It might be best in this case to close the hive to a .5in^2 entrance for defence and install a big feeder in the winter.

      Did you have feeders installed when this happened?

      This kind of info/experiment might help to narrow down variables when trying to determine what is/isn't CCD. I'm going to start some hives next year and run datalogger PCs for the hives. What data would you recommend recording? (Temperature, outside wind speed, ingress/egress, etc.)

    5. Re:LoL at article... by petgiraffe · · Score: 1

      No, I didn't have any feeders installed, but I would have tried that if I'd suspected what was happening. Incidentally, it looks like a similar situation may occur this summer because the 'early nectar flow' has ended surprisingly early in this part of the world. I'm going to offer some syrup today to see if they're hungry enough to go after it. If so I'll probably have to start feeding them regularly for a while.

      The datalogger idea sounds great. Everything you mention is worth recording. I would think the ingress/egress data in particular would be nice to have. If you can come up with a trick for distinguishing between them you can check to see how often bees leave and never come back.

      Some other data that would be tricky to automate, but is important to know, is how the nectar and pollen in the area are doing. You can see the pollen on the bees when they come back, but nectar would be especially tricky to measure (implicit in weight of the hive perhaps?). If the hive starts losing weight perhaps you can trigger an alarm notification?

      --
      -- The reader anything less than completely failing to not misunderstand this sig is cursed.
    6. Re:LoL at article... by petgiraffe · · Score: 1

      Also, since Varroa mites are suspected conspirators in CCD, keeping a mite count for each box would be good data too. Albeit another one that would be hard to automate. There are several manual techniques that are good for estimating mite counts. My favorite is the "sugar roll". (you roll a handful of bees around in a jar of powdered sugar, then the mites fall out through a mesh screen)

      --
      -- The reader anything less than completely failing to not misunderstand this sig is cursed.
  108. as a scientist I take offense by forand · · Score: 2, Interesting
    While I totally agree with what I believe your point was, that popular media distorts scientific results and that there are certainly a subset of scientists who seem more inclined to push an agenda than to report scientific results, I must take offense at your statement that:

    Science is nothing more than a marketing term to convince people to buy whatever they're selling.

    Science is a method for obtaining data, testing hypotheses, and reporting results. The results of science, like virtually anything else, can be misused. The current atmosphere of decreeing that "science is marketing" or "science is biased" degrades the method which is NOT at fault. If we want to improve our understanding of nature and the universe then we need to learn, as a society to decouple objective results from interpretation, rather analogous to how society would be better served by a clearer decoupling of news opinion from news facts.

  109. Evolution will fix it by Urkki · · Score: 1

    Unless this messes the bees up in a very fundamental level, it shouldn't take many generations for evolution to take care of the problem, if there's as strong an effect as this study claims. Wild bees might have a real problem, getting replaced by some other, less sensitive insect, and not being able to reclaim their place even after adapting to cell phone radiation. But "domesticated" bees have the advantage that no other insect can take their place, and once adaptation to cell phone radiation happens, that particular strain of bees will be spread by humans who want the honey.

    Of course if it's not just bees but many other insects, then there might be far-reaching problems first for plants requiring insects for pollination, and as a consequence for pretty much everything, since everything depends on these plants, or something that depends on these plants, or something that depends on something that depends on these plants, or... you get the picture.

    1. Re:Evolution will fix it by geekoid · · Score: 1

      If it kills then before they can propagate, then no, it won't.

      It could be like saying if the sun exploded, evolution would make it so people didn't need the sun.

      BTW: it is NOT cell phone radiation. I just want to be clear. This 'study' is crap.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Evolution will fix it by Urkki · · Score: 1

      If it kills then before they can propagate, then no, it won't.

      It could be like saying if the sun exploded, evolution would make it so people didn't need the sun.

      Well, yeah, but the bees aren't all being killed, are they? Are there entire areas where you can no longer get local honey, even though some years ago you could still get it? And if you bring new bees to these areas, they just die off and still no honey?

      I don't think this is that bad, and therefore it will not kill off the bees completely, and therefore evolution has a chance to fix it, and will fix it given enough time (which in this case is provided indefinitely by humans who bring more bees to the area after old ones have died).

      BTW: it is NOT cell phone radiation. I just want to be clear. This 'study' is crap.

      Yeah, most likely.

  110. Sounds like more work needs to be done by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    I was listening to an NPR article just last week about how bees closer to cities don't seem to be in as rapid decline as bees in more rural areas.

    I would think there would be much more cell phones and other EM radiators around cities in the country.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  111. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1 - 4 dead colonies do not make statistical significance.

    2 - please stop calling it homo depot, you're insulting homosexuals by linking them to this store, and ruining any argument you may have by being childish and petty.

    3 - hearing stories about diminished immune systems means exactly nothing.

    Your experiment does, however, sound interesting.

  112. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by phlinn · · Score: 1

    Don't leave out blinding the test. After looking at the paper, they had to turn on the phones by hand and put them into the hive. It doesn't say if they left the phones in all the time and only turned them on periodically, or if they only put them in the boxes periodically.

    --
    "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
  113. Ask an ant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GSM and 3G signals should not have any effect of bees. As the waves are too big to have any effect of them. Wavelength of 900Mhz (and 850Mhz) is about 30 cm. It is slightly less at 1800Mhz and 1900Mhz.

    In fact, the waves are bigger then bee in size in most cases.

    This study needs to repeated few more times before any results can come from it.

    How about applying the "Scientific Method" to your theory?

    Find an ant (length= 0,2inches = 5mm), put it in the microwave (wavelength=5inches = 120mm), turn the microwave on for 30 second, and ask the ant how it liked being exposed to wavelengths "too big to have an effect on it".

    If It doesn't answer with a booming "great, man!", your theory was disproved.

    A microwave oven works by heating individual water molecules in an alternating electric field.

    That said, I don't trust this study either, but for other reasons.

    You can also build antennas much smaller than the wavelength they are designed to receive, a good example are watches with radio receivers.
    They work with 60..77KHz frequencies, i.e. app. 3 miles wavelength.

    1. Re:Ask an ant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Find an ant (length= 0,2inches = 5mm), put it in the microwave (wavelength=5inches = 120mm), turn the microwave on for 30 second, and ask the ant how it liked being exposed to wavelengths "too big to have an effect on it".

      You might be surprised. Ants do, indeed often survive a microwave for significant time, although it doesn't have much to do with wavelength. Because they are so small they have high surface area to volume ratio and since air is not heated up they can just dump heat into it almost as fast as they absorb it from the microwaves.

  114. So... by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    ...don't give cellphones to your bees is the lesson here...? (blank stare)

  115. Amen! by SirWhoopass · · Score: 1

    Amen brother!

    I'll never forget the look of confusion on my boss' face when he asked for my cell phone number and I told him I didn't own one. Of course, he thought I should buy one on my own so he could call me for work-related issues.

  116. Scientific American published contrary research by krulgar · · Score: 1

    http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=saving-the-honeybee
    http://research.cas.psu.edu/546.htm

    Sciam and Penn State University published this last year showing that a "recently discovered pathogen, Israeli Acute Paralysis Virus (IAPV), the presence of which is strongly correlated with hives suffering from the disorder"

    Blaming cell towers and cell phones seems to be en vogue, but I don't see a lot of peer-reviewed entomology articles supporting this (yet).

    1. Re:Scientific American published contrary research by cdpage · · Score: 1

      didn't seem contrary... just an alternative theory

  117. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    > If the test had come out the opposite (in the non-powered-phone, the hive
    > was effected), then they could drop it.

    Which of course they would have done, without publishing their results. For every "successful" study like this one how many "failed" ones do you think go unpublished? And of the ones that are published how many get reported?

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  118. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, what is up with /. lately? I keep seeing borderline religious pseudoscience posts like this getting a +5 interesting mod. Come on, people. Cell phone towers resonating at the frequency of water and causing cancer? Cancer is a fungus? Evolution isn't true? Yikes.

  119. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

    I'm an ex-microbiologist. I got well past 12. In fact, I'm absolutely sure I know more about science and living creatures than you do.

    I know a lot of people who have collected a huge amount of knowledge who are still locked down with a multitude psychological knots which prevent a full scope of rational behavior. I know guys who can quote encyclopedias at me but who can't dress themselves properly or reconcile their own behavior patterns which prevent them from getting and maintaining jobs, friends, wives. And while those are gross examples, MOST people carry around quantities of emotional/psychological baggage rendering them emotionally and psychologically child-like in many ways.

    Apparently, you don't know what 'peer-reviewed' means. One of the key elements is you don't get to pick the peers that review your work, unlike the papers you've cited.

    I know what peer-reviewed means, thanks. And while there is a body of non peer-reviewed work in the sources quoted, there IS some which is. But you'd have to spend some time reading through the materials I've offered to see them. If you were a a microbiologist, then you have spent thousands of hours reading, and you ought to be very good at it. The prospect of reading one book and one paper shouldn't take you any time at all. I recommend the book especially; it cites a wealth of excellent science. And yes, peer-reviewed science.

    3 questions. But they are the dividing line between science and quackery. If you answer them with an answer that is remotely coherent, I'll happily read your articles.

    Okay, but I recommend the book over the paper.

    1. Cell phones give off much less RF than other sources, including the sun, radio antennas and your microwave. Why are cell phones different? What physical phenomena of the RF signal from a cell phone makes it lethal, whereas leakage from a microwave is not?

    Cancer is not the issue, (although it is certainly part of the story). The actual mechanics are not fully understood, but there are numerous suggested models. Basically, sympathetic resonance is the key. Here's one example, duplicated in different labs, which shows how low-power EM can affect cellular behavior. . .

    A 60 Htz signal was used in the experiment. In conjunction with the Earth's natural magnetic field, (at the low end), through a process known as cyclotronic resonanace the lithium ion resonates, absorbs energy from the field and then moves on a vector when in a medium allowing motion. In this state, the excited ion is able to more readily penetrate the Blood Brain Barrier of the rats being used in the experiments. The effect was that trace quantities of lithium in the blood stream of the test animals, when excited by basic wall socket current, was able to deliver the equivalent of a much higher medicinal dosage of lithium.

    That's just one example to illustrate how low power signals which are not capable of causing damage to chemical bonds are able to have an impact on cellular behavior.

    2. Why was there been no spike in mortality surrounding large RF transmitters, including TV, radio and cell towers?

    There have been many studies which strongly disagree with your base assumption. Numerous studies show that there are in fact spikes in leukemia among people living along power transmission lines, but I don't know how accurate those claims are. I find statistical studies of any sort hard to take entirely seriously simply because there are usually hundreds of other possible agents which might be involved but which are not examined by the study. In any case, I am far more interested in effects on cognition than I am in cancer.

    3. Since RF in the frequencies used by a cell phone can not break chemical bonds, what is the mechanism by which damage is caused? And since we can repair most damage from powerf

  120. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

    First, the sun *does* emit a steady stream of 10-500 Hz radio waves -- it emits in a distribution much closer to a black body than white noise -- and has since long before WWII. It's the brightest astronomical source of just about all wavelengths below 1m (i.e. ~300 MHz), and a non-trivial emitter above that. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v161/n4081/abs/161091a0.html

    The article you linked only suggests that what you are saying might be the case, and only under specific conditions.

    That's very different from the claim that the Sun outputs a steady stream of such emissions.

    There's a reason why radios still work when the Sun is shining. Biological systems are able to differentiate as well.

    -FL

  121. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by cain · · Score: 1

    Why wouldn't they publish? I'd say that is just as worthy an article or paper than the one they published. A paper showing they found pretty strong evidence that cell phones don't disturb bees means everyone can stop investigating that avenue of research and looks for other things.

  122. Did they reverse the cell phones later? by cdpage · · Score: 1

    I mean, did they take the working phones and switch them to the hive that were health to see of the they too would drop in productivity... and to see if the unhealthy hive bounced back?

    another Question.

    is there possibly any difference between GSM, 3G, 4G, Edge etc networks?

  123. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by IICV · · Score: 1

    You're totally right! And the moon is actually a liberal myth!

  124. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously the solution to this is to then GMO the Bees to work with the flowers. :)

  125. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've fallen prey to one of the classic blunders of non-academics.

    The first rule of academic publishing is that you NEVER, EVER publish negative results. If you do, you'll find your funding cut. Getting research money relies almost exclusively on hysteria (see the G.W. debate) so you must at all costs suppress any results that seem to contradict the imminent danger of world-wide disaster and promote only those findings that support a worst case scenario.

    Your proposal is fine for some post-grad student who doesn't intend to go into research. They might not have and agenda. But pretty much any "real" researcher who relies on grants for funding is going to publish only the stuff that produces more finding.

    Scratch the surface of any academic in the "publish or perish" world and you'll quickly find the bias.

  126. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Heather+D · · Score: 1

    True, it's not at all well established to people who actually think it's important to understand what's happening before they act but it is 'well established' to the woo woos that seriously discuss the 'alien conspiracy' and what ever Bigfoot has done lately and such. The above post mentioning neonicotinoids is correct. We have the solution, now it's just a matter of verification and implementation. Well, that and opposing the paid mercenaries of the pesticide corps who want to keep making the stuff.

  127. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

    I know a lot of people who have collected a huge amount of knowledge who are still locked down with a multitude psychological knots which prevent a full scope of rational behavior.

    And I know many, many people who make shit up and then claim it's a major breakthrough. Your point?

    But you'd have to spend some time reading through the materials I've offered to see them.

    No, you'd just have to supply a link to the peer reviewed papers. Yet you have not. It's just more hand-waving about 'the truth is out there'. I've wasted enough time following the evidence trails of crackpots. I will not waste further time until the "extraordinary proof" level has been reached.

    A 60 Htz signal was used in the experiment.

    Htz is the stock ticker for Hertz rent-a-car, not a unit of measure. I'm going to assume you ment Hertz, which is abbreviated Hz. Anyway, 60Hz isn't RF. Cell phones transmit in the MHz-to-GHz range.

    In conjunction with the Earth's natural magnetic field,

    The Earth's magnetic field doesn't cycle much within a small area, and definitely not at a fixed frequency.

    As for the rest of your so-called example, you now have a 100+ year old technology that you claim is killing people, yet has not been linked to increased mortality. And considering your experiment contains fundamental flaws, such as believing the Earth's magnetic field pulses regularly, there really isn't reason to believe in the conclusions.

    There have been many studies which strongly disagree with your base assumption

    None peer reviewed. All the peer reviewed studies have failed to find any correlation.

    I can easily create a study that proves Slashdot increases mortality. I can even make it sound good enough to convince you that it's true. It wouldn't survive peer-review.

    Numerous studies show that there are in fact spikes in leukemia among people living along power transmission lines, but I don't know how accurate those claims are.

    Again, not peer-reviewed. Poorly designed studies showed a correlation when they compared the power-line denizens to the population as a whole. That correlation disappeared when they controlled for economic factors. People who live under high-tension power lines tend to be lower class, since the houses are cheaper. They experienced no higher rate of disease than other lower-class individuals.

    I find statistical studies of any sort hard to take entirely seriously simply because there are usually hundreds of other possible agents which might be involved but which are not examined by the study.

    So....we should only look at the studies that prove your existing beliefs?

    ou're stuck on cancer and the breaking of chemical bonds and it is coloring and limiting every aspect of your understanding of the whole issue of EM and its effect upon biological systems

    I'm "stuck" on breaking chemical bonds because that is the only proven mechanism where EM causes disease.

    But when the immune system is over-taxed by environmental toxins,

    Our immune system does not fight 'environmental toxins', assuming you mean pollution. Our immune systems fight disease. We do not produce antibodies against lead, for example.

    Aside from direct mechanisms like cyclotronic resonance

    Let me just take a moment to point out you're either using the wrong term, or made one up. Ion Cyclotron resonance is a known phenomena, but if you run the formulas in that Wikipedia article, you'll discover it requires a rather hefty magnetic field.

    The book lays out a lot of detail and the progressio

  128. Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to see the answer to this

  129. stop! by fireylord · · Score: 1

    other examples of radiation exposure. . .of ionizing radiation maybe. microwave radio is not ionizing, it may have warmed the hive ever so slightly though? (seriously)

  130. No, the cat does not, in fact, "got my tongue." by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    What was this "dummy" phone? The LCD, the battery, the internal electronics (PCB, anyone?), and god knows what will all be giving out low levels of many different chemicals.

    Being "powered on" for 30 minutes a day may have very little or nothing to do with it. Indeed, it's more likely that, by warming the phone, it may exacerbate the chemical leakage, and thus be more likely to have an effect than the EMR itself.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  131. The methodologies in the report sound suspect... by Benfea · · Score: 1

    ...but the overall declines in bee populations seem to coincide roughly with the penetration of cellular networks into rural areas. I would suggest that more studies on this would be a good thing as the loss of bees has very serious implications for humanity. Even if the studies turn up nothing, at least then we will know, which is not something we can say about some random poster on the Internet waving his hands around and declaring "it's definitely nothing!"

    I appreciate your insights, but you are not a scientist.

  132. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by cain · · Score: 1

    I am a researcher. And thankfully not as cynical as you.

  133. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by cain · · Score: 1

    Yes, this does make a difference. If they only did this with the "live" hive, then the results are suspect. If they did it with both, it may be OK, but not really. I assumed (poor Uma Thurman) that the phones were remotely powered on/off.

  134. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

    Sigh. The correct response was to not get all defensive. You disappoint me.

    And I know many, many people who make shit up and then claim it's a major breakthrough. Your point?

    My point was that knowledge doesn't imply wisdom. You are making this plain by avoiding the point by changing the subject. That's the behavior of a child.

    No, you'd just have to supply a link to the peer reviewed papers. Yet you have not.

    Yes I did. But you just chose to pretend that I didn't. Here's another link which performed a meta-analysis of peer-reviewed papers on the subject. . .

    http://jco.ascopubs.org/cgi/content/abstract/JCO.2008.21.6366v1

    Here's another sixty or so papers presented in a document which have been peer-reviewed/refereed before inclusion.
    http://www.radiationresearch.org/pdfs/20090407_competence_genes_mobile_phones.pdf

    It's just more hand-waving about 'the truth is out there'. I've wasted enough time following the evidence trails of crackpots. I will not waste further time until the "extraordinary proof" level has been reached.

    Talk is cheap. I have my doubts that you've explored much of anything with that attitude. Also, if you had, you wouldn't be asking questions which show such basic pieces of ignorance in this field, so I'm going to call bullshit on you.

    Htz is the stock ticker for Hertz rent-a-car, not a unit of measure. I'm going to assume you ment Hertz, which is abbreviated Hz. Anyway, 60Hz isn't RF. Cell phones transmit in the MHz-to-GHz range.

    Oh, come now. Yes, I used the wrong notation. (But hey, it gave you the chance to show off your well-groomed dictionary knowledge.) Now dig into that knowledge base of yours and tell me what you know about, "Frequency Modulation". -Because biological systems will respond to both analog wave forms and those which are modulated from high frequencies. Again, the fact you don't know this common detail suggest to me that you need to research the subject and not wait around for so-called "extraordinary evidence" to show up without you having to look for it.

    The Earth's magnetic field doesn't cycle much within a small area, and definitely not at a fixed frequency.

    Yes, I know. The Earth's magnetic field doesn't have to move at all for the example I offered to work. I didn't say that it did, and if I gave you that impression then I do apologize.

    As for the rest of your so-called example, you now have a 100+ year old technology that you claim is killing people, yet has not been linked to increased mortality. And considering your experiment contains fundamental flaws, such as believing the Earth's magnetic field pulses regularly, there really isn't reason to believe in the conclusions.

    I think you need to slow down. You're mis-interpreting what I wrote and making false assumptions based on those interpretations. And I certainly don't think it's fair to place emphasis on the fact that, "I think this technology is killing people". That makes me sound hysterical, which I am certainly not. I've been quite clear in saying that whatever cancer risks may be present are not the focus of my interest. I'm interested in how EM can affect cognition and the nervous system in non-destructive ways.

    I'm "stuck" on breaking chemical bonds because that is the only proven mechanism where EM causes disease.

    "Proven" is a big word. You're talking about orthodox truth, which is spotty at best and agreed upon more by television broadcasters and public relations firms. And in any case, disease isn't the whole enchilada by a long shot. I keep telling you, I'm interested primarily in how EM affects cognition.

  135. Well that makes a bit more sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As the plants slowly gradually improve or devolve, the animals aren't kill shocked all at once like what is happening today. Geneticists, appropriately named as Eugenicists in regard of their recent foul ability, need more time because when they think to change elements of a balanced nature then they should expect all others to follow the changes. Do you suppose that the Kingdoms of Plants and Animals are the true stewards that created each other how they see fit, and that GMO'd plants are a foreign and invasive species brought onto the field? Did you ever suppose that the plants and animals are more qualified?

  136. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 1

    Honeybees are a non-native invasive species in the United State anyway. That's why they were call the "white man's fly".

    So, evolutionarily speaking, there should be rather little difference between the reactions of bees to hybrids at home depot and flowers in Mississippi

  137. I worked at Homo Depot. They are homos, all of us. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I worked at Homo Depot. They are homos, all of us.

    Thanks for your insight though less critical it were. You seem like the kind of fellow that thinks an experiment of non-industry scientists is less biased and more useful than the Conclusion of someone like myself that knows what he's look for to prove. Who pays who, now, a drug company among grocery stores or is there no room for bad health that we don't allow drug companies and GMO'd products anywhere near influencing our results? 4 dead colonies on my hand in a controlled environment is more conclusive than you think. I was expected to carry the effort with fellow bee keepers into Bakersfield as a contract mass-polenator; that's honest, high-profit work that secures the entire season of produce in grocery stores. Colony die-off has not been much of a problem with these portable bee stands because with such a large area covered it will benefit the colonies more to roam around by truck because they collect so much more pollen and nectar than stationary hives stuck on a hill. Colony die-off has effected polenation outfits as was my destiny, because the recent number of trees aren't the safe gently-hybridized variety that kill insects with evolution: it's outright killing them all.

    Anyways, for our information about the closed experiments: The queens I used are pure strain, not mated from unworthy drones of known or unknown questionable lineage, with proper temperature and water, without physical threat. Diminished Immune Systems is everything in the Life itself: fungus consumes sugar, bees are a perfect example of keeping that balance in check on a fine line of their Immune System being strong. If their Immune System ever fluctuates, then this is what happens: fungal spores become imbalanced in their body, it gets out of control, they die in a month rather than 2.5 months.

    If you want to see how much fungus is in your body, go to an Optometrist to ask about viewing the back of your eyes with a Dark Field/phase Microscope. What that will show you is all the fungal spores that embed in the rear of your eyes. It's related to Candida balance. All the fungal infections in the Animal kingdom are regardless of Immune System response: there is so much toxic material being mislabeled as food that causes the Immune System and even the Nervous System to become agitated or weakened. Take Aspartame, a Nervous System agitant for example; you can buy a bottle of pure Lemon Juice and the Ingredients on the bottle will say "Lemmons, Water, Natural Flavors" and because Aspartame is in such ill-Fame the FDA has approved over 25 synonyms indicator it may hide under: Aspartame is allowed to be written as a Natural Flavor, while that mis-implies that Lemons and Water are un-Natural Flavors(tm).

    When I worked for Home Depot, people would ask about care of their outdoor wood structures like a Spa Gazeebo, fence, or Greenhouse. The customer always wants it to last longer, but then they want to paint it to match their house or look prettier than it needed to be. Painted wood weekens in the sun and only lasts 10 years as opposed to sealed unpainted wood that could last 75 years. Everyone gets giddy because the paint is fresh, but then it fades in 2 years to look uglier than unpainted wood.

    Yes, they are all homos. Homo Depot employees suggest more unproved and unnecessary improvements just because it looks good as they see it. That's why none of them are in actual construction or Ikea. Like how homos pretend to squeal like a girl just because an unrelated orifice is plugged or unplugged. It's just as much pretend as it is for any purpose, yet somehow it gets them more money to make more advertisements that have encouraged people to use toxic paints, plant FOREIGN INVASIVE PLANTS, use toxic chemical plant-sprays on their FOREIGN INVASIVE PLANTS, killing my beeeeeees that flowers are made for.

    This entire planet would look like the English bullshit housing projects if it was upto Homo Depot.

  138. Re:The methodologies in the report sound suspect.. by x2A · · Score: 1

    What are you on?!! The information he's provided as both well reasoned and founded in reality which comes from direct observation of the matter in hand! What do you think science is? D'you think if you're not wearing a white lab coat and playing with test tubes "it's not science"??? I think you've been watching too many hair product adverts.

    --
    The revolution will not be televised... but it will have a page on Wikipedia
  139. Re:Don't know about bees, but certainly this shows by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

    I just re-read my response, and I don't like my dismissive tone towards you.

    Please forgive my poor attitude. I was just feeling dismayed with some of the attacks I'd been receiving lately from other rude and thoughtless posters elsewhere and I clumped you in among them. You are among the more moderate people and I do appreciate your willingness to engage in discussion. I know it takes courage to face the possibility of not knowing everything. Happens to me all the time, and it is never made easier when somebody is actively throwing mean-spirited words around.

    -FL

  140. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one wastes money developing GMO'ed flowering shrubs. There's no profit in it, unlike farm crops. Pull the other one and put your tin-foil hat back on.

  141. Mosquito's also by geekoid · · Score: 1

    pollinate.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  142. Re:Why is slashdot accepting stories from Telegrap by geekoid · · Score: 1

    the Huffington post use to be a good site, but in the last years it publishes quack science as if it's true, and is an area infested with people who have no clue about science and think vaccines are bad.

    So it' pretty much the Guardian .

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  143. Re:Wait, what? - The next step by phlinn · · Score: 1

    That's what I assumed as well until i saw their picture of an example in the paper.

    --
    "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
  144. Wall Street bees laugh at cell phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gee, I might believe this study, if it could explain why they have trouble every year in NYC from swarming bees that have to be rounded up and taken out to the country, and a beekeeper friend of mine who lives in a remote area of WV, with virtually no cell phone coverage almost lost all of his bees a couple years ago. He lost 4 of 7 hives and has slowly and surely been nursing his population back. And this latest bee swarm in NYC, a swam of 15,000 bees, took place on Wall Street (http://wvgazette.com/News/weirdnews/201006010443). Do you think there are many cell phones being used on Wall Street. I'm guessing yes. I guess the NYC bees didn't read the theory that cell phones are causing their demise. Weird.

  145. Re:Actual Apiarist/beekeeper here. Blame GMO'd pol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi,
    I read the cloud seeding weather modification project (the pdf you posted) and only saw silver iodide flares and solutions to be burned into the air. Why did you use Titanium oxide in your experiment?

    Thank you for the interesting info. I too am a beekeeper in LA, for three years now (they came to me, and I took care of them). I have noticed that an entire row of Jasmine I purchased from Home Dupo is flowering like crazy, but not one bee on them--they are avoiding them.