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Is $100 Million Per Year Too Little For The Brain Map Initiative?

waderoush writes "At a time of sequesters and shrinking R&D spending, critics are attacking President Obama's proposed Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) initiative, which would have a $100 million budget starting in 2014. But in fact, the project 'runs the risk of becoming a casualty of small-bore thinking in science business, and politics,' argues Xconomy national life sciences editor Luke Timmerman. The goal of the BRAIN initiative is to develop technologies for exploring the trillions of synapses between neurons in the human brain. If the $3 billion Human Genome Project and its even more productive sequel, the $300-million-per-year Advanced Sequencing Technologies program, are any guide, the initiative could lead to huge advances in our understanding of Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, and consciousness itself. Only government can afford to think this big, argues Timmerman. 'Even though $100 million a year is small change by federal government standards,' Timmerman writes, 'it is enough to create a small market that gives for-profit companies assurance that if they build such tools, someone will buy them. We ought to be talking about how we can free up more money to achieve our neuroscience goals faster, rather than talking about whether we can afford this puny appropriation at all.'"

190 comments

  1. More ways to sped by putzin · · Score: 1, Insightful

    While I'm all for government research. We need to spend less, not more. BRAIN sounds great, but so does a hundred other potential research projects that aren't even up for funding.

    --
    Bah
    1. Re:More ways to sped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are many potential projects, so we should spend LESS?

    2. Re:More ways to sped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I'm all for the use of "clever" acronyms, calling it Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies does not result in BRAIN, it results in BTRAIN.
      Get that Booty Train a-rollin, yo!

    3. Re:More ways to sped by hedwards · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The government should be a major source of funding for research, the government doesn't have to worry about being profitable in any given quarter, so long as the research leads to prosperity that's all well and good.

      As the AC asked, the solution to many potential projects is less funding? In what way does that make any sense at all?

      What's more you wouldn't be typing that without US government money for things like the internet and laptops would probably not exist either as battery research was primarily driven by space exploration related needs.

      When all is said and done this sort of "thinking" is what's threatening the US, get the government out of it and hope your cause is sufficiently sexy to attract philanthropists.

    4. Re:More ways to sped by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, sometimes more, sometimes less, that's how prioritization works.

      Although learning more about how the brain works is a worthy goal, it is not necessarily the *most* worthy goal, and it may actually be better to have the government spend less on it (so more can be spent on other things).

      If we solved all the other problems in the world except demystifying the brain (even if it wasn't that important), then we should absolutely spend all our research money on that. This is an example of having less potential projects causing the best option to be to spend more on brain research.

    5. Re:More ways to sped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm all for spending less but we should actually debate what we need to spend more or less on. When the debate on anything boils down to two sides arguing spend more or spend less we have already lost. Try asking how much we should spend on any given thing and why. I don't benefit from Social Security or Medicare. Nor do I think I benefit proportionally for paying taxes to support half the world's military spending. At least as far as debt goes, money is all made up anyway (even when it was based on gold) and doesn't change the actual resources or manpower that we have. So either this research is worth the investment or it's not. Regardless of our debt.

    6. Re:More ways to sped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The government should be a major source of funding for research, the government doesn't have to worry about being profitable in any given quarter, so long as the research leads to prosperity that's all well and good.

      And if we spend $100 to get $1 of prosperity, it's Other People's Money, and we'll just ignore all the waste and fraud!

    7. Re:More ways to sped by ackthpt · · Score: 0

      While I'm all for government research. We need to spend less, not more. BRAIN sounds great, but so does a hundred other potential research projects that aren't even up for funding.

      I'm still of the mind that most truly astounding things in the world were done before the age of computers. How about applying some brains to this brain-mapping. Some pencils and paper, too. $100 million sounds absurdly high for anyone to be moaning about it being inadequate.

      ob zombie: Braaaaiiinnnsss

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    8. Re:More ways to sped by Thud457 · · Score: 2

      we'll just ignore all the waste and fraud!

      Sciencemen don't waste and fraud.
      You must be thinking of banksters or politicians.

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    9. Re:More ways to sped by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      There are many potential projects, so we should spend LESS?

      I think it's the potential government contractors who are thinking moar needs to be spent. That's how they think. We have a real POS system running at our state level I cannot believe should have cost $27 million. Take 1/10 that amount and give it to the department that peformed the function formerly and we'd have a better system - the old one really was well done and they were such great people to work with. IBM got the state contract and their system is riddled with bugs and they didn't know how to train users, so at least the old department employees took that over, which they do very well (largely because they understood what was going on and weren't burdened with IBMs documentation and ISO-9001, whatever perceived requirements.)

      Just like we should be wary of the Military/Industrial Complex, the modern equivilent is the Government/Contractor booby trap - Your tax dollars at work, kinda/sorta.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    10. Re:More ways to sped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sciencemen don't waste and fraud.

      Such a wise-wise-man... yet such a fool.

      'Sciencemen' would only be beyond immorality if they were dead; they, too, are human.

      What a religion you and your ilk have created around 'science' - what dogma, what blind faith, what WILLING ignorance!

    11. Re:More ways to sped by rhodium_mir · · Score: 2

      Anything the taxpayers money is going to be spent on needs to have quantifiable and measurable goals of success or its just some ideological feelgood bullshit.

      Truth. If the next James Clerk Maxwell wants to play around with useless curiosities like magnets he should do it on his own dime. The only science governments should fund are those where the outcome is already known.

      --
      You can't spell "oneiromancy" without "roman".
    12. Re:More ways to sped by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 0

      With the way we're spending right now, economic collapse is a sure thing. Not an "oh maybe" but an absolute guarantee. We can't just borrow forever. The budget is a bunch of small numbers, like this one, that add up to big ones. No reasonable person would ever just keep buying things without question. A reasonable person would make choices, depending on their priorities. The government ideally would do the same thing, yet it doesn't.

      If I was in Washington, I think a smart thing to do would be to take an item like this, and ask what other program we can sacrifice to make way for it. My first choice would be a far more expensive and useless one, like the national endowment of the arts, or title ix. Ask yourself, would you rather have artwork that so few people are interested in that almost nobody would ever pay for it, or would you rather have medical research that even costs less? Then we get two benefits: both a smaller budget and a more useful program.

      --
      Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
    13. Re:More ways to sped by hedwards · · Score: 2

      You're an idiot.

      I said they don't have to worry about it in any given quarter. Also, it's a lot more complicated than you make it sound. How much money has the US made off of battery technology and such? It's not an easily answered question.

    14. Re:More ways to sped by hedwards · · Score: 2

      LOL, so we should probably just stop funding research altogether as we aren't going to be funding any actual science.

      Then again, I'm pretty sure you're being sarcastic with your comment.

    15. Re:More ways to sped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if we spend $100 to get $1000 of prosperity? So everyone knows that inflation is caused by too much money and/or less goods. Basically if you have 100 pieces of currency and 100 goods of equal value each one is going to be worth one piece of currency. Now if technology makes it possible for you to produce 200 goods and you still have 100 pieces of currency you will get deflation so that each good is worth half a piece. On the other end if you production falls to 50 goods you get inflation and everything cost 2 pieces. And of course if you have 100 goods and your currency doubles to 200 pieces you'll get inflation or conversely deflation.

      So are you still with me? To keep money stable the supply of it needs to be increased and decreased as production increases and decreases. Funny thing though. Increasing the money supply can in fact increase production. Banks do this all the time. Their loan to you, which is debt, is like negative money. On one side is the collateral/security and on the other is a negative number. The two should balance plus interest. Everything is fine as long as that collateral is truly worth the negative number. If I loan you $400,000 of made up money for a house that's worth $400,000 we're good. If that house become worth $200,000 and I loaned $400,000 that's bad. Now the balance sheet doesn't match up. The money didn't come from anywhere. The goods and products were still created. But we moan about the negative money.

      And using something like gold doesn't do any good. The goldsmiths that turned into bankers figured out long ago that they could loan out more that they had. And it has pros. Created money can create goods. If I loan you a receipt for gold and you give me back another receipt for gold no one is any the wiser but the loan can create value by creating investment capital. So a loan for equipment turns into a greater production of goods which adds real wealth.

      Things can actually go pretty good for a while. The main problem that generally occurs is an asset becomes overvalued. When this happens there is more made up money in the system than what's represented in value. This could cause inflation. However, because spending has seized up the actually used money supply has shrunk and prices are somewhat more stable than they other wise would be. And if companies started spending again but increase production in line with spending then inflation should stay pretty steady.

      Interest can be a problem for a debt based economy. After all if most of your money is debt where do you get the interest from? Well, it turns out you get it from the banker when he pays you to do things. If the economy has 10 dollars and $9.00 is debt money $1.00 is 'real' money and that debt has $1.50 in finance or interest charges getting the other $.50 becomes difficult even if I get all the debt money plus the dollar. Unless the banker pays me $.50 to do something, I'll never be able to pay him back. Of course, he's not really out anything either except for a promise from me to pay him He can also loan somebody else money who can pay me until that guy figures out where to get his money from.

      So the only real question is, will the $100 million the government spends going to return to society more than $100 million in value? If it does then it's worth doing. Quantifying the return for society is difficult. For instance, let's say we spend $10 million on a bridge and that bridge creates a $20 million boost to the value of the economy. If the government collects %20 in taxes it won't recoup it's costs or pay back it's debt if it got the money from debt. Does that mean it was a bad idea? The government might as well print the money. Either way you're putting the same amount of money into the supply whether it's debt based or printed. Either way there are inflationary pressures. The only difference would be the taxpayers wouldn't have to pay interest and have debt on their back forever.

      Sorry for the rant, but money only repres

  2. It's too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    If there were a demand for such a thing, the free market would have demanded its creation already.

    This is just another rathole down which to pour more borrowed/printed money that our great-great-great-great-great grandchildren will never be able to pay back.

    1. Re:It's too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I assume the Human Genome Project was a waste too? And nearly all space travel?

    2. Re:It's too much by hedwards · · Score: 2

      I know you're a troll, but on the chance that people are thinking the same thing.

      Private funding tends to be pretty short sighted. If there isn't an immediately obvious application for it, and a way of making a buck on it, chances are it won't be done. Government money doesn't mean that you can research things of no significance, it just means that you don't have to be able to turn it profitable by itself. And a ton of research out there is useless by itself, but when combined with other studies and research projects makes for some very useful things.

    3. Re:It's too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Government money doesn't mean that you can research things of no significance...

      Shrimp treadmill. http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/federalbudgetprocess/a/How-Much-Shrimp-Treadmill-Study-Cost-Taxpayers.htm

    4. Re:It's too much by DoctorBonzo · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, government funded research also is short sighted, but sometimes not as short as that which is commercially funded.

      Note that it usually has to be sold to Congress (the actual funders) as having some societal good - witness the brain project being touted as maybe leading to cures for Alzheimers.

      Basic research (that is with no obvious commercial potential) usually follows free market principles - there's no market for it so it has to be done for free.

      I don't see this changing anytime soon, and maybe it shouldn't...

    5. Re:It's too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but that shrimp treadmill story is bullshit. The treadmill portion cost all of about $1000 and was a minor portion of the work. The full project was what cost 500k and the research was centered on the effects disease has on respiration. Shrimp are simple and easy to study, the reasearch was directly focused on marine life, with the likelihood of giving direction for future studies on the effects of infection on people. But yeah, total waste...

      You sound like Sarah Palin railing on the stupidity of using research dollars on fruit flies.

    6. Re:It's too much by backslashdot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A large capital intensive project that yields information that cannot be patented. Why would private investors spend money on it?

      The Brain map will discover information, that information cannot be suppressed or even hidden (somebody is bound to leak it for free). Therefore it makes no sense for private investors to pour money into it, since they won't be able to get a return.

      On the other hand, the value to society is immense .. therefore government should do it.

    7. Re:It's too much by agm · · Score: 0

      Why is this moderated as a Troll? Though the poster is anonymous, they are spot on.

      If you think this research is worthwhile, then you wouldn't mind paying for it yourself.

      If you don't think this research is worthwhile then why should you be forced to pay for it?

      However it is funded it should not be via compulsory wealth confiscation.

    8. Re:It's too much by agm · · Score: 0

      Not a waste, just inappropriately funded.

  3. Faster than expected! by Empiric · · Score: 1

    ... more money to achieve our neuroscience goals faster

    Apparently they've already achieved augmenting the mind to psychic powers, because there's no other way he knows what my (as, yes, a member of the set of "our") neuroscience goals are.

    Since, however, I am not a consulting neuroscientist nor a corporation poised to monetize discoveries in this field, my goals, at least in the "money" terms, probably vary.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    1. Re:Faster than expected! by hedwards · · Score: 1

      What are you on about?

      The focus of this research is on the technology necessary to map and study the brain. So, it accelerates pretty much any brain related research. So, as long as you plan not to get dementia or alzheimers you may well be right, but there's a ton of research left to be done on all sorts of things that's held up by the limited technology for studying brains of living subjects.

    2. Re:Faster than expected! by Empiric · · Score: 0

      Or, to put it another way, there's a ton of research left to be done for which the entire medical industry has looked at the tangibility of the definition of the objective, and the likelihood of its pursuit being useful, and (with their own money on the line), all passed.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    3. Re:Faster than expected! by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Protip: They were.

      http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2000/04/35479

      On the other hand, I have in mind a number of pursuits that I personally expect will "return many times over what was spent on it", that is, return to someone, perhaps even coincidentally you.

      Ready to invest? Wait, not "invest" per se, as my actual investors/political-friends will get any payback. Let's call your contribution an "enforced donation". I await your check.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    4. Re:Faster than expected! by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      Protip: They were.

      Celera didn't come into existence until an entire decade after the public genome project started, and was able to take advantage of a decade's worth of technology development - as well as the initial results of the HGP, which were immediately deposited in a public database.

  4. Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by ohnocitizen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Research like this is needed, and could yield benefits in medicine, business, and simply human curiosity about our nature. We *could* just cut programs until we stagnate, or we could invest in science and try to grow. I vote for the latter.

    1. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by femtobyte · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The big question isn't so much whether brain research is good and needed (I think it is), but whether handing out wads of cash to private profiteers is actually the most effective way to do research. There are plenty of highly qualified, smart, and innovative academic researchers who would be glad to get grants without tacking on a fat profit bonus for investors. Private business is great at self-promotion and sucking up cash from public coffers into private pockets, but it's doubtful whether those massive added inefficiencies are balanced by equal or greater gains in quality of results over publicly-funded non-profit research.

    2. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It could go either way. Investment in fundamental research is a great idea for government, one that has returned some of the best dividends over time.

      On the other hand, you can't just throw money at anyone who talks pretty about brains. That opens the door for scammers and frauds to come in and steal a lot of money.

      The guys in the article don't really seem to have a clear plan, they just want investments in things like nano-diamonds. Also their idea is to take the money away from cancer research, which is weird. I'd like to see ideas that are at least a little more concrete than that before supporting a billion dollar commitment on the topic.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jealous?

    4. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by femtobyte · · Score: 2

      Nope. Jealous would mean that I wished academic researchers would be paid millions and millions, and be able to rule over all the peons below. That's not the outcome I want. I just don't think multimillionaire profiteers should be granted such societal power, either, especially when they're only doing a less efficient job of what academic researchers do with far lower wasted margins.

    5. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Research is good no doubt. The problem is, as always, that there are limited resources, and sometimes using those resources responsibly means saying "no" to an expenditure that you may really really want to make.

      For instance (to use an extreme example), if we were talking "Zimbabwe", and you were to say "they should definately invest in space research", I might respond that, while true, their limited resources should be spent on their many more pressing issues.

      We're not Zimbabwe, but we do need to watch how much we spend, and we already spend huge amounts on medical research. It would be inaccurate to make a dichotomy between "providing more funding for BRAIN" and "doing no research like this".

    6. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by jd · · Score: 1

      Agreed on all points, though I'd have to agree with femtobyte as well that profiteers make horrible scientists. $100 million is peanuts, as the original article notes, but that is only a bad thing if it operates in complete isolation. If it cooperates with the Connectome Project and other neurological studies, this study could be quite useful. But that is only true if the division of labour is correct. You cannot break a scientific project into N sub-projects at random, even $100 million ones. If everyone got together and discussed who is best placed to do which part, the results could be extremely valuable.

      Even more so, when you consider that a 13T MRI scanner capable of handling humans should be online just about now. Since that has already been built, the cost of building it is effectively zero. The resolution achievable from such a scanner, however, should be nothing short of spectacular.

      Can you even begin to imagine the advances achievable from a consortium of Connectome researchers, high-end (9.3T and 13T) MRI labs, and this new foundation?

      Ok, now you've imagined it, stop. We're talking politicians, scientists under publish-or-perish rules, get-rich-quick corporations and corrupt "advocacy". There's no possible way any of those involved will be capable of doing what they should do.

      --
      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)
    7. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the part where we spend $300 million to learn some modest, iterative thing that some fucking drug company patents anyway.

      You want $300 mil for this and think it's too little? Cancel an aircraft carrier and use that money. Stop coming back to the fucking well with a bigger and bigger bucket.

    8. Re:Ignore the Critics, Research is Necessary by fche · · Score: 1

      Not all research is worthwhile. When you're going bankrupt, the threshold / burden of proof ought to be pretty darned high to ensconce new spending.

  5. Excuse me... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    Where does government get its funding from? And who is it that has a serious budgeting problem?

    1. Re:Excuse me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The government gets its funding through raising taxes, loans, and by creating new money. Taxes are very low right now, yield on T-bills so low that a 10-year note effectively has a negative yield, and the cost of creating new money is ridiculously low with inflation pushing hard against the lower bound. Combing all of that plus our enormous and long running unemployment and the USA has a very serious budgeting problem: we're not spending anywhere near enough.

  6. It's a scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There is already a TON of brain research being funded. This is repackaging existing research as something new. $100 million is nothing compared to the amount already being spent.

    1. Re:It's a scam. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Just because there is existing research doesn't mean that funding for a new line of work is a scam. The goal (although currently vague) is funnel more money into technologies for the simultaneous recording of large numbers of neurons.

  7. Far enough along to throw money at it? by Animats · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Throwing money at a problem only works if you known roughly what you want to do. The Manhattan Project had a well defined goal - 1) separate uranium isotopes or make plutonium, and 2) figure out some way to assemble them fast enough to get a fast chain reaction. They knew up front roughly what was needed. The Apollo program was a step up from the previous rocket programs, but it wasn't the first big rocket.

    On the other hand, throwing money at controlled fusion has not been very successful. We don't know how to make that work. Throwing money at artificial intelligence didn't accomplish much until recent years. Interestingly, mobile robotics is now far enough along that throwing money at it works. NASA blew about $80 million on the Flight Telerobotic Servicer in the 1980s and got zip. DARPA has spent over $100 million with Boston Dynamics on BigDog, LS3, PETMAN, and ATLAS, and they're getting results.

    The trouble with the BRAIN program is that they're talking about developing bigger computers to emulate a brain, but don't really know what problem they have to solve. This could turn into another supercomputer boondoggle. The comment I've made previously (once to Rod Brooks) about emulating a human brain is that you should try to emulate a mouse brain (1/1000th the mass) first. All the mammal brains have roughly the same architecture. Until you can emulate a mouse brain, you're not ready to try for a human brain. Brooks replied that "he didn't want to go down in history as the person who created the world's best robot mouse." So he tried Cog, which was an embarrassing flop, and hasn't been heard of much since.

    1. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Oh we know what we want to do. More basic research.

      This, OTOH is just a typical presidential PR stunt. A 'dream team' approach. Well, that doesn't even work so well in sports and science isn't a basketball game.

      It's just a way to 1) make noise 2) make some more noise and 3) toss some money to some politically connected friends.

      Nothing to see here, move along.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Synerg1y · · Score: 5, Interesting

      the initiative could lead to huge advances in our understanding of Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, and consciousness itself

      The goal is right in the summary, you wouldn't even have to RTFA...

      Ever meet anybody with the former 2 conditions? $2/year an American is less than I'm about to go spend on lunch, saying its not worth it implies a general misunderstanding of the scope of the US economy and a disregard for fellow human beings suffering from these conditions.

      I also feel I've met way too many people with the third condition, some of it is pretty atrocious.

    3. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Alomex · · Score: 1

      he comment I've made previously (once to Rod Brooks) about emulating a human brain is that you should try to emulate a mouse brain (1/1000th the mass) first.

      To me this is the hallmark of an over-hyped project. Setting overly ambitious goals that are not achievable even in the medium term but designed to attract media attention.

      The MIT media lab was a classical example of this, with press release after press release promising some life changing research or product (OLPC anyone?) well before the problem and solution space were well understood.

    4. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Interesting

      On the other hand, throwing money at controlled fusion has not been very successful. We don't know how to make that work.

      We know what we need to do, the path forward is fairly clear. We haven't exactly been throwing money at it, that's the problem.

      Other than that, I agree with your post.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "On the other hand, throwing money at controlled fusion has not been very successful"

      We have never "thrown money at controlled fusion"
      See..
      http://i.imgur.com/sjH5r.jpg

    6. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      It's just a way to 1) make noise 2) make some more noise and 3) toss some money to some politically connected friends.
      Nothing to see here, move along.

      Sounds like the IRAQ war Bush friends got us into. Unfortunately, it took us over 10 years to "move along"...

      Personally, I'd rather spend *only* 100 million on brain research.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    7. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Graydyn+Young · · Score: 2

      I personally suffer from human consciousness, and I'll tell ya, it ain't easy. For most sufferers, fits of consciousness often last 16 hours or more and cause serious feelings of confusion and frustration. Sometimes I wake up in the morning, and I don't even know the nature of my own being. There are several disease modifying medications available to sufferers of consciousness, but they are highly restricted and come with a whole host of side effects.

    8. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      the initiative could lead to huge advances in our understanding of Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, and consciousness itself

      Ever meet anybody with the former 2 conditions?

      Even more useful, spend that money simply studying the last item (consciousness) on members of the House and Senate. I'm sure we'd find *something* - eventually...

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    9. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The trouble with the BRAIN program is that they're talking about developing bigger computers to emulate a brain, but don't really know what problem they have to solve. This could turn into another supercomputer boondoggle. The comment I've made previously (once to Rod Brooks) about emulating a human brain is that you should try to emulate a mouse brain (1/1000th the mass) first. All the mammal brains have roughly the same architecture. Until you can emulate a mouse brain, you're not ready to try for a human brain. Brooks replied that "he didn't want to go down in history as the person who created the world's best robot mouse." So he tried Cog, which was an embarrassing flop, and hasn't been heard of much since.

      You misunderstand what the BRAIN program is doing. The money isn't to simulate a/the brain. It's develop new technologies for recording from vast numbers of neurons at the same time.

    10. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      toss some money to some politically connected friends

      Which friends would those be? People like George Church are not exactly politically connected, not in any way that matters. If a politician wants to hand out spoils to guarantee future party loyalty, giving money a relatively tiny clique of academic scientists is one of the least effective methods I can imagine.

    11. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by oldhack · · Score: 2

      The goals you quoted might as well read "the good stuff". If you can't even propose what you specifically want to try, you can spend your own god damn money.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    12. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      We're on a topic where understanding the why leads to the how though. Understanding the how has proven impossible up to this point.

      I think a lot of the responses here are the government's fault though for botching an infinite number of these studies where nothing actually got studied and the money was just recycled among a few staff until it was gone. But, still I think it's a worthy goal, and I support it, though I'd just like to see more checks and balances.

    13. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I for one hope you or your parents get Alzheimer's and suffer a slow, horrible decline. Then if at the end you are even capable of remembering your past attitude or comprehending regret, you can wish you had understood the reason individuals can't just "spend their own god damn money" trying to solve the big scientific and healthcare issues. Honestly, there's a pretty solid chance you are only alive (or even ever existed) today because others were a hell of a lot less selfish than you.

    14. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      There are countless conditions that cause human suffering. To decide to fund one group or another necessarily means that funding can not be used to help a different group. Saying that people who don;t support this don't care about suffering is retarded. It is *as* retarded as saying you don't care about suffering because you'd don't want to spend those $2/year on a campaign to stop "texting while driving" which also saves lives.

      You might say ok fine, lets spend $4/year then. The problem is that you could easily come up with 50000 things that we could spend money on, and now our entire GDP is spent on government research.

    15. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      the initiative could lead to huge advances in our understanding of Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, and consciousness itself

      That's not a goal. That's the kind of thing to tell venture capitalists when you want them to give you money. A goal sounds more like this, "We're going to use radiographic injection to observe the brain and collect data." It's a plan that's reachable and achievable.

      Remember, AI funding already got cut once (AI winter) because of making ridiculous overpromises.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    16. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you want to push your pet-funding through because some other administration pushed their pet-funding through? When does this cycle of federal appropriations waste ever end? Oh right, when Congress decides to obey the Constitution.

    17. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      $2/year an American is less than I'm about to go spend on lunch, saying its not worth it implies a general misunderstanding of the scope of the US economy and a disregard for fellow human beings suffering from these conditions [Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy].

      And if the government does ENOUGH stuff at $2/person/project, pretty soon you can't afford lunch - or a place to live, or a way to get to work, or medical care if you DO get Alzheimer's or epilepsy, ...

      Further, government projects are NOTORIOUSLY less effective - and often drastically counter-productive - than virtually any other approach to doing practically ANYTHING. I'd expect this project to work the same way - dumping much of the money down the bureaucratic and crony ratholes while putting researchers to work on questions chosen by non-experts. (For an extreme example, consider the effect of Lysenkoism on genetics research in the USSR.)

      (Note, by the way, that they weren't talking about spending that $2/year/man-woman-or-child on a project to cure or prevent those conditions. They were holding out improved "UNDERSTANDING" them as a possible side-benefit of their tiny project - which is directed at the normal functioning of the brain, not biochemical and biomechanical pathologies degrading it. It was marketing puffery, not the actual target of the project.)

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    18. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by khallow · · Score: 1

      You can't be bothered to spend your own money. But you can be bothered to hope for the worst for people who mildly disagree with you. You are only alive today because others were a hell of a lot less selfish than you.

    19. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      putting researchers to work on questions chosen by non-experts

      That is generally a worrisome prospect, but it's not normally the case in the US. The government outlines broad areas that it wants to see studied (cancer, infectious diseases, etc.), but the specific questions being addressed are chosen by actual experts in the form of NIH grant panels. In this specific case, while the decision to push for funding for this initiative came from Obama (which definitely gives me pause), the project itself is, again, the brainchild of actual experts.

    20. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      so how do you decide then? do you not think this is an important project then?

      I've also never seen anybody in science take the pre-emptive on I'm going to solve this or cure this... it's always trial and error, so making promises beforehand would be stupid imho.

      You guys hear government and money and immediately protest, but guess what, that federal tax is coming out of your paycheck either way, so might as well put it towards something that CAN be useful.

    21. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Throwing money at artificial intelligence didn't accomplish much until recent years.

      It accomplished the groundwork that made the recent advances possible.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    22. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Yes I do think it is very important. I think it would probably even be beneficial to spend more than $2/person/year.

      I just disagree that being in opposition to spending the money means that people don't care about suffering. They may simply care more about suffering in different areas, or simply want to decide for themselves which causes are worthy (e.g. charity).

      Also, government programs have a reputation for wasting money. Something might be a very good cause, but that doesn't mean the government will solve it by throwing money at it. I am not saying the private sector is always better. I am just saying that there is some probability the money will just be squandered, and that needs to be factored into the equation. Many government programs are so important that they are worth doing even if X% will be squandered.

      You say the money is coming out of our paycheck either way, but that's not the whole truth. We are ridiculously in debt. There is over $50K of US debt for every citizen.

      Every $1 we spend now is $10 we need to repay later. We are consuming more than we are producing, and we are paying for it with a credit card. This isn't about democrats vs republicans. Taxes vs. spending cuts. What are doing now is unsustainable. We need to raise taxes to pay off the debt faster *and* cut spending. I believe Obama called this "a balanced approach".

    23. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      I just disagree that being in opposition to spending the money means that people don't care about suffering. They may simply care more about suffering in different areas, or simply want to decide for themselves which causes are worthy (e.g. charity).

      Again, how do you decide?

      I agree the government does waste money, but while $9m of this project may get wasted, at $100m a year it seems like it's going to make progress short of complete fraud.

      Also, a lot of scientists, depend on grants like this to feed their families and produce future scientists (yes i'm partially joking), so you know, we don't go back to the dark ages.

      Funny you should mention debt because it sounds like you've been listening to the republicans: read & behold... we owe most of the deficit... to ourselves : http://economyincrisis.org/content/whos-behind-deficit-crisis unless you consider the U.S. Treasury more than a government puppet. Our debt is really a good measure of how much money we've injected into the economy which in turn causes the dollar to lose value, but as you can see from the article its all very POV based.

    24. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      You decide the way we decide anything subjective in a democracy... with democracy.

      If most people have friends and relatives that have suffered from brain related illnesses, then it becomes very important. If most people don't know anyone with mental illness, then it becomes less important. Maybe everyone knows someone with Alzheimers, but they are just much more scared of other things like cancer and heart disease.

      If people don't like the laws that get passed (i.e. the way the money is spent), then they elect new representatives to make new laws. Its not a perfect system, but I don't have any better ideas.

      I don't see why mentioning the national debt means I am being influenced by republicans. I also said we should raise taxes and I even quoted Obama.

      Yes we owe most of the debt to "ourselves", but that's not the right way to look at it. We could say that 100% of the world's debt is held by other people in the world, so really no debt is ever bad because it's just internal "world debt", and therefore no debt is ever bad, but this can't be true.

      When we create excessive debt (i.e. increase the money supply) we make people in general feel liek they have more wealth than they actually do. They start building mansions and say "I will pay for my retirement with all the money I make flipping houses". Then we end up with a bunch of useless mcmansions and a generation of people who need the next generation to support them, because we spent the money on houses rather than on investing it for a rainy day.

      obviously this is just a silly example, but I don't think it is too far off from reality.

    25. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have given many thousands of dollars of my money to charities, including Alzheimer's. How about you?

      I may be a sarcastic asshole to people I don't agree with (I obviously don't want anyone to literally get a disease, and was making a point - ie. this guy is probably one of those libertarian objectivists who will defend their right to smoke when and where they want to until the day they get lung cancer and want someone else to pay for it), but I am *not* selfish.

    26. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      How about just prioritizing it by potential cost SAVINGS, then?

      Dementia treatment and care, etc costs over $200B a year to the US, and that's largely paid for by Medicare/Medicaid. It's estimated to be a near unimaginable $1.2 TRILLION PER YEAR by 2050 - it will be far and away the single biggest medical expense, and will make Medicare and other government health-related expenses dwarf anything else we are spending on.

      I saw an estimate that it costs almost $100K per person per year to pay for 24/7 long term care to a patient with severe dementia/memory loss (most of whom are already on Medicare, so the government is obligated to pay!) That piddling $100M pays for about 1000 patients per year, which is inconsequential compared to the 2-3 million who need that care.

      When you really look at the numbers, if there is anything that is going to bankrupt America (the government or many of the individual citizens) it's health care expenses of the elderly. Minimizing those expenses in the future is the only foreseeable solution (short of some version of Logan's Run). This sort of large scale problem requiring direction and foresight that can't be solved by individuals is WHY "to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts" was included in the taxation Section (8) of the Constitution in the first place...

    27. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Every $1 we spend now is $10 we need to repay later.

      Actually, it's more like "every $1 we spend now is $10 we DON'T need to spend later" where proactive health care expenses are concerned.

    28. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by khallow · · Score: 1

      I have given many thousands of dollars of my money to charities, including Alzheimer's. How about you?

      About seven years volunteering for a non profit aerospace group with some donations over that time. I am satisfied by your explanation.

    29. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by JubilantShank · · Score: 1

      I really wish I could mod this +1000, insightful.

    30. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Regarding AI and Thinking, I wonder if scientists even know how amoeba and paramecia think.

      Most people just assume they don't think. But what makes them so sure? I mostly see circular logic - e.g. "thinking requires neurons and single celled creatures can't think because they have no neurons".

      It seems to me that they do somewhat complicated stuff: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pvOz4V699gk

      A blind and mute paraplegic could still think. Just because something doesn't have the same senses and physical abilities doesn't mean it can't think.

      --
    31. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      If it's all about the economics then you'd need people to die soon after their productivity starts declining a lot or dropping to zero.

      So you might not actually want to find cures/treatments for some problems ;).

      People will eventually die, but before that they often use up a lot of $$$ in medical expenses. And if anyone asks "but what if people could be healthy and fit forever?" they should go think more about the consequences. It's ugly.

      --
    32. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those aren't goals, that's hand-waving.

      Ever meet anybody with the former 2 conditions? $2/year an American is less than I'm about to go spend on lunch, saying its not worth it implies a general misunderstanding of the scope of the US economy and a disregard for fellow human beings suffering from these conditions.

      I also feel I've met way too many people with the third condition, some of it is pretty atrocious

      Ever meet anybody with a congenital heart defect? Why is their lifelong suffering less important than the ~15 years of Alzheimer's?

    33. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's exactly the point of why dementia/Alzheimer's IS something you'd want to cure to save money. People can live for decades with it while getting to the point they need constant care and attention. If people were HEALTHY and FIT, it wouldn't be that big of a deal. It's the people who are debilitatingly sick but long lived that will be so expensive to care for.

    34. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're usually not very productive anyway, so might as well have them dropping dead of heart attacks much earlier.

      Pass em some transfat fries, soda and cigarettes or something.

    35. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Yes, you fuckwit, that's the right way to treat your parents and grandparents. I'm sure you are about 14, but once your family members get to that age hopefully you have actually grown up.

    36. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by jewens · · Score: 1

      Yep, this is just one step removed from this.

      --
      That group of bovine standing over there appears quite portentous. That's right it's an ominous cow herd.
    37. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey fuckwit firstly this whole thread was started by others talking about the money and cost savings. If they're so concerned about the money and economics then it is logical to have people die earlier when they are no longer economically viable.

      Secondly you are going to die eventually (which is a good thing- imagine not being able to die and still being alive when the last stars in the universe have gone dark).

      You're the one who's young. Have you ever seen what happens to those who are dying a bit too slowly for comfort? If you've achieved most of what you've wanted to do (or it's no longer possible for you to achieve it), why hang around slowly rotting away as various bits fail just enough to make your life miserable but not enough to kill you? Makes even more sense for them to check out before that if they believe they will get to heaven or be reincarnated anyway.

      I can tell you once too much stuff starts failing, I'm gonna medicate myself with some cheeseburgers or similar. But only the good stuff. Maybe even try smoking some Cubans (the cigars not the people).

    38. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      The biggest cost savings would be to abolish social security and medicare. Once you decide that saving people is more important than small government and financial freedom, then we need to decide the most fair way to distribute government resources towards care and research. One way that seems pretty fair is democracy, although it doesn't always work.

    39. Re:Far enough along to throw money at it? by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      In many instances this is true in healthcare. But this is the exception to the rule. MOst of the things we put on the government credit card are not things that save us money in the long term. They are things that we have decided we are unwilling to live without. But by doing this our biggest expense becomes interest payments. If we could simply live within our means for a while, it would mean that all the money we are spending on interest could be spent on stuff.

      I am not even advocating privatizing everything. I am advocating smart utilization of government resources. I am advocating what John Stewart constantly says on his show. I want value for the money we spend in washington. For lots of the things we buy, we are not getting good value, first and foremost being our interest payments.

  8. Stop spending money we don't have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    While this is a noble project it still should be noted that we can't afford it. $100 million may not be much in the grand scheme of things but as a tax payer I'm outraged that once again we're spending money we don't have. Let's fix the budget, get spending under control and develop a surplus before we embark on any more spending.

    1. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funding wouldn't be a problem if the rich were made to pay their fair share. But, we allow them to hide their money in tax-free offshore accounts and skip out on paying what they owe. It should come as no surprise that we're broke when the people who own 80% of the wealth don't have to pay in.

      This is why we need a wealth tax instead of an income tax.

    2. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

      Of course, spending a relatively small amount to study the causes of diseases that end up costing a LOT more in medical expenses makes more sense, unless you subscribe to the penny-wise, pound-foolish school of thinking - which it sound like you do - along with all the others screaming about "spending money we don't have" - usually on the poor, sick, disabled and/or elderly - you know, those 47% er's Romney mentioned to all those rich people (with great health insurance - if they even *need* insurance).

      You want to bring the budget more inline? Start by eliminating most tax deductions and loopholes for individual and corporations, have people - namely rich people - pay taxes at their apportioned tax bracket, remove the salary cap for Medicare withholding, eliminate other corporate and farm welfare programs.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    3. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by Dahamma · · Score: 2

      That's insanely short sighted. The real answer is we can't afford NOT to do it.

      Dementia treatment and long term care currently costs a combined $200B (yes two hundred BILLION) dollars a year in the US, and is going to rise DRASTICALLY in coming years with the aging baby boomers. That's literally more than spent on cancer or heart disease. Finding the root cause and an effective treatment for Alzheimer's alone could possibly be the single biggest healthcare accomplishment of the 21st century.

    4. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Except that wealthy people don;t have any wealth. They are just lucky that trusts in the cayment islands buy them nice dinners and their companies give them nice cars to drive and fancy places to live. They don't own any wealth. They just get to consume it.

      This is why we shouldn't have an income tax *or* a wealth tax. We should have a consumption tax. Wealthy people can use loopholes to claim they have no wealth and have no income. What they will be less able to do is to consume less wealth. Afterall what is the point of being rich if you can't enjoy it.

    5. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Yes, but how much of that $200B wouldn't be spent if we had the best possible case and spent $2B (say 20 years of research) to find what the cause was? That's still worlds away from an actual solution, which *surprise* will cost money to implement. And, hey, if you cure Alzheimers - how much longer might someone with other infirmity live? Curing them doesn't actually save money because long term care starts at a point before death, and everyone eventually dies. The reason we spend less on heart disease and cancer care is because those patients don't last as long. That's morbid, but true.

      Finding a cure would be wonderful, as would finding a cure for thousands and thousands of other diseases, developing energy sources which don't have a negative impact on the environment, learning to feed our starving population, eliminating dangerous chemicals and compounds in our manufacturing processes for all the goods we consume, learning more about the stars and our origins, preserving our heritage and history so it doesn't get lost to the developers shovel or erode in the wind and rain, find world peace. Hundreds of thousands of worthy projects, just waiting for a mere $100M/year to fund their cause and produce real progress.

      The real answer is that we cannot, at the moment, afford it. No...let me rephrase that - a large plurality people in the US who care about what the government does has chosen, through their representation, that they would rather keep their money in their pockets than contribute it towards the common good. Until that changes, then these kinds of programs need to be shelved, along with a great number of others.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    6. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      One problem with a "consumption tax" is that you have several generations that have spent their lives trying to accumulate enough to support them in their old age while the government sucked them dry with income taxes and inflation.

      Now that the productive portions of their lives are running out, switching to a consumption tax lets the government loot them AGAIN on what they managed to save despite the previous blood-sucking.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    7. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      That's not that big of a problem. Yes it would be unfair to people who paid income tax their whole life, but you can just cut a check to everyone based on how much income tax they've paid. This would be paid for by the new consumption tax being collected.

      For example:

      Someone worked from age 18 to age 65 paying income tax. This person saved $500K for retirement, but now there is a 40% consumption tax. As long has he gets a check for $200K, he's fine.

      This kind of thing can be calculated as yearly or even monthly payments to people. The extra payments can even be willed to others in case of death. (i.e. what would have happened if the person in question just had the $200k up front, or had simply saved more money for retirement had there been a consumption tax rather than an income tax)

      It can also be prorated for people who retire X years after the new consumption tax.

      ]

      These sorts of changes to the financial incentive system should always be Pareto efficient when possible. There is no reason to unnecessarily screw people over unless they deserve it.

    8. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Curing them doesn't actually save money because long term care starts at a point before death, and everyone eventually dies. The reason we spend less on heart disease and cancer care is because those patients don't last as long. That's morbid, but true.

      But that's not really true, and even when it is it doesn't diminish the point at all. Heart disease and cancer these days are very treatable in many cases. My grandmother has had a coronary stent and breast cancer, and she's now 88 years old and can still get around well enough to do light gardening. Probably significant cost for those incidents, but instead of two major medical expenses over 30 years, an Alzheimer's patient would have that same expense EVERY year.

      But the main reason it's not true is because the first part of your statement just doesn't make sense... curing them DOES actually save money BECAUSE long term care starts at a point before death. In fact, WELL before death. Alzheimer's patients often live as long as those without dementia, the different is they are utterly unable to take care of themselves and must have 24/7 care and monitoring - which can cost huge amounts or money and/or become a horribly stressful and expensive full time activity for a family caregiver.

      And anyway, you can claim there are thousands of other diseases or projects to spend the money on, but I will challenge you that they are really just as worthy in terms of human OR financial benefit. The real fact is dementia and elder care is currently one of the largest medical expenses in the country, and soon will dwarf any others. The US taxpayers are already spending ridiculous amounts of money towards Medicare benefits, etc to pay for this care (much more than Medicare taxes bring in) and it's only going to get worse until the root causes are dealt with.

    9. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      The problem there is it becomes easier and easier to avoid the taxes the longer you let people hold onto their money. Make a bunch of money tax-free, then move to another country to retire and live off it tax-free. Not to mention the crazy calculations or rules you'd have to add to the tax code, etc to deal with inflation, gifts, essential expenses (do you tax someone on *consumption* for medical *expenses* or basic food and housing required to live?)

      I'm sure you can try to come up with all kinds of rules about tracking their money, transfers, withdrawls, etc. But avoiding that is what rich people (and their accounts and lawyers) are already so good at, so I'm sure anyone with any knowledge of the area could poke a dozen holes in any ideas someone on this thread could come up with...

      You are basically discarding one flawed and massively complicated tax system for another flawed and massively complicated tax system that requires a giant flawed and massively complicated process to convert between the two. The only ones that win in this case are the middlemen.

    10. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      You are right what is the point of finding a cure for any disease? We should just shoot the disabled and feeble who don't have the money to be cared for - the would save a lot of money - and of course you argue we don't have the money, of course we have the money to currently care for these people, we just don't have any money to really fix the problem, and money is like some sort of magic scarce resource to you instead of just a way of keeping score - saying the government is out of money is like saying you can run out of points at a basketball game - you can't - all that matters is if there are idle resources available to do what you want or not and with 7% unemployment there are plenty of idle resources - in short, sir, you are a nitwit

    11. Re:Stop spending money we don't have by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying it's flawless. I am saying that a consumption tax has 1 less flaw than the existing system.

      Now on to specifics:

      Yes you would tax consumption of medical services if it where still a commercial service. It is important to have the prices of all services reflect their true cost. In order to support the poor, a prebate could be given out to people, raising everyone's income to some minimum level. Ideally single payer healthcare would simply be paid for with the consumption tax money.

      Yes rich people are good at dodging taxes. But instead of dodging one tax (income tax), they would be forced to try to dodge a consumption tax everytime they purchased something. This means getting every single vendor to conspire with you to break the law. Instead of finding 1 shady accountant, you need to find countless shady vendors.

      Gifts have the same problem in both systems, so switching systems is just a wash in that area. I don't see the problem with inflation.

  9. Main Expenses by schneidafunk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think a better question would be to ask how the money is going to be spent, and the main expenses of the project, before saying x amount of money is too much or too little.

    --
    Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
    1. Re:Main Expenses by Bigby · · Score: 0

      They are going to pay:

      $7M: 100 scientists $50k a year + benefits
      $2M: 10 scientists $100k a year + benefits
      $1M: 3 scientists $250k a year + benefits.
      $10M: capital expenditures
      $10M: travel and other related expenses (including exorbitant parties)
      $20M: laundered for some other use
      $30M: management
      $20M: political special interest

    2. Re:Main Expenses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An even better question is why is the president micromanaging the NIH, DARPA and the NSF.

  10. Value of American currency has declined. by concealment · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    $100m is the new $20m. While this fact is virtually never reported, American currency has lost a huge amount of its actual spending value since 2007. A lot of this is hidden behind the lower quality, quantity or degree of innovation behind products; they're cheaper to make and so can be sold for the same price, which is worth less than it was.

    When Americans wake up to how much they've lost, despite the numbers not changing all that much, they will surely write a lot of strongly-worded text messages to their representatives.

    1. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Synerg1y · · Score: 0

      How aboutzor you put your tin foil hat back on... or provide source. I also don't think you understand how innovation works either, moving on.

      Hint: In capitalism it typically has nothing to do with making a product more efficient, that's usually a by-product of something else.

    2. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by GigsVT · · Score: 0

      SGS inflation, calculated using the methodology they used to calculate inflation up until 1990 when they started fudging the numbers in a serious way, has been hovering around 5-6% per year, this is double or triple what the "official" numbers are saying.

      The quality of our goods have been dropping as well, in large part due to Wal-Mart and their low quality products (often even the same brands, with a special crappy version made only for wal-mart). The inflation numbers do not account for the loss of product quality.

      So real inflation, product quality included, has probably been more around 8-9% a year. So it's not unreasonable to say that our money has lost a great deal of value in recent years. The rate of inflation has been accelerating as well, with many graphs of product price showing a clear "hockey stick" formation.

      The Keynesian and Bernankian ideal of forcing the destruction of savings has caused a flight to hard assets. This, coupled with the massive 1+ trillion dollar money creation event used to bail out investors holding worthless real estate investments... high inflation is inevitable.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    3. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're full of shit.

    4. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go ahead and look at your spending on groceries.

    5. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inflation since 2007 has not been 5x. From 2007 to 2012 inflation has been ~10%. Hell, you know what? Let's make inflation per-year even larger, say it's 5% per year. Even then, inflation from 2007 to 2012 would be 27%-28% - again, certainly not 5x. If it was 5x, the average per-year inflation figure would be ~38%, which is ridiculous and untrue.

      (Used 2012 as the ending year since 2013 figures are (obviously) unavailable)

    6. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you're going to claim that it costs you $35 to see a movie in a theater SGS inflation is clearly wrong.

      http://blog.jparsons.net/2011/03/shadow-stats-debunked-part-i.html

      http://blog.jparsons.net/2011/06/shadow-stats-debunked-part-ii.html

    7. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by rwa2 · · Score: 1

      Americans didn't really lose squat. The bankers multiply money, and had inflated their value from a somewhat sustainable 15x multiplier to somewhere in the 30x range, thanks to the real estate bubble loans and other insurance gimmicks. Then that scheme fell flat, and they lost half their value on paper, bringing down the accounts of investors foolish enough to invest in those "safe" things. But that value never really existed anyway.

      The only real crime was giving them real money to prop up their facade. It'll be interesting to see how long we can keep this up.

    8. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Go ahead and look at your spending on groceries."

      I just did. In 2006 I was unemployed for six months following grad school so I kept track of every cent I spent and I still have those records. I'm currently going through another period of long term unemployment (STEM shortage my ass) and likewise keeping track of every cent I spend. My diet then and now are very similar, as are my grocery bills. Inflation is near zero and has been for quite some time.

    9. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      Americans who put all their money under their mattress definitely lost out. Americans who invested their money did not. The financial system we have now, while not perfect, is designed to encourage investment rather than just hiding your money and waiting for it to go up in value (like you would do with gold). Having an economy where the investors lose out to the people who can manage to spend the least is a recipe for a depression.

      The US government could certainly be more honest about the way it dilutes the USD, and maybe do it in a less manipulative and more stable way, but in the end, it makes a lot of sense to drive growth by encouraging investment. We just maybe need to do it more responsibly.

    10. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Raw materials have gone up,

      movies rely on people relies on money relies on government.
      Mining has gotten much more effecient, food and fuel production has gotten more effecient, etc.

      The reason things haven't exploded into hyperinflation is because the US is much more self suffecient then other nations, and china pegs it's currency to ours, so any drop in real spending power goes directly to lower prices for chinese goods. Only now are we starting to see stuff get more expensive. Also, the IT revolution drastically boosted productivity in all sectors. However, it all got soaked up in hiding inflation.

      welcome to stagflation, where total consumption drops and cash doesn't matter.

    11. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      they lost half their value on paper, bringing down the accounts of investors foolish enough to invest in those "safe" things.

      Maybe you weren't paying attention, but the entire stock market tumbled when the crash came. People who invested in much safer things like mutual funds also lost a huge fraction of their net worth - not quite half, but around 40% in my case. These may not be as conservative an investment as, say, CDs or (on the extreme end) savings accounts, but they're hardly irresponsible speculation.

      Now, the good news is that my mutual funds have now climbed back to where they were in late 2007 - this is a big part of the reason why Obama is still president (not that I bothered voting).

    12. Re:Value of American currency has declined. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      investment like in lehman brothers investment right?

  11. More spending.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    'Even though $100 million a year is small change by federal government standards,'

    That much should not be considered a small chunk of change. If a government has gotten so wasteful that an it-is-small-change-compared-to-other-programs argument becomes a valid excuse to fund a $100 million/year project, government spending spending needs to be reevaluated. Yes, sometimes spending money on research is a good thing... hell, I have epilepsy, so I am one of the people that could benefit from this project. But I think there are more important things we need to spending money on.

    1. Re:More spending.... by Dorianny · · Score: 1

      I agree! For a 100mil we could get 2/3 of a F22. Think about it for a minute, in 10 years we could add another 6 to the 187 we already have.

    2. Re:More spending.... by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      'Even though $100 million a year is small change by federal government standards,'

      That much should not be considered a small chunk of change.

      Question: "How does a country build a debt of $16 trillion . . . ?"

      Answer: "One $100 million at a time . . ."

      Maybe the US should adopt the European model? When one of the southern countries gets in debt over their heads . . . they just get Germany to pay for it.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    3. Re:More spending.... by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      So, "we're already spending money hand-over fist in a bad way, whats another few hundred million between friends"?

      THATS the way to solve budgeting issues!

    4. Re:More spending.... by Zak3056 · · Score: 1

      I agree! For a 100mil we could get 2/3 of a F22. Think about it for a minute, in 10 years we could add another 6 to the 187 we already have.

      Or we could, you know, borrow $100,000,000 less every year. I know that's outside the box thinking and all, but where the hell has this dichotomy come from where, when we have a spending problem, we always hear, "Well, it's better than spending $VALUE on $INITIATIVE?" Military and social spending BOTH have to come down, and revenue (somehow) has to come UP if we're to get out of the mess we're in. I'm all for basic research (as someone else up thread noted, nothing in history has paid dividends like it) but the barrel has a bottom, we have a crisis of unprecedented historical proportions, and no one in government seems to give a fuck about fixing it.

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    5. Re:More spending.... by mevets · · Score: 1

      Apparently the answer is more like:

      âoe2/3 of an F22 at a time...â.

    6. Re:More spending.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simplistic answer from a dumbass

    7. Re:More spending.... by hackula · · Score: 1

      Agreed, no brain research. I do support, however, 100 billion invested into pancreatic research immediately, since I have Type I diabetes. ;)

  12. He with the deapest pockets wins... by DizTorDed · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Only government can afford to think this big, argues Timmerman" Then let the government get a job that will earn $120,700,000/yr so they can have $100,000,000 after taxes to spend on such a project.

    1. Re:He with the deapest pockets wins... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless they get a discount, they would need to earn over 166 million to have 100 million after taxes.

    2. Re:He with the deapest pockets wins... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Closer to $104,000,000 - they'll use a shell corporation in an offshore tax haven, and sub out the work to non-US workers at half the going rate.

    3. Re:He with the deapest pockets wins... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What on earth are you on about?

    4. Re:He with the deapest pockets wins... by femtobyte · · Score: 1

      The government has been doing quite a lot of jobs; like providing roads, communications systems, schools, universities, legal systems, parks, environmental quality oversight, labor protections, military support, innovative fundamental research, etc. Now, I don't think they're always doing the best possible job (and in some areas, like murderous foreign wars and torture camps, they're downright terrible). If you don't like the job our government does, you're free to pack up and head over to the competition --- move to Canada, or Somalia, or whoever else you think is doing a better job. On the whole, the government does a lot of fairly decent work that earns its salary; certainly a lot more in comparison than many megacorporations do for the amount of money they rake in.

  13. Dynamically Interactive System by infinitelink · · Score: 1

    Some years ago I remember reading reports from the research projects which seek to create scanning and interpretation tools which those who are paralyzed, seemingly catatonic (or "vegetables"), and others with severe restrictions in mobility and ability to communicate, can use to communicate with the outside world by manipulating existing computer interfaces and tools. This kind of work was growing magnitudinally and then one day (in any given project) they hit a wall while those used to test the work (who are happy to gain the ability to engage the outside world) mysteriously begin to make the tool do things it is not programmed to do. Apparently, without realizing it they start exploiting bugs to trick the algorithms in use to perform new behaviors, and this means that the researchers attempting to learn more and implement new functions and features have no way of discovering many of the yet-unknowns necessary, which is really bad because the users can't do anything imaginable with bugs, and neither does every user discover the same exploits.

    There is no reason to suspect that a project attempting to map a dynamic system as complicated as this will not also hit some seemingly insurmountable walls, as the brain itself perhaps begin exploiting whatever tools are used to probe it: it's an interactive system, after all, which means we need something more like a meta-analysis probe to observe the system in play, rather than ways to interact with it directly. At least, that is, if we're seeking to understand rather than just manipulate it, but even then it manipulates back...We should get more specifics about what projects, exactly, are to be funded; how closely allied they are to this politician and his other cronies vs. how eminent and meritorious they are, and how they intend to deal with problems like the aforementioned, before doling out anything to them.

    --
    Intelligent idiots are we. | Evil men do not understand justice.
  14. More money != more results by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In a project, the curve of efficiency divided by money drops off after relatively low budgets. So as long as there are not investments necessary to get to some kind of economies of scale, there is a low likelyhood that more money would have much of an impact.

    I am all for this effort, but sometimes there is no way around time.

  15. So what do you do when ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what do you do when it says "LEAVE ME ALONE!".

    Or "I think, therefore I am".

    Or "I want my freedom."

    1. Re:So what do you do when ... by Talderas · · Score: 1

      "Does this one have a soul?"

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  16. EU is doing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The European Union is already funding research in this area, with about 1.19 billion euros. Details at http://www.humanbrainproject.eu/.

    1. Re:EU is doing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Talk about brain drain ;-)

  17. Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The US defense budget is 700,000 million. If we reduced the defense budget by .1% (iow, by a factor of .001), we could get another 700 million for this project. If you're concerned about the national security consequences, don't be. We could reduce the defense budget by 50% and still outspend China by more than 2:1.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    1. Re:Way too little. by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and the only reason we outspend China 2:1 on defense is because we do all of their R&D for them.

    2. Re:Way too little. by msauve · · Score: 1

      "The US defense budget is 700,000 million. If we reduced the defense budget by .1% (iow, by a factor of .001), we could get another 700 million for this project."

      Or, we could simply reduce the deficit by that amount, instead of continuing to spend money we don't have.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    3. Re:Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Or, we could simply reduce the deficit by that amount, instead of continuing to spend money we don't have.

      Yes, because we all saw how well austerity worked in Greece, Ireland, Cypress, etc. Everywhere austerity has been tried it's failed. You have to spend your way out of recessions. If money isn't moving on its own, we have to force it to move. Austerity simply doesn't work.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:Way too little. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Ok. Then reduce the defense budget first, because thats how responsible budgeting works: you start by reducing expenditure, and THEN you talk about using that money elsewhere.

    5. Re:Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I'd love to, but the fiscal conservatives won't let us.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Way too little. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spending our way out of the recession didn't work well either unless you were one of the ones who were bailed out by government funding. You're a friggin shill for big government and crony capitalism.

    7. Re:Way too little. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Your examples are all countries which do not control their currency. They all use the Euro. The problems they are having are exactly the problems that were predicted when they joined the euro. Their problems have nothing to do with austerity, rather their problems are because their monetary policy is controlled by someone outside of those countries (this does not mean that they wouldn't have problems if they still controlled their monetary policy, just that the lesson you are learning is not the correct one).
      I will repeat, there were quite a few people who predicted the exact problems that Greece, Ireland and Cypress are having before the Euro was created.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    8. Re:Way too little. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      How do you know, the federal government has never actually talked about reducing spending. The closest they have ever come was to talk about reducing how fast they increased spending.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    9. Re:Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 2

      How do you know, the federal government has never actually talked about reducing spending.

      That's exactly how I know. It's not like you haven't had your chance on many different occasions since Reagan.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    10. Re:Way too little. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Good grief every time somebody tries to start reigning in government spending, people start talking about "draconian cuts" even though the people are only talking about slowing down the increase in spending. What do you think would happen to a politician that talked about actually cutting spending?
      When people start screaming about "spending cuts", have you made any effort to point out that those "cuts" are merely reductions in the increase in spending? Or do you just complain that no one follows through on promises to cut spending? Considering the fact that you think the problems in Europe that were caused by monetary policy are the result of austerity, I'm going to guess that you were one of those screaming about the "spending cuts".

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    11. Re:Way too little. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      We could reduce the defense budget by 50% and still outspend China by more than 2:1.

      And how many soldiers would be in that army? If you can't answer that question, you haven't thought it through very well.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    12. Re:Way too little. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with Greece and those other shit holes is that the Euro is worth too much.
      Those countries don't produce shit, and they're stuck with a currency with a high value.
      So they run out of money.

    13. Re:Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Considering the fact that you think the problems in Europe that were caused by monetary policy are the result of austerity, I'm going to guess that you were one of those screaming about the "spending cuts".

      Not at all. Balanced budgets are great. But the time to balance the budget is when the economy is healthy. Borrow during lean times, pay it back in times of plenty. It's not that complicated.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    14. Re:Way too little. by msauve · · Score: 1

      Spoken like a true Keynesian. Spending only "works" to get out of a recession because it creates inflation. And it doesn't even do that well.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    15. Re:Way too little. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Yes, because we all saw how well austerity worked in Greece, Ireland, Cypress, etc.

      Don't blame the cure for the disease.

      For example, if you get a severe heart attack away from prompt medical care, the usual first aid treatment, cardiopulmonary resuscitation or CPR is brutal. If done correctly, it can break your ribs and there's a good chance you'll die anyway (Wikpedia claims long term survival rates under 10%!). But if done correctly, it can beat doing nothing, most of the time.

      The conditions that lead up to the need for austerity are a lot like a predictable heart attack. There might have been plenty of times the patient could have caught the symptoms leading up to the heart attack (sometimes it is a genuine surprise, but usually there's a long build up). They might even have ignored the early stages of the heart attack for days before they got to the point of requiring CPR.

      But it's foolish to merely look at the downside of CPR and not the improved chance of survival. Or to even blame the heart attack itself on CPR.

      I feel this is what has been done with austerity. People have ignored that this is an emergency treatment for a country in a situation where the government has lost most of its credibility, and spending and debt are so far out of control that the government lost the ability at least for a time to borrow and spend money (that includes losing the ability to spend your way out of a recession!).

      One doesn't do austerity on a healthy society any more than one does CPR on a healthy person. Such societies and governments have to do it at the worst time (in the midst of hard recessions) because they put off fiscal responsibility for as long as they possibly could.

      And frankly, I think defenders of Greece are delusional to think that the short term GDP decline from austerity is more dangerous than the long term threat to the EU from a completely insolvent Greece would be. Where will the money come from to pay for Greece's continued spending? There's no exit strategy aside from just stopping spending at some point, then you're back to austerity. It's very similar to the Gambler's Ruin problem where the gambler places bigger and bigger bets until they run out of money.

    16. Re:Way too little. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Not at all. Balanced budgets are great. But the time to balance the budget is when the economy is healthy. Borrow during lean times, pay it back in times of plenty. It's not that complicated.

      And for the most part, it's not done. Countries like Greece are suffering from austerity precisely because they didn't follow the plan.

    17. Re:Way too little. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Medusa said you're a bitch ass cunt.

    18. Re:Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      People have ignored that this is an emergency treatment for a country in a situation where the government has lost most of its credibility, and spending and debt are so far out of control that the government lost the ability at least for a time to borrow and spend money

      So the real problem isn't the financial deficit, it's the trust deficit. Hold the politicians who committed the fraud accountable, as well as the bankers who helped. That, combined with a huge push for financial transparency should be all that's needed to get the loans these countries need. But nobody wants to do that. Instead they'd rather punish the poor.

      One doesn't do austerity on a healthy society any more than one does CPR on a healthy person.

      You could say the same about blood letting. That doesn't mean it's effective. Austerity is ineffective. It's been tried and it doesn't work.

      Where will the money come from to pay for Greece's continued spending?

      That's easy. You borrow money, inject it into the economy, and collect taxes as it moves around the economy. Give it to people who need to spend it to live, which will increase demand, creating business opportunities for investors.

      Now I have to ask you. Where will the money come from to pay back Greece's debt, if no one can afford to buy anything and no one can afford to hire, how will they collect the taxes they need to pay back their debt? And more importantly, how does paying back their debt improve Greece's economy.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    19. Re:Way too little. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      A) Im a fiscal conservative, so perhaps be careful with those broad statements-- theyre not true.

      B) If the majority cannot agree to lower spending on defense, then it doesnt happen. But fiscally it is a TERRIBLE idea to say "well, we werent able to lower costs, but we're going to spend on this other thing anyways".

    20. Re:Way too little. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      It is generally a political no-win to "cut" things because people on both sides will demonize the attempt.

      It doesnt change the fact that if your debt is growing, the responsible thing is not to add new spending until you have cut more than that from your existing budget.

      Of course, the responsible thing is also to have a budget to begin with, but I suppose baby steps...

    21. Re:Way too little. by khallow · · Score: 1

      So the real problem isn't the financial deficit, it's the trust deficit. Hold the politicians who committed the fraud accountable, as well as the bankers who helped. That, combined with a huge push for financial transparency should be all that's needed to get the loans these countries need. But nobody wants to do that. Instead they'd rather punish the poor.

      Ignoring here that fiscal deficits create trust deficits, why should the people who don't care about fiscal deficits care about trust deficits? And why not punish the poor? They're most of the votes, and have to be voting for the problem.

      Now I have to ask you. Where will the money come from to pay back Greece's debt, if no one can afford to buy anything and no one can afford to hire, how will they collect the taxes they need to pay back their debt? And more importantly, how does paying back their debt improve Greece's economy.

      Nobody asked for the remaining debt to be fully repaid in the next few weeks. When Greece recovers, it'll have the economy to pay off this debt. Austerity will be the tool that makes that happen.

    22. Re:Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Ignoring here that fiscal deficits create trust deficits, why should the people who don't care about fiscal deficits care about trust deficits? And why not punish the poor? They're most of the votes, and have to be voting for the problem.

      No, lies about fiscal deficits create trust deficits. The problems in Greece happened because Greek politicians lied to the EU and their own people with the help of Goldman Sachs. They are the criminals, and they need to be punished.

      Nobody asked for the remaining debt to be fully repaid in the next few weeks. When Greece recovers, it'll have the economy to pay off this debt. Austerity will be the tool that makes that happen.

      That's awfully handwavy. By what actual mechanism do you expect Greece to recover when it's burdened with debt and unable to invest in itself? You speak of "when" but the real question is "if". Greece would have a surplus today if it weren't saddled with such high debt payments(20% of their budget). All they really need is for their creditors to ease up a bit for a few years while the Greeks invest in their economy. But that would require accountability for people in power, and that won't happen.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    23. Re:Way too little. by khallow · · Score: 1

      The problems in Greece happened because Greek politicians lied to the EU and their own people with the help of Goldman Sachs.

      That's just end game thrashing like how a heart attack victim might injure themselves as they fall unconscious. One didn't need to wait this long to see that Greece was going to fail sooner or later.

      Second, it's worth remembering that much of that excessive spending was bribes to the voters to look the other way while Greek politicians squandered the wealth of that country.

      By what actual mechanism do you expect Greece to recover when it's burdened with debt and unable to invest in itself?

      Well, let's look at what actually happened. Private holders of debt took a large haircut, more than half the Greek debt they held. That cut a portion of the debt right there (about a quarter of the amount). The EU refinanced a considerable portion of Greece's debts at lower rates. Austerity cut the crazy spending. And Greece is slowly implementing structural policies to improve their economy. This is a huge gift to Greece and its future yet all I hear about is the whining over the cost containment from "austerity" which while it has some negative consequences for economic activity is a short term issue.

      All they really need is for their creditors to ease up a bit for a few years while the Greeks invest in their economy. But that would require accountability for people in power, and that won't happen.

      That's happened several times. Why should the Greeks be treated better than their creditors? And why do you think there's going to be a magical way out of this huge mess that's easier than austerity?

    24. Re:Way too little. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      That's just end game thrashing like how a heart attack victim might injure themselves as they fall unconscious.

      Do you ever use logic, or do you just argue by analogy?

      Second, it's worth remembering that much of that excessive spending was bribes to the voters to look the other way while Greek politicians squandered the wealth of that country.

      Quit blaming the victim. The voters were lied to about the budget. The Greek people were defrauded by their own government.

      Why should the Greeks be treated better than their creditors?

      Because the people, by and large, work for a living, and creditors merely take a cut.

      And why do you think there's going to be a magical way out of this huge mess that's easier than austerity?

      How is austerity "a way out"? I've asked you this several times now, and you never explain. I've described a mechanism by which stimulus spending would improve the economy, and yet you call my solution "magical". You're the one waving your hands around here.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    25. Re:Way too little. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Quit blaming the victim. The voters were lied to about the budget. The Greek people were defrauded by their own government.

      In a democracy, the citizens bear the ultimate responsibility. So they are "victims"? Too bad. Maybe they'll remember this little episode the next time some politicians start making ridiculously extravagant promises.

      I also don't buy that the Greek citizenry are victims. I think they're willing collaborators who got stuck with the bill.

      How is austerity "a way out"? I've asked you this several times now, and you never explain. I've described a mechanism by which stimulus spending would improve the economy, and yet you call my solution "magical". You're the one waving your hands around here.

      Austerity stops the problem of uncontrolled and irrational spending. Your approach of stimulus spending ignores that Greece similar doesn't have the authority to borrow or print that kind of money. And nobody else will do it for them. Further, I'm not convinced that stimulus spending ever works.

      Recessions end naturally, there's centuries of history of even the worst of them doing so without stimulus spending. Even the explanation for how stimulus spending works doesn't make sense. The argument is that it is supposed to help by stimulating some part of the economy, such as aggregate demand. Why does that doe for you? As far as I can tell, it just means higher economic activity as long as the stimulus is in play. Once the stimulus stops, so does the economic activity.

      But that money comes from somewhere either in the present or future. And that part gets depressed. So we have one part of the economy arbitrarily stimulated while another part gets arbitrarily depressed.

      That doesn't seem that useful to me and I'd have to say that it doesn't appear to be working out for Greece either. They did their stimulus thing in 2009 after all, and that lead directly to austerity.

      We also have the rest of Europe, the US, and Japan as more examples of countries with great, big stimulus packages, some going back more than two decades, and yet we still don't see stimulus working very well. It's just creating more public debt and more opportunities for Greece-style austerity.

  18. Private vs. Gov't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Genome_Project#Public_versus_private_approaches Craig Venter's private company was able to do similar work on the Human Genome Project, in a shorter amount of time, and for roughly 1/10 the cost of Francis Collins' gov't project.

    I'm not sure the government is the most efficient benefactor of scientific exploration.

    1. Re:Private vs. Gov't by Hartree · · Score: 1

      Yes, Celera was able to do more with less. But that was due to the technology advancing during the 8 years the public project had already been running. Venter was able to use the experience gained from that time.

      Also, Venter was using a shotgun approach that hadn't been fully vetted at the time on genomes that large. It turned out it worked well, but for this first time, you still needed the public project data to check it.

      This is much like when Eckert and Mauchly were building the Eniac. Partway thru building it, they had learned enough that they would have done it differently. But, you have to get started somewhere and start building to learn. For the genome project, the public project was that start.

      This is a little like criticizing someone in the 1920s for using a Model T rather than a modern hybrid like a Prius. The one was part of the development that led to the modern method.

    2. Re:Private vs. Gov't by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      But that was due to the technology advancing during the 8 years the public project had already been running. Venter was able to use the experience gained from that time.

      Yes, and as you hinted at, the technology required for Venter's approach didn't even exist when the HGP started. Among other things, they'd have required a couple orders of magnitude more computer hardware to do the genome assembly.

      A fair assessment of the HGP is that it was slow to adapt, and stuck to the older, tested methods several years longer than it should have. However, once Celera actually got running, the public genome centers changed relatively quickly and adopted a more efficient industrial approach. Within a couple of years their sequencing capacity increased massively, and basically eliminated the gap with Celera.

    3. Re:Private vs. Gov't by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      Craig Venter's private company was able to do similar work on the Human Genome Project, in a shorter amount of time, and for roughly 1/10 the cost of Francis Collins' gov't project.

      In addition to the fact that Venter was able to take advantage of nearly a decade of technology development, you're leaving out a few important details:

      1) Celera was able to use the HGP results, but not vice-versa. Which was convenient, since the HGP's more laborious process could cover parts of the genome that weren't well-suited for the shotgun assembly method.

      2) The total cost of the HGP covered much more than simply sequencing the human genome - there were many preliminary and side projects covered as well, none of which Celera pursued.

      3) The availability of a public, license-free genome meant that it could be used as a reference for future studies without restriction. This eliminates the need to perform de-novo assembly with each individual genome from the same species, which drastically reduces the cost and time required for further sequencing. Without this, the huge advances in comparative genomics and personal genomics over the past decade would have been hideously expensive, because they'd all have needed to pay Celera for a license (and not been able to publish their results).

  19. Or.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it $100 million too much?...

  20. Careful by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    It wouldn't surprise me if the areas they will emphasize for study are mind reading, pain infliction (combined with shock supression), memory insertion, and remote control just for the hell of it.

    Keep in mind this admin is perfectly comfortable with droning, Gitmo, permanent war...

  21. Re:Liberal brains ok, conservative not so much... by LordLimecat · · Score: 0

    These kind of comments are worthless when liberals make them, what makes them any better when a conservative does?

    Mods, please bury this crap.

  22. Re:$100 million dollars in stolen money. by TheNastyInThePasty · · Score: 1

    Please, cut the hyperbolic bullshit or go live on an island in the Pacific. The government is not keeping you here.

    --
    The best thing about UDP jokes is I don't care if you get them or not
  23. NPR just covered this and how it's all theater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  24. Re:$100 million dollars in stolen money. by the+gnat · · Score: 1

    Took the words right out of my mouth... but I'll add "and don't let the door hit you in the ass on the way out". American citzens who whine about the government taking taxes "by force" need to think about what life is like in Cuba or North Korea where the citizens aren't even allowed to leave the country.

  25. Re:$100 million dollars in stolen money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Oh, okay. So let's not do any government-funded basic research- it's all heavily speculative anyway. NASA was embarrassingly speculative, why did we do that? Forget about the Human Genome Project.

    The government does these projects to absorb the up-front risk that no private enterprise is willing to absorb itself. On government-sized scales, the risk is basically non-existent. If this is not good justification for performing fundamental research, I do not know what sort of organization would be well-justified in performing it.

  26. no, megaprojects this nebulous do not work. by markhahn · · Score: 1

    Manhattan or Apollo projects were successful primarily because they had such a clear focus.

    Sequencing the human genome was just a way to push development of techniques: we didn't learn that much from the primary product. especially since it's become clear that expression is far more interesting/relevant than just a straight read of sequences. and even that is arguably incomplete without better proteomics.

    neuroscience is not at any clearly defined threshold where we can see what's needed to get to a state of much higher understanding. throwing money at the problem will just exercise our inability to pick winners. (and if there's anything fundamental we know about funding, it's that we, especially governments, simply cannot pick winners. this is why broad funding of basic science is essential: we can't know which directions will pay off.)

    sometimes, such big-spending programs are just trying to stretch the normal timeline of a technology. is it actually important to spend $1e8 in order to bring about some technical advance by a year? maybe it's 5 years, maybe it's 6 months. in neuroscience, no one even talks about the unknown unknowns, let alone the known unknowns ;)

  27. Too Much, Actually by ilikenwf · · Score: 1

    This and all other research should be privately funded. This, just like the treadmill for shrimp, is a waste of my and many other people's tax dollars.

    http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/federalbudgetprocess/a/How-Much-Shrimp-Treadmill-Study-Cost-Taxpayers.htm

    1. Re:Too Much, Actually by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I guess you'll be getting off the internet right about now then? Filthy communist product of public-funded research that it is.

  28. A drop in the bucket for bankers by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    The geniuses on Wall Street managed to make off with about 80,000x that much five years ago. I'm not seeing most of the banking boards of directors in jail. Every single day they siphon off millions of dollars through HFT and "innovative" financial products at the general public investor's expense.

    I suggest you go hunt down bankers if you want some vigilante justice for wasted money.

    Not that I endorse this research. It's nice, but as another poster pointed out the EU is already funding somewhat similar research at an order of magnitude larger scale. There are lots of things we (the government) really don't to be spending money on. Thing is, when some of that money ends up in your pocket - or your back yard - it all seems okay. A few years ago I watched a VERY conservative community rail against all the public welfare money, but cheer the USDA grant of $35,000 they took to help put a new roof on their community center, and the $10,000 USDA grant to build a computer lab in the same center. A waste of taxpayer dollars, imho, but in one corner of my mind I thought - well, at least a portion of my money is coming back into my backyard.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    1. Re:A drop in the bucket for bankers by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      It's a poor assumption to think that because I believe taxation is fundamentally theft, that I am fully supportive of the sleazeball shit that went on with these bankers. They were mostly taking advantage of situations the government created, but they still knew exactly what they were doing, laying the excess risk on the government and the implicit bailout they knew would come.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  29. What for? by migloo · · Score: 1

    So what do they want to do?
    A massively parallel simulation of a human brain?
    Assuming it succeeds, what is the point? We already have 7billion of them around, and much cheaper and we still will not understand how and why it works.
    At this point what we need is a few more bright theoreticians and it will not cost nearly as much.

  30. Hey, It's a No-Brainer! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course the title sez it all!

  31. only the government .... by buybuydandavis · · Score: 0

    Yes, "only the government" can do anything. Couldn't wipe our asses without the government's help.

    As far as 100mil/year, there are a number of *individuals* in the world who could fund the project entirely on his own indefinitely. The Paul Allen Brain Institute has been running a brain mapping project for years now.

    Also, take a look at the X Prize Foundation to see some of the things some people are doing without Big Daddy to wipe their rears for them.

    All sorts of things happen without the government's help. Often the government is the biggest obstacle to progress, particularly in health care.

  32. cynical publicity stunt by stenvar · · Score: 1

    Spending public money on brain research (and other basic research) is a really good thing. However, spending money in this way, by taking a huge chunk of money and dedicating it in some limited way, is not a good way of doing it. This money will likely mostly go to just a few big institutions and a lot of it will be wasted. In fact, people haven't even formulated a clear plan on what to do with the money. Money like this should be spent as a large number of small grants, awarded through many different granting agencies. In different words, Obama should have given more money (in fact, a lot more) to NSF, DARPA, and many other granting agencies. But adding another couple of billions to the science budget would just be a budgetary footnote. Taking the same money, calling it an "initiative" for some topic-du-jour, and then giving it to a bunch of marble-clad institutions is a great publicity stunt and PR opportunity for politicians, even though you'll get much less scientific return on the investment. Just as bad is Obama's attempts to justify basic science with supposedly and fictitious vast financial returns. I think the BRAIN project is a cynical abuse of science for the political process, and it will result in less science being done compared to simply increasing regular funding by the same amount.

  33. Re:$100 million dollars in stolen money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    need to think about what life is like in Cuba or North Korea where the citizens aren't even allowed to leave the country.

    Maybe that is precisely what they are thinking of and are attempting to prevent the same populist leftist takeover from happening as took place in those countries.

  34. Re:$100 million dollars in stolen money. by the+gnat · · Score: 1

    attempting to prevent the same populist leftist takeover from happening

    Anyone who thinks the USA is in any danger of this - in particular, anyone who thinks Obama is representative of such a trend - needs to seek psychiatric help. I happen to live in one of the few places in the country where such far-left agitators (and cult-of-personality followers) group, and they're considered a bunch of nutters by their (overwhelmingly liberal) neighbors. They incite the occasional riot and commit petty vandalism, but their political influence and their ability to cause real damage is nil. The more mainstream leftists content themselves with waving signs whining about the 1% during rush hour; they present absolutely no risk of violent takeover. (Most of them freak out about guns anyway.)

    The OWS crowd presents another good example - most people around here like their iPhones too much to want to "smash global capitalism" or whatever the goal is. Supporting nationalized health insurance does not equate to wanting to herd your fellow citizens into forced-labor camps, or summarily execute them. And again, I remind you: the left-wingers in this country are generally not the ones with large numbers of firearms. I think they have a childishly simple and idealistic worldview, and I find them generally incompetent at governing, but they're not the people I'm worried about forming death squads.

  35. Who's brain? by thundergeek · · Score: 0

    If they are mapping a liberal's brain, then $100 million is 99% more than needed.

  36. I'm pleasantly astonished that this got through by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    Look, we figure out the brain and we figure out how to build one in silica, thereby making it expandable and controllable. At that point, the whole domain of useful, answerable questions is open to us. *This* is the one best thing we could throw R&D money at. I would say, "throw more if it helps" but I don't know that it would.

    Anyway, if we don't, the Chinese and Indians will. The country that owns this, owns the world.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  37. Only government can think this big? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you joking? The annual R&D budget for Pfizer is 70x this amount. Give me a break.

  38. It's... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's ($999,999,999.99 + $0.01) too much.

    The Constitution doesn't authorize this robbery and laws should protect the innocent... thought they don't always succeed... and they most certainly shouldn't be used to take money from one person inorder to give it to another.

  39. Link in Solar and Windmill... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and they could get a couple billion from DOE.

  40. Re:$100 million dollars in stolen money. by GigsVT · · Score: 1

    NASA existed so we could prove that we could blow the shit out of Russia from the comfort of home. That was the entire reason we ever went to space at all, just to prove that we could plant a nuke on Moscow from a missile silo in Nebraska, and vice versa.

    It was never about "science" or "innovation", it was about military and diplomatic saber rattling.

    In case you didn't notice, innovation in the US space program pretty much ended with the cold war. We had obsolete space shuttles with woven core memory operating in the 2000s. It was an extension of a military program, pure and simple.

    It's interesting you pick space for this. A couple years ago people like you would probably tell me that no private enterprise would ever invest the massive amount of money necessary for space travel. And yet, in the last few years, private companies have developed technology to get into orbit and it won't be long before they can go further.

    It was the realization that NASA was a massive, obsolete, waste of money, combined with the quasi-deregulation of space launches that lead to real innovation for the first time in 30 years, once the government got out of the way.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.