Scott Adcox

Doing More With Less Since 1972

Page 69 of 87

A Replacement for Seatbelts

Safety Exposes Us to Risk:

So call the seat belt a boon to safety — no doubt true — but credit it too with spurring the modern study of risk compensation, which by now has been observed well beyond the highway—”in the workplace, on the playing field, at home, in the air.” When people perceive greater safety in skydiving, living in flood zones, having unprotected sex or even in high finance, they evidently take more chances.

My friend Jerry had a great idea…replace seat belts with huge metal spikes on steering wheels. Build all cars so that any crash will kill the driver. That will make people much more careful.

It goes along well with my idea of requiring every person on a airplane to be armed. Don’t own a gun? You’ll be handed one right after passing through the metal detector–sixteen in the clip and one in the chamber.

In all seriousness, the risk compensation thing explains why rugby is actually safer than football. With no pads you are a little more careful about what you do with your face and shoulders. That, or you have a very short career.

Interesting Take on Somalian Pirates

Coming from Infowars:

During the revolutionary war in America, George Washington and America’s founding fathers paid pirates to protect America’s territorial waters, because they had no navy or coast guard of their own. Most Americans supported them. Is this so different?

There is no doubt more to this than we are being told. This would make an interesting book.

Long Hours and Dementia

I stayed up all night reading about this.

However, the researchers say key factors could include increased sleeping problems, depression, an unhealthy lifestyle and a raised risk of cardiovascular disease, possibly linked to stress.

I think that’s probably key–all the other factors that usually go along with hard work. My motto: work hard, play harder, rest hardest.

Of All The Bad Ideas in Washington

This may be one of the worst:

Addressing what intelligence officials describe as a gaping vulnerability, the legislation also calls for the appointment of a White House cybersecurity “czar” with unprecedented authority to shut down computer networks, including private ones, if a cyberattack is underway, the officials said.

Can’t they be content with wrecking health care first?

George Clooney Isn’t There Anymore!

I’m a walking limping injury, and I think I’ve been to the ER 5 times in the last 15 years. And two of those trips were to take other people to get stitched up.

In the past six years, eight people from Austin and one from Luling racked up 2,678 emergency room visits in Central Texas, costing hospitals, taxpayers and others $3 million, according to a report from a nonprofit made up of hospitals and other providers that care for the uninsured and low-income Central Texans.

via Austin ER’s got 2,678 visits from 9 people over 6 years.

Smokers Hacking Up A Lung Over Federal Tax Increase

Wait. But wh…huh? You mean a tax on an industry/corporation is being passed on to a consumer? Does O’Bama know about this?!?!?!  That’s not fair!  LOL!

But major tobacco companies began incorporating that increase into their prices to wholesalers in March. And the companies, wholesalers and retailers in many cases gave prices a boost beyond the tax increase, in part to make up for an expected drop in sales caused by the hike, some of them said.

Facebook Still Valued @ $15B?

Facebook “Definitely” Raising Capital This Year

eMarketer projects Facebook revenues of $230 million in 2009. Our sources say this is way low, and that Facebook will hit at least $300 million in 2009 revenues. But the costs of running this ginormous company are staggering. Facebook may be burning though $20 million or more per month, even on top of revenues

Google thinks they are worth $2B, andI think that may even be high. Mabye if Google owned it. Maybe.

If they were publicly traded (and I had money), I’d short FB.

EESA Unconstitutional? Yeah, so?

George F. Will

Since the New Deal era, few laws have been invalidated on the ground that they improperly delegated legislative powers. And Chief Justice John Marshall did say that the “precise boundary” of the power to “make” or the power to “execute” the law “is a subject of delicate and difficult inquiry.” Still, surely sometimes the judiciary must adjudicate such boundary disputes.

I wouldn’t hold my breath.

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