Welcome to the world, James Andrew Sonas! (I promise to post pictures as soon as I get some.)

I’ve written before about pension plans and the problems they face. Well, it seems that one way around the problem is highlighted in today’s New York Times (”Whoops! There Goes Another Pension Plan“). More and more, companies are abandoning their pension plans to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC):

ROBERT S. MILLER is a turnaround artist with a Dickensian twist. He unlocks hidden value in floundering Rust Belt companies by jettisoning their pension plans. His approach, copied by executives at airlines and other troubled companies, can make the people who rely on him very rich. But it may be creating a multibillion-dollar mess for taxpayers later.

So by threatening bankruptcy, companies are able to hand some or all of their pension obligations over to the PBGC. And since the PBGC isn’t fully-funded by corporation fees, that means some of the bill will fall back on taxpayers.

The pension issue and the existence of the PBGC (which apparently was created at the end of the Nixon administration) highlights one of the problems with government acting as a “safety net.” Pension insurance makes a certain amount of sense for any corporation to buy. But the PBGC was structured in such a way that it ignored fundamental rules of the insurance industry. The insurance cost to each company was not tied to the risks with their specific pension plan or even their specific costs, and obviously the inncentives to default are large enough to be pursued by semi-unscrupulous managers.

On the other hand, if a commercial insurer had been involved, you could be certain that they wouldn’t have allowed companies to get away with paying too little into their pension plans. In some cases that might have meant no pension plan at all, but I don’t see that as a bad thing. Money that would have gone to a benefits plan could have gone to salaries, and workers either way would have known that they’d need to save for their retirement. Instead, people probably haven’t saved as much as they would have otherwise, and now they’re mostly not going to be getting as much as they’d expected, so they are in worse shape than they would have been if the pensions had been handled honestly and appropriately from the beginning.

If you use an RSS reader, Elizabeth tells me you can find the new RSS feeds for the updated blog at feed://www.contracheck.com/nika/?feed=rss2 and http://www.contracheck.com/nika/?feed=atom.

It looks like we have successfully switched this blog from MovableType to WordPress. The old links should work, but simply redirect you to the new blog. If you come across any problems, please let me know. And remember to update your bookmarks! This blog is now found at http://www.contracheck.com/nika/!

The current theme is a placeholder, until I can find/make a theme I like. I put in this theme because it looks different from the default WordPress theme you see all over the place. :-)

I’m getting ready to move the blog over to the new software right now (8:45pm Pacific, 11:45pm Eastern, on Friday Sept. 16). Please do not post comments here, or else they won’t get carried over into the new system. Remember, the new blog link is http://www.contracheck.com/nika/. It should all be functional by Saturday morning, and this old blog should redirect you to the new one.

I just I’m just a blogging fool today. I came across this blurb about a remote control car with a camcorder built in. It’s a cool idea. But after watching the linked video, I don’t know that I could stand much of any video produced by kids, even my darling baby.

Well, not exactly see-through, but there is now a type of concrete that passes light. Too cool! You could put walls around your garden or yard, and get more light than you otherwise would, among many other applications.

CNN is reporting that IBM is starting a program to support its employees who want to become math & science teachers. IBM, along with the rest of the technology industry, is concerned about the shortfall in math & science education in the US. So, they’re going to give financial support to some employeees (up to 100 in their trial phase of the program) to get teaching credentials and then move over to schools.

Bravo to IBM for putting money into a program that could help the nation’s long-term educational goals, even if nothing is guaranteed to come directly back to IBM.

I was just reading an article about computing advances, and more than one futurist predicts we could have human-level intelligence in computers by 2020. I like this part:

Pearson said that computer consciousness would make feasible a whole new sphere of emotional machines, such as airplanes that are afraid of crashing.

Just what we need: Airplanes that refuse to take off.

While playing with the new BlogSearch tool at Google yesterday, I found out that Elizabeth D. has a blog, and she’d linked to some of my posts. Unfortunately, it turns out that she and some of her readers either misunderstood me, or couldn’t understand me at all. :-) So, maybe I can clarify things a bit.

The post was about the military and citizenship. I’d tried to make a few points in the article:

  • America has a standing army which is large enough and well-funded enough to allow politicians to send troops around the world without causing undue distress at home. As the article I was quoting put it, “Modern warfare lays no significant burdens on the larger body of citizens in whose name war is being waged.
  • This disconnect between military and the broader population raises the scary possibility (based on the history of other nations) of the USA at some point becoming a military empire, a fear the nation’s founders felt: “a danger made manifest in their day by the career of Napoleon Bonaparte, whom Jefferson described as having “transferred the destinies of the republic from the civil to the military arm.”
  • Compulsory service to the government, which could be both in service to the military or to other functions (such as land beautification), is distasteful in many ways. But it does tie some large fraction of the citizenry to the nation’s politics, especially its military activities.

In the comments on my post, Elizabeth D. wrote, “Draftees tend to make poor soldiers.” I think it depends on the situation. Surely the Israeli military (which requires everyone to serve for some time, I believe) is not seen as a poor quality army? I don’t know enough about other countries to compare other volunteer versus draft armies. Options to keep both a volunteer component and a draft component in the military could also probably help with some of the problems.

The other comments about mandatory work are valid. I’m not saying that forcing all (or a randomly selected fraction) of the population of a certain age to work for the government (either in the military or in infrastructure improvement) is a great solution. I do think, however, that variations of the idea should be explored, because the current system has its own problems.

Thomas Friedman writes in today’s New York Times (”Still Eating Our Lunch“) about a program called HeyMath (note that the URL is heymath.org, NOT heymath.net as it says in Friedman’s column), which serves to collect the best way of teaching individual math concepts from teachers in multiple countries. Abstract concepts are combined with illustrations and animations to help explain the concepts, and now teachers from around the world can use the website to help their own math instruction. It sounds like an interesting idea.

And of course, the reason for Friedman to devote his editorial segment to the topic is clear:

Why am I writing about this? Because math and science are the keys to innovation and power in today’s world, and American parents had better understand that the people who are eating their kids’ lunch in math are not resting on their laurels.

Some of Dorothy’s bath toys (esp. the ducks) have been getting mildew or something inside of them, presumably due to not properly drying out. So, last night during bath time, Elizabeth’s suggestion was that it was time to:

give the duck a bleach enema.

So funny, yet so disturbing…

Well, today I gave the duck (and a few others toys) the bleach enema, and now they’re squeaky (was the pun intended, or wasn’t it? you’ll never know…) clean!

How did this happen?

At some point in the near future, I’m going to switch this blog from using MovableType to WordPress instead. I’m using MovableType v. 2.65, whereas the software has been upgraded beyond version 3, but now costs money to use. And I don’t like the administrative interface or the way it has to rebuild every single page if you change the layout etc. WordPress has worked pretty well as the LiftPort blog software.

When I do switch things over, I’ll move the location of the blog as well. The new URL will be http://www.contracheck.com/nika (instead of /blog). I will leave a placeholder here, redirecting people to the new location. And I will post an announcement to the blog when the switchover is imminent.

From Elizabeth: A Toy for the Times. “OK dolly, time for the full body cavity search!”

Elizabeth says, “I canŐt decide if this is a good idea or horrifying. Maybe itŐs both.” It is a bit sad.

Wild chimpanzees capable of passing on knowledge of how to detect and destroy traps have been found in the West African nation of Guinea.

Very interesting. You can read more here.

The cats have pretty well-defined territories around the house. The seat of the rocking chair belongs to Cobalt, and the top of the chair back belongs to Rhodium. Rhodium also has Dorothy’s folding mat/chair, although Cobalt will use it occasionally when she’s not around. Cobalt has priority on our pillows.

Of course, the territiories are somewhat fluid, and Dorothy’s mobility has definitely shifted which are the preferred locations. But Cobalt decided that enough was enough this weekend.
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It appears that Elizabeth and I took away very different messages from the post about Tribes. I agree that the author might have come across as smug, and I disagree with many of his comments on modern-era politicians (e.g., George Bush et al). I believe that the message shouldn’t be confused with the way it is said, but Elizabeth and I seem to take away different core messages. Here’s what I took from the article.
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OK, I’ve got the latest batch of photos online. Uncle Keith’s visit, deer in the back yard, and cheesy grins from Dorothy.

Seen on the back of a trailer parked in the construction zone behind our house:
P9118921-flamable.jpg
So, does this mean that the contents of the trailer are controversial and might start an internet flame war?

I just downloaded two weeks’ worth of photos from the camera, and will be uploading some of them later today. For now, here’s a movie of Dorothy beeping Cobalt’s nose (the movie requires Quicktime 7 to view). He’s surprisingly unphased by the ordeal.

Dorothy had her 18-month check-up this morning, and everything looks good. For the record, her weight was 26 lbs. 15oz, and her height was 33 inches. So she’s still bouncing around the 75th to 90th percentile. Oh, and her head diameter was 19.25 centimeters.

They asked us if she knows 20 words. We replied that she knows almost that many animals. Dog, cat, bear, deer, bird, owl, otter, frog, giraffe, hippo, rhino, ape, etc. etc. Plus she knows her head, hair, ears, eyes, nose, mouth, teeth, tongue, belly button, heinie (very cute when she points to it), knees, ankles, toes, etc. Words are not a problem. :-)

I think it’s appropriate, on this anniversary of 9/11, to post a link to an excellent post about humanity. Warning: There’s some profanity from the article quoted here.
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There are so many stories coming out of New Orleans, it’s hard to know what is true and what is not. Although the story from the EMS workers about getting shot at by police and repeatedly bullied by law enforcement seemed plausible, numerous comments are debunking the story (e.g., in this Samizdata.net blog and this Free Republic blog), pointing out the authors’ political history and inconsistencies in their story. The sad thing, of course, is that the story was so believable.
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The explosion of Dorothy’s language abilities has been continuing, and we wanted to record her current state before she gets to the level of the high school debate team.

Below are new words she can say and/or sign (that she couldn’t do as of the last report), and words that she now says that she only signed before (at least, these are the ones we can think of right now):

  • Animals: Cat (pronounced “wahnwa”), bear, owl, dog, bird, deer, bunny, duck, fish, sheep, frog
  • Food: Milk, water, cracker, cookie, cheese, apple
  • Misc. objects: Socks, bus, bike, bah-bahl (for big/blue ball), diaper, frisbee, bathtub, slide, moon, Aquadoodle (said as “ahdoo”), block, door (she can say these last two very clearly)
  • People: Dorothy, Meemom, Poopop (sounds like Boopah), Emma
  • Abstract: Help, bye, outside, down, up, high five, please
  • Compound words: Other (said “oh” as in “o-bear” and “o-sock”), more (e.g., she’s now saying “more food” instead of just “more”)

Some of these words are also used to name specific books. For example, the book “I Love You, Little One” has a picture of many animals in it, including deer, so she calls it the deer book (”dee”). And “More More More Said the Baby” is the “baby” book.

She also chatters on for long periods of time, although it’s mostly babbling that we can’t understand.

Dorothy knows many body parts. She can point to her head, hair, ears, eyes, nose, mouth, teeth, shoulders, belly button, knees, feet & toes. And she understands some colors pretty well. If you ask her to hand you the blue duck, etc., she usually gets it right.

It’s pointless to try and list all the words she can understand, because 1) there are so many, and 2) she understands more than we realize. I’ll see if I can collect anecdotes to give examples in a separate post, but here’s just one to give you an idea. At the zoo yesterday, after lunch we’d put the remaining pieces of cheese on the front of her stroller for her to eat as we were going around. They stayed there for a little while, and I thought she was full. So I asked her if she was going to eat them, and got no response. I then commented that maybe I should throw them out, since they were getting soft in the sun. She immediately grabbed them and snarfed down the cheese before I could blink.

UPDATE: Additional words that we either forgot, or heard very clearly for the first time today, are: pizza, eye, teeth, open, rhino, and OK. Elizabeth figures that Dorothy is now learning to say almost one new word a day. :-O The avalanche is beginning…

Today’s New York Times has an op-ed piece on the debate over evolution and more, as centered around the so-called “intelligent design” idea (”Show Me the Science” by Daniel C. Dennett). The author makes an excellent summary of why the arguments put forward by the intelligent design crowd are deceptive, misleading, and ultimately don’t do anything useful.

It’s late at night as I write this, so I don’t have as much commentary as I did on previous pieces on this topic. But go read the editorial - he clarifies why there is no real controversy over the teaching of evolution, and how the intelligent design crowd has made it seem as if there is a controversy.
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