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Pixdaus: God Gave Us Pics!

11 Sep

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via http://pixdaus.com/single.php?id=5412

 
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Defending against the spin. So frustrating. [Corrections about candidates]

10 Sep
Chris Wetherell via massless shared by 4 people


1) Watch it get thrown.
2) *sigh* Correct it.
I'm trying to sort out the chaff from the messaging wheat about our candidates for the U.S. executive branch...so I'm making another list for myself (maybe useful to you?) so that I can be reminded of the current research about each claim. This is a non-comprehensive list and as a watchmen's watchman I should be fact-checked as well. Please correct me as necessary. (And yes, I know...that I'm publishing another political post annoys me as much as it may annoy you. Please accept my apology.)

Correcting stuff about Sarah Palin that isn't true.

  • Palin did NOT cut funding for special needs education in Alaska.
  • Actually, just the opposite - she tripled per-pupil funding.
  • Palin did NOT demand that books be banned from the Wasilla library.
    Though she did inquire about banning, she never, ever banned any books. Ever.
  • Palin was NEVER a member of the Alaskan Independence Party.
  • Palin NEVER endorsed or supported Pat Buchanan for president.
    This is just ridiculous. She wore a pin only when he visited and then took it off. More factually, she headed Steve Forbes' campaign efforts in Alaska.
  • Palin has NOT pushed for teaching creationism in Alaska's schools.
    She's said she's open to it being taught alongside evolution, however, she hasn't actually done anything substantive about it. Hopefully, she'll clarify her position. But it's (currently) incorrect to say she's actually made any changes in Alaskan education regarding creationism.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/sliming_palin.html

Correcting stuff about Barack Obama that isn't true.

  • Obama’s health care plan will NOT "force small businesses to cut jobs".
    In fact, the plan exempts small businesses.
  • Obama's health care plan will NOT put "a bureaucrat ... between you and your doctor."
    In fact, those who have insurance now could keep the coverage they have.
  • Obama has NEVER voted for "corporate welfare" for oil companies.
    In fact, the bill Obama voted for raised taxes on oil companies by $300 million over 11 years while providing $5.8 billion in subsidies for renewable energy, energy efficiency and alternative fuels.
  • Obama will NOT close markets to trade.
    Though he once said he wanted to "renegotiate" NAFTA, now he says he wants to try to strengthen environmental and labor provisions in it. He's not advocating closing any markets.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/factchecking_mccain.html
  • Obama DID NOT vote to teach sex to kindergarten children.
    Wow, this is disgustingly wrong. Rather, Obama voted for a bill in the Illinois state Senate that would update the sex education curriculum and make it "medically accurate." It was specifically designed to teach young kids how to recognize inappropriate behavior and avoid pedophiles and also demanded that any instruction be "age-appropriate". It was deemed urgently necessary enough to arm kids with knowledge about predators that it adjusted the year of beginning instruction. (Additionally, Obama was neither a co-sponsor nor a sponsor of the bill and it never got past the Senate.)
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/off_base_on_sex_ed.html
  • Obama IS OPEN TO DRILLING for oil.
    Specifically, he said he's open to "a careful, well thought-out drilling strategy that was carefully circumscribed to avoid significant environmental damage".
Source: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/state/content/state/epaper/2008/08/01/0801obama1.html
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/gop_convention_spin_part_ii.html
  • Obama will NOT INCREASE TAXES for working, middle-class families.
    Nope. NO. NO. This is wholly incorrect. Despite a McCain ad claiming otherwise, Obama's plan would cut taxes for the vast majority of American households, with middle-income earners benefiting a great deal.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/a_new_stitch_in_a_bad_pattern.html

Correcting stuff about John McCain that isn't true.

  • McCain will NOT fail to support loan guarantees for the auto industry.
    Despite what an Obama ad says, McCain is actually in favor of low-cost loans to that industry.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/hit_the_brakes.html
  • McCain did NOT say we could just "muddle through" in Afghanistan.
    In 2003, McCain actually said that we "may" muddle through, and he recently also called for more troops there.
  • McCain does NOT define middle-class as someone making under five million dollars a year.
    He was joking. Seriously. He even said, "but seriously" just after it. C'mon.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/factchecking_obama.html

Correcting stuff about Joe Biden that isn't true.

  • Biden did NOT get fewer votes as a presidential nominee than Palin as mayor.
Source: http://politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/694/

[What they said] - McCain has said stuff that's wrong, incorrect, or misleading.

  • McCain FALSELY claimed that his plan will increase use of "wind, tide [and] solar" energy.
    His actual energy plan contains no new money for renewable energy.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/factchecking_mccain.html

[What they said] - Obama has said stuff that's wrong, incorrect, or misleading.

  • Obama's plan currently CANNOT "pay for every dime" of his spending and tax cut proposals "by closing corporate loopholes and tax havens."
    This was quite the whopper. His proposed tax increases on upper-income individuals seems crucial. And his plan, like McCain’s, looks likely to leave the U.S. facing big budget deficits.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/factchecking_obama.html
  • Obama FALSELY accused McCain of saying "no to higher fuel-efficiency standards for cars, no to investment in renewable energy, no to renewable fuels."
    In fact, in 2002 McCain not only wanted tougher standards than most of the Senate did, but he was lauded by a Democrat.
Source: http://politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/672/

[What they said] - Biden has said stuff that's wrong, incorrect, or misleading.

  • Biden FALSELY claimed that "murder and violent crime rates went down eight years in a row" as a result of the Biden Crime Bill.
    A peer-reviewed study published in the February 2007 issue of the journal Criminology found that the bill's "spending had little to no effect on crime."
Source: http://politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/158/

[What they said] - Palin has said stuff that's wrong, incorrect, or misleading.

  • Palin did NOT say "thanks, but no thanks" to the building of the Ketchikan bridge.
    She clearly supported it and didn't stand up to Congressional waste - she accepted the money on behalf of Alaska.
  • Palin FALSELY accused Obama of being more worried about terrorists being read their rights than apprehended.
    This is a whopper. Obama seems as committed to apprehending terrorists as the other candidates. But he's a constitutional scholar and law professor and is passionate about the rights of habeus corpus being respected.
Source: http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/gop_convention_spin_part_ii.html
 
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TC50: Atmosphir, The Build-It-Yourself Gaming Platform

10 Sep
Jason Kincaid via TechCrunch shared by 5 people

Atmosphir is a gaming platform and engine that allows users to easily create their own levels in a 3D world by painting basic elements into a three dimensional grid. After downloading a client application, users can play in their own levels, or they can visit the Atmosphir community website to play on any of the maps that have been uploaded by other users. The application is currently available in a limited beta with plans to release by the end of the year, and is available for both Mac and PC.

Users can choose from a number of palettes, including pieces of land, bridges, and hazard props that will threaten the in-game avatar with blazing fireballs. The application also includes a number of theme packs, which allow users to create some variety in their levels. The packs are currently pretty basic, but the site plans to release more exciting themes like “Pirates” and “Robots”.

As far as gameplay goes, Atmosphir seems to be very straightfoward, much like a standard “Mario Brothers” game. The player’s avatar can run and jump around each level, which allows for jumping puzzles and the stomping on bad guys, but that’s about it. Atmosphir says that the current iteration is just a foundation, and that it plans to implement far more functionality including multiplayer support, which it says it can seamlessly push to every user’s client through an integrated updating system.

Panel

Robert Scoble - That’s what i’m talking about!

Bradley Horowitz - It’s impressive. Are the games suitable to play on game consoles?

Atmosphir - Definitely, I was always into Nintendo (they’re looking at getting onto gaming systems, like the Wii)

Bradley Horowitz - whats the level of effort involved?

Atmosphir - We built an abstraction layer that makes it easy to port to different systems, port to Sony PSP, we’re testing for the iPhone.

Bradley Horowitz - I can see a business model where I make a game and there’s a rev share.

Robert Scoble - Single player or online?

Atmosphir - Currently looking to make mulitplayer, add multiplayer code on top.. The game features automatic transparent updates. If we add code, we can download that seamlessly to user… client updates automatically

Robert Scoble - Is making level collaborative? I’d like to collaborate with my son.

Atmosphir - Yes, you can collaborate. Right now you take a file, send draft back and forth.. eventually would like to design in same environmental, can also upload with edit unlocked tag.. Levels are small files, only around 100k for a large level.

Robert Scoble - are blocks interactive? Can you make it play audio when you land on a block?

Atmosphir - Right now there are interactive things we’re working on.. some blocks shoot you up. we’re looking at doing audio stuff.

Sheryl Sandberg - looks exciting.. i think collaborative looks good going forward.

Joi Ito - How big is the client?

Atmosphir - Around 40 MB.

Joi Ito - Seems like tradeoff between user scriptabillty and blocks. Running from start flag would get kind of boring… are you going to have just one category of users.. User game play… it’s going to be a weird problem.

Atmosphir - We’re interested in when people mix roles of games and genres.. We want to mix it up.

Robert Scoble - Where’s the violence?

Atmosphir - We want to keep it family friendly, maybe we’ll have more mature themes. For right now we’re taking a Nintendo approach… But a rocket launcher is on the way.

Information provided by CrunchBase

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

 
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Smoke

10 Sep

"Smoke"
 
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The Landscape of Possible Intelligences

10 Sep
(author unknown) via The Technium shared by 4 people

In A Taxonomy of Minds I explore the varieties of intelligence which a greater-than-human intelligence might take.  We could meet greater-than-human intelligences in an alien ET, or we can make synthetic ones. The one foundational assumption behind our making new minds ourselves is that we assume our mind is intelligent enough to make a new and different mind. Just because we are conscious does not mean we have the smarts to make consciousness ourselves. Whether (or when) AI is possible will ultimately depend on whether we are smart enough to make something smarter than ourselves. We assume that ants have not achieved this level. We also assume that as smart as chimpanzees are, chimps are not smart enough to make a mind smarter than a chimp, and so have not reached this threshold either. While some people assume humans can create a mind smarter than a human mind, humans may be at a level of intelligence that is below that threshold also. We simply don't know where the threshold of bootstrapping intelligence is, nor where we are on this metric.

We can distinguish several categories of elementary minds in relation to bootstrapping:

1) A  mind capable of imagining, or identifying a greater mind.
2) A  mind capable of imaging but incapable of designing a greater mind.
3) A  mind capable of designing a greater mind.

We fit the first criteria, but it is unclear whether we are of the second or third type of mind.  There is also a fourth type, which follows the third:

4) A mind capable of generating a greater mind which in turn itself creates a greater mind, and so on.

This is an cascading, bootstrapping mind. Once a mind reach this level, the recursive mind-enlargement can either keep going ad infinitum, or it might reach some limit. On the other hand, there may be more than one threshold in intelligence. Think of it as quantum levels. A mind may be able to make a mind smarter than itself, but the offspring mind may not be smart enough to make the next leap, and so gets stuck.

If we imagine the levels of intelligence as a ladder with unevenly spaced rungs, there may be jumps that some intelligences are not able to complete, or their derivatives are not able to jump. So a type 3 mind may be able to jump up four levels of bootstrapping intelligence, but not five. Since I don't believe intelligence is linear (that is I believe intelligence grows in many dimensions), a better illustration may be to view the problem of bootstrapping super intelligence as navigating across a rugged evolutionary landscape.

Intelligencelandscape

In this type of graph higher means better adapted, more suitable in form. Different hills indicated different varieties of environments, and different types of forms. This particular chart represents the landscape of possible types of intelligences. Here the higher a mind goes on a hill, the more highly it is suited or perfected for that type of intelligence.

In a very rugged fitness landscape, the danger is getting stuck on local optima of form. Your organism perfects a type of mind that is optimal for a local condition, but this very perfection imprisons you locally and prevents you from reaching a greater optimal form elsewhere. In other words, evolving to a higher elevation is not a matter of sheer power of intelligence, but of type. There may be certain kinds of minds that are powerful and optimal for some kinds of thinking, but that are incapable overcoming hurdles to reach a different, higher peak. Certain types of minds may be able to keep getting more powerful in the direction they have been evolving, but incapable of shifting direction in order to reach a new power. In other words, they may be incapable of bootstrapping the next generation. Other kinds of minds may be not as optimal but more nimble.

At the moment we are totally ignorant of what the possibility landscape of intelligence is. We have not yet even mapped out animal intelligences, and we have no real examples of other self-conscious intelligences to map. Navigating through the evolutionary landscape may be very smooth, or it may be very rough and very dependent on the path an evolving mind takes.

Because we have experience with such a small set of mind types, we really have no idea whether there are limits to the varieties and levels of intelligence.  While we can calculate the limits of computation (and folks like Seth Lloyd have done just that), I don't think intelligence as we currently understand it is equivalent to computation. The internet as a whole is computationally larger than our brains, but not as intelligent in the way we crave. Some people, like Stephen Wolfram, believe there is only one type of computation, and that there is sort of one universal intelligence. I tend to think there will be millions and billions of types of minds.

Recently, in conversations with George Dyson, I realized there is a fifth type of elementary mind:

5) A mind incapable of designing a greater mind, but capable of creating a platform upon which greater mind emerges.

This type of mind cannot figure out how to birth an intelligence equal to itself, but it does figure out how to set up conditions of evolution so that a new mind emerges from the forces pushing it. Dyson and I believe this is what is happening with the web and Google. An intelligence is forming without an overt top-down designer.  Right now that intelligence is rather dimwitted, but it continues to grow. Whether it continues to develop into something near human or greater-than-human remains to be seen. But if this embryonic smartness continued, it would represent a new way of making a mind.  And of course, this indirect way of making something smarter than yourself could be used at any point in the evolutionary bootstrapping cycle of a mind. Perhaps the fourth of fifth generation of a mind may be incapable of designing the next generation but capable of designing a system in which it emerges.

We tend to think of intelligence as singular, but biologically this is unlikely. More likely intelligence is multiple, diverse, and fecund. In the long haul, the central question will concern the differences between the evolvability of these various intelligences. Which types are capable of bootstrapping? And are we one of those?

 
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Google Apps

10 Sep

The Google Email Uploader is a desktop utility for Microsoft Windows that uploads email from other desktop email programs (like Microsoft Outlook) into your Google Apps mailbox. More information can be found at http://code.google.com/p/google-email-uploader/.

Download it here or share this link with your users: http://mail.google.com/mail/help/email_uploader.html

 
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Earth was in the crosshairs

10 Sep
(author unknown) via Bad Astronomy shared by 4 people

Shared by cephyn
quit worrying about the LHC - this is the real scary stuff.

On March 19, 2008, the Earth was caught full-on in the beam of nature’s deadliest beast, a gamma-ray burst.


Swift’s view of GRB 080319b
Swift’s view of GRB 080319B. Courtesy Swift team/Penn State University/NASA.


Lucky for us, the GRB was far away– far, far away: 7.5 billion light years distant, literally more than halfway across the visible Universe.

Had we been much, much closer, like a thousand light years away, the energy from the beam would have torn our atmosphere away, boiled our oceans, and irradiated the planet with a million times the lethal dose of high-energy gamma and X-rays.

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are scary, scary, scary.

But it wasn’t that close; it was a million times farther away than the lethal distance (in fact, all GRBs are really far away, and so pose little real danger to us here on Earth). All we saw was a flash of light — actually, a flash of gamma rays, detected by NASA’s remarkable Swift satellite, designed to do this very task. But what a flash! Even from that terrible distance, the amount of light the GRB gave off made it visible, briefly, to the naked eye!


Artist’s impression of a GRB
Artist’s impression of a GRB. Click for a way cool animation. Courtesy NASA.


A GRB is born in the fury of an exploding massive star, when its core collapses into a black hole. A vast amount of energy is released, more than the Sun’s entire lifetime’s output. A hellish mix of forces focuses, squeezes this exploding energy and matter into beams, extremely narrow cones of emission, cosmic blowtorches which march across space. If you are too close, and in the path of a beam, well, saying "you’re toast" doesn’t quite cover it. But if the beam misses you, you don’t get the gigantic burst of light; the energy drops of very rapidly if the aim of the GRB is off. Even a miss by a fraction of a degree is enough to change its apparent brightness hugely.

Scientists making models of GRBs had an idea that this narrow, intense beam is inside a wider, mushier beam of energy. It’s easier to get hit by by the wider beam (like you don’t have to aim a shotgun as carefully as you do a rifle), and so the idea is that what we see from almost all detected GRBs is this wide beam. Actually being in the path of the narrow beam would be very rare.

And that’s what makes GRB 080319B (the second GRB seen on March 19, 2008), so remarkable: it was aimed squarely at us, and we were bathed by light from the narrow beam. We were looking right down the monster’s throat. The beam was incredibly tight; only about 0.4 degrees wide (take a look at a protractor to get an idea of how skinny this is). Had the beam been aimed just a scosh off, just a tad, the GRB would have appeared far, far dimmer. We still would have seen it, but it would have looked like just another GRB, and not the single most luminous event ever witnessed by humans.

Probably all GRBs have this narrow beam, but they miss us, so we don’t see them. And because the beam is so narrow, scientists say that this sort of thing would happen once a decade or so. Good thing we had Swift running at the time! Swift was able to detect the burst, then rapidly (within seconds) send the news to observatories all over (and above) the planet, so that they could instantly follow up with their own observations. This allowed astronomers to detect the burst at a wide range of wavelengths (radio, infrared, optical, ultraviolet, X-ray and gamma ray), which is critical: it gives us insight into how the beams are formed. That in turn tells us about how the black hole formed, how the star exploded, what sorts of material were involved, and their physical characteristics.

All of this tells us more about the Universe, which is good.

But it also tells us about gamma-ray bursts. And there is just something about them, something terrifying about the energy, the power, the raw fury of them, that fascinates me. They really aren’t a threat to us — we think they can only come from great distance — but they still represent nature at its fiercest. Sometimes the pursuit of science may seem cold and emotionless, but that is far, far from truth. And like GRBs, the closer you get to the truth, the more powerful, the more energetic, and the more passionate science gets.

And may I add, I have a whole chapter about these beasts in my upcoming book, Death from the Skies!, which is available for pre-order on amazon.com.

 
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StackOverlow: A Teeming Beehive of Programming Q&A

10 Sep
Marshall Kirkpatrick via ReadWriteWeb shared by 7 people

SOFlogo.jpgDigg for programming questions? Joel on Software and Jeff Atwood of Coding Horror start letting users into their well built site.

The highly anticipated general release of StackOverflow, the social site for programming questions developed by rock star programmers Joel Spolsky and Jeff Atwood, hasn't happened yet - but the doors are cracked open and many new users are streaming in this morning.

You can get in via this beta URL, using"twitter@twitter.com" as your email and "falkensmaze" as your password. At least you can get in that way for now. Below are screen shots and our first impressions of the new service.

The Big Idea

The idea behind StackOverflow is to offer a really well designed site where programmers can find answers to questions that are more obscure than they can get answered elsewhere. Site founders Spolsky and Attwood are software gurus focused on developer relations and user experience. They've got a very capable team with them as well, as is evidenced by the product so far.

The community is for developers working in any programming language and use of the site is completely free. The name StackOverflow refers to an infinite loop or recursion in the programming languages C or C++ and sure enough, a lot of the conversation on the site is self referential so far. The team's got plans for that, though, so we're confident this will be less the case than it is on other sites.

So far, we like it a lot. What does it look like? Check out these screen shots.

Screen Shots

The front page.
SOFfrontpage.jpg

My Question Got Answered!
SOFquestionanswered.jpg

I got a good answer to an admittedly simple question, in 2 minutes. Awesome.

Asking a Question.
SOFaskquestion.jpg

Pretty smart UI here, quite helpful and fun to use.

A User Profile

SOFusertop.jpg

Above, the top half of a user profile, below the bottom half. Note that you can see how often a user votes things up or down but you cannot see specific voting history. The user feed is nice.

SOFuserbottom.jpg

Our Thoughts

The UI here has lots of really nice little touches, it's responsive, communicative and relatively clear. We like it a lot and that was one of the site's big goals, to build an effective UI.

Account creation looks very good, it happens automatically via cookie until you register, but OpenID association with your account is not implemented particularly well. Attwood is blaming OpenID providers for that on Twitter, but we're seeing a few too many problems to buy that.

There's already an active community of beta testers on the site and they've developed extensions like a Firefox and IE7 search plugin, a couple of Greasemonkey scripts and a Ubiquity script. That's pretty awesome.

There's a sophisticated credibility system at work here, where users who build up their reputation are given new capabilities. Those capabilities include commenting on questions instead of just answering them and doing some moderation.

The "community mode" is interesting, things are wiki style on the site and once a certain number of edits have occurred the original asker of the question no longer owns it - it becomes a community question, with lower credibility thresh holds required for interaction, etc. The Community User username is tied to these threads and acts as an automated bot repairing things like malformed tags through out the site. That sounds really helpful.

Finally on the positive side, we got some good replies to our questions really quickly and we're already having a lot of fun just browsing the site.

The Down Sides

We like StackOverflow a lot so far, but there are some real concerns that deserve to be raised. As the site's owners have voiced throughout its development, the quality of discussions may go down rapidly when they open up to the world at large. We hope that's not the case but we will watch the reputation and bios of the people who answer our questions.

More importantly, perhaps, we're not sure the Digg-style home page is the best way to organize these discussion. Is it on the basis of the newness or hotness of questions that things should be ranked? Or should top answers be highlighted? We know that the site's developers have spent a lot of time wrestling with these questions, so we won't pretend to know better, but we hope the core prioritization principles work out well in this context.

There are some features that we expected to see here but don't. An easy way to mark a thread for reading later would be really helpful, as would a feed for those items in our account. A feed for answers given to our questions would be nice. So would the option to get an email notification when one of our questions is replied to, or another question we're interested in. GetSatisfaction's "I'm interested in this too" feature would make a world of sense - let me know when someone else gets an answer to this question because I'm curious. Finally, a "thanks for this" button like Ma.gonlia would make sense and offer a different kind of feedback.

We've already subscribed to the feeds for several topic tags and we're excited about everything we expect we can learn from the StackOverflow community. General availability of the site is expected sometime this week or next.

 
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Senator opens inquiry into rising text messaging rates

10 Sep
Donald Melanson via Engadget shared by 4 people

Filed under:

The increasingly high cost of text messaging has already caused a bit of a stir in Canada, and it looks like Democratic Senator Herb Kohl of Wisconsin is concerned with the situation in the US as well, with him now opening an inquiry to attempt to get the carriers to explain themselves. Apparently, Kohl is a bit puzzled as to why some customers are now paying 20 cents per message when they paid just 10 cents in 2005, a period that Kohl notes just happens to overlap with some consolidation in the wireless industry, when the number of national carriers shrunk from six to four. Those carriers, as you might expect, aren't saying much just yet, with Sprint only going as far as to say that it looks forward to "responding to the Senator's inquiry about the text messaging options we offer our customers and we will fully cooperate with his request," and the rest saying even less.
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McCain’s Integrity

10 Sep
Andrew Sullivan via The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan shared by 4 people

For me, this surreal moment - like the entire surrealism of the past ten days - is not really about Sarah Palin or Barack Obama or pigs or fish or lipstick. It's about John McCain. The one thing I always thought I knew about him is that he is a decent and honest person. When he knows, as every sane person must, that Obama did not in any conceivable sense mean that Sarah Palin is a pig, what did he do? Did he come out and say so and end this charade? Or did he acquiesce in and thereby enable the mindless Rovianism that is now the core feature of his campaign?

So far, he has let us all down. My guess is he will continue to do so. And that decision, for my part, ends whatever respect I once had for him. On core moral issues, where this man knew what the right thing was, and had to pick between good and evil, he chose evil. When he knew that George W. Bush's war in Iraq was a fiasco and catastrophe, and before Donald Rumsfeld quit, McCain endorsed George W. Bush against his fellow Vietnam vet, John McCain in 2004. By that decision, McCain lost any credibility that he can ever put country first. He put party first and his own career first ahead of what he knew was best for the country.

And when the Senate and House voted overwhelmingly to condemn and end the torture regime of Bush and Cheney in 2006, McCain again had a clear choice between good and evil, and chose evil.

He capitulated and enshrined torture as the policy of the United States, by allowing the CIA to use techniques as bad as and worse than the torture inflicted on him in Vietnam. He gave the war criminals in the White House retroactive immunity against the prosecution they so richly deserve. The enormity of this moral betrayal, this betrayal of his country's honor, has yet to sink in. But for my part, it now makes much more sense. He is not the man I thought he was.

And when he had the chance to engage in a real and substantive debate against the most talented politician of the next generation in a fall campaign where vital issues are at stake, what did McCain do? He began his general campaign with a series of grotesque, trivial and absurd MTV-style attacks on Obama's virtues and implied disgusting things about his opponent's patriotism.

And then, because he could see he was going to lose, ten days ago, he threw caution to the wind and with no vetting whatsoever, picked a woman who, by her decision to endure her own eight-month pregnancy of a Down Syndrome child in public, that he was going to reignite the culture war as a last stand against Obama. That's all that is happening right now: a massive bump in the enthusiasm of the Christianist base. This is pure Rove.

Yes, McCain made a decision that revealed many appalling things about him. In the end, his final concern is not national security. No one who cares about national security would pick as vice-president someone who knows nothing about it as his replacement. No one who cares about this country's safety would gamble the security of the world on a total unknown because she polled well with the Christianist base. No person who truly believed that the surge was integral to this country's national security would pick as his veep candidate a woman who, so far as we can tell anything, opposed it at the time.

McCain has demonstrated in the last two months that he does not have the character to be president of the United States. And that is why it is more important than ever to ensure that Barack Obama is the next president. The alternative is now unthinkable. And McCain - no one else - has proved it.

 
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