Recovery Website

Hey Folks, in case you’re interested in the government’s massive bailout, there’s a website available. Here’s a quote from Recovery.gov:

Recovery.gov is a website that lets you, the taxpayer, figure out where the money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is going. There are going to be a few different ways to search for information. The money is being distributed by Federal agencies, and soon you’ll be able to see where it’s going — to which states, to which congressional districts, even to which Federal contractors. As soon as we are able to, we’ll display that information visually in maps, charts, and graphics.

There’s even a link to the actual bill that President Obama signed today.

Ok, time for some reading.

Gas Just Keeps Going Up

When oil prices are going down (around $34 a barrel Friday) how come gas prices keep going up ($.35 since Jan 1)? Turns out that the $34 per barrel is for West Texas crude and they’re not making much gas from it. Instead, we’re getting gas from inferior oil imported from Canada, Venezuela, Saudi Arabia, and others. That oil is much more expensive, about $7 more per barrel not counting transportation cast, than West Texas crude. Why are we using foreign oil instead of West Texas crude? We don’t have pipelines in place to transport the oil out of the Southwest.

Is there any money in the massive bailout bill to build pipelines?

Begging The Question

One thing that irks me is talking heads completely butchering the English language. Many times they take a term that means one thing then use it incorrectly to mean another. For example, the word momentarily means for a moment. How many times a day do you hear an announcer say, “We’ll be back momentarily?” The announcer means in a moment but is actually saying for a moment.

One phrase that talking heads misuse that really annoys me is begs the question to mean asks the question. In fact, begging the question is a logical fallacy wherein the arguer tries to prove a point by relying on a premise 1 something assumed or taken for granted that proves the point. Here’s what Wikipedia has to say on the topic.

In logic, begging the question has traditionally described a type of logical fallacy … in which the proposition to be proved is assumed implicitly or explicitly in one of the premises...

In contemporary usage, “begging the question” often refers to an argument where the premises are as questionable as the conclusion.

In popular usage, “begging the question” is often used to mean that a statement invites another obvious question. This usage is stated to be incorrect in The Oxford Guide to English Usage, 1st edition; “raises the question” is suggested as a more appropriate alternative. Improper usage of the term may to some observers make the user appear uneducated; this is presumably the opposite effect the user intends by using the term. [Emphasis mine]

Are you surprised the talking heads get stuff like this wrong?

Footnotes

Footnotes
1  something assumed or taken for granted

Changed Gravitars

If you hadn’t noticed, I changed the gravatar 1the little picture that appears next to your comments, aka Globally Recognized Avatars scheme. Many of you have commented on how your gravitar looked, sick, scary, ugly, so I changed the scheme to monsters. 

If you don’t like that scheme, you can always upload your own gravitar at http://en.gravatar.com/. The account is free and you can upload any small picture you like, associate it with your email address, and it will appear next to your comments at any tech-savvy, gravitar enabled site like Major Mike’s Musings.

Footnotes

Footnotes
1 the little picture that appears next to your comments, aka Globally Recognized Avatars