



In the September 25th entry, All about 
The previous blog entry, Some recovery info, talked about the economic stimulus, and provided a view of the proposed expenditures in a spreadsheet format. This link, The Stimulus Plan: Where the Money Would Go, shows the information in a graphical manner...

Further to getting the funds spent so that the nation will derive the hoped for economic benefits, all the funds to be appropriated will be "good" until September 30th, 2010 (unless otherwise specified within the Act), per Sec 1105 Period of Availability.
Understanding that spending these huge amounts in a short time frame could be problematic, the Act provides USD 240.5 million (available to be used until 2013) to a number of Offices of Inspectors General for oversight and audit:
The above takes up 31 pages, which are followed by the lists of amounts for various areas, broadly divided into the following groups:
This spreadsheet lists many of the proposed expenditures (divided into the groups above). Some general observations:
This blogger saw the following headline, 'Uranium For Iran Nuke In 2009,' and quickly checked out the link. The article started: "Iran will have enough enriched uranium to make a single nuclear weapon later this year, the prestigious International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) predicts." This was a bit of a shocker given that most reputable estimates of Iran's progress were that this was still several years off (ignoring a few outliers from folks interested in, let's say, "encouraging" a bombing campaign...).

The November 14th blog entry, Financial crisis and hospitals, listed out all the different ways that the economic downturn is negatively impacting most not-for-profit hospitals. In January the American Hospital Association published the results of a survey done in December 2008, that showed the extent of the problem. An extract:
Great explanation how hospital chargemasters work, and how different parties pay significantly different amounts for the same items (Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, etc)
"Direct-to-consumer" advertisement spending by pharmaceutical companies (Source) A second consecutive year of decline, and 2009 is projected to fall further... Bad news for the various media companies that depend on this revenue...
1. The Daily Dish takes Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS) to task for his feeble arguments against closing Guantanamo (and potentially moving the detainees into the U.S.) in 'Brownback's Lamest Reason Ever,' and then turns round and trumps him by coming up with an even lamer reason in 'A Good Reason Against the Transfer.' Hmm, one of the pitfalls of having two different people subbing for you...
The Sun - Terrorists Killed By Own Black Death Experiment: The terrorists planned to wreak havoc on Western targets but fell victims to their own weapon, a leading expert on chemical warfare believes. The Sun revealed yesterday that Black Death, also called the Plague, killed at least 40 fanatics at a terror training camp in Algeria earlier this month.
It was thought they caught the disease through poor living conditions in their forest hideouts. But Dr Igor Khrupinov, of Georgia University, said: “Al-Qaeda is known to experiment with biological weapons. And this group has direct communication with other cells around the world. “Contagious diseases, like ebola and anthrax, occur in northern Africa. It makes sense that people are trying to use them against Western governments.” Dr Khrupinov, once arms adviser to Russian leader Mikhail Gorbachev, added: “Instead of using bombs, people with infectious diseases could be walking through cities.” Black Death has been researched as a biological weapon before. Source, The Sun.
A second article, "UK Cyber Attack reported" from DefenseTech.org also bears many of the same hallmarks as the story above i.e somewhat vague on the details, anonymously sourced, a breathless "danger, danger" quality, "unconfirmed reports implied", etc. OK, so this is a reputable organization and their articles generally are top-notch, but this blogger is still a little skeptical on this one.
Next up, JeffreyLockwood, a professor of entomology at the University of Wyoming, who has just published a book, "Six-Legged Soldiers," purporting to explore the history of man's attempts to use insects for military purposes... While promoting his book (which has been reviewed as not very rigorous, e.g. see here, here and here) , he seems to have hit upon the idea of emphasizing how easy it would be for terrorist to use insects (perhaps to 'goose' sales of his book).
The March 29th blog entry, Medellin, discussed the SCOTUS decision on Medellin v. Texas, while the August 10th entry, Updates, noted that José E. MedellÃn had subsequently been executed by lethal injection. Today, January 19th, the International Court of Justice ruled that the United States violated the court's March 2004 order when this was done. However, the court refused to interpret the order or to grant a Mexican government request that the U.S. provide guarantees that this would not occur again, stating that these were "issues between the Parties."



Trauma on Loan - 8-page PDF comic on Iraqi prisoner abuse... Both works by Joe Sacco.
President-elect Obama recently chose Dr. Sanjay Gupta, a neurosurgeon better known as CNN's chief health correspondent, for the post of Surgeon General of the United States. In response Representative John Conyers Jr. (D-MI) circulated a "Dear Colleague" letter criticizing the pick and inviting others to join him in signing a letter of protest.
There's usually a rich vein of irony running through politics, generally not very far from the surface, and gems surface (or may be mined) on a fairly regular basis.... Some examples:
OK, so the movie 2012 is set to debut in July. The trailer is sort of cool, but is there really enough water in the world to swamp the Himalayas (with a hundred peaks higher than 7,200 m i.e. 23,600 feet) or even, say, Lhasa at 12,000 feet above sea level?? Oh, and the ocean's fairly far away!