George Rebane
Here’s the FDA approval of an Ivermectin wannabe that is touted by the conservative Daily Signal. And here from Blaze is a more sobering look at the new pill therapeutics that discusses their problems and shortcomings, among them price. Meanwhile IVM has all the proven requirements for an early stage pill to minimize subsequent Covid morbidity, and a medicine that is widely available, off-patent cheap, and doesn’t have the feared side effects of the recently rushed remedies from big pharma.
[24dec21 update] Here is a gun culture that would give our totalitarians (aka Democrats) sanitary problems in their shorts. And it's all made possible, as always, by the society's civilized culture; something that has been destroyed in America, the land of the formerly free. (H/T to reader)
[26dec21 update] Weather guessers (aka meteorologists) have no shame. This becomes clear to anyone who attempts to use winter weather forecasts for planning purposes. Their models are totally deficient in their attempts to predict impactive weather events like rain or snow. Their unabashed predictions over the last five days for the imminent onset of heavy snow have witnessed a steady sequence of rollbacks without once diminishing the “100%” probabilities they continue to attribute the snows’ onsets that are only a few hours in the future. Bottom line – no can do, but will continue publishing unabated bullshit hour after hour as the days pass. So, the tribe that can’t hack getting major weather changes only hours away, still insist that their ‘science’ allows them to predict global temperatures 50 years from now to within one degree Celsius. And then there are the millions of true believers out there eating it all up – don’t get me (re)started.
[27dec21 update] VDH's The Dying Citizen (2021) is a tour de force from a scholar and keen observer of the human condition that is not his first, nor will it be his last. In Hanson's included essay on the progressivists' plan for global governance, I extract the following – "In sum, globalization rests on a few poorly examined laws: those who draft globalized rules for others have the resources to navigate around them. Discussions of abstract cosmic challenges – achieving world peace, cooling the planet, lowering the seas, dismantling secure borders – are psychological ways to square the circle of failure to solve concrete problems at home from war to poverty. Wealthy tech workers in San Francisco hold frequent conferences and symposia about addressing water, sewage, and disease in Africa, but the have demonstrated no ability to address California's own fetid city streets, which are home to over three hundred thousand homeless and rife with medieval diseases, refuse, excrement, and rodents. In addressing such existential and age-old challenges, we are left where we started in Western civilization: the only means are transparent decentralized local governments, audited by a free and disinterested press and acting under the aegis of a constitutional, consensual republic, serving only at the pleasure of a voting citizenry." (emphasis added)
[29dec21 update] To become an actuary is hard, so reports the 29dec21 WSJ in ‘Want to be an actuary? Odds are you’ll fail the test.’ “Insurers need experts to calculate risks. Among those number-crunchers’ riskiest endeavors are the tortuous exams for credentials.” Actuaries do all kinds of quantitative risk assessment work for insurance companies, M&A consultants, corporate investment activities, etc. The two professional credentialed actuary levels are Associate and Fellow. Passing multiple tests are required for each, the toughest being on probabilistics. The tests are usually taken multiple times by successful candidates to get passing scores – even then only 15% of those attempting make it to Associate, 10% make it to Fellow. Here’s one of the toughies on probabilistics. “An urn contains 10 balls: 4 red and 6 blue. A second urn contains 16 red balls and an unknown number of blue balls. A single ball is drawn from each urn. The probability that both balls are the same color is 0.4720. Calculate the number of blue balls in the second urn.” Give it a try and post your answer in the comments. I’ll post the correct answer after we see a few attempts (or not).


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