Speaking of Charity: Help DonorsChoose

You may or may not remember that we did a ScienceBlogs fundraiser last year for a group called “DonorsChoose” that provides small grants to teachers in poor school districts around the country. We’ll probably do another in September this year (discussions are under way), but right now, they’re involved in the Members Project run by… Continue reading Speaking of Charity: Help DonorsChoose

High Stakes Cheating

From EurekAlert, we learn that corporate executives are a bunch of cheaters, when the incentives are right: According to the authors, “Our results demonstrate two factors substantially increase the likelihood of financial misrepresentation: extremely low performance relative to average performance in the firm’s industry, and high percentages of CEO compensation in stock options.” The study… Continue reading High Stakes Cheating

Envy? Hardly.

Dave at the World’s Fair is trying to start a “meme” based on a Science Creative Quarterly piece about physics envy among biologists and vice versa. He’s asking other science bloggers whether there’s another field that they wish they were working in. While I have occasionally joked that if I had it to do over,… Continue reading Envy? Hardly.

Crack Security Screening

I don’t read the local paper regularly, so it took a LiveJournal post to alert me to this story from the Times Union: The unannounced inspection by TSA officials took place early last week. [Albany International Airport’s] security measures failed in five of seven tests, most of the problems occurring at the passenger checkpoint, the… Continue reading Crack Security Screening

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Categorized as Personal

Atheist Charity Results

So, you may or may not recall that last week, Matt Nisbet posted about a study purporting to show that religious people were more generous in their charitable giving than atheists. One of his commenters opted to go for the “sour grapes” response, claiming that religious charities were all stupid, and asking rhetorically: How many… Continue reading Atheist Charity Results

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Categorized as Politics

Remake Poll 2: Covering Collins

Another pop-culture question for the audience: Jason Hare, in the course of recapping a Top Ten from 1985 makes a shrewd observation: “Sussudio” was a damn catchy song in 1985 and while nobody will admit to liking it now, I guarantee you that once an indie band covers it, Stereogum will lose their shit. So,… Continue reading Remake Poll 2: Covering Collins

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Categorized as Music

Why Go to Concerts?

An insane audiophile of my acquaintance recently remarked (in a locked LiveJournal, otherwise I’d link to it) that while live classical music is clearly superior to recorded classical music, it’s crazy to go to a live performance of pop music because “you’re not hearing actual instruments/voices, you’re hearing them miked and amplified through speakers just… Continue reading Why Go to Concerts?

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Categorized as Music