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White Christmas?

That's nothing.  We're talking white Thanksgiving...

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Despite What You Might Have Heard...

1) Studies show that overweight people have a lower death rate than people who are normal weight, underweight, or obese.  The research is summarized in a recent article in the NY Times by Gina Kolata: link

...overweight people have a lower death rate because they are much less likely to die from a grab bag of diseases that includes Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, infections and lung disease. And that lower risk is not counteracted by increased risks of dying from any other disease, including cancer, diabetes or heart disease.

The researchers also confirmed that obese people and people whose weights are below normal have higher death rates than people of normal weight.

Critics of the research argue that "Health extends far beyond mortality rates" and that "...excess weight makes it more difficult to move about and impairs the quality of life."  But we're talking about overweight here, not obese.  The struggle to maintain normal weight is such a struggle for so many...trying exercise regularly...trying to watch what we eat.  I suspect that a bit less pressure in that area wouldn't be a bad thing for "quality of life."

2) Bringing up politics over Thanksgiving dinner may be a good idea.  In an opinion piece in the LA Times, Josiah Bunting III summarizes some recent research: link.  A test that gauged college students' "civic literacy", focusing "...on American history, government, international relations and economics."

The students who did the best on the test were those who came from homes where the parents were both college graduates, were still married and living together, spoke English to their children...The most significant factor...was frequent family discussion of current events and history.

3) There does appear to be a racial genetic component to intelligence.  William Saletan discusses the issue in Slate: link

Tests do show an IQ deficit, not just for Africans relative to Europeans, but for Europeans relative to Asians. Economic and cultural theories have failed to explain most of the pattern, and there's strong preliminary evidence that part of it is genetic. It's time to prepare for the possibility that equality of intelligence, in the sense of racial averages on tests, will turn out not to be true.

Among white Americans, the average IQ, as of a decade or so ago, was 103. Among Asian-Americans, it was 106. Among Jewish Americans, it was 113. Among Latino Americans, it was 89. Among African-Americans, it was 85. Around the world, studies find the same general pattern: whites 100, East Asians 106, sub-Sarahan Africans 70. One IQ table shows 113 in Hong Kong, 110 in Japan, and 100 in Britain. White populations in Australia, Canada, Europe, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States score closer to one another than to the worldwide black average. It's been that way for at least a century.

Remember, these are averages, and all groups overlap. You can't deduce an individual's intelligence from her ethnicity. The only thing you can reasonably infer is that anyone who presumes to rate your IQ based on the color of your skin is probably dumber than you are.

How could genes cause an IQ advantage? The simplest pathway is head size. I thought head measurement had been discredited as Eurocentric pseudoscience. I was wrong. In fact, it's been bolstered by MRI. On average, Asian-American kids have bigger brains than white American kids, who in turn have bigger brains than black American kids. This is true even though the order of body size and weight runs in the other direction. The pattern holds true throughout the world and persists at death, as measured by brain weight.

4) The death penalty saves lives, at least according to economists who have been studying the data.  Adam Liptak discusses the issue in an article in the NY Times: link

According to roughly a dozen recent studies, executions save lives. For each inmate put to death, the studies say, 3 to 18 murders are prevented.

The effect is most pronounced, according to some studies, in Texas and other states that execute condemned inmates relatively often and relatively quickly.

The studies, performed by economists in the past decade, compare the number of executions in different jurisdictions with homicide rates over time — while trying to eliminate the effects of crime rates, conviction rates and other factors — and say that murder rates tend to fall as executions rise. One influential study looked at 3,054 counties over two decades.

“I personally am opposed to the death penalty,” said H. Naci Mocan, an economist at Louisiana State University and an author of a study finding that each execution saves five lives. “But my research shows that there is a deterrent effect.”

I wouldn't be surprised if some of the conclusions described above continue to evolve and go in different directions in the coming decades as more data are collected and analyzed...but I always find it interesting when studies buck conventional wisdom.

Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby

200px-Talladega_nights A few weeks back I watched Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006,PG-13) (ScreenIt! Review).  From ScreenIt!:

A NASCAR racer must contend with his fall from the top of the sport at the hands of a foreign driver.

I was surprised when I realized that I had been watching for quite a while before noticing tat the "foreign driver" was Sacha Baron Cohen.  The film was quirky enough to be kinda funny despite a tame storyline.  I give it 3 out of 5.

The Da Vinci Code

200px-The_da_vinci_code Last weekend we finished watching The Da Vinci Code (2006,PG-13) (ScreenIt! Review).  From ScreenIt!:

An American professor of religious symbology reluctantly teams up with a French police cryptologist as they try to solve a murder that may lead to the greatest religious cover-up of all time.

We didn't care for it at all and took several weeks to make it through.  It just seemed boring and kind of stuffy/stale which was a bit of a surprise since we had heard from friends that it was good.

I give it 2 out of 5.

Syriana

200px-Syriana One of the advantages of a writers' strike is that you get a chance to clean out some of the DVR backlog.  Tonight I watched Syriana (2005,R) (ScreenIt! Review).  From ScreenIt!:

The complex paths of disparate individuals eventually converge as the U.S. government and a corporate oil giant position themselves in response to an Arab Gulf State seeking to realign its oil ties and business.

The multiple plot lines were a challenge to follow, but I enjoyed it and thought that the treatment of petroleum politics had the ring of truth.  I give it 4 out of 5.

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