Science & Technology
Science & Technology
Unlike Ezekiel Emanuel, I Hope Not to Die at 75
Ari Armstrong September 21, 2014
Although it is true that a person may reach a point when, given the diminished quality of his life, he no longer deems it worth living, the proper principle guiding such decisions—a principle Ezekiel Emanuel never states—is that the only person properly in a position to decide whether his life is worth living is the individual himself.
Science & Technology
Concrete: The Foundation of Modern Life
Ari Armstrong September 16, 2014
We typically go through our days without devoting a thought to this this magnificent material, concrete, that helps make modern life possible. The next time you enjoy a modern building, drive down a street, or so much as stroll down a sidewalk, you might think for a moment of the modern producers of concrete. Their thought and work literally support your life.
Politics & Rights, Science & Technology
Endangered Species Act Sacrifices People to Frogs
Ari Armstrong September 6, 2014
The Endangered Species Act empowers the federal government to effectively nationalize private property without even compensating the owners of the property. It should be unnecessary in civilized society to point out that frogs do not have rights. They don’t. People do. And government’s sole proper function is to protect people’s rights.
Science & Technology
Kids React to Apple II: “Look at How Humanity Has Used Their Intellect!”
Ari Armstrong September 5, 2014
A recent YouTube video, “Kids React to Old Computers,” is a fun and profound way to mark the rapid advance of computer technology. Children interviewed for the video have a variety of reactions to the Apple II, an innovative machine in its day—it was introduced in 1977—but now useful mainly as a museum piece.
Science & Technology
Mexico’s Oil Monopoly Looks to U.S. for Crude Oil Resulting from Non-Monopoly
David Biederman September 5, 2014
Under the control of Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex)—Mexico’s State Run Oil Monopoly—oil production has declined to levels not seen since 1995. Fortunately for the people of Mexico, producers in the United States, operating in relative freedom, have, during that same time, massively increased their production of crude. Mexico may soon begin importing crude from the United States.
Philosophy, Science & Technology
Ice-Bucket Challenge Supports Embryonic Stem Cell Research—And That’s a Good Thing
Ari Armstrong August 28, 2014
If scientists rationally judge that they can make headway against ALS and other devastating diseases by engaging in embryonic stem cell research, that is what they should do—and those who voluntarily (and non-sacrificially) fund such research are morally virtuous in doing so.
Science & Technology
Government to Patients: “We Feel Pain Is Best for You”
Ari Armstrong August 27, 2014
Individuals’ lives and bodies belong to them, not to the government. Individuals have a moral right to seek out and use the drugs of their choice for pain management (and for any other purpose), and politicians and bureaucrats are morally wrong—indeed, they are detestable—when they violate those rights.
Science & Technology
European Industry Stagnates as Americans Prosper with Fracking
David Biederman August 8, 2014
The cause of this problem for the EU is not the shale gas revolution in the United States; rather, the cause of the problem is the lack of such a revolution in Europe—and the cause of that problem is European policies that stifle energy production.
Science & Technology
The Environmentalists’ War on People
Ari Armstrong August 4, 2014
Although environmentalists sometimes couch their policies in terms of improving the world for human benefit, fundamentally the environmentalist movement regards humankind as a blight on the earth whose productive activities are inherently immoral. Most recently, the Guardian reports a “plan to engineer a shorter, smaller human race to cope with climate change.”
Science & Technology
What Congress Should Do Rather than Sue
Ari Armstrong August 1, 2014
Unfortunately, this week’s response by House Republicans—to sue Obama—demonstrates that they are more interested in poking the President than in defunding and ultimately repealing the rights-violating laws that are throttling the ability of doctors, insurers, and patients to act according to their reasoned judgment.