Animal Rights Activist Pleads Guilty in UK Terror Bombing

What’s the difference between an animal rights activist and a schizophrenic bomber? In the case of Glynn Harding, 26, the two maladies converged into a bombing campaign that seriously injured thee people.

In July Harding plead guilt in the United Kingdom to 12 counts of sending explosive devises with intent and three counts of causing bodily harm with explosives. Only sheer luck prevented more harm and possible deaths in the bombings (one victim’s life was saved, for example, when he opened the bomb from the wrong end). As it was, one of Harding’s bombs seriously injured a six-year-old girl and blinded an estate agent in one eye.

Harding began sending his bombs in December 2000, and targeted businesses connected in some way with animal industries.

Harding suffers from schizophrenia and had been held in a secure mental facility since his February 2001 arrest. Sentencing proceedings will not commence in the case until sometime in September.

Sources:

Letter bomber motivated by animal rights. Angelique Chrisafis, The Guardian (London), July 28, 2001.

Animal rights bomber admits terror campaign. Paul Stokes, The Daily Telegraph (London), July 28, 2001.

Man admits sending letter bombs. The BBC, July 27, 2001.

Brazil’s Short Sighted Thinking on AIDS Drugs

A lot of folks are celebrating Brazil’s decision to declare AIDS a national emergency and basically ignore patents on AIDS drugs.

There is a lot of debate back and forth over patents for lifesaving drugs, with pharma. companies claiming the prices they charge are necessary to pay for continued research and development, and AIDS activists and others charging that this is nonsense.

Before the celebration over Brazil’s actions go into high gear, it might be worth taking the time to survey the current state of vaccine development and production.

For a variety of reasons, it is very difficult to make a profit on vaccines. They are difficult to research, and often even more difficult to manufacture. The political situation in Western countries has really focused intense attention to even minor side effects of vaccines, with a couple prominent vaccines (such as for rotavirus) being recalled.

So how have companies reacted? Most major pharmaceutical companies won’t go near vaccine development with a ten foot pole. Those few that do focus almost exclusively on vaccines for diseases affect those in the developed world.

My daughter’s generation, for example, was one of the first to receive a chicken pox vaccination. Now, I think it’s great there is a chicken pox vaccination, and yes, in some rare instances chicken pox can be life threatening, but chicken pox is hardly a deadly scourge.

Compare that to the malaria vaccine. Well, we could do that in theory if there were a malaria vaccine. Not only is there no vaccine yet for malaria, but most drug companies don’t even have major efforts to find such a vaccine. Certainly nobody is putting the sort of money into finding a malaria vaccine as they are for other vaccines.

And it would be kind of pointless to do so. Not only would a malaria vaccine likely not be profitable, but it probably wouldn’t even recoup its development costs by the time companies were forced to give it away.

Look, for example, at how bad the business climate is in Africa. Nobody wants to invest in Africa so several governments there are going to create a special insurance company just to issue policies to reduce the political risks of doing business on that continent (i.e. Robert Mugabe might decide some of his cronies need your company more than you do).

I Really Hate Slashdot Sometimes

In 1997, ABC “reporter” Cokie Roberts blasted the Internet in a column she wrote with her husband, Steve. Among other things they complained about was that (surprise) the Internet didn’t allow for any mediation of views by responsible folks.

To us it [unmediated web communication] sounds like no more deliberation, no more consideration of an issue over a long period of time, no more balancing of regional and ethnic interests, no more protection of minority views.

Jon Katz, who at the time was writing for HotWired, turned around and ripped on the Roberts’s saying,

The column serves as a window into the dark and disconnected heart of Washington journalism, a culture that fiercely defends its own freedom but has mixed feelings about everyone else’s.

Katz was certainly right, but on the other hand a very popular web site Katz now writes for on occasion, Slashdot, seems intent on proving Cokie and Steve Roberts main contention correct.

This morning, for example, Slashdot posted an item titled Microsoft Fakes Citizen Letters of Support. As is typical with Slashdot, they post an excerpt from a user who first submitted the story to the site.

According to this Seattle Times article, Microsoft is sending letters to Utah’s Attorney General in support of the company, but with fake signatures of citizens (some of whom are dead!). The article says: “Letters sent in the last month are on personalized stationery using different wording, color and typefaces, details that distinguish Microsoft’s efforts from lobbying tactics that go on in politics every day. State law-enforcement officials became suspicious after noticing that the same sentences appear in the letters and that some return addresses appeared invalid.””

This is where I start to get really angry. If you actually go read the Seattle Times story, Lobbyists Tied to Microsoft Wrote Citizens’ Letters, it bears little resemblance to this summary.

Is Microsoft making up letters, signing dead people’s names to them, and then sending those letters to Utah’s Attorney General? Of course not.

What actually happened here was a number of pro-Microsoft lobbying groups conducted telephone surveys about the MS antitrust case. People who indicated they opposed the antitrust case were sent a package including an already prepared letter opposing the antitrust case that they could sign and mail to their state’s attorney general.

So where do the dead people come in? According to the Seattle Times,

Utah officials found that two prefab letters from Citizens Against Government Waste bore the typed names of dead people. Those names had been crossed out by family members who signed for them. And another letter came from “Tucson, Utah,” a city that doesn’t exist.

It is reprehensible for Slashdot to claim that, “Microsoft is sending letters to Utah’s Attorney General in support of the company, but with fake signatures of citizens (some of whom are dead!).”

This from the same site where editors and readers go ballistic because the film Swordfish‘s portrayal of hacking, and specifically computer encryption, was beyond laughable. But at least everyone seeing it new that Swordfish was a piece of fiction, while Slashdot continues to engage in such shoddy practices and pass them off as fact. And, of course, almost never makes any sort of corrections or retraction notices.

And personally I just don’t get it. Here’s my favorite story about Cokie Roberts: she’s a liar as well. Roberts was almost fired by ABC for an incident involving faked “live” coverage outside the White House. Basically, ABC ran footage showing Roberts reporting live from the White House, but in fact the footage was actually shot on a sound stage in front of a blue screen with the White House added in later.

That was extremely shoddy journalism, and at the moment Slashdot is not a whole lot better.

I guess I really don’t understand why anyone would want to put out such a shoddy product. I mean, I understand why traditional news agencies often get burned — incredible deadline and economic pressures — but I don’t see how independent web sites are doing anybody a favor by repeating the same mistakes of traditional media.

Save Five Lives, Go Directly to Jail

Courtesy of Morons.Org comes this report about, well, morons in California’s justice system.

Two armed men busted into a San Francisco loft where Detrick Washington, 25, and four other people were hanging out. Washington noticed that one of the intruders had laid down his gun will attempting to tie up some of the loft’s occupants. Washington grabbed the gun, and within a few minutes both would-be robbers (who still had knives and a machete) were shot dead.

Police call Washington a hero, but he’s now in jail for his actions. Washington was on parole for a drug conviction and his parole carries explicit conditions that he is not even supposed to touch a gun, much less use it to kill an armed intruder.

A spokesman for the Department of Corrections said that Washington will remain locked up until the department finishes its own investigation of the shooting.

Fishing for Blood Clotting Agents

According to the BBC, researchers at the UK’s Southampton University were touting ongoing research their conducting to genetically modify the tilapia species of fish to both grow faster as well as produce an important blood clotting agent.

Funded by the UK’s Department for International Development, the researchers hope to modify the fish to grow three times as fast as the naturally occurring tilapia.

Norman Maclean, a professor of genetics working on the project, also told the BBC that they hope to turn the species into a biological factory for an important, but currently expensive blood clotting agent. Maclean told the BBC,

We are currently working with an American bio-tech company to produce this blood-clotting agent called ‘factor seven’, which is very important in the treatment of someone who has, for example, been involved in a road accident. At the moment, factor seven is being used, but it is very expensive, and this research should help reduce the cost of its production.

Certainly the usual suspects in the animal rights movement will be horrified at the idea of using a genetically-modified fish to save people’s lives.

Source:

‘Superfish’ to ease food shortage. The BBC, August 16, 2001.

Wil Wheaton Can’t Be All Bad

Okay, I absolutely hate Wesley Crusher (though that’s the least of things I hate about Star Trek), but when Memepool decided to link to several sites related to Wil Wheaton, they missed this Wheaton’s excellent interview with the Aint-It-Cool-News folks.

Anyway, I’m reading through this thinking this is one of the better interviews with people who aren’t famous anymore when I come to this part which makes me clap my hands. Wheaton talks about how lucky he felt when he was asked by the Make A Wish Foundation to give a dying child a backstage tour of the Star Trek: The Next Generation set. And then launches into a very un-PC attack on the enemy of all things good in the world, The Backstreet Boys,

Like The Backstreet Boys refused to let a little girl, through the Make A Wish Foundation, come backstage at the end of one of their concerts. So, I’d just like to say right now, on record, fuck them. Fuck them. I mean, honestly, was it going to kill them to take 15 minutes away from sitting back there, drinking beer, patting themselves on their collective back, talking about how great they are? Honestly. There are times when you get an opportunity to do something, to really make a difference. Not the way everybody says, “I’m going to make a difference.” I mean really, right now, directly make a difference in somebody’s life. You gotta seize those opportunities and if you don’t, then fuck you and I hope you fail. OK. Off the soapbox now.

Now that’s the kind of thing I want to read in celebrity interviews. Besides, whatever you say about Wesley Crusher, you gotta admit he never sucked as bad as any of The Backstreet Boys (I’m not sure that’s much of a compliment, but it will have to do).