Sorry for the late response, but yep. US-centrism, pardon me, haha
Sometimes sports takes up a fair amount of my time. Trying to follow four leagues (the big 4) while working and trying to stay on top of everything else in a productive life is kind of hard.
He's protected himself from Manning's great fault: he didn't release documents all willy nilly. That's going to remove one of the major arguments I (and others) had against Manning.
I understand. I completely understand you consider intelligence irrelevant when compared to results. But how does that relate to someone attempting to simply explain Bush is intelligent to people who doubt otherwise?
I get what you're saying, just it doesn't matter in the context of this discussion. This article itself does not win/lose any debate about the merits of the Bush presidency, because it simply doesn't engage that debate at all. It does however, dispel the notion of Bush being unintelligent, which is an issue entirely separate from success/failure of the presidency. I have no idea why you are conflating the two. It's a non-sequitur. Like someone writing about the great Vitamin A content of potatoes and you talking about how monoculture of potatoes led to Great Irish Famine. About the same general topic, but you're railing against something that isn't the point. Basically, my point is, I have no idea why you're upset this essay didn't to respond points it wasn't even attempting to respond to in the first place. Thesis of the essay: Bush is smart. I'd say they proved that. Why are you looking for something else?
I'm under the impression this is not a defense of his presidency, merely a defense against the general "Bush was/is an idiot" attack by some on the left.
Attempt to solve de novo structures of any protein I could think of. That's the holy grail of computational biology pretty much, and overnight we could be closer to solving thousands of diseases
I don't understand this argument. Because a celebration has been unable to erase centuries of systematic exclusion of a people's history, it's a failure? I think Black History Month has been doing it's job, and it just has to continue doing so.
The thing is, at this point, he'd have a well oiled machine of a campaign for Senate by now. Governor's race is a different ballgame.
Hey, I know this wasn't directed towards me, but I'm just getting started on Hubski so I don't have a name for myself haha. I'm a structural biologist, specifically I work with glycosidases, enzymes that break down glycoproteins. These proteins are the reason for many of the lysosmal storage diseases. Generally, the one most people are familiar with is Tay-Sachs, though that is a result of failure of a lipase, not a glycosidase. Our lab works to solve the structures of these enzymes so possible pharmacological chaperones can be tested and possibly discovered. As for whether enough resources are allocated towards science...eh. Every sector is selfish, and every sector wants to get more pieces of the pie if it can. Do I wish the NIH had more money, so then my PI would get more grants and therefore I would have more equipment and leeway? Sure. But I also realize the federal government is in a crunch and it's not just me and my field feeling the crunch. I think politicians realize how important science is.
I thought their reasoning was that it didn't come with deficit cuts
But where on Reddit? To be honest, I don't especially see it as a good idea to get my news from reddit unless you stay away from /r/politics, /r/worldnews, and the like. And even then, its probably a good idea to avoid the comments.
Can you elaborate on what you mean by that?
Yeah, it seems as if using institutions as a source of news is on its way out; aggregators are the future. Shame, because I'm a loyal individual who doesn't especially enjoy separating wheat from chaff.
I work in New England, though I'm originally from New Jersey. People up here can for some reason readily identify me as being from NJ. I never knew our cultures were that far apart to the point where'd I'd be easily identifiable
Research technician in a lab in New England, hoping to actually get into graduate school this time, instead of bouncing around labs like I have the last few years. Came here from reddit, seems like an awesome place.