Yet another mass shooting in our USA April 16, 2007
Posted by gaussling in Angst, Arts & Entertainment, Current Events, History, Politics.10 comments
The news of the mass shooting at Virginia Tech just seems to get worse as the day wears on. There aren’t words to describe it.
After the grisly scene in Blacksburg is cleaned up and the bodies are buried, we’ll once again switch on the TV and watch programming glamorizing gun-toting tough guys and violence. Not a night goes by on television where some plot isn’t based on the menacing of women by crazed or angry men, most with guns. Some people will solve problems with guns and others will cause problems with guns. The message is that guns bring satisfaction and command respect. Just look at the very title of the series The Sopranos and listen to the lyrics. “Woke up this mornin’ and got myself a gun …”
Maybe there is no causal connection between entertainment and what this shooter did. But I cannot help but believe that the more or less constant exposure to violence in our entertainment doesn’t dull our sensibilities and lower our threshold for what constitutes acceptable behaviour. Regardless, we have to start somewhere and cleaning up our tastes in entertainment is relatively painless. We need to create less demand for this crude stuff.
Obviously, the shooter is responsible for the murders, not the inanimate steel mechanism. But the common fascination we have with the gun and it’s stylized, even mythical, application means that this mechanical device has some kind of hold on us. Its ease of use and its ability to deliver death from a great distance makes it possible for anyone to deem themselves a “warrier” for a few minutes.
We are horrified by such violence when it is real. But we entertain ourselves with painstakingly elaborate dramatizations of it. We are gratified to watch fictional characters engage in gunplay with bad guys. We cheer as fictional cops rough up suspects because, as we all know, bad guys really shouldn’t have rights.
There is no mysterious or complex phenomenon to sort out here. Our American culture has a form of fragmented personality disorder with respect to gun violence. I don’t know if it’ll do a damned bit of good, but we need to come down from the saturation level of violence in our entertainment and recreation. The first thing we must do is to remove a bit of the glamor of gunplay.
We don’t have to give up our guns. But we do need to develop a new viewpoint or an advanced ethos about them. We need new icons and archetypes. It is time to retire CSI and The Sopranos as popular iconography. We must find better ways to fulfill our self image and need for power besides being handy with a gun. How do other societies do it? Any suggestions??
Here is an interesting link to a rebuttal in the Daily Kos written by someone said to be from VT.
GD vs ICP Mass Spec April 16, 2007
Posted by gaussling in Chemical Industry, Chemistry, Chemistry Blogs, Science.4 comments
I wonder if there are any mass spec jockeys out there who can comment on the relative accuracy of Glow Discharge Mass Spec (GDMS) with ICP Mass Spec (ICPMS) at the ppm level? In other words, if one has data taken from each and compares them side by side, which should one side with? I have results from both analyses on a metal oxide and I’m puzzled as to which I should stand behind.
If you have one clock, you know what time it is. If you have two, you’re never sure.
One lab breathlessly proclaims that GDMS is linear over 9 orders of magnitude, but is subject to 20 to 30 % error owing to a lack of a valid standard (??!@#?). The same fellow says that ICPMS is accurate to 5 % at 100 ppm, but the error is considerably higher at 1 ppm. Good gravy.
No doubt, the answer will contain the words “it depends”. But I wonder what the issues are.