Warm DNA

According to researchers, the cells of people native to cold climates function slightly differently than those of people in more temperate regions:

The change occurs in the mitochondria, the parts of human cells that burn fuel to produce heat and energy, according to the team of researchers led by Eduardo Ruiz-Pesini of the University of California at Irvine.
The scientists analyzed mitochondria from 1,125 people ranging from Africa to Europe and Arctic Siberia. They found that that mutations in mitochondria DNA, increasing production of heat, though reducing energy production, rise in people living closer to the pole, compared with tropical residents.

I would hope so. Here in Tennessee, I’m perpetually cold from late October through April. If Eskimos responded to the cold the same way I do, they’d have a pretty miserable lot in life.

Blind Leading the Blind Deaf

Looks like another good “60 Minutes” segment is upcoming:

Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill likened President Bush at Cabinet meetings to “a blind man in a room full of deaf people,” according to excerpts Friday from a CBS interview.
O’Neill, who was fired by Bush in December 2002, also said the president did not ask him a single question during their first one-on-one meeting, which lasted an hour.
“As I recall it was just a monologue,” he told CBS’ “60 Minutes,” which will broadcast the entire interview Sunday.
In making the blind man analogy, O’Neill told CBS his ex-boss did not encourage a free flow of ideas or open debate.
“There is no discernible connection,” CBS quoted O’Neill as saying. The president’s lack of engagement left his advisers with “little more than hunches about what the president might think,” O’Neil said, according to the program.

Perhaps there wasn’t any connection because Bush didn’t understand what his advisers were talking about–a scary but credible possibility. Either that or he’s so set in his views that he simply doesn’t care what his advisers tell him–which is almost as bad.

WMD Update

What have we learned recently from the weapons hunt?

Here’s highlights (pdf file) from the Carnegie report, “WMD IN IRAQ: Evidence and Implications“:

  • WMD programs represented a long-term threat that could not be ignored. They did not, however, pose an immediate threat to the United States, to the region, or to global security.
  • The dramatic shift between prior intelligence assessments and the October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), together with the creation of an independent intelligence entity at the Pentagon and other steps, suggest that the intelligence community began to be unduly influenced by policymakers’ views sometime in 2002.
  • There was and is no solid evidence of a cooperative relationship between Saddam’s government and Al Qaeda.
  • There was no evidence to support the claim that Iraq would have transferred WMD to Al Qaeda and much evidence to counter it.
  • Administration officials systematically misrepresented the threat from Iraq’s WMD and ballistic missile programs, beyond the intelligence failures noted above, by:
    • Treating nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons as a single “WMD threat.” The conflation of three distinct threats, very different in the danger they pose,distorted the cost/benefit analysis of the war.
    • Insisting without evidence—yet treating as a given truth—that Saddam Hussein would give whatever WMD he possessed to terrorists.
    • Routinely dropping caveats, probabilities, and expressions of uncertainty present in intelligence assessments from public statements.
    • Misrepresenting inspectors’ findings in ways that turned threats from minor to dire.

  • Even a war successful on other counts could leave behind three significant WMD threats: lost material, “loose” scientists, and the message that only nuclear weapons could protect a state from foreign invasion.

Meanwhile, here’s the Bush administration response:

The Bush administration has quietly withdrawn from Iraq a 400-member military team whose job was to scour the country for military equipment, according to senior government officials. The step was described by some military officials as a sign that the administration might have lowered its sights and no longer expected to uncover the caches of chemical and biological weapons that the White House cited as a principal reason for going to war last March.

And the status of David Kay’s heralded efforts?

Its leader, David Kay, is said to be on the point of resignation. A colleague in Washington said: “His family is worried about his safety and he is disenchanted, both by the failure to find weapons he was sure were there and because his team has been cut in half.”

Interesting.

Weather Closings

Snow hits the Tennessee Valley again. More closings to report:

  • Karl Rove School of Latin-American Studies: Closed
  • Britney Spears Emergency Marriage Counseling Clinic: Closed at 4 A.M.
  • Washington Hog Heaven Footballaholics: Re-Opening 11 Years Late
  • Steve Irwin Daycare Center: Closed Indefinitely
  • Howard Dean Seminar on the Book of Job: Rescheduled for a Later Date
  • Pete Rose Baseball Odds Makers: Open Two Hours Late

Stay tuned for more weather-related announcements.