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Biocolonialism.

A few decades ago, back when I lived in Syndey, I came back from the States with a toasty Giardia infection that I most definitely picked up from a pristine spring near High Falls, New York. It didn’t impact any of the locals there, but when I was a kid and drank water our of polluted mountain streams, my intestinal plants and animals apparently made a peace treaty with Rocky Mountain Giardia that did not offer reciprocation status with Upstate New York Giardia.

So I’m shitting my brains out in my tastefully-furnished apartment in Potts Point, and I sez to my self “self, you are gonna die if this goes on too much longer.” I head to the doctor … or at least I assumed it was a doctor. But it was Australia and that was no doctor.

I walk into this doctor’s office, told him what I just told y’all, and he tells me to stop eating any food at all for 24 hours. “Mate, you kin have an oice-pop, or a feezy drink, but na food. Twinny-four hours. You got it?”

Quack. Whatever.

I go back to my tasteful apartment in Sydney, and I really do need to share, how lovely was that flat. It was the apartment that Gidget used to make a gin and tonic for a pro surfer on the Duke Kahanamoku tour. I’m sitting on the toilet in my tasteful apartment with Sally Fields and Miki in the living room, my Prime American Male Body veering unavoidably to the same death that kills one-in-ten Haitian children. That’s what diarrhea does when it is left untreated. I avoid eating for half the day, finally I get hungry and I eat a little something, eat a banana, I can’t remember exactly what I ate.

A day later, Sally Field and Miki are long gone, my place looks like the day after an industry party with those same damned three chicks from Sweden who always make a mess of my life, while the New Zealand and Aussie chicks make a mess of my heart. Whatever rosy glow I had of my future had quickly dissolved into the reality that I was dying a Third World Death in a First World Country. It’s a reality that the unhoused deal with on a daily basis, but it isn’t something to which stylish playboy newspaper reporters find themselves.

I get down to the clinic again, I was sure I would get a real doctor who gives out cures, rather than a wannabe Jainist who hands out 10-day fasts. Then, as now, I am an American, and I need pills. It is our nature as stylish playboy newspaper reporters to respond well to those pills. What was the name of the reporter guy who hung out with Ralph Steadman? I can’t place his name at the moment, the Gonzo guy.

Regardless, we do well with pills.

So I’m sitting in the little office, eager to meet with an actual doctor, and who the fuck comes in the room again? It’s that same quack from before! What the sideways-mounted fuck is this?

He said to me “Mate, dan’t say anotha wahd, I know why yer here Mate.”

“I’m really very sick. I need help doctor.”

“You didn’t do what I told you to do.”

“I did!”

“You didn’t. Because if you did what I told you to do, you wouldn’t be in my office right now.”

“I need medicine.”

“I told you what to do. No food for twinny-fawr hours. You kin have an ice-pop.”

Fucking quack.

I go back home, I didn’t eat any food for at least twelve hours. Then I took a bite of a chocolate chip cookie to stop my stomach from grumbling.

So then I’m back in that same clinic, and that same outback-looking motherfucker comes in the room, calls me a liar to my face, and tells me to go home and not eat for 24 hours. He said I could have ice pops. I didn’t have any ice-pops because I was a stylish playboy newspaper reporter. I bought some ice-pops. It unnerved me that they were so cheap, I think about one Aussie Dollar for the box. None of that frozen fruit shit, these were actual ice-pops, just water, sugar and some flavoring and coloring that gives the consumer the vague recollection of something fruity as they lick the little thing to oblivion whilst debating if they should in fact steal that pogo stick from the Cheeseman Park playground. That kind of ice-pop.

I make it 24 hours, no medicine, no food, the ice-pops sorta distracted me from the hunger, but it wasn’t a big deal, fasts are usually not that difficult once you resign yourself to one. And then maybe 26 hours later, I eat some food, and my American colon in a More-American-Than-America Continent maintains, and I get my strength back.

That’s what happened, the Aussie Doctor was apparently not threatened by medical malpractice lawsuits, and he was able to practice medicine as American doctors wished they could practice medicine, or practice medicine the way the American dentists practice medicine. That Aussie Doctor had a sufficiently well-understood knowledge of the human digestive system that he was able to create a path forward, and then force this fucking idiot of a non-medical person to actually do what the doctor prescribes. American Doctors don’t get to do that anymore. Yes, the pharmaceutical companies made their kind wealthy, but along with the wealth and the majestic public relations campaigns comes the cost of letting a pharma company put its supple latex finger up your arse … What is the old joke? Was it something like the only time you really need to worry during your prostate exam is when you see both of the doctors hands on your shoulders. Just one hand? Eh, you’re probably alright.

I never thought I would wax poetic about getting the eruptions from a little Giardia. But in this new era of Biocolonialism, those days sound wistfully simple in comparison.

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Fusion still sucks.


I was surprised that the fusion researchers reported that they hit and possibly exceeded break-even. I didn’t think it would happen, and I still wonder if it’s a mistake, or something pops up in the research studies next year or so that shows an unaccounted energy source somewhere.

In fact, if I were a better man, I wouldn’t have bet some asshole in a bar in Wichita, $500 that this result is spurious. But I did make that bet, not because I don’t want the best for the men and women in that research program. The people who work in fusion have taken on a difficult assignment that I decided against in my own career. And I was recruited for the Princeton Tokamak program back when I was just a grommet undergrad physicist student at Huntah Collitch in CUNY. There was something depressing about the whole affair. The physicists there had this long line of dusty bottles on a shelf above one of the main control booths. One bottle was labeled 10% of energy break-even, the next was 25% of energy break-even, the next was 50%, 75%, 90%, 95%, 98%, 99% and finally, break-even. And each bottle was some kind of cheap champagne, though I think the “break even” bottle may have actually been a bottle of Moet y Chandon, the same kind of champagne I got my advisor when I finally got passed my defense. So at least someone in Princeton administration had confidence that this Tokamak team would pay their worth. The rest were undoubtedly funded with folding money, and physicists don’t make fat stacks now and they didn’t make fat stacks back then either.

To the man, woman and the ferrets that ran the cleaning brush pilot lines through the feed control tubes, the Tokamak was the best chance we had at fusion as a country, even though it was Russian technology. Was it Russian? I forget, not the point of this. My point is that a physicist who takes a career in fusion is (or at least was) the kind of physicist who had no hopes of moving the needle and just wanted to have a reliable job around people who make him or her happy. 

Your note about the artificial intelligence thing, that makes sense, and this is the very first that I’ve heard about it. Had I known that, I wouldn’t have made that bet in Wichita. Artificial Intelligence truly is foundational for doing this kind of work. My own work now is ion separation through laminar flows. I do know why they would need AI to stabilize the plasma, and how that could completely change the fusion equation. Yes, plasmas are fluids, and yes they can be controlled to the kind of relatively low Reynolds numbers that would probably be needed to fuse helium and tritium or whatever it is that they do these days. I know from my own work that it just doesn’t work without at least a first-order approximation on the flow velocity, flow cross section, applied voltage, current draw, etc.. And my actual fluids are far more stable than a plasma, so yes, finding the sweet spot to keep the plasma stable enough for continuous fusion reactions would be tough, and it’s a job for a computer to respond with “feeling” and thus have a handle on the stability of the system, able to turn five or six knobs at a time.

Fusion succeeded? It must have succeeded because we had some help from the robots this time, it was a job too complex for us mere humans. But I have two years before I have to pay off that bet, and between then and now, maybe someone did find some unaccounted energy, or maybe like the Pons and Fleishmann results, perhaps nobody will be able to replicate these results. 

I’m not even sure if he will even remember the bet. I had put a good number of tequilas into my constitution, and he had apparently matched mine own. Who am I kidding? That fucking asshole was a low-energy physicist, they never forget a damned thing. They spend half of their day in a clean room taking radiation measurements to detect neutrinos and weak-reactions. If ever there was a physicist who would remember a $500 bet while toe-up on Milagro and plastic cups filled with moldy water from an ancient plastic Igloo cooler in the corner of the bar, it would be a low-energy physicist. He was one of the rare low-energy physicists who didn’t work in academia, he had some kind of defense research contractor gig that he couldn’t discuss due to his contract, but it isn’t rocket surgery to assume that his work is with neutrino detection for military communication, same as Pirelli figured out a few decades ago. If they can neutrino communications figured out, they will have a way to communicate with submarines from a single broadcast center, beamed directly through the center of the Earth if necessary. A Neutrino communication could travel through the Moon like it is a $3 piƱata at the Mexican Dollar Store. It would be pretty neat and probably add to our nuclear safety, not just to keep submarines from going Crimson Tide, but also to detect rogue nuclear production, which would be a free side-benefit of the military applications. And maybe by the time our grandkids have grandkids, there will be no more nuclear weapons on our planet, and anyone who decides to violate the NPT by building a secret nuclear reactor, will be detected as easily as a high school sophomore quivering under a bush, while hiding from a police helicopter with infra-red sights was sent by the neighbors to get them to stop lighting off bottle rockets in the middle of the night on a night sufficiently close to July Fourth, that nobody would notice, but apparently there was a shortage of weed or whiskey or Pabst Blue Ribbon in Denver back in those days, and everyone was on edge.

I digress. The point here is that maybe they didn’t fuck up and maybe they actually hit and exceeded energy break-even.

Now what?

We can do one of two things:

  1. We can stop working on renewable energy, grid storage, cleantech, nuclear non-proliferation, grid stability, grid infrastructure defense, and employee-ownership in the energy industry,
  2. Or we can continue to work on renewable energy, grid storage, cleantech, nuclear non-proliferation, grid stability, grid infrastructure defense, and employee-ownership in the energy industry.

We have no idea what is in front of us with fusion energy. It might change the nature of transportation and energy. With free unlimited energy, we wouldn’t need oil, or coal, or fission, or grid renewables. All we would need is the miracle of unlimited free energy; a world where unlimited energy destroys poverty, class, hatred, anger, wars and confusion.

Or it might lock us into a future where we owe our souls to the company store.

I am sufficiently more concerned about the latter, that the slim benefits of the former are not sufficient enticement.

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Mineragua

Mineragua is so good. I sometimes feel guilty that I add to the plastic waste stream with so many of my Mineragua bottles, I should do a self-tax, and pay a Hatian charity $0.25 per bottle that I buy. Mineragua is so good that I will often not even buy seltzer water if my store is sold out of my favorite, which is Mineragua.