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There is one more study that is of interest in testing the hypothesis that big government is bad for America. While there appears to be no negative effect of the physical size of government on incomes [1], there is the potential that government spending has a negative impact on incomes. […]

The Hypothesis of “Big Government” – Part 2

2 comments

Updated 3/20/2010: added a reference for the median family income data. Corrected the table of trends, removing an incorrect cell-by-cell normalization (division by the number of years over which the slope was measured). Slope is ALREADY in units of “per year,” so an additional division was not needed. This in […]

The Hypothesis of “Big Government”

Guns, Taxes, and State Religion

The new textbook standards being pursued by the Texas state board of education are still in motion, despite the rejection of some of the nuttier board members in recent elections. This was expected. The work that has gone on for so long has too much momentum to just be reversed. […]

Guns, Taxes, and State Religion

The Science of Swearing

Today, while driving to Milwaukee for a return flight to Dallas, Jodi and I heard on “Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me” about a bill in the California State Assembly aimed at creating a “No Cuss Week” in March [1]. The idea was inspired by the creation of a “No Cussing […]

The Science of Swearing

Lessons from Concepcion

In late February and early March came periods of devastation for Chile. Those periods came in the form of ” . . . the most severe earthquake experienced by the oldest inhabitant . . . ” as stated in an account of the events. The account continues, “A bad earthquake […]

Lessons from Concepcion

When values meet data

NPR ran a timely story tonight about how people with different value systems will interpret the same information differently [1]. Social scientists are applying these observations to understand reactions to vaccination and climate change data. The story offered explanations but few ideas. For instance, there was this cautionary tale: So, […]

When values meet data

Temperature in the Northern Hemisphere (2000 years)

Updated on 2/25/2010: some of the language needed editing for clarity. Updated on 2/23/2010: added discussion of the current state of the medieval warming period, and whether it was actually a global phenomenon. George Will’s opinion piece in today’s Washington Post serves as a textbook example of the current argument […]

Thy will be done

Don’t be a science jerk

Of late, I’ve written some things in my blog that, upon reflection, make me a science jerk. For instance, in my recent discussion of media coverage of the climate science mistakes uncovered in the last four months, I pretty much made it sound like anybody who doubts climate science is […]

Don’t be a science jerk

Scholarship

Athletics at SMU can raised quite heated responses from members of the SMU academic community. This response is rooted in many things, but primarily a perception that student athletes are expected, or themselves expect, to achieve less in the academic realm than their non-athlete peers. Setting aside the reality for […]

Scholarship

Healthcare: birthday edition

While attending my nephews’ birthday party this weekend, I was told a horrific anecdote by one of my family members. Their employer recently bought a larger retail space not far from their original building. The employer relocated to the larger building and merged departments and personnel. In the process, they’ve […]

Healthcare: birthday edition

Headlines wagging science?

This was buried in the third paragraph of a Fox News story on climate change and the questions about some of the results reported by the British MET office and used in IPCC reports [1]: Although the errors did not alter the bigger picture on climate change, they were seized […]

Headlines wagging science?

A lonely stretch of beach

What do autism and climate change have in common? They are two sides of the same coin. On one side, you have autism, vaccines, and a single study from 1998 that was long touted as evidence of a link between the two. On the other side, you have climate-change deniers […]

A lonely stretch of beach

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Follow this blog on Mastodon or any other ActivityPub-enabled social media system. This blog’s identity (webfinger) is @steve@steve.cooleysekula.net.

astrophysics a view from the shadows badreligion badscience chickasha climate climate disruption evolution fighting pseudoscience israel linux nobelprize oklahoma photo photos physics policy politics pseudoscience research science teaching Texas State Fair travel

  • (no title)
    February 10, 2026
    It was lovely tonight in #Toronto. Had a good time catching up with colleagues.
  • (no title)
    February 10, 2026
    This is very specific. #hotel

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