| Saturday, June 22, 2002 |
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The Wicked Witch is Dead
By Diana Hsieh @ 8:44 PM
Ann Landers is dead. I can't say I'm sorry. I've read her column intermittently over the years and regularly since my return to philosophy last summer. (Reading such advice columns and listening to Dr. Laura helps me get a sense for the sorts of moral dilemmas that ordinary people struggle with everyday.)
Ann Landers doled out some seriously awful advice on a regular basis. She was an altruist of the worst kind, recommending that people but up with obnoxious, mean, and immoral people because they were "probably lonely." She routinely advocated putting people on medication as a way of solving moral flaws. In contrast, her twin sister Dear Abby, generally doles out good, common sense advice, despite her proclivity for sappy mystical stories about pennies from heaven.
So good riddance to bad advice!
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Containment is Glorious
By Diana Hsieh @ 8:16 PM
The whole eastern edge of the fire has now been contained! VodkaPundit, worry no more! So now the only uncontained area of the Hayman fire is to the west, burning into wilderness, not homes. Woohoo! Hooray for firefighters!
In more troubling news, a number of small fires flared up elsewhere in Douglas County today, including one that was fairly close to us. They were all rapidly extinguished, thankfully. It was a grim reminder that the Hayman fire will likely not be the only wildfire we face this summer. Anyone want to start a betting pool for the number of evacuation alerts, voluntary evacuations, and mandatory evacuations that NoodleFood and GeekPress will face this summer? We're already 1-1-0. :-/
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| Friday, June 21, 2002 |
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Wild and Woolly!
By Diana Hsieh @ 10:07 PM
We are experiencing a wild and woolly storm here at this very moment! Poor Abby is, as usual, beside herself with worry over the wind and the thunder and the lightening. (Thankfully, the rain just started too.)
Don't tell Paul, but I let her up on the forbidden couch to sit with me. I was hoping that she would be comforted by my presence. But I clearly didn't make the grade, as she shortly jumped over the couch to go crawl under my desk, where she now lays, quivering in fear. Poor doggie.
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Second Test Results
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:24 PM
So I took the test again to see how much my results would vary from just a few hours ago. I worked harder at a realistic assessment of my 7-ness, which is evidenced by its lower score, I think. So here they are:
Enneagram Test Results #2
| Type | Score | Summary | | 5 | 21 | Fives are basically on some level ambivalent about the world, consequently, their mind is usually their best friend. They like to analyze things and make sense of them (that is their anchor), perception and invention come naturally. The immense inner world of fives can cause them to lose touch or interest in reality. | | 8 | 13 | Eights are natural leaders. They are straight forward, direct, large personalities, that are unlikely to back down to adversity. They have a talent for motivating others. They have a strong sense of justice and are often protectors of the weak. However, they also have short fuses and can become domineering tyrants. | | 4 | 10 | Fours are all about being unique and creating their own distinct culture. They experience the highs and lows of life more intensely than other types. They take great pride in their aesthetic tastes. Fours often feel like misplaced children, and they long for a sense of real family. | | 7 | 10 | Sevens are optimistic thrill seekers that see life as an adventure. They are always thinking of new possibilities and adventures. This constant zest for life can become escapism. Once things lose there fun they are no longer interested, so many projects go unfinished. Essentially, they avoid the difficulties of life because they fear being overwhelmed by them. | | 3 | 10 | Threes derive self worth from success in the external world. They are highly skilled at adapting themselves in whatever way necessary to achieve success. This external success driven image often comes at a price of having a personal identity and they often are uncertain of who they really are. | | 6 | 9 | Sixes are overly alert and anxious. They are skeptical of the status quo but are also fearful of being on their own. They satisfy their need for security and belonging by establishing strong friendships and/or loyally backing a cause. | | 1 | 9 | Ones are idealistic and strive for perfection. Morals and ethics drive them. They live with an overbearing internal critic that never rests. They are always comparing themselves to others and are overly concerned with external criticism. They can be very judgmental and others perceive them as too uptight. | | 9 | 8 | Nines are calm, laid-back, and optimistic. They are able to see everyone's point of view, and have a natural desire for making peace. Consequently, they are effective mediators. Fearful of conflict and separation from others, they can be too accommodating and unassertive. | | 2 | 2 | Twos are defined by their empathy of other people. They are uniquely gifted at tuning in on the feelings of others. This makes them great networkers, but being too caught up with other people can cause them to lose track of their own personal well being. Two charity is really a projection of how they want others to care for them. |
There is a fair amount of difference in the ordering of the #2 to #8 slots compared to my first test. But I suppose that I can be very certain that I am a 5 and nothing like a 2. Over time, a person is supposed to integrate aspects of all the enneagram types into their personality. Perhaps I've just done that very well! :-)
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Oh So Five!
By Diana Hsieh @ 7:59 PM
So when I took the the personality compatibility test blogged below, I noticed that it was an enneagram test. I've been interested in enneagrams for a while now, as Josh Zader introduced me to Don Richard Riso's very interesting and clear book Personality Types a few years ago.
Riso's enneagrams quickly captured my attention for a few reasons. First, Riso's enneagrams seemed to distinctly and clearly capture most people's personalities in a way that other typing schemes do not. Second, the description of my own personality type (which I'll get to in a minute) identified and integrated some very strange traits of mine that I never ever would have thought of related to each other or shared with others. Third, there is little rosy glow to the enneagrams, as each of Riso's descriptions of the nine enneagram types includes ten clearly identified levels of healthy to unhealthy functioning within that type. (To know that an unhealthy person of my personality type is the Unabomber is a bit chilling.)
Anyway, my reading Personality Types made it quite clear that I am a 5. (I expect that a great many bloggers are 5s.) I got similar results from the Similar Minds enneagram test:

Here's my detailed results:
Enneagram Test Results
| Type | Score | Summary | | 5 | 19 | Fives are basically on some level ambivalent about the world, consequently, their mind is usually their best friend. They like to analyze things and make sense of them (that is their anchor), perception and invention come naturally. The immense inner world of fives can cause them to lose touch or interest in reality. | | 7 | 14 | Sevens are optimistic thrill seekers that see life as an adventure. They are always thinking of new possibilities and adventures. This constant zest for life can become escapism. Once things lose there fun they are no longer interested, so many projects go unfinished. Essentially, they avoid the difficulties of life because they fear being overwhelmed by them. | | 8 | 12 | Eights are natural leaders. They are straight forward, direct, large personalities, that are unlikely to back down to adversity. They have a talent for motivating others. They have a strong sense of justice and are often protectors of the weak. However, they also have short fuses and can become domineering tyrants. | | 9 | 11 | Nines are calm, laid-back, and optimistic. They are able to see everyone's point of view, and have a natural desire for making peace. Consequently, they are effective mediators. Fearful of conflict and separation from others, they can be too accommodating and unassertive. | | 3 | 10 | Threes derive self worth from success in the external world. They are highly skilled at adapting themselves in whatever way necessary to achieve success. This external success driven image often comes at a price of having a personal identity and they often are uncertain of who they really are. | | 1 | 10 | Ones are idealistic and strive for perfection. Morals and ethics drive them. They live with an overbearing internal critic that never rests. They are always comparing themselves to others and are overly concerned with external criticism. They can be very judgmental and others perceive them as too uptight. | | 6 | 8 | Sixes are overly alert and anxious. They are skeptical of the status quo but are also fearful of being on their own. They satisfy their need for security and belonging by establishing strong friendships and/or loyally backing a cause. | | 4 | 8 | Fours are all about being unique and creating their own distinct culture. They experience the highs and lows of life more intensely than other types. They take great pride in their aesthetic tastes. Fours often feel like misplaced children, and they long for a sense of real family. | | 2 | 5 | Twos are defined by their empathy of other people. They are uniquely gifted at tuning in on the feelings of others. This makes them great networkers, but being too caught up with other people can cause them to lose track of their own personal well being. Two charity is really a projection of how they want others to care for them. |
I tend to think that I scored more 7-ish on this test than I actually am. Interestingly, I know from too much personal experience that 7s are rather dangerous people for me to become close friends with. I suspect that it is my own unhealthy tendencies towards 7-ness that make 7s both attractive and dangerous to me. (So I might have score too highly 7-ish because I am ultra-aware of any minor slippage in an unhealthy 7-ish direction. But not all my 7-ness is unhealthy -- and much of it is healthy. Certainly without it, I would be boring with a capital b.)
I wonder whether the longer test would give better results. This one didn't seem to hit on many of the core issues for any particular type, as it was simply too short. I also wonder whether how much my results would vary if I took the test in a week or month or year. I'm sure that I'd still be a 5, the only question is how much the above numbers would vary.
Oh, and Paul's results are here. It is interesting to me that he rated more 5-ish than me. But even more interesting (and accurate, when I think of it) is his high 9-ish score.
Since Paul was as similar to me as I was to Eric Raymond, we tried a direct comparison here. As it turns out, Paul and Eric have a higher similarity and compatibility rating (95% and 96%, respectively) than I do with Paul. Oh dear! I just hope that Paul doesn't file for divorce and elope to Vegas with Eric Raymond!
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Similarity Test
By Diana Hsieh @ 7:12 PM
This bit by Eric Raymond is so amazing that my brain is about to explode.
And... Yoohoo! Eric!
Okay Paul, time to see how you measure up!
I'm going to join the site so that I can take the real test.
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Appropriate Apologies
By Diana Hsieh @ 5:27 PM
As I was posting various recent internet posts to the web site today, I thought that this one on Bernstein's apology was worth reposting here. The relevant portion of the message is below, with embarrassing grammatical mistakes edited out.
I, for one, find Bernstein's apology to be sad and degrading. It is inconsistent with the virtue of pride. (Pride requires that we acknowledge and correct our moral failings, but not that we subject ourselves to a public humiliation of detailing those failings.)
For the sake of argument, let's presume that Bernstein did make a serious error in judgment in publishing his short comment in JARS. An adequate apology would be something along the lines of the following:
"I recently published a short comment in JARS regarding my CliffsNotes books. I was ignorant of the sort of articles and authors JARS publishes, many/most/all of which I emphatically do not sanction. I ought to have investigated further before giving my consent to publish. I do not approve of JARS in any way and will not publish in that forum again. I apologize for any confusion this incident might have created."
Such an apology would have conveyed the appropriate information and regret without going into the pathetic and demeaning details of whether Bernstein used or did not use his mind properly. (Those details might be relevant to a more personal discussion with a friend, but not to the whole world.)
An excessive apology can be just as damaging to trust and reputation as an inadequate one, I suspect.
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Oh, Deep Psychological Insight! Not!
By Diana Hsieh @ 2:31 PM
Yesterday, I posted some comments on the uniqueness of the parent / adult child relationship to the Nathaniel Branden Forum. I argued that parents often have insight into an adult child's personality and character that simply cannot be duplicated, not even with a spouse. So I almost turned myself inside out when I read this delightful response from exitil last night:
That says more about both of your communication skills than it does about the benefits of parenthood. Or about artificial barriers you've created that don't need to exist between yourself and your husband. Also, I would hope that your personality would change as you grow older.
Augh!
I just posted my response. The relevant portion says:
Your ludicrous psychologizing about my lack of communication skills was, well, ludicrous. The issue is that there is knowledge about my deep personality and formative experiences that my parents have, but I do not. After all, they were present and involved, with an adult perspective, through a childhood of which I have only spotty and immature memories. A person (the adult child) cannot communicate knowledge to others (like friends) that they themselves do not possess.
I'm not making some radical claim that people don't really understand themselves. I'm certainly not saying that people can't have deep relationships of mutual understanding as adults. I'm merely saying that a person's parents (and siblings to some extent) can have a uniquely valuable perspective on that person that can contribute to the closeness of the relationship.
If Paul were awake, he'd be pretty damn amused at the idea that I have any difficulties in communication other than my inability to describe the locations of objects he is looking for. I suspect that he sometimes wishes that I would communicate a little less. ;-)
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Busy Bee
By Diana Hsieh @ 2:15 PM
I've been busy updating the web site today!
I've posted my lecture to the COLP convention, The Philosophical Underpinnings of Capitalism, which argues that political theories collapse into one of four distinct forms of statism without a philosophical foundation of reason, egoism, harmony of interests, and mind-body integration.
I've added my lecture notes from two short speeches to Toastmasters, one entitled Hidden Clues, the other You Like Dr. Laura?!?.
I've also added a bunch of internet posts from the past two months.
And finally, I've added the slide presentations (in PowerPoint or HTML) for my 2001 talk on forgiveness and redemption.
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On the Brink
By Diana Hsieh @ 7:45 AM
Oh, woe, I feel like some washed-up girlfriend upon reading this entry from Brink Lindsey:
I've now been at the blogging game for three months, posting almost every weekday and not infrequently on weekends. My guess is that I'm ready to scale back to once or twice a week -- I've never thought that I could maintain this initial pace for the long term, but I figured more-or-less daily posting at the outset was necessary to build up readers. I hope the folks who've discovered this blog over the past three months will continue to tune in even if it's updated less frequently. We'll see.
He lured me in with his excellent analyses, only to abandon me once I was hooked on him. The bastard!
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| Thursday, June 20, 2002 |
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How I was Seduced by Epistemology
By Diana Hsieh @ 10:30 PM
A while back, I was working on my lecture on metaphysics and epistemology for the Objectivism 101 course soon to be given at the TOC Summer Seminar. Working on that lecture reminded me that my own serious interest in Objectivism was largely sparked by Ayn Rand's short description of her theory of concepts in "The Objectivist Ethics" (of VOS). At the time, I was immersed in the confusion and muddle of a very demanding philosophy of language course. The obviousness and simplicity of Ayn Rand's account hit me like a sack of bricks:
A "concept" is a mental integration of two or more perceptual concretes, which are isolated by a process of abstraction and united by means of a specific definition. Every word of man's language, with the exception of proper names, denotes a concept, an abstraction that stands for an unlimited number of concretes of a specific kind. It is by organizing his perceptual material into concepts, and his concepts into wider and still wider concepts that man is able to grasp and retain, to identify and integrate an unlimited amount of knowledge, a knowledge extending beyond the immediate perceptions of any given, immediate moment. Man's sense organs function automatically; man's brain integrates his sense data into percepts automatically; but the process of integrating percepts into concepts--the process of abstraction and of concept -formation--is not automatic. (VOS 21)
It was clear to me at the time -- and is even more clear now -- that this description was merely a beginning of a theory of concepts. But what a promising beginning it was -- and still is!
So I've long wanted to write a book entitled How I was Seduced by Epistemology. Perhaps that will be the title of my autobiography when I'm a wrinkled old philosopher. In any case, with a title like that, the book cover will have to look like this:

Yowza!
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O'Reilly Finally Gets It
By Diana Hsieh @ 5:26 PM
Bill O'Reilly has finally wised up about Israel. Wednesday's Talking Points Memo offered full support for Israel's seek and destroy mission of terrorists. He said:
A couple of months ago, I opined that Israel should pull back its forces after invading and destroying a number of Palestinian cities. My thinking was that an Israeli withdrawal might give peace talks a chance to get under way. When Ehud Barak appeared on The Factor, I suggested to him that if the bombings continued, Israel could go right back in.
Well, the homicide bombings have continued, and the situation is now totally out of control. Arafat can't handle Hamas and other killers, and civilians are laying dead in the streets.
So now Israel should take any and all measures to kill the terrorists. Whatever the Sharon government deems appropriate should be done. No cause, no injustice can justify bombing attacks on buses and restaurants where children are. That is simply unacceptable in the name of any movement.
Foolish people who justify such murder will always point to atrocities on the other side. Al Qaeda does that. Those terrorists believe they can kill American civilians because we support Israel, and on and on.
But those arguments can only persuade sick minds. The truth is that some Palestinian terrorist groups want to destroy Israel and will not negotiate. Those people must be killed, and America should support Israel in its quest to eliminate the terrorist leadership.
Enough is enough. All decent human beings must act against the growing terror that threatens this world. Excuses for the murder of innocent civilians must be condemned.
It's about time, buddy!
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Great News!
By Diana Hsieh @ 5:11 PM
Hooray! Our standby evacuation alert has been lifted! Hooray!
Other evacuation orders have been lifted in both Douglas County and Jefferson County.
Hooray!
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Egoism, Rationality, and Children
By Diana Hsieh @ 3:26 PM
The issue of the rationality of having children has popped up on the Nathaniel Branden Forum. I posted a quick bit yesterday, then this more philosophical bit in a message today:
The anti-children people tend to argue that parents are deluded about their own happiness, that they are rationalizing their terrible mistake of having children by claiming that they actually enjoy it. That claim requires substantial, empirical proof for two reasons.
First: Outsiders can't see into the heads of parents to actually determine whether they are happy or not. Those parents, on the other hand, have direct access to their emotional states. To claim greater knowledge of their emotional states without concrete evidence is absurd. We must take parents at their word about their own happiness unless there is some *particular* reason to believe them deluded.
Second: Of course it is true that people can be made happy by irrational things. And surely some parents are irrationally happy in parenthood, perhaps because it allows them to live their long-extinguished dreams of becoming a musician through their child. But I know of many happy parents who live by the principles of a rational, egoistic morality in their daily lives. The idea that they have abandoned that rational egoism where their children are concerned is implausible. It is yet another bold claim that requires substantial proof.
Without proof of the above points, the basic argument of anti-childrenists is hopelessly circular. It presumes that parenting is so god-awful that no rational person could possible enjoy it. Hence parents who claim to enjoy it must be deluded. The argument presumes the very conclusion it attempts to prove. That's a terribly fallacious argument!
Parenting is hard work. It can be aggravating and painful and inconvenient and expensive. But so are other things in life, from preparing philosophy lectures to caring for a sick dog. But I wouldn't give up either philosophy or dogs simply because neither is perfectly delightful all the time. And I know many rational, egoistic parents who feel exactly the same way about their children.
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Two Excuses
By Diana Hsieh @ 2:34 PM
Fred Jenson wrote me a delightful e-mail about my paper on false excuses. He said:
There are only two excuses and they cover every stupid thing you (and I) have ever done in our lives.
1. It seemed like a good idea at the time. 2. I forgot.
I have yet to find a screw up that one of these doesn't cover.
Sounds about right to me!
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Drugs and Guns
By Diana Hsieh @ 11:48 AM
Oh, yeah baby! It's a fight over the role of the druggies versus the gunnies in the Colorado Libertarian Party. I'm partial to the gunnies for two reasons. First, I agree with Smith's argument that gunnies are generally more principled than the druggies. Second, gun ownership is a perfectly moral aspect of a rational life, while significant drug use is not.
So phooey on the druggies!
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New Hayman Fire Map
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:01 AM
Finally! The fire map current as of yesterday evening has arrived:
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A Good Bellyful of Libertarian Laughs
By Diana Hsieh @ 8:44 AM
I love the Independence Institute's e-mail newsletter. Why? It's funny! Here's the opening to their latest one:
It is my sad duty to report that our Independence Institute Senior Fellow Charles King came in second place in the "men's over 80-year-old" category of the Bolder Boulder, Boulder Colorado's Memorial Day's marathon. That type of slack-ass behavior is not what we expect from a member of our team. He will do better next year, or we'll can him. As for me, I was not allowed to compete in the race because they said it was against the rules to drive. Socialist bastards.
Speaking of socialists, in my Sunday column for the Boulder Daily Camera, I examined Boulder plan to limit jobs for the perfect jobs to population ratio. You really have to read this!
TOC, take note!
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International Diana
By Diana Hsieh @ 8:35 AM
Forget the aussie! I'm just soooo international these days...
Before the wildfire came along, I was wondering how to increase traffic to the blog. Now I know. :-/
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| Wednesday, June 19, 2002 |
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TOC Seminar Update
By Diana Hsieh @ 10:41 PM
A number of concerned friends have e-mailed me in the past few days about my presence at upcoming Summer Seminar of The Objectivist Center, given that the Hayman fire still threatens home and hearth. Given my presentation schedule, after all, I expect that my absence would be rather problematic. I am slated to present my paper on false excuses at the Advanced Seminar that runs from June 26th to June 29th. At the regular seminar from June 29 to July 6, I am giving the six-lecture introductory course on Objectivism entitled Objectivism 101, as well as a single lecture on honesty entitled White Lies, Black Lies. Oh, and of course, Paul is slated to (merely) attend the regular seminar too.
But don't worry, I'll be there! Paul and I will be more or less evacuating while we are gone, in case the fire does head northeast while we're gone. Our essential stuff (now packed in our vehicles) will be moved into storage. The horses will remain with the ever-generous Mike Paul until we return. Our usual and wonderful neighborhood housesitter will stay at our house to take care of the dogs and cats, ready to evacuate them to the Buddy Center of the Denver Dumb Friends League if needed.
Frankly, it will be nice to be away for a while. The need to stay tethered close to home, religiously watching the news three times a day, constantly focusing on about even small shifts in the weather outside, alternating between irrational hope and irrational despair, and mostly just waiting for the real emergency to finally materialize has been exhausting. I'm very pleased that I'll be able to leave town knowing that everything important has already been arranged.
Also, I expect that attending the TOC Seminar will sooth my intense aggravation of being forced to miss the much-looked-forward-to IHS Social Change Workshop going on right now. I haven't been able to read The Volkh Conspiracy these past few days, due to blinding envy upon reading posts from Sasha like this one.
So don't worry guys, we'll be there, come (literally) hell or high water!
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Firegal
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:54 PM
Thanks to Tim Blair, I've been designated a "firegal"! Sounds like a good superhero name to me! :-)
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Singing in the Rain!
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:38 PM
At the informational meeting on the Hayman Fire tonight, Ron Raley was back providing updates on the fire. (Two days ago, his deputy was at the meeting instead. He was also very informed and very informative.) Raley said that the fire has now grown to about 137,000 acres.
In Raley's words, the weather has been "absolutely horrendous" for the past few days, particularly yesterday. The high temperatures and low humidity that made yesterday brutal for the firefighters were, thankfully, a little more moderate today. (Also the fire mostly pushed a bit south and east towards Woodland Park today.)
Raley said that the fuel conditions in this fire were "the worst conditions that [he's] ever seen," due to the low humidity present in the large quantity of fuels. We can thank this year's drought for that.
The (4-6 foot hand) lines have held on the north and south sides of the fire (except for a break-out around "L"), but the east side of the fire is out of control. That east side did go through Westcreek yesterday. Many structures were burned, but many were saved. The fire did also cross Highway 67 in that area.
The most pressing danger for those of us north of the fire is that the out-of-control eastern edge may continue to move east, then turn northward towards various subdivisions like Perry Park. (The northernmost "U" and southernmost "W" bits of that eastern edge are of greatest concern in terms of break-out potential.) Raley said that under adverse weather conditions, the fire could reach Perry Park in 9-10 hours from its present position.
To address that risk, Raley said that firefighters are trying to pinch off the north side of that edge of the fire. There are also large contingency lines going in along Rampart Ridge to prevent the fire from moving towards those communities.
Here's the map posted at the meeting, current as of this afternoon. Once again, we are near the bright green dot to the northeast of the fire.

Sergeant Dennis of the Douglas County Sheriff, who was also at the meeting two days ago, gave the news regarding Douglas County evacuations. The most interesting tidbit from him was that he was an advocate of returning people to their homes around areas northeast of the fire ("N") where the line has held for many days -- until the fire update meeting tonight.
There, he learned that the fire has a much greater potential to get out-of-control than he previously thought. In particular, the fire could encircle those neighborhoods (like Nighthawk) and then burn back on itself, thereby trapping any residents that were permitted to reoccupy their homes. After learning that, he could no longer in good conscience advocate returning people to their homes.
The third person to speak was Randy Hickenbottom, District Ranger for the South Platte Ranger District of the Forest Service. He presented some rather interesting information on the serious danger of flooding in the coming weeks and months in the burned areas. He said that 50-60% of the fire area has been intensively burned, meaning reduced to mineral soil and blackened sticks of tree trunks. In other words, over 60,000 acres in a serious watershed area have lost all erosion control. A heavy rain could cause flooding and mudslides, thereby threatening both life and property, even after the fire has been put out. Yikes!
So yet another informative meeting.
The best news of the evening is that on the drive home, I was driving through real rain! The storm looked to be mostly south, over the fire. There was lots of lightening, but also enough rain to keep my windshield wipers on low for the last seven minutes of my drive home. The rain seems to have stopped for now and the weather report indicates that the storm has moved on. Any little bit of wet is wonderful news!
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Perry Park Dangers
By Diana Hsieh @ 12:59 PM
This Yahoo News story indicates that Perry Park faces a particularly grave threat:
Officials were particularly concerned about Perry Park, a subdivision in a canyon in Douglas County. "If the fire gets into that area, those canyons act like a chimney," Colwell said. "Winds are still the wild card."
Oh dear. Let's hope it doesn't get that far. Perry Park is a pretty big subdivision.
Our neighborhood, Indian Creek Ranch, is fairly hilly, but I'm not really sure how it compares to Perry Park. My vague recollection is that Perry Park is both hillier and more densely covered with scrub oak than here. Thankfully, we do have an excellent buffer between us and Pike National Forest in the form of a large ranch consisting mostly of grassland. But I believe that there are continuous and dense lines of trees from the forest straight through our neighborhood, along Rainbow Creek and Indian Creek.
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Tuesday's Hayman Fire Map
By Diana Hsieh @ 12:38 PM
So here's the latest map, current as of yesterday evening. It's clear that the fire has grown a great deal towards the east, particularly in comparison with the maps from previous days that I've posted.

We are more-or-less at the bright green "67" sign. Looking at this map, it's very clear that a south or southwestern wind could blow that out of control eastern edge of the fire back up towards us. Yikes.
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More Scorched Acres
By Diana Hsieh @ 12:29 PM
The Hayman fire is now estimated to have burned 135,889 acres. According to the noon news, the fire is burning one mile from Rampart Range Road, a trigger point for evacuation of some of the towns southeast of the fire. Fire crews have been pulled off of the north side of the fire to help out those battling the more active eastern edge. Also, another Type I team has been added, bringing the total up to three now. (I understand that just having two Type I teams on one fire was pretty unprecedented.)
Thankfully, winds are calm and the air is fairly clear here, which is good news for us!
The Douglas County web site hasn't been updated since last night. Augh. But looking at the evacuation page most locations listed have now been evacuated.
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Old Hags
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:52 AM
I watched David Letterman's monologue last night, as I was avoiding going to bed. Oh man, is Letterman ever old! And he's just about as in-touch and funny as Bob Dole. So I say: Get rid of the old hags! I want to see Jon Stewart versus Craig Kilbourn battling it out for top late night comedian!
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| Tuesday, June 18, 2002 |
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Perry Park Evacuated
By Diana Hsieh @ 11:54 PM
At the moment, the people in the Perry Park area have another 5 minutes or so to evacuate. They were given two hours notice, as well as an announcement this morning that they would likely be evacuated (blogged here). I wish them all the best.
At the moment, my horses are with Mike Paul, just two miles or so north of this new evacuation area. But I have no worries about them, as he can evacuate them quickly as needed. Plus, I suppose that he could evacuate them here if needed, as the hand line on the north side of the fire has held today.
The Hayman fire has now grown to about 120,000 acres. The containment has gone from 47% down to 40%. The weather tomorrow is supposed to be similar to today. Let's just hope the fire doesn't get too out of control.
Stay safe, firefighters!
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Terry Lynn Barton: Evil Psycho Arsonist?
By Diana Hsieh @ 1:47 PM
9 News reports:
Federal investigators are beginning to question the story of the U.S. Forest Service worker accused of starting the Hayman fire. Recreation technician Terry Lynn Barton, 38, appeared in federal court Monday morning to be advised of the charges against her. Barton told investigators she was enforcing the fire ban in the Pike National Forest on June 8 when she started burning a letter from her estranged husband within a designated campfire ring. She said she then tried to put out the blaze. Prosecutors now believe Barton made up the story. They say based on evidence gathered at the fire's starting point, it appears the fire was deliberately set and staged to look like an escaped campfire.
Hooray for forensics! Now I really hope Terry Barton gets the maximum penalty! She could spend many, many years in jail for deliberately setting a forest fire.
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Science Quiz
By Diana Hsieh @ 12:49 PM
I guess that getting a BS degree from MIT doesn't help pass a basic science test for 4th, 8th, and 12th graders. Unlike Paul, I got all the questions correct. (He got the insanely easy #7 wrong.) Funny how Paul didn't mention his own scientific illiteracy in his blog entry about the quiz.
When I read him the above, Paul retorted, "I took it again last night and got them all right!" Good for you, dearest, good for you...
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Douglas County Evacuations
By Diana Hsieh @ 7:47 AM
The Douglas County website says as of 1 am this morning:
Due to yesterdays rapid southern fire expansion, residents living in the below areas, who are already on a "Stand by" evacuation status, are being alerted that a strong possibility exists that mandatory evacuations may occur as early as this afternoon, Tuesday, 06/18/02. Those areas that are advised to prepare for possible mandatory evacuation include: Areas west of Hwy. 105, bounded by the current mandatory evacuation area of the Pike National Forest boundary on the west, Tomah Road on the north, and the El Paso County line on the south, including: Perry Park, Indian Head, Wauconoa Lakes, Echo Hills, Echo Village, Douglas Park, Hidden Valley, Valley Park, Vaux Ranchette, Mountain Ranch, Woodmoor Mountain subdivision, Split Acres, Emily Griffith Youth Center. This "Stand by alert' is announced because fire officials expect the fire to advance rapidly today, with winds blowing north/northeast, creating the opportunity for the fire to spread very quickly.
That's a few miles south of us.
Oh, and wind is now predicted to be from the S and SW today, picking up to about 15-20 mph this afternoon. So right now, we're covered in smoke again.
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| Monday, June 17, 2002 |
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Two Bits of Bad News
By Diana Hsieh @ 11:09 PM
Trivial Bad News: My sore throat has returned. *swallow* Ouch! *swallow* Ouch! *swallow* Ouch!
Potentially Significant Bad News: Tomorrow is shaping up to be the worst day for the Hayman fire since that explosive Monday of last week. It's going to be a "red flag day" tomorrow, which means high temperatures, low humidity, and gusty winds. However, for those of us northeast of the fire, there is good news.
First, the prevailing winds are predicted to be from the north and northwest, so not towards us. (I hate to be so unbenevolent as to even wish such winds towards those south of the fire, particularly given that more people on the south side of the fire were evacuated today. But such is the nature of emergencies.)
Second, I learned in the informational meeting tonight that the firefighters have made great progress these past few days in creating a hand line around the north side of the fire. That narrow line won't protect us against a crowning fire, but it is an important barrier.
The southeast side of the fire did grow substantially today, as you can see from the red outline in the map below (current as of this evening):

Thankfully, there is some good news for everyone: Rain is forecasted for later this week.
I wish all firefighters and homeowners the best of luck tomorrow. Stay safe!
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Rorschach Bullshit
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:29 PM
Thanks to Paul, I now know that the Rorschach Test is the biggest load of psychological crap since phrenology. Tarot card reading with Cleo would probably yield more scientific results! But don't take my word for it, go take the ultra-secret test for yourself. You'll see what I mean.
The scary thing is that such ludicrous tests can do great damage to people's lives, as this article "Misuse of Psychological Tests in Forensic Settings: Some Horrible Examples" details.
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Link Whores
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:08 PM
Looking over Instapundit's blogroll this evening, Paul asked me: "If Instapundit is such a linkwhore, then why aren't you one of his hos?"
So my dearest, why don't you tell me: What did you have to do become one? Hmm???
(Background: Paul is on Glenn's blogroll, but I am not.)
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Aesthetics Sandwich
By Diana Hsieh @ 9:33 AM
Ari Armstrong has a fun commentary in the Boulder Weekly. He starts and ends with hockey, but in the middle we find Ayn Rand's aesthetics. Cool!
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Arguments from Intimidation
By Diana Hsieh @ 8:57 AM
Bill Nevin, who introduced Paul to Ayn Rand while at MIT, had this to say about Andy Bernstein:
Thank you for your recent posts on Andrew Bernstein. From my own brief experience with him, and the cringing style of his Maoist self-criticism-style letter you posted, I found the accounts of his behavior to be quite credible. I've had unpleasant encounters with Peikoff, Schwartz, and even Binswanger. But when I first saw Bernstein give an introductory talk on Objectivism at Rice U. about 2 yrs ago, I was pleasantly surprised by his winning attitude, friendly manner, and "common touch" (a virtue conspicuously absent from Peikoff and Schwartz). At a more advanced long talk on _Atlas_ the same weekend I was very taken with his mastery of the subject and benefited from his insights into the novel. But then during the Q&A, I asked a question, politically incorrect in TAO circles, about Jewish symbolism in Atlas. He just blew it off as ridiculous that anyone could think the greatest atheist in history could use literary allusions to the Bible in her work. When I defended my position with a few quick examples (from Ronald Merrill's _The Ideas of Ayn Rand_, which I did not acknowledge at the time), he still said it was ridiculous but this time qualified it by admitting that Galt's instruction to Dagny "Don't look back" in the next-to-last scene "may" have been a reference to Lot's fleeing Sodom.
Then a funny thing happened. Having been totally absorbed in _Atlas_ all morning, a few minutes after answering me he suddenly, apropos of nothing, launched into a moralistic little speech on the evils of David Kelley. He accused Kelley of saying that academic Marxists were among those we could justifiably form coalitions with, among other things. Now this seminar was in a small auditorium at Rice with a big area in the middle for the prof and then tables in semi-circular rows rising up on terraces around it. Bernstein had mostly stayed in the middle for several hours, sometimes approaching audience members briefly to take questions. But during the anti-Kelley digression, he came forward and paced in front of my front-row table as his voice took on a heavy condemnatory tone totally unlike his normal bright lecture voice. I took this to be a warning to mind my place and shut up. The argument from intimidation really bothers me when it comes from run of the mill leftist profs, but I really get teed off when ARI types do it. They're the ones espousing a philosophy whose founder explicitly identified and denounced the fallacy.
Augh!
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| Sunday, June 16, 2002 |
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Batting Bricks
By Diana Hsieh @ 10:59 PM
Charles Oliver's April Brickbats were delightful. Some I had already heard, thanks to my wanderings through the blogosphere. But others were new to me, such as this one:
Gun Safety (4/9/02) A Quebec City cop visited a local elementary school to talk to children. Apparently, the talk wasn't about gun safety. While visiting the restroom, the cop put his loaded revolver on the back of a toilet. He then forgot it and left. A 7-year-old boy found the gun, which didn't even have its safety catch on. Fortunately, the boy reported the gun to teachers and didn't fire it.
VodkaPundit's suggestion to ban government ownership of firearms is looking better all the time. (Okay, so he was just talking about the Feds.)
Another delight is found in Norway:
Sex Crime (4/16/02) Doctors at Norway's national prison have prescribed Viagra to at least two prisoners serving time for sex crimes. One of the prisoners later raped his son in the prison visiting area. Medical officials are unapologetic. "If they have a problem, they have the same rights as anyone else to get help," said chief medical officer Anders Smith.
Yeah, I suppose those prisoners have a right to give some sweet hot love to welcome the new guy when he drops the soap in the shower too. Amazing.
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The Criminal is Caught
By Diana Hsieh @ 5:20 PM
Terry Lynn Barton, a U.S. Forest Service employee, was arrested today for starting the Hayman wildfire. The story on The Denver Channel website says:
Barton, a forest service technician, was charged with starting a fire in a national forest, making false statements, and damaging federal property, in excess of $1,000, officials said.
According to Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Leoni, Barton admitted starting the fire.
"She said she started the fire within the campfire ring while on patrol to look for illegal campfires during the fire ban," Leoni told shocked reporters. "She said she attempted to put it out but it just got away from her."
Officials said that Barton was burning "personal papers" in the illegal campfire ring. There was one unconfirmed report that she was burning a letter from her husband.
Barton was the forest service employee who first called in the fire report and described another vehicle leaving the area. The driver of that vehicle was later contacted and said he went to investigate the smoke he saw and called 911 to report it. That driver was not connected with the fire, officials said.
Leoni said Barton was taken into custody "without incident" Sunday morning was being held in the jail in Colorado Springs, Colo.
She faces 15 years in prison and a $250,000 fine if she is found guilty of all the charges, Leoni said.
I hope she gets the maximum penalty.
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Debating Bernstein
By Diana Hsieh @ 8:26 AM
If you are at all interested in my recent postings on Andy Bernstein (one and two), be sure to read Josh Zader's comment about him. I have definitely heard from multiple reliable sources that Andy Bernstein is one of The Good Guys at the ARI. (Josh is one of those sources.) But Wolf's story makes me wonder whether he occasionally suffers from the same Dr Jekel and Mr Hyde behavior that so many of the other bigwigs at the ARI exhibit.
I did look up any references to Chris Wolf's essay on Usenet and found these threads, all from February 1999:
You can read critics (and defenders) of Wolf's story there. Most of the posts were garbage, but a few stood out as worth reading:
Of particular interest was this confirmation of Chris Wolf's story from someone who was present:
START OF MESSAGE FROM MIKE MAIKOWSKI
Hi everybody!
My name is Mike Maikowski. I don't normally post to newsgroups (don't even know how), so I'm posting this message on Chris's newsgroup account.
I've been involved in Objectivism even longer than Chris has. I was present, with Chris, during the dinner with Andrew Bernstein, and the subsequent meeting in Chris's home. I saw, firsthand, how Andrew Bernstein behaved like an ill-mannered clod. I can vouch for the accuracy of everything Chris said in his post entitled "My Dinner With Andy." In fact, I helped Chris write that post (Chris had forgotten a couple of minor details.)
And if anyone wants to contact me privately about this subject, via e-mail, my address is 72456.2262@compuserve.com.
That's all for now. Back to Chris.
Michael F. Maikowski
END OF MESSAGE FROM MIKE MAIKOWSKI
Also interesting was David Friedman's alternate explanation:
Chris raises the issue of his reputation in the context of his account of his dinner with Andrew Bernstein. As I presume Chris realizes, part of his reputation here is that he is rude, abrasive, and arrogant (also fairly bright and independent minded, but that is irrelevant to the present discussion). That doesn't imply that he is deliberately misreporting the facts, but it does suggest an alternative interpretation for the facts he reports--that Bernstein perceived Chris as being rude and abrasive towards him and reacted accordingly.
If that was of interest, take a peek at Wolf's reply, Friedman's reply to the reply, and Wolf's reply to the reply to the reply. Confused yet?
And don't miss Lee Stranahan's sharp critique of Wolf's own behavior during the evening.
But really, if you do nothing else, go read Josh's comment.
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