Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Peggy Noonan Beclowns Herself On Web Journalism

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

By Brother Bradley J. Fikes, C.O.R.

Bloggers talk about things they know nothing about, mistaking opinion for fact. Oh wait . . . the know-nothing comments came from print journalism veteran Peggy Noonan, and they were about Web journalism.

Noonan and Arianna Huffington sparred on MSNBC about new media. Huffington pointed out that new Web outfits like her own, and regional ones like Voice of San Diego and MinnPost are performing a lot of good journalism.

Voice of San Diego came off looking pretty good in the exchange, and can be pardoned for posting a videolink to Noonan’s comeuppance.

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Deception About Global Warming

Friday, April 24th, 2009

By Brother Bradley J. Fikes, C.O.R.

The New York Times has published an incredibly dishonest article about global warming.

Industry ignored its own scientists on climate,” says the headline on the article, by Andrew C. Revkin. It alleges that behind the scenes, fossil fuel producing companies admitted the accuracy of global warming theory, while publicly denying it.

That claim is wholly founded on one passage in a primer on climate change distributed by the Global Climate Coalition. Here is how it appears in the NYT article:

“The scientific basis for the Greenhouse Effect and the potential impact of human emissions of greenhouse gases such as CO2 on climate is well established and cannot be denied,” the experts wrote in an internal report compiled for the coalition in 1995.

Download the PDF document here.

Sounds pretty damning, doesn’t it? However, the primer distinguishes the potential for human effects on climate from the actual evidence, and highlights uncertainties in what we know.
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The GM nationalization

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

UPDATE: We now have evidence of Steve Rattner’s expertise in the issues of GM’s financial crisis. He has experience with pension fraud.

A Securities and Exchange Commission complaint says a “senior executive” of Mr. Rattner’s investment firm met in 2004 with a politically connected consultant about a finder’s fee. Later, the complaint says, the firm received an investment from the state pension fund and paid $1.1 million in fees.

The “senior executive,” not named in the complaint, is Mr. Rattner, according to the person familiar with the matter. He is co-founder of the investment firm, Quadrangle Group, which he left to join the Treasury Department to oversee the auto task force earlier this year. Neither Mr. Rattner nor Quadrangle has been accused of any wrongdoing. Mr. Rattner did not return calls for comment.

Well, at least he knows the issues.

With the firing of GM CEO Waggoner, the Obama administration has embarked on a program of corporate socialism reminiscent of Mussolini in the 1920s. Obama threatens corporate executives, telling them, “My administration is the only thing between you and the pitchforks.” Hmmm. Were those the pitchforks forged in the House Financial Services committee ? And, who are the pitchforks aimed at, really ?

It is notable that no one with auto industry experience is involved in the “task force” that took over.

In session after session in a warren of offices at the Treasury Department, the team has sat through tutorials on dealer financing, studied basic data and debated the future of U.S. car sales. They have spent days trying to understand the complexities of the hundreds of companies that supply the car companies with axles, seats and other parts.

Steven Rattner, a former journalist-turned-investment banker, was picked last month to head the team. He reports to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Lawrence Summers, the chief White House economic adviser. Mr. Rattner compares the challenge to a complicated puzzle.

“It’s like a Rubik’s cube, trying to untwist it and trying to get all the colors to line up,” he said in an interview. “So we’ve learned a lot about how car dealers work, and how companies get paid when they sell a car to a dealer, and why there are a certain number of dealers more than are optimal. Have we learned everything? Of course not, but I think we are learning what we need to learn to do this job.”

Of note are Rattner’s credentials.

Mr. Rattner started his career as a financial reporter for The New York Times. He has been active in New York’s Democratic Party, holding a variety of fund-raisers for candidates; he originally backed Hillary Clinton for president. Mr. Rattner’s wife, Maureen White, was a co-chairwoman of finance for Mrs. Clinton’s campaign.

He previously worked at Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley and Lazard as a mergers and acquisitions specialist.

Certainly gives one confidence, doesn’t it ?

How about the others on the task force ?

The team’s industrial expertise comes from Ron Bloom, a scrappy Harvard Business School graduate who gave up investment banking in 1996 to work as a top adviser to the United Steelworkers union

Several team members, such as Brian Deese, a 31-year-old former Obama campaign aide, are on loan from the White House’s National Economic Council. Three others specialize in climate change. The rest come from agencies such as the Energy and Labor departments. Backing them up are about 30 accountants and advisers.

Yes, GM is in good hands.

Luke Y. Thompson Returns From Exile

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

By Bradley J. Fikes, C.O.R.

UPDATE: I’m at The Olde Ship Inn with Luke Y. Thompson and QDPSteve. Delicious libations and conversations are pouring . . .

This afternoon, I’m visiting film critic, American/Irish/British cultural hybrid and  debonnaire man about town Luke Y. Thompson. Occasion: Luke is vacating the Santa Ana crib where he’s been for a couple of years to return to the culture capital of America, Los Angeles.

I first met Luke online, commenting on the late Cathy’s Seipp’s blog. Luke was a FOC, itself a recommendation, and an entertaining person in his own right. I’ve since met him IRL, and found him a great companion in search of good sushi, especially sea urchin.

Like about 12 quintillion people, Luke’s career is about The Business. He wants to write about movies, he’s been in a couple, such as Mad Cowgirl. He had written for the OC Weekly, hence his move to Santa Ana, but was laid off. Since then, Luke has been freelancing and working against great odds to return to Los Angeles on a limited budget.

So Luke managed to swing it, he’s moving out tomorrow, and the meet-up at The Olde Ship Inn in Santa Ana is where we shall toast Luke this afternoon with tequila and other fine spirits, and begin hours of Saturday revelry.

I will add to this post when I get there — have laptop, will blog.

Enjoy your Saturday!

What do fools look like ?

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

We have seen a week of faux outrage over the AIG bonuses, bonuses that were specifically protected by an amendment by Senator Dodd. Meanwhile the fool-in-chief rants at the CEO of AIG, Edward Liddy. The fact is that Mr. Liddy took the job at the request of the government and is being paid $1 per year. He was comfortably retired when he was asked to come back to work to aid his country in a time of crisis. What he, and the other AIG executives who agreed to stay on and unwind the financial chaos are getting is a frightening amount of abuse.

A sense of fear hung in the room — the palpable, unsettling kind that flashes across people’s eyes. But there was anger, too. No one would express it publicly, of course. Who wants to hear a wealthy financier complain? And yet, within those walls off Danbury Road lies a deep sense of betrayal — first by their former colleagues, now by their elected leaders.

The handful of souls who championed the firm’s now-infamous credit-default swaps are, by nearly every account, long since departed. Those left behind to clean up the mess, the majority of whom never lost a dime for AIG, now feel they have been sold out by their Congress and their president.

“They’ve chosen to throw us under the bus,” said a Financial Products executive, one of several who spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisals. “They have vilified us.”

Ayn Rand’s novel, Atlas Shrugged, which has seen soaring sales (Amazon.com Sales Rank: #183 in Books ) the past few months, seems to be coming true. In the novel, the people who made private industry work walked away from their jobs and let the government, which was not satisfied with their performance, take over.

“They are replaceable,” Pasciucco acknowledges. “If we were running a long-term business, we could probably replace them over time, not all at the same time.”

But it would be impractical at best, dangerous at worst, to get rid of everyone at Financial Products, according to AIG officials. If everyone leaves, Pasciucco said, “you don’t have people that really, truly understand the book [of business]. We’re still big enough that that matters.”

If they did walk out the door, who would volunteer to work at the Chernobyl of the financial world? And what would become of the mammoth portfolio that remains?

“It would become the biggest naked position on Wall Street,” one longtime Financial Products executive said, “and everybody would exploit it.”

So Barney Frank and Chris Dodd are riding the wave of public indignation about the practices of people who are no longer at AIG.

Numerous employees indicated that they would be willing to return the money, but most wanted nothing more to do with the firm. It was a preview of the possible exodus to come, one that concerns Liddy himself.

“My fear is that the damage is done,” he told a congressional subcommittee. “That they will return [the money], but that they will return it with their resignations.”

There is little doubt within Financial Products that he’s right about that.

Nobody is going to give it back and then stay,” said one of the firm’s employees. “If they give back the money, then they will walk. And they will walk into the arms of AIG’s counterparties.”

We may have the opportunity to see how Barney Frank and Chris Dodd do running a big financial services operation. Have they ever run anything but their mouths ? I guess we will learn.

End Of The Copley Reign

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Welcome, Voice of San Diego readers!

This is an expanded version of my article on the historic sale of the Union-Tribune, announced Wednesday.

Correction: The Union-Tribune does have a Tijuana bureau, according to a comment left by staffer Onell Soto. More at the end of the story.

Update: Don Bauder of the San Diego Reader says the Union-Tribune’s new owners will soon perform a major staff-ectomy.

By Bradley J. Fikes, C.O.R.

What does it mean to a city when the family that has owned your newspaper since God was a babe sells out?

We know what it meant to the Los Angeles Times when the Chandlers sold out — and the results were not encouraging. Now my city (and county) of San Diego is about to find out if there can be a happier ending.

For longer than nearly anyone has been alive, the Copley family has been synonymous with the San Diego Union-Tribune. But that epoch, which began in 1928, is at an end with Wednesday’s announcement that the Copley Press is selling the Union-Tribune to a private equity firm, Beverly Hills-based Platinum Equity.

Copley Press in practice means its owner, which has always been one of the Copleys. The current and last is David C. Copley, who inherited the paper in 2004. In retrospect, it was only a matter of time before he sold the paper. David Copley has never taken the interest in journalism shown by his late mother, Helen K. Copley, or the others.

The Copleys were extremely influential in San Diego politics, and acquired many friends and some enemies along the way. Most notably, former San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock feuded with the Union-Tribune, and more recently, the paper has sparred with former City Attorney Mike Aguirre.

The San Diego Reader is one of the few institutions in town to regularly challenge the Copleys. The Reader’s owner, Jim Holman, regularly prints unflattering exposes on Copley activities, such as David Copley’s course through the Mediterranean on his yacht, along with allusions to Copley’s party-hearty lifestyle, which included drunk driving convictions, and the reported attendance of serial killer Andrew Cunanan at some of Copley’s parties.

The Reader published an epic retrospective, “The Rise and Fall of the Copley Press,” in February, 2008.

Throughout it all, since the Union-Tribune was such a huge vehicle of influence, along with a huge money-maker, the Copleys had no reason to sell.

Until now. Newspaper advertising revenues are plummeting amid recession and a shift of customers to the Internet. The Union-Tribune has endured round after round of job cuts, a huge shock to lifers who thought their jobs were permanent.

“The Copleys helped drive San Diego, and now they’re out. That’s a huge shift for this community,” said Dean Nelson, a professor of journalism at Point Loma Nazarene University.

“An announcement like this raises as many questions as it answers. But it sounds like at least for the short term, we’re still going to have a newspaper in San Diego.”

The deal is expected to be completed during the second quarter.

The first Copley owner of the Union-Tribune, Col. Ira Copley, bought the paper in 1928. When Ira Copley died in 1947, he passed it on to James Copley, his son. James Copley in turn bequeathed the Union Tribune to his widow, Helen K. Copley, when he died in 1973.

La Jolla resident David C. Copley, the end of the family line, inherited the Union-Tribune from Helen Copley, his mother, when she died in 2004. Up until last year, David Copley denied any interest in selling the newspaper. He did sell off the Copley Press’ chain of papers in Illinois and Ohio in 2007 for $380 million. That left the Union Tribune as the only major newspaper under Copley Press ownership.

David Copley has also suffered from poor health. Notably obese for much of his life, he had a heart transplant in 2005. He’s unmarried and has no children, so there was no next generation waiting in the wings. After the heart transplant, speculation abounded about whether Copley would sell the paper.

With the end of Copley family ownership, Nelson said it’s difficult to predict what the new Union-Tribune will be like.

New in town
One potential clue, Nelson said, is the involvement of newspaper owner David H. Black in the purchase. Platinum Equity’s announcement. Black is part of the “Platinum team” that will run the Union-Tribune, according to the firm. He owns the Akron Beacon Journal in Ohio, the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, and a number of community newspapers in the Pacific Northwest and Canada.

David Black reportedly leads a low-key lifestyle without the conspicuous consumption or notoriety of Conrad Black, an unrelated media mogul now in prison. David Black was profiled by the Seattle Weekly in 2007.

Platinum has not specified what role Black will play.

Nelson said Platinum Equity’s description of itself on its Web site, is “strategically vague in what they do,” a point also made by Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism. Rosenstiel pointed to the equity firm’s description of itself as a specialist in “acquiring businesses facing complex operational challenges in declining or transitioning markets.”

The key to what Platinum Equity will do, Rosenstiel said, is whether the firm sees newspapers as a declining market, or a transitioning one.

“If they see them as declining, what private equity firms typically do is cut costs and they might operate this business for the cash flow,” Rosenstiel said. “There’s still a lot of cash in newspapers.”

“But if they see it as a transitioning business, then that might suggest they’re interested in building up the operation, strengthening its market share, and experimenting with new revenue models,” Rosenstiel said.

“We don’t know what’s their time horizon for return on investment, and how much debt they’re taking on,” he said.

Debt matters
Heavy debt has been the bane of recent newspaper acquisitions, such as the 2007 purchase of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune by the private equity firm Avista Capital Partners, for $100 million. In January of this year, the Star-Tribune filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Private equity firms in general concentrate on cutting costs, and tend not to be good at innovation, said Marc Cooper, a faculty member of the USC Annenberg School for Communication. If that’s the case with Platinum Equity, Cooper said, the outlook is not good for the Union-Tribune.

Even a strong commitment to building a new model for journalism may not work, Cooper said, because newspapers are struggling with a nasty recession in addition to the “revolutionary” technological shift to the Internet. That makes the viability of any newspaper, even with good management, “a very iffy proposition,” Cooper said.

“I don’t purport to know that there is a way to turn around any of these newspapers,” Cooper said. “It would seem that when you are purchased by a private equity group, the chances that your owners are any more interested in the product than they are in the bottom line seems remote.”

Cooper recounted how he had freelanced for the Union-Tribune in the 1980s, reporting on the war in El Salvador. This was in addition to regular coverage, Cooper stressed, not to substitute for paid staffers.

Today, Cooper said, the Union-Tribune and other papers wouldn’t do such a thing, pointing out that the Union-Tribune no longer even maintains a bureau in Tijuana, right across the Mexican border from San Diego.

* * * * * * * * * *

CORRECTION: According to a comment by Onell Soto of the U-T, the paper does have a Tijuana bureau. I called the paper twice to check on that information. The first time, the operator transferred me to someone in the Mission Valley office, and I got voice mail. The second time I asked the operator for the number of the U-T’s Tijuana bureau. After being put on hold for a few minutes, the operator told me the paper did not have a bureau in Tijuana.

Like all else I write here, the opinions I express in this article are my own, and not necessarily the opinions of my employer, the North County Times.

I thought Bush was the one shredding the Constitution

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

For the past eight years we’ve heard about Bush shredding the Constitution. Now this:

subsection 1607(b): “If funds provided to any State in any division of this Act are not accepted for use by the Governor, then acceptance by the State legislature, by means of the adoption of a concurrent resolution, shall be sufficient to provide funding to such State.”

This was being called the Sanford provision after Governor Sanford said he would refuse some of the money that required state law changes.

If state law does not give the state legislature the right to bypass the governor, how can Congress just change that law? Where does Congress get the power to change a state constitution?

Commerce Clause ? No

Spending Clause ? No.

Congress is simply telling the state, “We have changed your state constitution so that we give more power to the state legislature, without any pesky interference from the governor.”

This violates the Tenth Amendment.


The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States, respectively, or to the people.

Except for Obama.

Why medical IRAs don’t work

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

UPDATE: Another form of health care subsidy doesn’t work either.

Those who led the 2006 effort said it would not have been feasible to enact universal coverage if the legislation had required heavy cost controls. The very stakeholders who were coaxed into the tent — doctors, hospitals, insurers and consumer groups — would probably have been driven into opposition by efforts to reduce their revenues and constrain their medical practices, they said.

Now those stakeholders and the state government have a huge investment to protect. But the task of cost-cutting remains difficult in a state with a long tradition of heavy spending on health care. Massachusetts has more doctors per capita than any state, Boston is home to some of the country’s most expensive academic medical centers, and a new state law requires comprehensive benefits like prescription drug and mental health coverage.

Now will come the cost controls but they will not use the market mechanisms the French system uses; fee-for-service with the patient paying the doctor first and getting reimbursement later. Also, mental health coverage is a black hole for payment programs. The Massachusetts program will be altered to fit political theories, not medical necessity.

One proposal for health reform has been the medical IRA. At one time about 14 years ago, I was very enthusiastic about the concept. They are also called Health Savings Accounts and are combined with a high deductible insurance policy to be used for hospitalization. There were struggles about them, with opposition from Democrats, for years but they were finally enacted into law by the Bush administration in 1993.

For 2008, in order to qualify to open an HSA, your HDHP [High Deductible Health Plan] minimum deductible must be at least $1,100 (self-only coverage) or $2,200 (family coverage). The annual out-of-pocket (including deductibles and co-pays) for 2008 cannot exceed $5,600 (self-only coverage) or $11,200 (family coverage). HDHPs can have first dollar coverage (no deductible) for preventive care and apply higher out-of-pocket limits (and copays & coinsurance) for non-network services.

This is not a bad idea as saving is always a good thing to do. High deductible insurance plans are always cheaper than low deductible as the cost of processing a large claim is about the same as processing a small one. Processing many small claims runs up overhead and premiums. Secondly, the high deductible tends to reduce moral hazard. Many people have the feeling that, “If I have the coverage, why not use it ?” The trouble with this is that the filing of many small claims tends to drive the cost of the premium up and the incentives of “first dollar coverage” are what gave us much of the current cost problem with insurance.

Why, then don’t I believe this concept works ? The health insurance industry left the concept of community rating years ago. Community rating means that a group, usually a geographic or age group, will be charged the same rates for similar insurance coverage. This is what is done in auto insurance. There have been complaints about “red-lining” certain neighborhoods because of a perceived higher risk of car theft or even accidents in certain neighborhoods, often inner city but not always. I have found that auto insurance is higher in Tucson than in southern California, for example. Some of that is due to a high rate of auto theft related to the proximity to Mexico and the ease of crossing the border. Some of it may be due to a higher risk of uninsured other drivers on the road in Tucson. or in Los Angeles, which also has higher rates than Orange County. Fifty years ago, health insurance was priced this way but no longer. What we have now is experience rating. That means the premium is based on your personal profile, including age sex and previous medical issues. Soon, it may include such measures as your genetic information including risk of inherited health factors. Insuring anyone with a history of illness has become nearly impossible unless they are part of a large pool such as an employee of a large corporation. This is why employer-based insurance will be so difficult to get rid of. High deductibles and medical IRAs is one approach.

My enthusiasm for medical IRAs was stimulated by the RAND Health Insurance Study of the 1980s.This studied the effect of co-pays, the payment of a cash fee for the medical service in addition to the insurance payment. This is the concept of the high deductible health plan.

As the co-pay increases, utilization decreases. Opponents say this denies care to the poor who cannot afford the co-pay. Studies were then done to analyze this effect and to see if, indeed, poor participants were being denied care that they needed. There is an old concept in medicine of the “worried well.” These are people who seek care for every tiny complaint. There is also the moral hazard issue where demand expands to fill supply. There is an old expression, “land office business,” the source of which many people don’t understand. The Land Office was giving away free land in the days of the homesteaders. Offer something for free and you will find many takers who may not even know what you are giving away. The question is, do co-pays deny necessary care ? Probably not but the amount has be set correctly. The RAND studies could never show any significant adverse health effect of the deductibles which were studied for several levels. The 95% deductible listed in the chart is 95% of the amount of deductible, which is some cases was $500/year.

Effects on Health

In general, the reduction in services induced by cost sharing had no adverse effect on participants’ health. However, there were exceptions. The poorest and sickest 6 percent of the sample at the start of the experiment had better outcomes under the free plan for 4 of the 30 conditions measured. Specifically,

* Free care improved the control of hypertension. The poorest patients in the free care group who entered the experiment with hypertension saw greater reductions in blood pressure than did their counterparts with cost sharing. The projected effect was about a 10 percent reduction in mortality for those with hypertension.
* Free care marginally improved vision for the poorest patients.
* Free care also increased the likelihood among the poorest patients of receiving needed dental care.
* Serious symptoms[2] were less prevalent for poorer people on the free plan.
* Cost sharing also had some beneficial effects. Participants in cost sharing plans worried less about their health and had fewer restricted-activity days (including time spent in seeking medical care).

The alternative, since no plan can afford unlimited care, is rationing as seen in England’s NHS and Canada’s program. Rationing often is determined by politics, as in Canada where the system was designed to provide unlimited primary care but restrict specialty care, especially hospital care. The subject continues to be debated. Part of the problem with the “first dollar” plans is that utilization, and cost, is always grossly underestimated.

My own concerns about medical IRAs are more practical. Many people do not understand how contracting between insurance plans and hospitals and other health services has affected their ability to understand the system. For example, there have been newspaper stories about uninsured patients whose hospital bills were far higher than an insurance company would pay for the same service. Moreover, the insurance deductible that you pay for certain services, such as outpatient surgery, may be more than the entire amount paid by your insurer. The 20% you pay is 20% of the “retail” bill while the 80% paid by the insurance company is 80% of a far smaller negotiated price. Neither the insurance company nor the hospital will tell you what that price is. It is not unusual to pay $4,000. (20%) of a $20,000 bill while the insurance company pays $2500, nearly half of what you pay.

Doctors may sometimes discount, even heavily discount, their fees for patients who are paying cash but they must be very careful to keep the insurance companies and Medicare from finding out about that discount. If Medicare learns that a doctor is discounting bills, or even failing to collect the deductible or co-pay for visits, they will reset the “profile” of that doctor. That profile is the base from which Medicare and most insurance companies set the amount they pay. A cash discount for one patient could result in a sharply lowered payment schedule for the entire practice of that doctor. Few patients understand this.

That practice of negotiated prices and fee schedules is the principle reason why medical IRAs are not as good a method of paying medical bills. Unless the bill goes through the payment process with the insurance company, the contract price may not be the price the patient is paying. The difference may be very large. This weakens the benefit of the medical IRA s a concept. Medical prices have no relationship to reality and the customer is unable to determine the actual price of services, necessary for a cash market.

I have since become interested in other alternatives, the best of which is the French system.

I Denounce Myself . . .

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

By Brother Bradley J. Fikes, C.O.R.

. . . for failing to be sufficiently outraged by Rush Limbaugh, as every good member of the MSM should be. I just played the infamous “Barack the Magic Negro” Paul Shankland parody El Rushbo broadcast, and collapsed in  hysterics. (Having met the infamous David Ehrenstein, who applied the phrase to The Messiah, helped).

Before that, I played the Barney Frank “Banking Queen” Shankland parody, also broadcast on Limbaugh.

I felt much like the Nine Nozdrul of Bored of the Rings when they saw Stomper’s frantic follies:

The nine stared at the writhing, foaming maniac with round, red eyes. The sight of Stomper filled them with awe. They stood speechless.

Suddenly one of the stunned creatures began to titter, then chuckle. Another guffawed. Two more joined in, chortling loudly, and finally all nine were in the throes of hysterical, side-aching laughter.

Stomper, puffing and enraged, stood up and tripped on his cape, spilling his silver bullets all over the floor. The whole dining room roared with unbelieving hilarity. Tears rolled down the Nozdruls’ scaly cheeks,  gasping for air and incapable of holding their maces. Haw haw haw!

Stomper got to his feet, his face beet-red with anger. He lifted his sword, and the blade fell off the handle. Haw haw haw haw haw!

The Nozdrul rolled and writhed on the ground, clutching their ribs. Stomper replaced the blade, took a mighty wind-up, and firmly embedded the point in the cement pig.

HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW HAW….

DISCLAIMER: Like everything else posted by Bradley J. Fikes, this is his personal opinion, and not of his employer, the North County Times.

Life on Mars

Friday, January 16th, 2009

MORE: There has been speculation that evolution on earth took a different path from that on other planets when mitochondria, which were originally free-living organisms like Rickettsia, developed a symbiotic relationship with eukaryotes (cells with a nucleus) and made possible multi-celled organisms. This crucial step may have occurred only once. Or, it may occur in any oxygen rich atmosphere. We should not be surprised to find single cell life on Mars but multicellular life might very, very rare.

I have already posted on the new developments in bacteriology and life forms like Archea. Now, we are starting to see evidence that Mars may host similar organisms. Here is evidence of methane on Mars.

At a NASA news conference this afternoon, a team of scientists led by Michael Mumma of the Goddard Space Flight Center announced the discovery of plumes of methane emanating from the surface of Mars during the planet’s late spring and early summer. Methane is a key component of natural gas, and much of the Earth’s supply of the chemical comes from organisms that release it as they digest nutrients. But the five scientists were cautious to avoid claiming the methane spouts as evidence of life, saying that geologic activity could also put pressure on the methane and blast it through cracks in the surface. Either way, Mumma said, the plumes show that Mars is not merely a dead planet that once may have hosted life or liquid water. “We are entering a new era,” he said. “Now we’re looking at an active Mars.”

I have previously commented on extremophiles and other organisms that might survive in the Martian environment. Here and here.

There is more on this topic here.

To learn whether life could exist in a barren landscape such as that seen on the surface of Mars, where any water present is mostly present in the frozen state, some microbiologists have journeyed to a part of Earth that resembles Mars in some respects: the polar deserts of Antarctica.

Antarctica proves that microbes survive in barren landscapes.

This region of Antarctica has very little water, and most of the year what little water there is exists in the form of ice.

The hole in the ozone layer that has developed over Antarctica allows high levels of ultraviolet radiation to reach Earth’s surface, a condition that would be experienced by any creatures located on the Martian surface.

The level of radiation encountered in Antarctica is not nearly as high as that encountered on the surface of Mars, but it is higher than that encountered on most other parts of Earth’s surface.
Is there life in the polar desert of Antarctica? The answer is an unequivocal Yes. Bacteria and fungi have been found in the Antarctic deserts, not only in the soil of the region but also inside rocks. Scientists speculate that bacteria enter the porous matrix of rocks as a means of protecting themselves from radiation.

The atmosphere on Mars is much thinner than Earth’s.
A major difference between the environment found in the high deserts of Antarctica and that encountered on the surface of Mars is the atmosphere. The Martian atmosphere is much thinner than that of Earth. It consists mostly of carbon dioxide, or CO2 (about 95%), and contains virtually no oxygen (O2). Because many bacteria, archaea, and algae can use inorganic carbon dioxide as their source of carbon (used to build proteins and other cell components), the predominance of carbon dioxide would be a plus. Also, as noted earlier, many of Earth’s microbes do not require O2, so the lack of O2 does not preclude life.

So all these points are permissive. Life could exist on Mars. There is a problem, though.

A more troubling feature of the Martian atmosphere is the very low level of nitrogen (N2). On Earth, N2 makes up 78% of atmospheric gases. On Mars it only composes 3%. Many bacteria can use N2 as a sole source of the nitrogen they need for proteins, nucleic acids, and other cell components, but the low level of N2 would certainly limit the amount of microbial growth. Thus, if there is microbial life on Mars, it is unlikely to be as abundant and as widespread as on Earth and may thus be harder to find.

Different compositions and concentrations of gases may exist in some areas under the Martian surface. Such a possibility would be difficult to prove—unless it is proved indirectly the presence of life in the subsurface regions and in greater abundance than expected.

We may have to consider a life form that does not use Nitrogen. Phosphorus and Arsenic are members of the family of Nitrogen in the periodic table. on Earth, Nitrogen is a gas and a large part of the atmosphere. On Mars, it is a small part. One problem is thinking about Exobiology, the biology of other systems. Phosphorus is abundant on Mars. What does this mean ? I don’t know.