New Scientist - USA (2019-07-27)

(Antfer) #1
27 July 2019 | New Scientist | 53

The back pages Feedback


Wet stones


With an unquenchable thirst for
exposing fruitloopery, Kathleen
James brings our attention to
“bewater”, a company selling
water bottles decorated with
semi-precious gemstone inserts.
“We want you to choose to
belove, bepowerful, bejoyful and
bemagical,” someone has written
using a keyboard with a sticky space
bar. “Each of our four ranges has
been designed using gemstones
inspired by these qualities.”
Consider us bemused. The
company is keen to note that
the gemstones don’t actually
come into contact with the drinking
water “as certain stones are toxic”.
Instead the (certifiably non-toxic)
vibrational energy of the stone
transmits itself to the water.
This brings a list of health
benefits as long as your credit card
receipt. The fluorite in bewater’s
£19.95 “positive insert” for a
bottle, for example, “cleanses
and stabilises the aura”, as well
as apparently doing a shedload of
good for, variously, self-confidence,
the immune system, the healing
of ulcers, balance (mental and
physical), shingles and the
“restructuring of cells and DNA”.
Great stuff, although Feedback
can’t help thinking that the mineral
sodalite’s reported quality of
“replenishing your natural thirst”
makes it a puzzling choice for use
in a water bottle. Help might be
at hand, however. Bewater’s FAQ
notes that the company can’t vouch
for any of these bemagical powers,
only that they were discovered in
“books and articles that inspire us”,
and “we never present them as
medical advice”. Wise.


It’s grim up Siberia


Also enjoying mineral-infused
waters are visitors to a lagoon
on the outskirts of Novosibirsk,
Russia. The intense turquoise
water of the “Siberian Maldives”
is proving a magnet for bikini-clad
Instagrammers hunting the
perfect holiday or wedding snaps.
However, authorities have


Besides expressing well-worn
concerns about the number
of birds sliced and diced by
wind turbines, the Russian
president told a conference in
Yekaterinburg, “they shake so
much that worms come out of
the ground”, adding, lest we think
otherwise, “Really, it’s not a joke”.
Perhaps, in a decarbonised
economy, redundant coal miners
might find employment gently
pushing agitated annelids
back into the earth, Feedback
speculates. But leafing through
our back copies, the only
reference we can find to the
worm-turning phenomenon
comes in an article from
now-emeritus professor of public
health Simon Chapman of the
University of Sydney (6 October
2012, page 26). There, he lists it
as one of the many phantasmal
symptoms of “wind farm
syndrome”, a frightening and
highly variable pathology chiefly

affecting anti-turbine activists,
fossil fuel interests and nimbyish
landowners. Fancy that!

Happy accidents
To err is human, to forgive divine.
But a well-placed excuse can
bridge the gap between the two
by alleviating blame, replacing
judgement with compassion and
granting you an extra day to
deliver your copy (here’s hoping).
Writing in the journal Philosophy
and Public Affairs, Paulina Sliwa at
the University of Cambridge posits a
“unified theory of excuses”. The key
to getting away with transgressions,
she says, is to show that your
underlying moral intentions were
good – it is just that something went
wrong putting them into practice.
Feedback is taking this advice
to heart. If you are looking at a
blank page, we promise we did
write our column, but a dog ate it.
An exploding dog. ❚

warned that the pond’s unusual
hue is down to the fact it is a
dumping ground for ash from
a nearby power plant, and
contains high levels of heavy
metals and other toxins. Skin
contact with the water is not
advised, nor is paddling across
it on unicorn-shaped inflatables.
The Siberian Generating
Company issued a statement
saying “walking along the ash
dump is like walking on a military
firing range: dangerous and
undesirable”. But then again, if
anyone can thrive in a pool of
toxic waste, it is Instagram users.

A matter of degree
Many parts of the world have been
experiencing record temperatures
recently, but if a special report
on climate change from Sky News
in the UK is anything to go by,
things are about to get far worse
than anyone thought.
Reader Tony Budd is informed
that scientists have warned “the
impacts of climate change would
become rapidly more severe once
the average global temperature
rose more than 1.5°C (34.7°F).
And the threshold could be
reached within a generation.”
Feedback recalls the tirade
against the metric system on
Fox News we mentioned last
month (22 June), and wonders
whether this excessive warming in
Fahrenheit might be the impetus
the US needs to embrace more
sensible measurement units.
At least for those not embracing
the view that climate change
is all a Chinese conspiracy.

Worm charming
Sweating in the present heat,
Feedback welcomes Russia’s move
to ratify the Paris Agreement,
which aims to limit global
warming to significantly less than
34.7 degrees above pre-industrial
levels. However, Climate Home
News reports that there could be
a catch with plans to expand wind
power capacity: Vladimir Putin
is worried about the worms.

Got a story for Feedback?
Send it to New Scientist, 25 Bedford Street,
London WC2E 9ES or you can email us at
[email protected]

Liana Finck for New Scientist

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