The Mad Cow Crisis: Health Care and the Public Good
Bovine spongiform ecephalopathy sounds considerably more precise than "mad cow disease," the affliction that in 1996 led to the extermination of vast herds of cattle, international acrimony in Europe, the expenditure of some $10 billion, and no verifiable direct human deaths. This compact volume, assembled by the editor of the Journal of Health Communication, incorporates a number of scientific, sociological, and political perspectives. As is always the case, reliance on a dozen authors leaves some holes in the narrative and analysis, and much of the writing has an unnecessarily scholastic quality, but the variety of views adduced here makes up for these deficiencies. A useful corrective to those who think that, at the end of the twentieth century, governments make public health decisions, and educated populaces assess risks, on the basis of cool scientific analysis.
Related
The tools and techniques for waging war never stand still, but these are the early days of a revolution in military affairs as momentous as those wrought by the railroad and the airplane. This newest transformation is a consequence of developments in civilian society including the information revolution and postindustrial capitalism. Its satellite imagery and smart bombs will change the forms of combat and armies. Personnel and politics, as always, will be as crucial as technology.
The American century, far from being over, is on the way. The information revolution, which capsized the Soviet Union and propelled Japan to eminence, has altered the equation of national power. America leads the world in the new technologies. Its emerging military systems can thwart any threat. On the "soft-power" side, it projects its ideals and other countries follow. To prevent an information race, America must share its lead; to preserve its reputation, it must keep its house in order.
More destructive cyberweapons are being created every day, and an increasingly sophisticated technology black market virtually guarantees that they will eventually land in the hands of the United States' enemies. Robust defenses are no longer a luxury, they are a necessity.

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