there’s only one

Surely this is a fun brain tease, to invent new this, to discover one and only.

Petina Gappah

At a Harare café the other day, I was intrigued to hear an extremely well-toned and well-groomed blonde woman say, with all the confidence of the only one in Africa who does this, ‘I am the only person in Africa who does this.’ She and her companion moved away before I could find out what this was, leaving me in great suspense. I must confess that I have been obsessing over this this a little. Africa is so big, so vast, so incredibly ginormous. And yet this lady is the only one in the whole continent who does this.

What is this? Is she the only person in Africa who gives French pedicures to African poodles? The only person in Africa who eats her peas with honey, who has done it all her life, it makes the peas taste funny but it keeps them on the knife? The only person in Africa who does sudoku in a bath of vanilla milk and rose petals? The only person in Africa who eats her meals backwards, starting with dinner in the morning and ending with a nice continental breakfast in the evening? The only person in Africa who makes small scarves for bats?

trapped, paralyzed, ashamed, helpless, furious

I can only be generous, only do things for those I love, only be of use to the world, if I am safe, sheltered, self-sufficient. I cannot afford to be needy, to be fully open, to let my heart be broken.

I am no use to the world broken.

Dave Pollard:

I am as self-sufficient, emotionally, as anyone I know.

But this stability has come at a price. I have built a protective shell around myself that cannot be penetrated until and unless I choose to open myself, and I do that rarely, only when I’m sure I can handle it. This has made me insensitive to much of the world’s pain and suffering, misanthropic, uncourageous, shut off from the grief that lurks beneath the knowledge of that awful suffering, and awareness of the state of this terrible world. I do this to survive, because I know what I can handle, and what I cannot.

I suspect I am far from alone in this.

I sometimes see the whole world as a hospital and a prison, with a trillion trillion creatures struggling to cope, to protect themselves and those they love, to heal themselves, to find support and solace and a trace of security, to steal a few moments of illusory freedom, and simply to survive. We are all civilization’s unwitting and well-intentioned victims, I think, hiding, or screaming out our pain, our innocence. Lurching from moment to moment, living for another day.

There is no cure, no pardon, no end, and no escape from our sentence here. We do what we must. We carry as much of the weight of the world as we can bear, and we turn away from the rest.

Or maybe I’m just projecting. Maybe it’s just me. No matter.

oil snows down

Surveys show that the underwater plume of Deepwater’s oil is being degraded and diluted, now at low concentrations, but a ‘marine snow’ of oily sediment coats the seafloor.

Wellhead region and near shore sediments made up of grayish muddy clay and a thin layer of orange-brown oil of varying thickness. Dead worms, shrimp and other bottom-dwelling organisms in the samples.  (nm – nautical miles)

pew numbers

Tech news here on Google’s auto-suggest feature. Algorithms analyze and rank popular views of various religions.

haves & have not internet

The internet was a wide-open space, a new frontier.

For the first time, anyone could communicate electronically with anyone else—globally and essentially free of charge. Anyone was able to create a website or an online shop, which could be reached from anywhere in the world using a simple piece of software called a browser, without asking anyone else for permission. The control of information, opinion and commerce by governments—or big companies, for that matter—indeed appeared to be a thing of the past. “You have no sovereignty where we gather,” Mr Barlow wrote.

Was?!

The Economist summarizes what’s ahead as firms carve up customers in order to price content and shape broadband.

Big companies are building their own digital territories.

Fifteen years after its first manifestation as a global, unifying network, it has entered its second phase: it appears to be balkanizing, torn apart by three separate, but related forces.

It is still too early to say that the internet has fragmented into ‘internets’, but there is a danger that it may splinter….


Here’s a project of Communications Workers of America:

The sooner we pass legislation, the sooner we can be sure everyone can reap the benefits of a fast and open internet. Take a moment to email your member of Congress with this easy-to-use tool, and do your part to bring broadband home.

http://action.cwa-union.org/action/speed-matters-broadband-home


cramming sucks

Psychologists have discovered that some of the most hallowed advice on study habits is flat wrong. NYTimes did not place this story on top of the front page??!!

Tips: Instead of sticking to one study location, simply alternating the room where a person studies improves retention. So does studying distinct but related skills or concepts in one sitting, rather than focusing intensely on a single thing. Spacing works: An hour of study tonight, an hour on the weekend, another session a week from now improves recall.

“We walk around with all sorts of unexamined beliefs about what works that are mistaken.”

free market shackles

Competition removed any real benefit of deregulation for bank shareholders.

Re-regulation—opposed by most bankers—might be surprisingly good for banks over the long run.

Of course competition was good for borrowers, at least for a while. Lower spreads meant cheaper finance, but not dramatically cheaper. Spreads of 150bps on mortgages levered 15 times is about as profitable as spreads of 40bps levered 60 times… at the risk to the whole banking system.

Re-regulation will a) reduce taxpayer risk, b) increase spreads, and c) reduce excess leverage.

And while we’re at it, what’s to be done with sloppy media? In 2005, TIME was beside itself promoting home ownership. Exposing terrific error in 2010 is no mea culpa.


medication prevalence trend

This stumps me. Half of us buying prescriptions hides many factors no chart can reveal.

September report from Centers for Disease Control:

  • The percentage of Americans who used at least one prescription drug in the past month increased from 44% in 1999-2000 to 48% in 2007-2008.
  • The percentage of persons who used two or more prescription drugs increased from 25% in 1999-2000 to 31% in 2007-2008.
  • The percentage of persons who used five or more prescription drugs increased from 6% in 1999-2000 to 11% in 2007-2008.

Methinks I’ll blame this on Bush too. Why not? Those years, his watch. Spending for prescription drugs was $234.1 billion in 2008, which was more than double what was spent in 1999.


coup of the coin

I have long had this instinct that it is the interests of big corporations that determine government policy in the United States.

Economist James Kwak:

I don’t claim to know how to fix our educational system. But I have an idea about why it hasn’t been fixed, which I’m sure someone can write up as a cute two-period economic model.

Assume that society is divided into the capitalists and everyone else, and the capitalists make investment decisions for society as a whole. Until 1980, if the capitalists wanted to make more money, they needed to invest in technology, which meant they needed an increasingly educated workforce, and therefore they were willing to invest some of their profits (via taxes and public schools) in education. And, according to Goldin and Katz, from 1930 to 1980 the average educational level of Americans increased by 4.7 years.

But since 1980, and especially since 1990, the world has become more open. If the American capitalists want to make more money, they still have to invest in new technology, and they still need an increasingly educated workforce. But now, because of globalization, they can get that workforce anywhere in the world.

And an appropriate roar from the Volatility blog:

We can reply that we spit upon your lies and your claims to the mantle of America. We can refuse them, reject them and renounce them. They’re not citizens. They’re nothing to us.

Even though we know this is not our government, not our system, not our polity, we can, by the act of articulating our demands, lay bare the fraudulence of this whole usurping bastard system.

Since it’s Labor Day, we can start here: We demand of this government a jobs program. What else is this government good for if it doesn’t coordinate the economy to create sufficient jobs for all? What could capitalism be good for if it doesn’t create living wage jobs for all? What are the corporations good for if they don’t create fulfilling jobs for all? What are the rich good for if all their stolen wealth doesn’t trickle down in the form of real jobs for all?

Today the Earth has been fenced off by thieves, and the produce of our hard work is stolen every day. And now, in accordance with the new feudal war upon us, more and more of us, already almost 20% of the work force, are permanently excluded from even subsistence labor, as the jobs themselves are liquidated.

All this is nothing but crime.

“Democrats are bad enough, but Republicans block anything that will help the American people and this economy at every turn”, says Robert Oak.

big cheese mousetrap

Village Voice. Is it, was it always, real estate schemes?

“Scientology is supported, in fact, by a few thousand wealthy members. Some of these, like Tom Cruise, Nancy Cartwright, Craig Jensen (Diskeeper), Sky Dayton (Earthlink) and a few others are very wealthy and contribute millions.

rape and its degree

Some find these numbers to be incredible.

The Department of Justice estimated that 25 percent of college women will be victims of rape or attempted rape before they graduate.

Minimum 97,000 cases of sexual assault or date rape each year. Study [pdf] from the Department of Justice.

Stop the world. Do not sleep. Fix this.

crunching vast quantities of us

How does our money become the money in others peoples’ pockets? The Economist hints at data mining. Massive-scale market demography.

If your phone records reveal quick callbacks, you do not worry about calling other people late at night, you tend to get more calls at times when social events are most often organized, such as Friday afternoons, you make long calls while the calls you take are generally short, you are a commercial target.

Criminal or enterprise if you see differences, firms are pleased to operate within the ‘spectrum of you’ because there is coin there.

JP Rangaswami:

There’s a new game in town, where the surveillance is all digital. Where everything we do is monitored and recorded and analyzed and used, ostensibly to help us. Ostensibly.

Many of the things we do are recorded, and we know about it.

Many of the things we do are recorded, and we give permission for that recording to take place.

Some of the things we do are recorded with our permission and we don’t understand enough about it.

So we need to know more about all of this.

strands of the far right

By Sarah Posner and Julie Ingersoll:

The Tea Party movement emerges out of the confluence of different strands of the far right, including Christian Reconstructionism.

The militia movement and Christian Reconstructionism both contend that our current civil government, most especially the federal government, is illegitimate: that it has overreached the limits of its divinely ordained authority, and that it continues to do so.

Many in the militia movement, the Tea Party Movement, and Christian Reconstruction also share the view that civil government should be reformed according to the dictates of biblical law.

sport hunting

The stars are all immensely hot and glowing objects, similar in nature to our Sun …. some bigger than the Sun, some smaller … but all of them shine by their OWN light.

Brian May:

No ! – we are absolutely not obsessed ENOUGH with animals. You are, sadly, asking the wrong question here.

We humans, as a race, are insanely obsessed with ourselves … and have the completely unjustifiable idea that we are the only species on this planet that is worthy of decent treatment. I believe our whole manner of treating the other animals on Earth is tragically off-beam.

It’s time we all got a grip, and realized that EVERY animal is worthy of respect.

masters in a hole

Washington Post tidbits as the story is told:

…the mine’s [original] stash of emergency food – two spoonfuls of tuna and half a glass of milk per man every 48 hours …finally through the roof of the miners’ shelter, the workers had run out of food and had not eaten in 48 hours.

…the men on a 12-hour shift schedule, using the headlights of trucks to simulate sunlight.

…a new shelter, a drier area about 200 yards farther down the shaft. They had already spent days reinforcing the roof.

Drilling will spill 18,000 gallons of water into their chambers …plans to construct drainage and holding pools and canals to shunt water away from the miners’ living quarters.

chicken fashion

I searched many pages failing to find the original link, faint praise for the wonderfully silly photo of a dressed chicken. But surprise, I did discover that Mary the Genji-robed chicken received the New Yorker’s 2009 Critterati Award.

sour or grapes

Penelope Trunk:

I think people need to choose between an interesting life or happy life.

People with interesting lives do not get offended that they cannot be happy. Happy people are offended that they cannot have interesting lives.

I’ve always preferred, ‘In all your getting, get understanding’.

Adam Phillips at the Guardian offers a bright essay on various myth of happiness.

We all want to be happy, we want our children to be happy, and there are countless books advising us how to achieve happiness. But is this really what we should be aiming for?

A people who conceive life to be the pursuit of happiness must be chronically unhappy. —Marshall Sahlins

fundamentalism, so simple it works

Too many of us are manifestly unwilling to put out any intellectual energy whatever and a large part of the reason can be traced to the far Right, particularly the far Religious Right.

Mick Arran on how devil-dogma, plutocratic greed, and religious orthodoxy renders the faithful blindly ignorant:

For four straight decades now, conservatives have been selling us economic and political policies based on 3-sec sound bites and sloganeering phrases, some of them barely more than a single loaded word. “Tax cuts”, “socialism”, “death panels”, “death tax”, and so on. They have told us over and over again that “liberals” always make things too complicated, and that they do that to bamboozle us suckers.

This has been the origination and the development of a doctrine I call “simplicism”: an orthodoxy masquerading as common sense that feeds into the historic American distaste for mental pursuits by promulgating a philosophical paradigm in which all solutions are simple and any solution that isn’t must therefore be a trick and should be ignored unless you want to be the victim of a con artist.

In effect, it excuses, justifies, and even encourages ignorance as a defense against an unnecessary and supposedly wasteful intellectual effort.

Complexity and nuance just confuse the situation, we’re told. They muddy the waters and throw sand in our eyes to prevent us from seeing that the answers we’re looking for are the simple ones, the ones any moron can understand.

The onslaught of simplicism slung from the political far Right would have been bad enough, dangerous enough, damaging enough to cause the our democracy serious problems in any case, but added to it was the sudden emergence of the fundalmentalist Religious Right’s insistence that God didn’t make us to think but to obey the Bible in all things, blindly believing every word literally, thereby cutting off all discussion or disagreement.

A quote FWIW:

It is no crime to be ignorant of economics, which is, after all, a specialized discipline and one that most people consider to be a ‘dismal science.’ But it is totally irresponsible to have a loud and vociferous opinion on economic subjects while remaining in this state of ignorance. —Murray Rothbard

episode of abuses

The Bush-Cheney private sector military fiasco:

Blackwater Worldwide created a web of more than 30 shell companies or subsidiaries in part to obtain millions of dollars in American government contracts after the security company came under intense criticism for reckless conduct in Iraq, according to Congressional investigators and former Blackwater officials.

Since 2001, the Central Intelligence Agency awarded up to $600 million in classified contracts to Blackwater and its affiliates.

nuggets of crazy

Oh just must follow up on veneer peeling off Palin.

“This whole hunter thing, for Sarah? That is the biggest fallacy,” says one longtime friend of the family. “That woman has never hunted.”

“The picture of her with the caribou she says she shot? She got out of the R.V. to pose for a picture. She never helps with the fishing either. It’s all a joke.”

The friend goes on to recall that when Greta Van Susteren came to the house to interview Palin “[Sarah] cooked moose chili and whatnot. Todd was calling everyone he knew the day before—’Do you got any moose?’ Desperate.”


weight lifted

Image of the infamous Macondo well head waiting for the new Blow Out Preventer.

The new BOP has been installed.

“The next step in the process is to ensure that the new BOP is working properly and then the relief well will be completed at the beginning of next week.”


every inch we eat

Gregor Macdonald:

What’s concerning about the pressures on the global food system that have bubbled up in the past five years is that they are accompanied by the crossing of certain thresholds.

While we cannot know for certain how resilient global agricultural will be in responding to either a rise in temperature volatility, or, demand pressure on yields in a time of higher cost energy inputs, the fact that the world has already positioned itself for highly optimized food production is worrisome.

Add to this juncture the fact that regions, at a time when oil is forcing the restoration of distance, are choosing to extend and lengthen distance between themselves and their food supply, and we can start to build a better case for a food problem that is not temporary but structural.

largely problem forces

Oh do get to know your neighborhood wingnut.

Bob Altemeyer has been studying this matter more than 30 years.

The greatest threat to American democracy today arises from a militant authoritarianism that has become a cancer upon the nation.