Thursday, January 25, 2024

So, That's What "God" Wants. You Don't Know It If You Get Distracted By the NT.

Over 64k rape survivors became pregnant across 14 US states after Roe Vs Wade overturned, study finds | The Independent

This is one of two stories I came across today.  The other was on the radio.

So, "god" wants women who were raped (or 10 year old girls in Alabama who were raped) to get pregnant, and to be saddled with children they didn't want, maybe couldn't care for, and about whom they have very mixed feelings, to say the least.

Of course, if we focus on the "be fruitful, and multiply" bit, we might further assume that "god" wants females to be impregnated, whether or not they want to.  That is to say, "god" presumably wants females to be raped, unless they happen to be consenting.  But if they're not, then some male, or a group of them, get to make the decision for the female.

And if the female doesn't want to get pregnant, or not by the person who impregnated her, or will be harmed by a pregnancy, or is not in a position to provide adequately for a child, well, that's just not "god's" problem.

The other story was from...oh, also Alabama.  It was about Kenneth Smith, a guy who, with the aid of another guy, killed a pastor's wife, because the pastor paid them to kill her.  This was in 1988.  The pastor later killed himself.  Smith's confederate was executed by Alabama in 2010.  Smith was to be executed by lethal injection, but prison staff couldn't find a vein, after working on Smith for two hours.  So, Alabama, which I'm sure promotes itself as "pro-life" (at least when it comes to 10 year old girls who were raped and impregnated), had to figure out some other method.  Alabama Prepares to Carry Out the First Nitrogen Gas Execution (theintercept.com)

For some reason, they didn't shoot Smith, or hang him, or electrocute him.  They wanted something different.  So they settled on a method that had never been attempted before, and about which no one really knew anything.

"God" likes live babies, no matter how messy and unworkable the circumstances, and s/he likes dead adults.  The OT "god" was notorious for liking people killed.  The NT "god" is often imagined to be more loving and forgiving, but it is that "god's" followers who advocate more or less fiercely for as much misery, disadvantage, and death as they can engineer.  But as far as I know, the OT "god" and the NT "god," and the Qur'an "god," are all the same "god," so it's unclear why his or her moods were so different.  Maybe parenthood instilled a kinder disposition, but that "god's" followers seem to prefer misery.  If there was such a thing as "god," I'd ask what s/he really wants.

I've asked Orthodox Jewish people why they don't believe in Jesus as the messiah, since the NT is a scripture, just like the OT, but they say the OT was written by "god" (as if anyone could know that), and the NT was only written by people (decades after Jesus' reported death), so they disqualify the NT, and only have faith in the OT.  So, if there was such a thing as "god," and if the Jews were right about why the OT counts, and the NT doesn't, then we would have to assume that "god" is the angry and punitive one of the OT.  Even the alleged NT adherents seem more comfortable with a "god" who rages and harms than one who loves and forgives, so maybe, if there was such a thing as "god," that's what "god" is really like, and what "god" really wants.

I don't think I'm missing out on anything.  Smith was in fact executed today.  No court would reverse the sentence, and the governor of Alabama refused to commute his sentence, as she has refused to commute any death sentence (13 of them) that came her way.  I wonder if she's a NT adherent.  She sure sounds OT to me.


Thursday, January 18, 2024

Recent Traffic Fatalities, or Don't You Just Love It When We Make National News?

 

Like any reasonable human being, I was shocked and saddened by the recent traffic fatalities on my street over the holiday weekend. In typical fashion, I was nose-down in a home maintenance project with my earbuds blasting rock'n'roll for motivation, so even though this was all happening three blocks away, I had no idea until my wife and child came home and gave me the news.

We still don't know everything that happened that day, and all of the factors that led up to the incident, but in typical Biscayne Park fashion, we will likely now demand some change to try and prevent it from happening again.  I recall about 16 years ago, I was one of the first people on the scene of that horrific accident where a child was dragged four blocks by a drunk driver and barely escaped with his life. I will never forget seeing the father's reaction when he first laid eyes on his bleeding/dying child. After this accident, we lowered the speed limit from 30 to 25 on most streets in the park, but as some people very astutely pointed out later, this accident was not caused by speed, but rather by a non-resident cutting through our village while drunk. And that leads me to the point of this post.

Certainly, there's going to be some demand for a reaction at the village government level to this incident.   Some may demand more police, a traffic light or two in the right places, perhaps even the approach that Miami shores took with barriers on certain parts of their border. It’s unlikely that any of those things would have prevented this accident, but something certainly would have helped – SPEED TABLES!  Police can’t be everywhere, all at once, all of the time, but strategically placed speed tables can work 24/7, including holidays.   And we don’t have to pay $10K for a traffic study to tell us where they’re needed – 8th and 9th Avenues, 119th Street (the ONLY street that connects the furthest points in the village from East/West), and Griffing Boulevard.  (Not that the study wouldn’t yield other benefits, but this one is a no-brainer).

It is my sincere hope that our reaction is on point and effective, and not merely symbolic. I have lived here for 20 years, but I have lived in the area for most of my 50 years on this blue dot in space, and not speeding in Biscayne park was practically on the exam to get my driver’s license! It was just something that people in the area knew - you speed in our village, you will pay the price eventually. In recent years I have heard others acknowledge that this reputation is no longer applicable to the village, and that is probably true. Times have changed, the areas around us have grown more populated and new residents/generations continue to use our village as a cut through in order to avoid the intersection of West Dixie / 6th Avenue / 125th Street.  And I can’t blame them.

I’m aware that only a handful of people will see this post, so I intend to read it aloud at the next commission meeting, and hopefully spur the conversations around strategically placed speed tables in our village.

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Maybe It Would Help to Take a Deep Breath First.

We could start in more recent years and decades.  It was when Ronald Reagan was running against incumbent Jimmy Carter.  Reagan did something unexpected, and possibly even shocking, during one of the debates.  Carter was saying something, and Reagan replied "there you go again."  He made this unbelievably wiseass wisecrack to the president of the United States.  But the public weren't turned off by it.  Reagan bought himself some support for having the nerve to make a wiseass wisecrack like that, to the sitting president.

Over three years ago, Joe Biden, in a debate with the sitting president, called Trump a "clown," twice, and asked "why don't you shut up," once.  Biden, too, bought himself support for being confrontational, and not submissive, that way.  It wouldn't be possible to calculate the effect, but both Reagan and Biden won their elections.

If we go back much further, and consider a fable, there's the public who fawned over the emperor's new clothes, and the boy who pointed out the emperor wasn't wearing any clothes.  In that fable, the rest of the public then felt empowered to admit the emperor was naked, and they laughed at him.  They were freed to laugh at the emperor.  Because a young boy commented on reality.

Tonight, yet again, the Republican presidential hopefuls are having a debate.  And again, Donnie Trump won't be there.  Instead, Fox News is hosting one of his solo "town hall" affairs.  They're afraid of Trump.  Most Republicans are afraid of Trump.  They're afraid of him because they know he has enough of a base to displace them from office, as his Wyoming base did to Liz Cheney.  Trump's base are out of their minds.  They have no idea what the issues are, or what they're doing.  They allowed themselves to forget that Liz Cheney is a rock solid, relatively far right, Republican, and just because of one vote she made, to acknowledge that Trump did something criminal enough to deserve impeachment, they turned on her, and they turned from her.

Carter had done some significantly good and right things.  I didn't vote for him when he ran the first time, but I did the second time.  "There you go again" isn't substantive.  It has no meaning.  It's just a wiseass wisecrack, and it was intended to suggest that no one intimidated Ronald Reagan.

Trump is without question a clown, an inveterate liar, and he's totally (that's 100%, not 99.8%) self-focused.  And he should shut up.  If he's not candidate enough, or man enough, to debate his opponents, then he's answered the question Republicans should be asking.

He shouldn't have the sycophants at Fox News running interference for him, or praising him for his new and magnificent outfit, when he isn't wearing anything.

The majority of voters understood what was wrong with Trump in 2016, and they voted for Clinton.  A larger majority of voters had an even clearer understanding of what was wrong with Trump in 2020, and they voted for Biden.  Perhaps in part because Biden helped them have confidence in what they then knew for a fact, having lived it for four years, when Biden called Trump a clown and told him to shut up.  It's unfortunate that political discourse gets to be that degree of schoolyard, but reality has to be acknowledged.  Unless you're afraid of assumed or imagined consequences, and you play along, and praise the emperor for his magnificent new outfit.

Fox News, and other media, are primarily interested in making money, so they have viewers and advertisers to worry about pleasing, and they haven't all taken a deep breath, and acknowledged reality.  They're further intimidated because such a massive majority of people who fill out surveys of which Republican candidate they want to be president name Trump.  Frankly, I think in the real world (country) of real people, Trump will take a shellacking, if he gets far enough to face Biden.  Biden's got issues, but none like Trump's.

Increasing numbers of right wing pundits have formally or informally fallen away from Trump.  Trump's rallies and other events draw pathetically small "crowds" now.

One thing I very commonly tell people is that it is the job of children, from as soon as they're old enough to start doing their job, to become capable and independent, including independent of their parents.  It is the job of parents to permit, or even encourage, their children to become capable and independent, including independent of them.  I tell them that if they have no other way of thinking about that, they should realize that their offspring are more or less guaranteed to outlive the parents.  If the offspring are not capable and independent, including independent of the parents, when the parents die of old age, and the offspring are in their 40s, 50s, 60s, or maybe even 70s, the offspring are in very deep trouble.

Trump has kept this charade going so far by inventing the idea that he earned more votes than Clinton or Biden, and that the second election was stolen from him.  And the children who are his supporters have clung to that as a basis for continuing to support him.  What are they going to do when this 77 year old man who doesn't exercise, and eats junk food, is gone?


Monday, January 8, 2024

It's a Theory That's Hard to Imagine.

"[Medicare poses] an existential threat to the American way of life."  Mike Johnson (Yeah, the one who's Speaker of the House of Representatives.)

James Michael Johnson is a lawyer.  There is no reason to imagine he has any understanding of the medical field, and he clearly has a limited knowledge of American government, including the Social Security Administration (SSA) and Medicare.

Medicare was a stop along the way.  It is true today, and it has always been true, that the commonest cause of personal bankruptcy in this country is an inability to pay medical bills.  There are several reasons for this, and the glaring one is that the medical industry in this country is very considerably overpriced.  (Although civilized countries have faced similar problems, and they have instituted universal health care, beaten down costs, and taxed adequately.)  When the public had to pay for medical care, the commonest cause of personal bankruptcy in this country was an inability to pay medical bills.  When health insurance was devised, the commonest cause of personal bankruptcy in this country was an inability to pay medical bills.  When Medicare was conceived, the commonest cause of personal bankruptcy in this country was an inability to pay medical bills.  And health insurance and Medicare are sort of forms of savings plans.  If you don't pay in, you don't get the benefits.  Health insurance relies in part on premiums charged.  So, in a way, does Medicare.  Medicare, like Social Security, are separate funds (separate from the rest of the government coffer), and people pay into them, with the expectation that they will be repaid, by having these programs pay relevant bills for them, if they live long enough, and if they need the fiscal help.  And because they're separate funds, and not part of the government coffer, it does not help the deficit, for example, to reduce, or even eliminate, these expenses/repayments.  Does Mike Johnson think that allowing people to have savings plans, and reducing their risk of personal bankruptcy, are an existential threat to the American way of life?  I wonder what Mike Johnson thinks the American way of life is.  I'm tempted to guess that shooting fish in a barrel represents Mike Johnson's concept of the American way of life.  Or maybe it's just his idea of satisfying fun.

Medicare didn't adequately solve the problem, for a collection of reasons, so Barack Obama encouraged the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which was only a partial and still inadequate step, and which was met with resistance from the medical industry (which did not want to be challenged for its excesses).  And maybe that's Johnson's point.  Maybe he favors destructive excesses which most imperil the most disadvantaged, and that's what he believes is the American way of life: that the least advantaged should be the most burdened, in an unnatural and cruel Darwinian way.  The American way of life: the rich get richer, and the poor either declare personal bankruptcy or die.

It's clear that Mike Johnson, and many or most other Republicans, don't care about the health or finances of the vast majority of Americans.  Caring about that isn't Mike Johnson's idea of the American way of life.  Mike Johnson very much wants to run interference (I'm skirting around the term that represents fellatio) for Donnie Trump.  In addition, Congressmembers like Mike Johnson happily don't rely on Social Security or Medicare.  They have their own scheme.  We pay for our health care, in a way that Mike Johnson thinks is an existential threat to the American way of life, and we pay for Mike Johnson's health care, in a way about which Mike Johnson doesn't seem to be complaining.  And our responsibility to pay for our own health care still leaves us vulnerable to personal bankruptcy.  Happily for Mike Johnson, our responsibility to pay for his health care does not leave him vulnerable to personal bankruptcy.

If all of this seems a bit twisted and somehow unfair, it's far beyond me to disagree.


Saturday, January 6, 2024

Today is January 6. No Questions, I Assume.

The only things I'll say are that Nixon assumed he'd be impeached, so he resigned.  And Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 9/11" starts with Gore unimaginably losing to W (whose cousin managed the vote-counting in Florida, and whose brother was the governor of Florida, both of whom decided to stop counting votes when Gore was catching up, and would win, and who benefitted from a sympathetic Supreme Court that agreed the Florida votes didn't need to be counted).  Gore, when asked if he was upset with this development, said it wasn't the outcome he hoped for, but he accepted it, and wanted a smooth transition.  He wasn't going to fight it.  Boy, have we come a long way since then.


You Missed Your First Chance. You Don't Have to Miss Your Second One.

Last night, I took myself to Coral Gables to hear George Li play piano.  I've heard some spectacular piano playing, but probably none like that.  It seemed clear from the program that Li is from Massachusetts (I didn't go backstage to talk to him), and someone in the know told me he's from Lexington.  He has a Harvard degree in English literature, loves to read, is a photographer, loves soccer, and plays piano like that.  The program said his first professional appearance was when he was 10.  I'm told he's in his 20s now.  I assume he's of Chinese descent, and his playing reminded me of Hiromi Uehara, who is Japanese.  He was also described as what you would call a really nice guy.  (I would say a really nice kid.)

The program was extensive, and of course, he played from memory.  It was Schumann, Ravel, and Stravinsky.  So composers who had nothing to do with each other, although Ravel and Stravinsky had 55 overlapping years, from their birth years to their death years.

But George Li.  Unbelievable.  The descriptions and reviews in the program were provided by Li's agent, and came from various publications, but they were all very similar, and all exactly right.  The "Washington Post," for example, said his performance "left no doubt that he combines staggering technical prowess, a sense of command, and depth of expression."  BINGO, BINGO, BINGO.  All of the reviews were like that, even when they were talking about different aspects of Li's playing.

How the ticket price was $30, and the hall was mostly empty, were entirely mysterious.  Someone sitting near me said that probably too many people were out of town this week.  If you're in town, I'm sorry you weren't there.

The organization that sponsored this performance was rk Cultural Productions.  RK is Rise Kern, and she doesn't look it.  She is said to be one of the biggest promoters anywhere, and she has travelled the world promoting her shows, including those from one of her clients, Yo-Yo Ma.  But she's very unassuming.  She was sitting behind me, and the woman sitting next to me was a friend of hers, and provided some professional dish.

So, I am sorry you missed last night, that I didn't know about until the day before, and that I didn't know anything about George Li, so I could have urged you to go.  What I will urge you to do is go to rk Cultural Productions' next event, which is the Gesualdo Six ("an award-winning British vocal ensemble:" all male, so possibly a countertenor or two), who are performing at the Aventura Arts & Cultural Center.  If you take my advice (I have no idea what the Gesualdo Six are about, and I don't care, having seen and heard George Li last night), you can get tickets through rkculturalproductions.org, or you can call 305-519-4442.  I doubt 519 is Aventura, so if you reach Rise Kern, you can tell her you got the suggestion from me.  Just tell her I'm the bald guy who was sitting in front of her and next to her friend.

If you want to go to the Gesualdo Six, and you want the best seats, they're $40.  If you want lesser seats, they're $30.  Don't ask me.  I don't know how or why Ms Kern charges like this.


Hmm.

New Democratic star utterly HUMILIATES Lauren Boebert using her OWN words against her (youtube.com)  This whole video is great, but note Mike Johnson from 5:00 to about 5:20.  Johnson, who is a primitive religious extremist, is arguing against abortion, and his argument is that aborted fetuses eventually don't become workers in the economy.  He adds something about Social Security and Medicare, but it's completely unclear what is his point.

There are two, or possibly three, relevant issues here.  One is that some people want to abort pregnancies, because they didn't want there to be a pregnancy.  Their approach is to have an abortion of a pregnancy they tried to avoid, instead of just not having sex, so there would be no chance of pregnancy.  Is Johnson somehow arguing that all people should have children, and maybe lots of children, for the benefit of a future workforce, whether or not the people want to have children, or how many?

Second, while Johnson is bemoaning the thinning of a future workforce, because a fetus who might have become a future worker was aborted, he is not advocating to open wide the gates to allow lots of immigration, so we could have an expanded workforce now.  And their children, whom they wanted, could be the future workforce.  That's among the reasons people want to immigrate here: to work.  (They also want to escape bad conditions in the old country, and have a better life, but that wasn't Johnson's point.)  Garcia made a version of that point.  It's no mystery why Johnson didn't want to be interrupted.  It's possible he was listening to himself talk.

As for Johnson's glancing crack about Social Security and Medicare, does he somehow, some way, not realize that the fetuses he thinks shouldn't be aborted would in theory grow to become Social Security and Medicare beneficiaries?

Then, there's Marge.  Marge, who exists in her own orbit somewhere, was squawking at Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and going on about swearing an oath on "the bible," not the "Qur'an."  Does Marge not realize 1) that Ocasio-Cortez is not Muslim, and 2) that the Qur'an is a bible?  Even Donnie Trump knows that.  In this video, someone lobbed to Donnie a softball which Donnie whiffed, and he asked if Donnie prefers the OT or the NT.  Donnie (who frankly clearly doesn't know the first thing about either of them) said he couldn't decide, and he likes them both.  So Donnie knows the OT and the NT are bibles.  So is the Qur'an.

It's not a surprise that these people keep tripping over themselves.  And that's our government, which we chose?


Tuesday, January 2, 2024

The Secret to a Long, Healthy, and Happy Life

Yes, of course there's a collection of such "secrets."  Mind your diet, exercise, don't smoke, and others.

I've been seeing an increasing number of references to another "secret" that's being promoted: having a social life, and friends.

On January 1, I was out with Richard and Debbie Ederr, and we happened to pass Laurenzo's Italian grocery store.  Right, it's been closed for some years now -- not long before the pandemic, I think -- and the story I heard was that David Laurenzo, who was the son or grandson of the founder, and the manager of the store, decided to shut down the store after about 60 years, to spite his siblings.  I thought I heard he had sold the land to a developer, but nothing was ever developed there.  It's just Laurenzo's, with the windows covered.

Richard told me that David likes music, and he decided he'd rather devote himself to music than to running the store.  But instead of hiring a manager, or selling the store, he shut it down.  More or less abruptly.  I think the last day I was there, one of their employees (some of whom had worked there for decades) told me with unmistakable anger that the employees had just been told their jobs were ending in two weeks.

If you weren't a patron of Laurenzo's, you don't know the kind of home away from home it was.  They had unique items, and the Laurenzos had spent decades cultivating contacts with suppliers.  None of that is reproducible in south Florida, or in any place that doesn't have a "Little Italy."  It's just gone.  They had a bakery, and they made their own pasta.  They had a butcher section and a seafood section.  They had tons of Italian groceries (canned goods, etc) and an extensive wine department.  They had a cafeteria that sold Italian dishes they made.  People ate lunch there.  People who shopped there knew other people who shopped there, and everyone knew the employees.

I asked Richard if David Laurenzo still owned the property, and was still paying property tax on an irreplaceable asset that produces nothing for David Laurenzo.  Yes, Richard said he does.  Good.  I hope paying the tax hurts.  Because David Laurenzo was mad at his siblings, for who knows (or cares) what reason, a treasure is gone, employees, some of whom were probably too old to get hired somewhere else, had to find jobs, and shoppers either went without or had to try to find other ways to create meals.

That's just one small example of a loss of opportunity to interact, and socialize.  An example of disconnection, and isolation.  But it's bigger, and a lot worse, than that.

There are two noteworthy dynamics going on now, and they interfere with socialization.  According to the theory, they shorten life, and make it less healthy and happy.  I'm setting aside the pandemic, which has continuing consequences for interaction.  One of them is the seemingly inexorable crusade toward divisiveness, so that people form antipathies based on nothing, and elevate them to extreme levels of disconnection, at least with whatever is imagined to be the "other side."  This is not entirely -- not entirely -- unfair, in that territoriality and group dynamics are human nature.  They serve a purpose for people, and for many animals, in that they keep groups together.  This requires designations of uses and thems, which can get uncontrolled and uncivilized, as they are now.  Unfortunately, or tragically, as much as the arc of human civilization has progressed to reducing dysfunctional discord, there's always some, and right now, there's more.  We're going backwards.  Only for the purpose of giving an example, and not to express partisan leanings, I was reading an article yesterday, about seven chimpanzees that escaped from their enclosure at a zoo in Sweden a few years ago.  The decision the zoo staff made was to shoot and kill any chimpanzees they could find, which did not re-enter the enclosure.  Chimpanzees, according to this article, are remarkably intelligent, and can be gentle and loving, but can unpredictably turn on other animals, like humans, and literally tear them limb from limb.  If you can form an image of that, and if you saw the video of Marjorie Taylor Greene raging at Joe Biden, and shrieking at him, calling him a liar (while he was doing something no more provocative than giving his State of the Union address), you can tell me the difference between MTG and an unhinged and violent chimpanzee.

Now you could argue that MTG was in fact experiencing the valued connection to others.  At least others like her.  In that sense, you could argue, she was doing what she should do to enhance her life.  (Although she's also recently gotten divorced, and called other far right Representatives "bitches."  So the sense of connection is pretty tenuous.)  I've mentioned before that I acquired all approximately 150 episodes of the "Twilight Zone."  I saw them probably 60 years ago, and I don't remember most of them.  The one I just watched is worthy of being considered the best of all of them.  (I'm happy to say it was written by Rod Serling.)  It was called "I Am the Night: Color Me Black."  I did not remember it.  It was a story about a convict sentenced to be hanged at 9:30 AM, but the sun never came up.  At first, there was no sun in this small town, and by the end of the episode, there was no sun anywhere.  There was doubt about the convict's guilt, and the newspaper editor said the deputy had perjured himself.  The police chief agreed the deputy had perjured himself, and he added that he had noticed the same finding the deputy omitted, and didn't say anything, either.  He said the newspaper editor had printed the story of the murder, having had his own doubts, which were not part of the story, and that each was looking out for himself.  Someone mentioned the importance of joining the majority, and the chaplain said the minority had been crucified 2000 years earlier.  So, again, there's the theme of the need for connection, even when the cause is unjust.  Not exactly a new story.

The other noteworthy dynamic has to do with shopping, of all things.  When I moved here in 2005, there was a mom and pop hardware store on the northwest corner of 125th St and 8th Ave.  They had a sign in the window about how people should shop there instead of at Home Depot.  "Dump the Depot, and Save," I think the sign read.  The Depot, of course, won, and the small store is gone.  It's impersonal now.  It's not just mom and pop stores that don't survive.  Sports Authority is gone, as is Bed, Bath, and Beyond (Linens 'N Things before that), and various book store chains.  The reason these stores fail is that fewer people go to stores.  They buy online.  If they're dissatisfied, they return the package, often by putting it in a mailbox of sorts.  People increasingly spend their lives alone, without even the benefit of going to stores, and interacting with the staff there.  They get entirely impersonal packages from (Sc)Amazon and other vendors.

Even listening to music has become impersonal.  Instead of going to concerts, and buying, and listening to, recordings, people "stream," and what is presented to them is indirectly connected to what they wanted to hear.  Now, it's AI, which is manufactured imagery of people who never had anything to do with the movie, or whatever is observed.  Not that there's anything "social" about watching a movie, but at least it is acted by real people, about whom you might know something, and about whom you might care.

It is my strong belief that each of us has one life, and no one is coming back for a redo.  Make the best of it.  Cherish your attachments, whether they're family, friends, store employees, or musicians and actors.  You'll live longer, and have a healthier, happier, and more fulfilling life.  (My daughter called me today.  We were on the phone for 45 minutes.  She started out by telling me about my granddaughter's temper tantrum, then we stayed on the phone while my daughter went to Walmart, then to Whole Foods.  My daughter couldn't find the night stand she wanted for my grandson.  I listened.  I gave advice about some things.  My daughter agreed, or she didn't.  None of this was about anything except connecting.  It's unspeakably important.)