Thursday, February 29, 2024

February 29

Sunny but very chilly today. Happy Leap day in this Leap Year. The snow is mostly gone--again. It has really not been much of a winter at all. We had to go out today to pay our rent so I stopped off at Michaels to get some floral pieces to put into a couple of spring arrangements for inside the house. I am not the only one who changed the door wreath early. One of the employees at Michaels said she did the same two weeks ago. Mine got changed about three weeks ago.

Mom and I both had "senior moments" yesterday because we couldn't remember if we had paid our rent during our errands over the last couple of weeks. She couldn't find any entry in her check book. I couldn't find it on the bank records. So we stopped by today and told the secretary at our landlord's office that we had a silly question: did we pay the rent. We hadn't according to her records so we paid it.

So President Biden and Former (hoping to be next) President Trump are both going to the Texas border to highlight immigration problems. I laughed when they said Trump is headed for Eagle Creek. He should get a very friendly reception because that is where that pathetic MAGA caravan went. I don't know if they are still there. I wondered at the time if they had jobs to go to and how they financed their adventure. About the only thing that will come out is some nice dueling visuals. What a waste!!

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has decided that he won't run to be leader of the Senate GOP contingent next year. He was elected to his current term in 2022 so he won't be up for re-election again until 2028. But I won't miss him as GOP leader but given who the news media are speculating might replace him, I don't expect any kind of real bi-partisan cooperation after he leaves.

The pictures of a relief convoy in Gaza City being mobbed by desperate people was horrific enough but that was compounded by the actions of Israeli troops nearby who felt threatened as some of the mob appeared to be approaching them. They opened fire. Casualties mounted to over 100 both from Israeli fire and from people being run over as convoy drivers tried to get through the mob. The news said that the French have had some good results from parachuting aid in and our government is thinking of doing the same. The whole thinking reminded me of a messy Berlin airlift.

Loved this from DIRECT eZine:

Heather Cox Richardson posted a good summary of the political events. She notes that Trump's take over of the Republican appears to be complete.














Wednesday, February 28, 2024

February 27, 28

Warm this morning--starting in the 40s. But it is wet. The rain may move out and it may dry out enough for me to get outside and clean up a bit. I won't do much because one of our errands yesterday was grocery shopping and both of us were exhausted by the time we finished. I can see a time in the not too distant future when we will have to set up the delivery service with the grocery we use most. Age does catch up with you.

Antidote du jour. Tim H: “Same pair that you featured last year in Ouroboros mode. They ignored those cat beds until they were appropriate housed.”

I loved this photo posted on Naked Capitalism today. I have two cats so this resonates. It is at the bottom of the post.

I saw the ad mentioned in the CNN article. Evidently it is getting some criticism for telling people to have cereal for supper to spare the food budget. I wan't thinking of the budget when I saw it. I was thinking of the added sugar and additives in most cereals today. We haven't had those in several years and have stuck with old fashioned (as in not quick or instant) rolled oats and farina. 

Found Indian Punchline by way of Naked Capitalism and it has an interesting article on the effect of Russia's victory in Avdiivka Ukraine. The focus of our news media seems to be blinkered and focused solely on Europe, Russia, and (to a lesser extent). But there is a complex set of relationships beyond and those countries don't have a very friendly relationship with the U.S. They have a far more favorable view of Putin and Russia than they have of the West.

28**********************************************************************

 Cold today and snow. Not much accumulated but the wind is definitely not comfortable. Thankfully we didn't get the hail or tornadoes the weather forecasters predicted we might have.

CNN published this article today detailing an interesting parallel between Putin and Xi. I thought a long time ago that both were trying to recover a, to them, glorious past. A past when their countries were rich, powerful and could influence the course of history. The problem for each is that with the passage of time large parts of the past empires have splintered off and aren't necessarily willing to resume their old subordinate relationship. But they aren't the only ones who are trying to recover an imagined past. A lot of our own people want a return to the 1950s, or the 1930s, or even 1900. Back when women remained in the home, before the pill, before abortion, when America could pretend it was a Christian nation just like they dreamed the founders established it.

Lyz at Men Yell At Me has a good analysis of the effect of laws from Texas, Alabama, Missouri, and Arizona which prohibit pregnant women from getting a divorce. The justifications usually involve ensuring the continuing care and well-being of children. But keeping women in abusive relationships, or relationships that aren't working (at least for the women) may actually be detrimental to the children. But the whole aim of these laws are the same as the aim of abortion bans is to keep women in subservient and impoverished positions. As the article says, keep women doing all of the unpaid and undervalued work that keeps society functioning. I remember, some decades ago, when the news media always featured a report on how much it would cost to actually pay women for all of the caring work they weren't, and still are not, paid for. I haven't seen even that minimal acknowledgement of women's work for forty years. 

Monday, February 26, 2024

February 26

 We have errands later today. It is nice and sunny with temperatures reaching the 60s--much above normal. It is supposed to continue tomorrow so I hope to get some of the patio cleaned up. After that the temperatures go back to a more normal 30s and low 40s.

We spent Sunday watching soccer and rugby. The local news was as depressing as usual--shootings, auto accidents, Chicago politics. The national news is both depressing and infuriating. The sports are much more pleasantly entertaining.

I started hearing the Democrat message that appropriating the billions of dollars for Ukraine and Israel isn't like sending gobs of money overseas because it will, mostly, be spent in this country for armaments. Bill Astore has an appropriately sarcastic blog about that cynical government argument. I don't think it is going to fly with Palestinian voters who object to their government spending their tax dollars to help Israel kill their family members in Gaza. Nor will it fly with younger voters who think supporting genocide is good foreign policy. If we are honest, and some of us aren't, we have to acknowledge that Israel's actions are genocide.

William Hartung also has a good article on Tomdispatch on the issue of military spending. 

I do wish there was a choice other than bad (Biden and business as has been usual) and much worse (Trump and despotism/Christian Nationalism/Handmaid's Tale). The assumptions our policies are based on have been baked into our thoughts and actions since the end of WWII. There is an inertia in human affairs just as in physics. What has been will continue to be unless events of sufficient impact force a change. (I.E., A body in motion will continue on its course and speed unless acted upon by an external force sufficient to change it.) 

Well, fire season has started, if last year's season ever ended. Texas has a 4K acre fire that is contained and Colorado has one outside Colorado Springs. The Weather Chanel has a map of fire warnings and watches that stretches from the Gulf to Canada and almost as far east as Wisconsin and Illinois.

Saturday, February 24, 2024

Some sun this morning after snow overnight. It is cold now and not expected to rise above 32F.

We watched the Chicago news this morning. As I have mentioned before Chicago is as close to local as we can get on TV. It is a relief from the repetition of the nationally oriented news we watch during the week. Then continued with the pre-game show for the Premier League soccer. The game should start shortly. At the same time I got the salmon patties made up and in the refrigerator ready to fry later. I am resting before fixing our breakfast.

The Hill has a long article about the latest looming budget deadline in D.C. The House is supposed to return, after a couple of weeks in their districts or somewhere, on Monday with the shutdown scheduled for March 1. I keep wondering why we are paying those guys a six figure salary for doing not much at all, except preening before cameras.

Responsible Statecraft posted this article this morning. The headline claims that Biden wants to put the U.S. on a "permanent war footing." After reading it I don't see the U.S. being put on a permanent war footing, rather just the defense industry. Worse I don't think the nebulous goals listed will do move us away from the system we have where the military is "getting less for more." And, in a continuation of George W.'s pronouncements after 9/11, that most of us should support his War on Terror by going shopping.

The New Eastern Outlook has an interesting analysis of our defense industry and expounds on some "fatal flaws" in the system as it is now organized. I haven't read much of this journal so I decided to look up more info. Wikipedia and other sources trace its ancestry back to a Soviet era academic institute specializing in Asia. They say that it is one major conduit for Russian misinformation and propaganda. I didn't see much in the article that got my skepticism antennae moving from normal to extreme. But it is a site to read carefully and skeptically.

Friday, February 23, 2024

February 23

 Sunny and cool so far. The rain yesterday ended mid-afternoon.

GZero has an interesting article that asks an important question: Russia is winning? Winning What? Our government has imposed a new round of sanctions but Russia's economy isn't as sensitive to sanctions as it was originally, and India and China are still very willing to buy the oil Russia sells them at bargain basement prices.

Heather Cox Richardson published a good overview of our current political turmoil. There are several things that make me crazy angry. One is a bunch of men deciding that I, or any other woman, isn't competent to make decisions about my life just because I MIGHT NOT MAKE THE DECISION THEY WANT ME TO MAKE. (I am not shouting here just emphasizing the injustice of the situation.) Second, I resent anyone, male or female, trying to saddle me with their religion based restrictions. I don't sing in their damned choirs. Third, I hate scientifically illiterate people thinking they should opine on science. I could go on but I won't.

By the way, I don't mind people deciding to live according to their religious beliefs and raising their children in those beliefs, but I draw the line with them imposing their beliefs on others. I don't think one parent in a school district should be able to restrict what every student in the school reads just to protect their precious offsprings delicate sensitivities. Expand that to IVF and abortion.

Joyce Vance has another piece on that idiotic ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court extending the legal protections given children to embryos.

One for the "OUCH" file. I have been watching this for a while. By the way, Milei has been described as Argentina's Trump.

OMG, how the hell did the idiot DeSantis appointed ?urgeon General get a medical degree? To send a letter to parents telling them to go ahead and send unvaccinated children to school as cases of measles are rising. Read all about it

February 22

 Rain today. I won't complain since the rain will help the soil in my containers fully defrost. That seems to be doing well. I noticed that, though we didn't have rain yesterday, I had small streams of water flowing slowly from the buckets.

Aurelien has a good, but long, post on his substack this morning. It reminds me of Daniel Boorstin's book THE IMAGE published in the 1960. It also reminds me of the new ad for (I think) Audi where the selling point seems to be the notion that you can choose, O Joy,  the configuration of lights in your headlights. Lovely image but how does that improve the performance of the car? Some years ago a book I read on the growth of advertising claimed that as a product became nearly universal in society the advertising became more about the aesthetics and less how the product worked.

Listening to the news this morning about the collapse of the newest base the Republicans in the House claim for their attempts to impeach Biden I was reminded of the Upton Sinclair quote: It is difficult to convince a man of something when his salary depends on him not understanding it. Rep. Jordan was asked about the arrest of the (newest) devastating witness and the document he provided to the FBI which was totally generated by Russian misinformation and the man's imagination. Jordan insisted that it did nothing to debunk the "facts." Unfortunately his facts aren't really facts; they are merely his own fevered imaginings. I think a corollary to Sinclair would read: A man will always believe what supports his ego, position, or salary even if false.

I found an interesting post that claimed 10 Israelis had been killed because of Israeli bombing in Gaza. I followed the link but the site is in Hebrew which I don't know. I tried to see if there was any mention in two Israeli media outlets and in Al Jazeera but found nothing recent which amount to 10 Israeli casualties of Israeli operations. Since I can't verify the claim I have put it in my mental "Maybe" file. The blogger claimed that it put a lie to the Netanyahu government's supposed concern for getting the hostages released. Well, I have always thought the two aims antithetical. I never believed that the "eliminate Hamas" aim was compatible with getting hostages out alive. I also wonder how many hostages are still alive. I wonder if the hostage exchange/pause talks have broken down because Hamas doesn't have all that many bargaining chips left.

 Ouch!!! The Edmonton Journal in Alberta, Canada reports the government has declared an early start to the 2024 fire season. They still have 54 fires (new and continued from last season) burning. The problem: low snow pack and very dry weather. Yesterday the Weather Channel reported that a large area of west Texas, Arizona, and southern Colorado was under fire warnings. Same problems.

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

 Good morning on a sunny and fairly warm day. We had an errand and I didn't need my heavy sweater. (I avoid wearing my winter coat--just don't really like it but am too cheap to buy another.)

Stray thought: reading this piece by Bill Astore I remember a bit I read in a book on the history of Rome. It recounted the transition from Republic to Empire and said that Augustus managed it by neatly gathering all the strings of power into his own hands while maintaining the illusion that the institutions of the Republic were still effective. The Senate still met but had less and less power as time went on. There were still Tribunes but they were subservient to Augustus. The various priesthoods answered to Augustus who held the supreme priesthood. And the power of ordinary citizens to affect policy, never really strong, was canceled out.

Interesting article on CNN today on the reestablishment of volunteer, corporate armies. Evidently 16 major companies and several minor ones are "recruiting" volunteers from among their employees who do their regular work while also participating in the security forces. These armies appear to function like our National Guard does. I am not at all sure how voluntary the recruitment is.

I love this post by Crooks&Liars. I am no fan of Margery Taylor Green and absolutely do not see why her constituents keep voting for her.

In case any one really thought Navalny died of some unspecified natural cause, this should raise suspicions. There was a debate during the pandemic about how to count the Covid deaths. Did someone die OF Covid or WITH Covid? If a person with diabetes or heart problems (or whatever) who contracted Covid die of the underlying condition or of Covid? I never could see why the distinction was so important. Did Navalny die of an underlying natural cause or from that cause (or no cause) complicated by harsh treatment (a.k.a., torture). I don't think the distinction mattered to Putin who has rewarded the chief torturer with a promotion.

Ouch!!! The drought in Europe is continuing adding to the problems that are propelling farmers to drive their tractors and trucks to protest at various capitals.

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

February 20

 The temperature yesterday warmed up nicely. Today might follow that pattern. It is sunny and just a bit after sunrise. We had a couple of errands yesterday. Mom had to get her blood work done to prepare for her appointment with her doctor next week. Then all of a sudden my computer wasn't charging. It took a while going through all of the components from the wall plug through to the computer to find what part was to blame. I had to replace the chord--again. I did that a week ago last weekend when that cord failed. At least everything is working again. We got started late and hadn't had breakfast so we decided to go to our favorite restaurant for breakfast which turned into a lunch instead. That restaurant has always been busy but yesterday it was crazy. The poor waitresses needed roller skates.

We don't go out to eat much any more. Since everything reopened after the pandemic most of our old favorites had drastically changed their menus eliminating our favorites and drastically raised prices. Too little enjoyment for the money. The one we went to yesterday has kept the same menu and hasn't raised prices outrageously.

England is experiencing a surge in measles cases that goes along with increasing vaccine skepticism. The Guardian reports that measles isn't the only once controlled disease making a comeback. Cases of Ricketts, scurvy, and scabies have also increased lately.

Monday, February 19, 2024

Sunny and frosty this morning.

Happy Presidents' Day. Interesting poll of historians rated Biden as the 14th most effective president in our history--and Trump as the least effective. And the morning news/commentary show presented a comedy sketch where the host mentioned that Biden and Trump are the oldest candidates for the Presidency--breaking a record they set FOUR YEARS AGO.

I heard another segment that finally mentioned the growth of an international anti-globalist movement that appears to be gaining strength. They mentioned the failure of the Arab Spring movement that has resulted in the entrenchment of even more authoritarian governments. They said that some of the people whose hopes have withered wish the Spring had never happened. The rise of European leaders who also reject the globalist movement and espouse various nationalisms. As they mentioned those I mused that the real birth of anti-globalism was the failure of NAFTA to provide the benefits promised. Less than a minute after I expressed that thought one of the moderators said the same and then commented on the U.K.'s exit from the EU. The process of globalization has enriched a few massively, stunted the economic progress of the many, hollowed out the industrial capacity of advanced countries as the CEOs of various companies in various industries moved operations to countries with lower wages, lax labor laws, and more dictatorial governments. America First marches along with India First (Hindu nationalism), Hungary First (Orban), AfD and other German nationalist groups, the recently defeated similar party in Poland, and Putin's rebuilding a Russian Nationalism based on going back to very traditional practices.

Maha at Mahablog has a good article taking off for the news that a Trump supporter has established a OMG GoFundMe page for poor, poor Donald to pay the judgement he just received. Grifting has been raised to a high art and not just by Trump. As P.T. Barnum is supposed to have said: there's a sucker borne every minute." (Like so many such sayings Barnum may not have said it but that doesn't make it any less true.) Bill Astore makes the same point here.

Sunday, February 18, 2024

February 18

 Sunny day with cloudless sky. We still have some snow from the previous fall. Nothing much planned for the day. I baked a couple of frozen turnovers for breakfast and plan on fried rice for supper. I didn't do any needlework yesterday and won't pick it up today. My hands were hurting so it was time for a couple aspirin and a rest.

Found this by way of Naked Capitalism which isn't really surprising. I don't think anyone was prepared for a drawn out conflict in Ukraine. Everything about the conflict has violated expectations. First, we thought that Ukraine would fall in days; it didn't happen. Then people thought the Russians would come back and use their manpower and superior army to take over in a slightly longer time frame--weeks maybe; didn't happen. The we saw a Russian military that was a total s**tshow which would have to retire back to the Donbas if not exit Ukraine entirely; didn't happen. Over the last few months the lines have solidified as the Russians have found new suppliers and Ukraine finds that their allies are quickly facing difficulties, politically and industrially, producing and providing materiel. Many are returning to the positions they started in: Ukraine is at a serious disadvantage and probably won't win. The European willingness to keep the Ukrainians who fled the early stages of the war was borne out of the early enthusiasm for a plucky underdog who was over performing against the Russian juggernaught. They were not prepared for an open ended commitment. And they see our own disfunction and have to wonder if we will continue to provide the kind of aid Ukraine needs. We are squabbling over a $65billion package while they have already promised $54billion. Add to that the economic problems in Europe and the UK has slipped into recession. 

Saturday, February 17, 2024

February 17

 Cloudy and cold enough that the slight snowfall we got yesterday is still around. It is a Saturday so we have a couple of soccer games on the TV. Great way to evade a lot of the repetitious news. I saw several discussions of the penalty Judge Engoron has handed Trump and his sons. I hope it gives him a severe case of apoplexy. Unfortunately, Trump is already fund raising off it with the usual mewling complaints that he is so persecuted.

I saw this NPR story about a recent case of bubonic plague in Oregon, the first in a decade and unusual because the victim acquired it from his cat. He, his cat, and all their contacts have been treated with antibiotics. One interesting piece in the history the story included was a study published in 2022 which said that the 14th century plague pandemic changed the human genome which had the interesting effects of 1) boosting a victim's chances of surviving infection by 40% and 2) suppressing the immune system making autoimmune diseases like Crohn's disease. Both traits are transmitted genetically. Just for the heck of it I looked up what animal vectors/reservoirs can pass on the plague bacillus and there are way too many to list here. I am not surprised that a domestic cat would be involved since one of the listed species is its wild cousin the bobcat.

I believe, and have for some time, that we are way too dependent on technology. This piece on Naked Capitalism covers a new aspect of AI in medicine that I REALLY don't like: automatic recording of doctors' visits. During my life time doctors have gone from independent entrepreneurs who may have had associations with a hospital to either proprietor of a chain of physicians offices or employees of the same or of hospitals. And I don't think the changes are necessarily good--for the doctors or their patients. The changes detailed in the article (which the author says are in beta form) would move them toward the status of "piece workers." I have read a couple of articles written by doctors complaining about the pressure the accountants put on them to push the patients through often setting time limits for consultations which consider profits only and take no account of the complexity of the cases. All of this is part of what Ives Smith calls crapification of everything. Others call it shitification.

Robert Reich posted two good articles today. The first involves the price hikes which has led to record corporate profits over the last couple of years. As he put is in his title: their profits come out of our pockets. And the claim by Pepsi that they raise prices because they can--because their products are popular. That reminds me of the quote from a meeting of CEOs a couple of years ago that the increase in costs meant they had the freedom to raise prices as much as they wanted--and those increases in prices vastly outstripped the cost of inputs.

The second article from Reich was a good review of the massive fraud judgement against Trump and the argument that because the banks were paid back there was no fraud. That reminds me of the old conundrum of whether a  tree falling in the forest makes a sound if there is no one to hear it. The whole thing depends on the definition of sound. If you mean a sensation people can perceive as sound. If you use a physics based definition then it does make a sound--disturbances traveling through the air which is what can be perceived as sound. Focusing on banks defines the situation too narrowly as Reich demonstrates.

Friday, February 16, 2024

February 16

 No sun today. In fact, it is snowing. I don't think we will get a huge snowfall. The Weather Channel predicts less than an inch accumulation.

News this morning reported the death of Alexi Navalny in a Siberian prison camp. The commentators nattered on and on what we might do to "hold Russia and Putin accountable." The most honest of them said "not much" and came closer to admitting that there are some things beyond our ability.

The other thing they went interminably on about was the hearing in Georgia on whether Fani Willis has a "conflict of interest" that would warrant her being forced off the RICO case against Trump and his co-defendants. To me they seem to be throwing spaghetti against the wall to see what sticks. Nothing so far. Perhaps they should ask  that master of heaving ketchup laden plates against the wall to give it a try. I doubt even Trump could manage to get such ridiculous allegations to stick.

A bit I did catch on the news re-runs was a group of incredulous attorneys on the Trump and Co. side skeptical about her repaying Wade for her part of their shared expenses in cash. What?? No receipts?? Or that she would keep cash on hand at home. I remarked to Mom that they were all obviously so young I doubt they even write checks. They grew up in a world where a lot of people simply whipped out a credit/debit card. Mom and I both come from a time when credit/debit cards were rare. I wonder how they would have handled a situation we faced a couple of weeks ago. We pulled up to the gas pump and found a sign saying they could only accept cash because their electronic system was down. I simply walked to the register, put down cash and asked them to activate the pump. I told the attendant I would come back in for the change. We could understand why Willis would cash on hand and why she would repay Wade in cash.

Thursday, February 15, 2024

 Sunny again and cool. The wind has cooled things down even more. We had some rain overnight. We turned off the mainstream news mid-morning because they were following the Georgia testimony live. Before that it wasn't bad. Stories included the hearing on the hush money case where the judge has set the next hearing to start jury selection for March 25, I think. Special Prosecutor Jack Smith threw Trump's lawyers a fast ball by submitting the response to their Supreme Court filing to which the Court demanded a response by next Tuesday. Smith has asked the court to deny Trump's request to stay the appellate court's denial of his claim of total immunity until some future time when he gets together his request for certiorari. Smith asked that they uphold the lower court's decision ZnZd failing that, if they feel they must weigh in, to do so expeditiously. The reporters speculated that a final judgement will come in Trump's civil fraud case tomorrow. An interesting snippet came out of the coverage of the Kansas City shooting: we have had 49 mass shootings (where four or more people are shot including the shooter) this year. That is more days than we have had already this year.

Watching an interesting discussion on the Weather Channel about the possibility of adding a category 6 to the hurricane rating system. They have made some good reasons to not do that. The reporters noted that the category ratings don't give location and condition information. The high category story might cause less damage depending on those factors. They also are worried that people might downgrade a category 5 by thinking that at least it isn't a 5. People already dismiss the danger of a low level (category 1 or 2) even though if those storm can cause extensive damage. It is an interesting question especially since they also question even having a category system at all. It might be a good idea to start looking at warnings that consider factors beyond wind speed.

MSNBC still has that damned Georgia hearing on Willis all the damned day. Excuse me while I yell---I DON'T GIVE A GOOD GOD DAMN!!!!! It isn't worth all of the time they have wasted. Their reporters could have supplied a perfectly good thumbnail summary.

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

February 14

 Another sunny and chilly day. Nothing much going on here. Welcome to half past February and Happy Valentine's Day.

Well, the do-nothing congress continues its pattern. They managed to pass articles of impeachment against Alejandro Mayorkas on BS "charges." I put that in quotes because the word "charges" implies that it fits the "high crimes and misdemeanors" specified in the Constitution. Somehow the definition has shifted to mean "you do what we want or we impeach you." So the Republican tail (one half of one branch of government) tries to wag the dog (the other half of the House and the White House and Senate) of our Federal Government. Oh, and they are trying to minimize the loss of that NY seat George Santos (or what ever his name really is) once so embarrassingly occupied. The Democrat candidate beat their candidate on the immigration issue, the economy, and abortion with the first two dominating the electorate's concerns.

Bill Astore posted a good piece on Israel-Hamas conflict: you can have war without genocide, genocide without war, and both together. In the current conflict we have the third--war with genocide. We have an intractable problem that may actually, at this moment, be a predicament. A problem has a solution however unpalatable; a predicament doesn't. According to the news just now the talks in Cairo have broken down....again.

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

February 12, 13

 Sunny morning but cold enough to lay down a hard frost. We had to scrape  the car windows when we went out today for a short shopping trip to the dairy and the drug store. I took the weekend off. We didn't watch much news because it is so repetitive it becomes annoying noise. Instead we watched Premier League soccer on Saturday and then switched to our own reruns, and the Six Nation rugby with ski jumping in between. So much more pleasant.

Charles Hugh Smith has an interesting comparison of the U.S. today and the Roman Empire in the decades before the Western Empire fell. I wondered where he was going when he was going when he brought up the "phantom legions." But he makes a good case. It is all about costs and effectiveness. Legion that were under strength, whose soldiers were not feed or equipped properly or trained well led by officers who were inexperienced or unmotivated can't perform effectively. And the empire was paying full freight for assets that just weren't there because the taxes were siphoned off by corrupt officials. Though one can quibble about whether the bureaucrats in health care (which Smith calls "sick care") are necessarily corrupt but the system is built to continue paying them (and increasing their salaries) whether the system (whether medicine, or education, or police forces) function properly or not. The bureaucrats have strong incentives to push for more money and hide any inadequacy. Interesting thought--I have read several stories about military units that are seriously undermanned. Where ever we are spending the more than $800billion we are taxed to provide it isn't going into the manpower.

13*********************************************************************

Cool and sunny today. I spent a couple of minutes looking at several of the plants but nothing is showing any signs of coming back. That might be a good thing. I remarked yesterday that I was glad none of the trees had started budding out because the overnight temps are back at or below freezing. I haven't made any of my seed orders yet but I will have to do so soon.

Aurelien posted this long article a couple of days ago. I have kept it in my inbox and gone back to it a couple of times. It echoes some of the ideas I have been reading in other places lately. As we stumble our way through this chaotic world I have wondered, worried in some cases, where we will end up. I am old enough that the actuarial realities mean I probably won't live long enough to see what that the near term will be. The long term is well beyond my likely termination date. I haven't found the fountain of youth or an immortality potion.

Stray thought #1: the divisions in, especially but not solely, the Republican Party over aid to Israel and Ukraine are remarkable. Once upon a time they would have been falling over themselves to get as much as possible for those "friends" but now, because Trump ordered them to kill the measures, they refuse to continue the funding. I have my own questions about how much aid and for whom and for what reasons. But I would have preferred to have a reasoned debate which we aren't getting.

Stray thought #2: I put the word friends in quotes because nations don't really have friends: they have allies who have their own goals which may or may not all run parallel with ours. For a good discussion of the results of this mistaken notion read Andrew Bacevich's After the Apocalypse. We really do need a more clear eyed assessment of our foreign policy.

Stray thought #3: so much of our foreign policy is a hold over from the Cold War. It has been over for thirty years but it still taints our actions and thoughts. Many of the countries of the Middle East (especially, but not solely) used the Cold War competition between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. to extract resources in return for "friendship." We are still buying friendship.

The Armchair Warlord on X  has an interesting post that should give us pause. Several stories over the last couple of years come to mind. Several NATO countries have had difficulties providing the military materiel they wanted to provide Ukraine. We have persuaded some of them by promising to "backstop" the weapons and ammunition they provided from our own stocks. Now we have to restock our own reserves. However, our legislature isn't considering any funding to do that. Warlord makes a good point that Rather than translating into a mountain of steel on the battlefield, Western riches have only made each shell cost a mountain of cash.

Stray thought #4: for about 20 years now, we have periodically read the stories about our industrial infrastructure and capabilities, and wondered how we might fare in a large war given how much of our industry has been moved off shore. Most of our military equipment is made largely if not entirely overseas. Think about how the Thai floods along the Mekong River messed up the U.S. automakers who couldn't get the parts to continue production. Think about how the pandemic messed up even more supply lines. Think about the shortages we have experienced in drugs and medical supplies.

Friday, February 9, 2024

February 9

Sunny today and fairly warm. I have swept up the mess the birds left under the feeder which I refilled. The avian chorus was in loud voice this morning. The trees must have quite a large number of birds staking out their territories.

The 1440 Digest provided a thumbnail of what the oral arguments at the Supreme Court yesterday. They are characterizing the case as determining whether Trump fits the definition of a seditionist but that isn't what the justices are looking at. The experts opining on the arguments had a list of seven questions the Court was asking and that Trump only needs one to go his way to win while Colorado needs all seven. I forget all of them but I think the two major questions are 1) if Section 3 of the 14th Amendment is self actualizing and 2) who decides if a candidate is disqualified. I doubt the court will agree on one or leave the decision to the states.

Thanks to the Special Prosecutor's report on his investigation into Biden's retention of classified documents the discussion is entirely focused on the part that says that, at a trial, Biden would appear to the jury as "a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory." Of course, the divide is entirely by party with Republicans minimizing the faulty memory of their 77 year old almost-candidate while howling about Biden's gaffs. The Democrats are railing about the gratuitous comments about Biden's spotty memory by a lawyer who is not really qualified to give an opinion though they would like to ignore similar mental failures on Trump's part. Our problem is that neither party can find anyone who voters want instead of two septuagenarians. None of the millennial candidates have generated much interest. Halley lost to "None of the above candidates" during the nonsensical and meaningless Nevada primary.

Stray thought: at least two of the bloggers I follow have expressed the notion that it doesn't matter who is the president because who ever occupies the office is a figurehead. One claims that is why we can get along with a "dementia" patient in the office. I disagree with both. I have asked who would be the "power behind the throne" if Trump gets back in and what policies the administration would follow. I would rather have a "sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with memory problems" than an (un)stable genius who is petty, vindictive, and cruel.

Stray thought on Justice Kagan's question of why we should let one state decide the election for the entire nation: ruling that states can keep candidates off the ballot--including for cause, i.e., insurrection--would not necessarily result in one state dictating the result of a national election. We already had five states basically decide the last election and a total of about 40k votes over those five did the trick. 

Thursday, February 8, 2024

February 8

 Sunny this morning and the prediction put the probably temp at low 50s. I have a couple of chores to start off the clean-up season on the patio. I might get to some today but at the moment we are waiting for our breakfast to come out of the oven and the coverage of the Supreme Court hearing on the Colorado decision that Trump is ineligible to run for office. I am wondering where the arguments are going to go. I have no idea what the court's decision will finally be.

One of the commentators this morning posited the possibility that the Supremes would punt back to the states. Basically, the Court can affirm the Colorado decision and reaffirm that elections are run, per the Constitution, by the states. The commentators were united in the conclusion that we would suddenly be in a chaotic world, as we aren't already. I noticed the arguments only went back to the 1865, or thereabouts, when the 14th Amendment was passed and entered the Constitution. However the election of 1861, and earlier elections, might be more instructive. In 1861, there were four parties in serious contention: Republican (Lincoln), Northern Democrat (Douglas), Southern Democrat (Breckenridge), Constitutional Unionist (Bell). The results divided along the fractures involving secession and slavery. Lincoln won the northern states. Bell won the southern states. Douglas won border three states along the Mason-Dixon Line. Bell won Missouri. We have dealt with this kind of chaos before.

Listening to the arguments:

Stray thought #1: if the Court hopes to thread a needle that would shore up their reputation, their hope will be defeated. No matter how they rule a significant number of Americans will vehemently disagree.

Stray thought #2: I have long thought that the U.S. is facing a fork in our road: will we take one fork and become a less of a confederation of equal sovereign states or will we move back toward a collection of sovereign states who handle most of our political, economic, social life at that level. Not long ago the Court shredded women's rights by sending the issue back to the states--in other words appealed to states' rights. But in this issue they seem to be favoring serious restrictions on states' rights.

Stray thought #3: for textualists many of the justices seem to be unable to read the text as written. We would consider that the words "insurrection" and "officer" meant exactly what the dictionary says. But they were constantly splitting hairs.

Stray thought #4: the old saying "what's old is new again" comes to mind. Some years ago my brother and I were discussing the fact that the Electoral College had elected a President who got the minority of popular votes. He asked why the vote of a resident in Wyoming should count for less than that of a California resident. I responded by asking why the several million voters in California should be cancelled out by the less than 200 thousand voters in Wyoming. But that was a restatement of the arguments at the Constitutional Convention which finally led to a bicameral legislature which gave equal representation to states regardless of population in the Senate and a proportional representation by population in the House of Representatives and an Electoral College. Even then the southern states insisted that 3/5 of their slaves, who had no vote, be counted in the populations on which representation in the House was based. Justice Kagan basically resurrected that argument with her question of why one state should be able to determine the result of an election for the whole country.

People, especially political commentators, have asked for some time why Biden isn't getting credit for an economy that, on the numbers, appears to be improving. Robert Reich has a good answer: the housing market. Many ordinary people find themselves priced out of the market. I saw a snippet of a program I didn't watch all of following a young couple trying to get into their first home and who had, again, lost out when their offer was outbid. It sounded like that had happened several times before. In a time when jobs appear to be plentiful and wages seem to be going up and both partners have jobs, people who can't buy a house for a price they can afford just might make them a bit cranky.


Wednesday, February 7, 2024

February 7

 Sort of sunny at the moment. I put another four rows into a lap blanket this morning. It is getting big enough that I will need to find a different place to put it between working. I also want to take the winter wreath apart because some of the flowers are badly faded. Sunshine does that. Looking at some of what I have left I think a trip to Michaels for some new items will come in the near future.

Anthropocene Magazine published a summary of a study of the carbon footprint of urban farming/gardening vs conventional field farming. The study is the first such study and it involved gardens and farms in several countries. I don't know enough of their methodology to criticize that. I would like to see more such studies. How we do things definitely affects how much pollutants and carbon is pumped into the environment. Such studies might give us ideas how we can make changes. However, I have long thought that the most significant changes will occur because individuals make changes in their own lives and influence changes at the local level.

Stray thought: I wonder if the verdict in case of the Crumbley mother will be a template for further prosecution of parents for involuntary manslaughter if their negligence enables their child in the commission of a mass shooting. The father's case goes to trial in the next couple of weeks.

Crooks & Liars reported that a couple of scientists propose a new category for hurricanes. The current system has a top rating of Category 5 but there is no upper limit. The new category would come in if the wind speed equalled or exceeded 192 mph. They looked back at hurricanes since around 1980 and found 5 would have qualified as Category 6 storms--ALL HAPPENED WITHIN THE LAST DECADE. It has only been a few years since the Australian meteorologists added a new color (bright purple) for exceedingly high temperatures over 50C (122F).

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

February 6

Another gray morning that may turn sunny later. The weather report says that we have patches of fog right now but that should dissipate and the temp should go to the low 40s. Thursday and Friday should be warmer so I am planning some clean up on the patio. For today, I will construct a couple of new wreaths or get them mostly constructed. I have the winter wreath on the door but it just doesn't feel like winter

The "border security" bill that the Senate has been negotiating within the chamber for the last three months and which some of the Senators ballyhooed appears to be dying unborn. The House Republicans, including the Speaker himself, promised it wouldn't even get a vote. Their orange god claims, without reading it, it is bad bill. In truth, and a couple of Republicans have said out loud that they weren't going to vote for anything because they don't want Biden to get any credit for anything. So over the couple of years, we have had Republicans rail against omnibus bills opining that single bills should be presented. Biden presents them with a bill to fund our commitments to Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan--and then they insist they won't consider it without "border security" provisions. The Democrats give them the strongest immigration/border security bill in decades negotiated by one of the most conservative senators in the Senate and a conservative former Democrat now an Independent--essentially everything they demanded. But then they hear from the Orange Jesus and MAGA Mike and suddenly it isn't good enough. Meanwhile, the Speaker offers a funding bill for Israel alone.

EuroNews posted this earlier: the appeals court issued its ruling about Trump's claim of immunity from prosecution. He is not immune. CNN provides another account. The decision demolishes Trump's claim that his actions were legitimately a part of his duties as president. And it also demolishes his reliance on the failure of the Senate to convict him in his impeachment trial. The appeals court also noted that the Fourteenth Amendment case soon to be argued in the Supreme Court is entirely separate from this decision. The first is a civil case while the insurrection case is criminal. 

Monday, February 5, 2024

February 5

 Overcast at the moment. Cool but not outright cold. I saw a couple of warmer days predicted to go into the 50s over the next ten days which might be good days to start my garden clean up. We are still two months away from the time the garden centers start ramping up. I still haven't firmed up plans for the garden. And, just a stray thought, perhaps I won't and just fly by the seat of my pants. I do know there are several plants I will put in because I liked them so well over the years: dipladenia and hibiscus. I haven't planted sunflowers for a couple of years so I think it is time to plant them again. What I put in depends also on what returns. Last year the asiatic lily, valerian, indigo all came back. The indigo self seeded. I should dig up the lily and valerian and reset the bulbs/roots. I intended to do it last fall but ran out of energy before I got to it.

CNN published this article that is an interesting treatment of the issues of misinformation and the "wellness movement". I have had my own issues with so-called wellness programs. A while back Mom had an issue with shingles. She thought it might be a good time to get a general practitioner or family medicine doctor and consulted one her endocrinologist recommended. Well, she (it was a female doctor) disposed of the issue of shingles quickly because there is essentially no cure and just treatments to ease the itching. But then the doc started looking for something to treat. Mom agreed to several tests that seemed reasonable but finally decided not to continue after she prescribed an inhaler for a light case of (maybe) emphysema which cost way more than Mom felt comfortable paying for ($400/month). Mom told the doctor that and was told to find out what medication Mom's insurance would pay for and she would prescribe that. At the time Mom had only Medicare and it would have been easier for the Doctor's staff to find out that information. Mom refused to see her again. The point of that long winded story is that "wellness" seems to be a synonym for "let me find something, anything I can treat." We are both at an age where nothing will really kill us before our time.

I have also become increasingly uncomfortable with the medical "industry" on the issue of information vs. misinformation vs. preliminary "information". By "preliminary information" I mean early results of experimental trials which may or may not prove beneficial and may actually be harmful when applied in a clinical setting. I don't know how many people remember the harm thalidomide caused back 50 years ago. It had been shown to alleviate severe morning sickness in trials and was prescribed in Europe for that. The FDA was poised to approve it here when reports of serious birth defects in the children of women given the drug surfaced.  That is one reason that new drugs have to be tested and shown safe in pregnant women now. It is also why I am pretty skeptical of publicity of early trials.

The CNN article hits at the problem of information vs. misinformation by covering the so-called internet "influencers." It basically boils down to who do you trust. It isn't easy to distinguish between valid information, misinformation, malicious disinformation and pure propaganda. Too much, if not all, of the pharmaceutical advertising is propaganda and often so technical that few ordinary people have the expertise or experience to judge. I have a Master's in Zoology and I have no idea of what some of that crap means. After decades of watching the U.S. get sucked into situations because our government either lied or seriously misrepresented the information given to voters, I take government sourced info with a large grain of salt. Financial information is not any better. I won't even get into the "influencers."

Sunday, February 4, 2024

February 3, 4

 Good morning. We woke up to a bit, very little bit, of snow. Not too surprising since the temp is now 27F. But the high today is supposed to reach into the 40s.

04******************************************************************

Our tv is set to the Six Nations Rugby tournament. It is far more interesting than the news this morning. The only thing we didn't see on the local (Chicago) news was another shooting. It is amazing how uninteresting most of it was. Only the weather is really relevant to us. The national news is chewing over the either the Mideast or the Trump legal mess while adding no new information. Much of it was pure speculation about what might happen.

Last Week In Collapse has some tidbits that should worry us. It is a bit long so I will let you peruse it yourself.

Naked Capitalism posted this article about the political situation in Germany. However, much of what is happening there sounds way to familiar. We don't have farmers driving their tractors and farm trucks into Berlin but we do have so-called "Gods Army" driving some 100 vehicles to southern Texas to support Abbot's "nullification" stance.

Boondoggle hooked me with its title: Lies, Damned Lies and Economic Impact Studies. It recalls the old saying: lies, damned lies, and statistics. That had been modified by some financial/political bloggers I follow to read: lies, damned lies, statistics, and government statistics. The authors note that the economic impact studies are paid for (and serve the interests of) the companies pushing certain projects with the accompanying humongous financial benefits they hope to get (exemptions from various laws and regulations, and tax relief). That is the same reason government stats are so highly massaged--to hide what government agencies want hidden (true inflation, real unemployment rates, etc.). I will take a bit of a quibble about the subtitle: How Taxpayers Spend Billions of Dollars Based On Corporate Propaganda. I would amend it to: How governments spend billions of taxpayers' dollars based on corporate propaganda. Taxpayers aren't spending the money governments are. And the relationship between taxpayers and governments is becoming more and more tenuous.


Friday, February 2, 2024

February 2

 Well, a certain rodent, rudely roused from hibernation, has predicted an early spring. It looks like we will have sun for at least part of the day. Mild temps also. The Weather Channel doesn't see much precipitation and a lot more sun with temps in the high 30s and 40s. The west has a mix of snow and rain but where that system will be going after it gets done with the Colorado, Wyoming and other states in that area.

William Hoagland has a good post on a particular amicus brief filed on the case that asks the Supreme Court to roll back the Exon decision which supported the role of Federal agencies in promulgating regulations. As a person who spent way too many years studying and teaching history, I love the humility of the historians behind the brief which advises the justices use history cautiously. As the quote Hoagland used says, the history can be informative but shouldn't be "dispositive." As the old saying attributed to Mark Twain holds " history doesn't repeat, but it does rhyme." The conditions of the present may bear some resemblance to the period just around the end of the Civil War, but they are not the same.

I wondered the other day what happened with that humongous convoy of trucks that were supposed to be heading to the Texas-Mexico border. Well, Crooks & Liars has answered my question. The organizers have fallen waaaay short of their promises. Evidently Yahoo News got a lot of their information from Telegram which Crooks&Liars notes is rife with Russian trolls. Something else I have wondered about is how much of the pseudo-news floating around is generated by such sources.

I just took a look at the latest Drought Monitor (for Jan 1) and noticed that the areas of serious and extreme drought have shrunk. The wet weather has had some beneficial effect. But we aren't the only ones with such problems. I found this on EuroNews concerning the situation in Spain. Authorities in Catalonia are mandating strict water restrictions including in the city of Barcelona.

Thursday, February 1, 2024

February 1

 Welcome to February. Tomorrow is Groundhog Day. During the back-and-forth on the Weather Channel on whether people hoped Phil sees his shadow or not one person had the situation right on. She remarked that it didn't matter because the seasons are changing so much. Whether we have six more weeks of winter or not it simply isn't the kind of winter we were used to. It is sunny right now with temps just below 40.

Bill Astore has a good criticism of the political campaign that appears to be shaping up. As he notes it is devoid of most of the issues that really concern ordinary people. The only truly domestic issue he mentions in the Biden-Trump matchup is abortion. Astore is one who is fed up with the choices between bad and worse, and I consider Trump to be worse. I can agree that we need a better foreign policy that doesn't overwhelmingly depend on military aid to whom ever and our own military actions. But I also don't see any real alternatives to the two major choices. Other commentators have noted that we desperately need two functioning and responsible political parties and at the moment we have one (sort of), and it is not the Republicans. I said "sort of" because both parties are beholden to different segments of the ultra wealthy and the financial industry.

I had to do some Googling because I simply couldn't believe ANYONE could be so stupid as to propose a resurrection of dueling. Evidently, some Republicans in the Missouri senate are so upset by the level of vitriol and want to restore a sense of decorum and honor that they floated the notion. As this Guardian article notes the proposal is still just in the initial stages and isn't anywhere near implementation. Perhaps I shouldn't be surprised since Missouri is one of the several Republican controlled states that are trying to erase the last 124 years by eliminating much child labor law and modifying the age at which children can leave school to enter the labor market.