Everyday Erinyes #310

 Posted by at 11:10 am  Politics
Mar 202022
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

Today, however, the furies and I are taking a day off, in a way.  We are just going to share with youa document which is making the rounds of Twitter and to some extent elsewhere.  It is – correction, it was – a leter from Putin to the UN>  It is now a “There.  Fixed it for ya” from the Canadian mission to the UN  I don;t think any further comment is required (though I will add “Oh!  Canada!  Excellent!”)

The Furies and I will be back)

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Mar 202022
 

Yesterday, the opera was “Rodelinda” (by Handel) which dates from before 1750.  It is an opera seria, a form which was still used in Mozart’s time (and he wrote a few, including one when he was 14), but he largely moved away from the form.  Opera was characterized by featuring noble characters being noble (and others, of course, in opposition to them) and really didn’t have any dialog, but was a series of arias through which the story was told.  There was no chorus, but all the soloists were singers I am familiar with and like., including Sasha Cooke, whom I hadn’t heard since she played Kitty Oppenheimer in “Dr. Atomic.”  That was in 2008, and she doesn’t appear to have aged a day.

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Short Takes –

Democracy: a Journal of Ideas – “Middle-Out” Biden’s New Deal?
Quote – When Biden speaks of middle-out versus trickle-down he is doing more than drawing a political contrast. He is making a highly consequential argument about economic cause and effect, how prosperity is created, and the role of government. And we’ll give you a hint about what he means: The answer is not tax cuts for the rich.
Click through for analysis by a couple of dudes who have been working on these principles for years.

Law and Crime – Project Veritas Loses Defamation Lawsuit Against CNN for Depicting Twitter Ban as Part of ‘Misinformation’ Crackdown
Quote – “Furthermore, while there is some difference between violating a policy by providing incorrect or misleading information and violating a policy by truthfully providing someone’s private information (and potentially exposing a person to harm), the distinction is not enough to make the statement at issue actionable as both violations are similarly damaging to the journalist’s reputation,” the ruling continues. “Project Veritas’s allegations and arguments do not plausibly suggest that the truth (as pled in the Complaint) would have a different effect on the mind of the average reader in terms of the reputational harm.”
Click through for more, including full ruling if you are so inclined. My translation would be “Just because the reporter made a mistake on which loe-life thing you did this time doesn’t make it defamation.” So nice to see “Project Varitas” lose.

Women’s History – Wikipedia – Ada Lovelace
Quote – [Ada Lovelace] was an English mathematician and writer, chiefly known for her work on Charles Babbage’s proposed mechanical general-purpose computer, the Analytical Engine. She was the first to recognise that the machine had applications beyond pure calculation, and to have published the first algorithm intended to be carried out by such a machine. As a result, she is often regarded as the first computer programmer.
Click through. A spiritual ancestor of Grace Hopper – and an interesting human being in her own right.

Food For Thought:

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Mar 192022
 

Glenn Kirschner – Steve Bannon is Back in Court: Here’s why his case in very unlikely to go to trial in July

Meidas Touch – Ukrainian diplomat exposes “Bunker Dwarf” Putin’s anal swab paranoia

Lincoln Project – Leader of Peace

Tweet – Arnold Schwarzenegger has a heartfelt message for Russians

Idaho News 6 – Squirrel attacks burglar

Shirley Serban – This Little Light of Mine (gas prices)

Beau – Let’s talk about new subscribers and my philosophy….

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Mar 192022
 

Lots of people, particularly on the Right, complain about the government sticking its nose into their business. I understand. Nobody likes being bossed around, especially by somebody or some institution against whom you can’t fight back. We all value our privacy, even if our lives are clean as a hound’s tooth.

We have government regulations for a reason. Hell – for LOTS of reasons. Because individuals and businesses alike cannot always be trusted to do what is moral and ethical. Because we need to protect our health, our environment, our lives, our children, our homes, our livelihoods.

In the 1800s, US dairy producers adulterated milk with not just water but also chalk, cow brains, even embalming fluid. Numerous children died from drinking this nasty mixture. In England, bakers stretched their bread dough with chalk, alum lime and powdered bones, which also made it whiter. Poor people bought cheap bread, and the alum interfered with digestion, thus lowering the nutritional value of other food. On The Victorian Web, Professor Anthony S. Wohl writes:

The list of poisonous additives reads like the stock list of some mad and malevolent chemist: strychnine, cocculus inculus (both are hallucinogens) and copperas in rum and beer; sulphate of copper in pickles, bottled fruit, wine, and preserves; lead chromate in mustard and snuff; sulphate of iron in tea and beer; ferric ferrocynanide, lime sulphate, and turmeric in chinese tea; copper carbonate, lead sulphate, bisulphate of mercury, and Venetian lead in sugar confectionery and chocolate; lead in wine and cider; all were extensively used and were accumulative in effect, resulting, over a long period, in chronic gastritis, and, indeed, often fatal food poisoning. Red lead gave Gloucester cheese its ‘healthy’ red hue, flour and arrowroot a rich thickness to cream, and tea leaves were ‘dried, dyed, and recycled again.’

As late as 1877 the Local Government Board found that approximately a quarter of the milk it examined contained excessive water, or chalk, and ten per cent of all the butter, over eight per cent of the bread, and 50 per cent of the gin had copper in them to heighten the color.

Can you imagine what sort of witch’s brews would be in our drink, food and medicine if we didn’t have regulations on what could be put in anything we ingest? If unhealthful crap is cheaper than real sustenance, and especially if it enhances flavor and/or color, in it goes.

Before the Clean Air Act, pollution was choking much of the United States. Ever seen before and after pictures of certain U.S. cities? China doesn’t have the kind of environmental regulation we have, and pollution is wrecking the country. Thousands of its rivers have disappeared, and most of the rest are severely contaminated. According to some estimates, up to 90% of China’s groundwater and half of its river water is unfit to drink; in fact, the water from 25% of Chinese rivers and more than half of that country’s groundwater is unsuitable even for agricultural or industrial uses. The USA would almost certainly be in a similar fix if not for the EPA and numerous environmental laws. Ever hear of a place called Flint, Michigan?

Upton Sinclair’s novel The Jungle exposed the exploitation of immigrant workers in industrial cities. Though the story was fictional, Sinclair based it on inconvenient truths. Sinclair’s muckraking revealed the shockingly unsanitary conditions in the meat packing industry. Inexpensive sausages could contain spoiled meat, rat droppings, poisoned bread, mold, borax, even ground-up rats.

Still wonder why we have regulations that control what goes into our food and medicines? Still wonder why we have any regulations at all?

Government regulations are what give us such blessings as a 40-hour work week, overtime pay, safety regulations that reduce the chances of workplace injuries, cleaner air and water, safer roads and bridges – you get the picture. People have a bad tendency to put their interests ahead of everything else, even if in the long run doing so will be to their detriment. Sadly, we can be remarkably short-sighted, putting momentary personal gain ahead of long-term well-being or even survival.

Yes, government can be a pain in the butt. Yes, some regulations go overboard or are entirely unnecessary. However, consider the alternative. If you like your air clean, the water coming from your tap potable, your sausage and bread free of dead rats and floor sweepings, your medicines unadulterated, and your place of work reasonably safe, please keep your grumbling to a minimum. It’s OK to raise a fuss when you have a legitimate beef, but don’t tar all regulations and statutes with the same brush.

Government is not best when it governs least. Government is best when it governs where it should govern, and does not govern where it should not govern.

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 Comments Off on SOUND OFF! 3/19/22 – Governmental Grumbles
Mar 192022
 

Yesterday, I had not slept terribly well, and kept nodding off. I did accomplish a little knitting, but not much, and not much else either.

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Short Takes –

Rolling Stone – Manchin’s Coal Corruption Is So Much Worse Than You Knew
Quote – At this point in human evolution, burning coal for power is one of the stupidest things humans do. Coal plants are engines of destruction, not progress. Thanks to the rapid evolution of clean energy, there are many better, cheaper, cleaner ways to power our lives. The only reason anyone still burns coal today is because of the enormous political power and inertia that the industry has acquired since the 19th century. In America, that power and inertia is embodied in the cruel and cartoonish character of West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who, paradoxically, may have more control over the trajectory of the climate crisis than any other person on the planet right now
Click through for details – lots of details and links to more. But right now we really don’t have a choice. This is why it is SO important to gain a REAL majority in the Senate as soon as possible.

The New Yorker (Jill Lepore) – Why the School Wars Still Rage
Quote – A century later, the battle over public education that afflicted the nineteen-twenties has started up again, this time over the teaching of American history. Since 2020, with the murder of George Floyd and the advance of the Black Lives Matter movement, seventeen states have made efforts to expand the teaching of one sort of history, sometimes called anti-racist history, while thirty-six states have made efforts to restrict that very same kind of instruction…. While all this has been happening, I’ve been working on a U.S.-history textbook, so it’s been weird to watch lawmakers try their hands at writing American history, and horrible to see what the ferment is doing to public-school teachers.
Click through for story. Besides the “new” stuff, evolution is still a bone of contention. Teachers in the line of fire are very visible – but my biggest worry is what will happen to America whenit becomes a nation whose citizens know noththing of real history.

Women’s History – Wikipedia – Christine de Pizan
Quote – Venetian by birth, Christine served as a court writer in medieval France after the death of her husband. Christine’s patrons included dukes Louis I of Orleans, Philip the Bold of Burgundy, and his son John the Fearless. Considered to be some of the earliest feminist writings, her work includes novels, poetry, and biography, and she also penned literary, historical, philosophical, political, and religious reviews and analysis. Her best known works include The Book of the City of Ladies and The Treasure of the City of Ladies, both written when she worked for John the Fearless of Burgundy.
Click through for bio. Not only did she write and get published in her own name … but she made a living doing it. That was a first for a woman, as far as we know.

Food For Thought:

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Mar 182022
 

Glenn Kirschner – Putin’s Acts Against Ukraine & Trump’s Acts Against the US: Political Acts or Acts of Evil? (“Why not both?” – JD)

Robert Reich – The Real Reason Congress Gets Nothing Done

Rebel HQ – Veteran RIPS Lauren Boebert For Disrespecting Military (As I’ve said elsewhere, I expect she got a letter from the [Fascist] mother of a Marine Lance Corloral [E3] which is abbreviated LCpl. Granted to be what she said it should have been “LtCpl,” but no other service uses the word “Lance” in a rank, so she just assumed. I wonder what she would have done with GySgt.)

Zelensky visits hospitalized girl who shielded her younger brother from Russian gunfire

The Lincoln Project – Putin’s Puppet

Puppet Regime – CoViD-19

Beau – Let’s talk about the country in the mirror….

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Mar 182022
 

Yesterday, I watched the Theater of War “The Nurse Antigone,” in which Margaret Atwood played Tiresias. Tiresias was blind, and she chose to present blindness with a hoodie covering a lot of her face, including her eyes – but oh, what a voice! All the actors were powerful certainly. And the discussion at the end raised issues which I didn’t realize that I didn’t realize, and not just pertinent to nurses. It was taped, which I hope means it will be available to re-watch – I will be looking for it. But a moral here is, don’t dismiss presentations for military because you’re not military (or have never been in compat), don’t dismiss presentations for medical professionals because you’re not one, and so on .. you could learn something, or hear something that really speaks to you, from any group in this web of projects.

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Short Takes –

The New Yorker – How Putin’s Oligarchs Bought London
Quote – Invoking Dean Acheson’s famous observation, in 1962, that Britain had “lost an empire but not yet found a role,” [Oliver] Bullough[, a former Russia correspondent,] suggests that it did find a role, as a no-questions-asked service provider to the crooked élite, offering access to capital markets, prime real estate, shopping at Harrods, and illustrious private schools, along with accountants for tax tricks, attorneys for legal squabbles, and “reputation managers” for inconvenient backstories. It starts with visas; any foreigner with adequate funds can buy one, by investing two million pounds in the U.K. (Ten million can buy you permanent residency.)
Click through.  It certainly gives me no pleasure to share this information. However … it is what it is.

The Daily Beast – ‘Many’ Spy Agency Staffers Think Capitol Riot Was ‘Justified,’ Ex-NSA Veteran Says
Quote – An internal U.S. intelligence messaging system became a “dumpster fire” of hate speech during the Trump administration…. Dan Gilmore, who was in charge of overseeing internal chat rooms for the Intelink system for over a decade starting in 2011, says that by late 2020 the system was afire with incendiary hate-filled commentary, especially on “eChirp,” the intelligence community’s clone of Twitter…. “Hate speech was running rampant on our applications… I’m not being hyperbolic. Racist, homophobic, transphobic, Islamaphobic [sic], and misogynistic speech was being posted in many of our applications.”
Click through for detail.  I’m not naive enough to think the it would ever be possible to eliminate all of them (and I realize I am inviting the question “How many traitors would be about right?”), but before I would believe that so many of our intel agents knowingly and delberately lied under oath about their intentions, I would believe that so many of them simply do not know what the Constitution is and says. And that would be a failure of education.

Women’s History – Wikipedia – Enheduanna (23rd century BCE)
Enheduanna … was the EN priestess of the moon god Nanna (Sīn) in the Sumerian city-state of Ur in the reign of her father, Sargon of Akkad. She was likely appointed by her father as the leader of the religious cult at Ur to cement ties between the Akkadian religion of her father and the native Sumerian religion. Enheduanna has been celebrated as the earliest known named author in world history, as a number of works in Sumerian literature, such as the Exaltation of Inanna feature her as the first person narrator, and other works, such as the Sumerian Temple Hymns may identify her as their author.
Click through for more. Sure, we can’t prove she did write everything attributed to her – but they also can’t prove she didn’t. But ar least she got recognition for the work. We do know for sure that she did not have to write under a male pen name to be piblished, like Amantine Dupin and Mary Ann Evans, to name just two. That is an accomplishment in itself.

Food For Thought:

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