Monday, January 31, 2022

Standing up to despots …

… Canadian Trucker Protests Continue, Aussies Launch 'Convoy to Canberra'.

Australians, who have been protesting some of the strictest lockdown protocols in the English-speaking world, are likewise plotting to demonstrate. Trucks and cars have already started converging on Canberra to call for an end to pandemic-related restrictions, with GoFundMe again freezing $160,000 until organizers can outline exactly how it’ll be spent. Australian media has also described protestors even less favorably than Canadian outlets handled the Freedom Convoy, discouraging businesses from working with demonstrators.

Notice how trustworthy the media has been. 

A fresh look at Tinseltown …

“The genius of place”: Boris Dralyuk’s debut poetry collection “My Hollywood”. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

My Hollywood features appearances by such cultural heavyweights as Thomas Mann, Laura and Aldous Huxley, and Arnold Schoenberg,” says L.A. poet Timothy Steele. “But Dralyuk also treats us to tours of now vanished landmarks of L.A. like the Garden of Allah hotel and the Bargain Circus discount barn; and he chronicles the careers of some of the many entertaining misfits, including a ne’er-do-well uncle of Isaac Babel, who have passed through Southern California on their earthly pilgrimage. Dralyuk is as well a lively technician—a clever rhymer who is particularly deft at sonnets. Anyone interested in fine verse and Los Angeles will relish this book.”

Something to think on

Nothing has ever been said about God that hasn't already been said better by the wind in the pine trees.
— Thomas Merton, born on this date in 1915

Sunday, January 30, 2022

Just so people know …

… On the "Pro-Choice" Position on Abortion | USCCB.

No Catholic can responsibly take a "pro-choice" stand when the "choice" in question involves the taking of innocent human life.

Resolution on Abortion (1989)

It all adds up …

The Beautiful World of Number Theory — The Queen of Mathematics.

An introduction to the effectiveness and elegance of Dirichlet convolutions and the relation to the Riemann zeta function.

Something to think on …

Policy is formed by preconceptions, by long implanted biases. When information is relayed to policy-makers, they respond in terms of what is already inside their heads and consequently make policy less to fit the facts than to fit the notions and intentions formed out of the mental baggage that has accumulated in their minds since childhood.
— Barbara Tuchman, born on this date in 1912

Why am I not surprised ?

Lockdowns Did Not Save Lives, Concludes Meta-analysis.

The authors are pretty severe in their final conclusions. Lockdowns didn’t meaningfully reduce Covid-19 mortalities: “the effect is little to none.”

Worrisome indeed …

… The New Lysenkoism | City Journal.

It’s high time for academics to take a stand on the matter instead of cowering under their desks. Without genetic differences, all humans would be clones, like some vast colony of bacteria. Because of the ceaseless process of evolution, populations in different regions of the world have accumulated their own genetic differences over time, and these regionally varying populations, all minor variations on the human theme, are what we call races. The results are evident to anyone who has noticed that babies resemble their parents, not people of other races. As for the insistence that gender is just a social construct, it’s on the same plane of absurdity as the campaign to abolish the word “woman.”

Poetry in a time of plague …

The Body and the Butterfly: On Fady Joudah’s “Tethered to Stars.” (Hat tip! rus Bowden.)

Joudah has always favored lyric over exposition, but this book is more opaque than The Earth in the Attic (2008), Alight (2013), or Footnotes in the Order of Disappearance (2018). Many of the poems are titled with signs of the zodiac or contain an astrological conceit, but they’re really the mask falling from another mask.

A life in letters …

… Colm Tóibín — Snail Slow: Letters to John McGahern  LRB 27 January 2022. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Despite the autobiographical elements in his fiction, McGahern wasn’t especially interested in exploring his own psyche. He rowed in familiar waters because the cadences in the prose and the resonant images came more naturally to him. And it was cadence and image that energised him, not self-revelation. In a letter from 1960, before he had published anything, he wrote: ‘The common notion that you can make art out of your life, refinement of pleasure etc, is pure moonshine as far as I see it. There must be some morality. You might as well call the philanderer a lover.’

Something to think on …

The task of a writer is not to solve the problem but to state the problem correctly
— Anton Chekhov, born on this date in 1860

One writer on another …

… Ivebeenreadinglately: Westlake on Hammett and The Thin Man. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

This is what good criticism does: it makes it hard to read a book the same way you read it before you encountered the critic's take on it. I would have read The Thin Man again eventually, but would I have seen in it the sense of dislocation and loss that Westlake showed me?

Something to think on …

I love my past, I love my present. I am not ashamed of what I have had, and I am not sad because I no longer have it.
— Colette, born on this date in 1873

A rerun …

A Journey Through Ancient Italy': A walk that blends past with present.

I came upon this by accident, and decided to post it because it is such a good book.

Must reading …

Matt Taibbi: The Folly of Pandemic Censorship. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)


People know authorities lie, which is why the more they clamp down, the bigger their trust problem usually becomes. Unfortunately, censors by nature can’t help themselves. Our official liars are always trying to learn from their errors. For instance, film of wounded, suffering, or dead American boys, as well as of the atrocities we committed, not only resulted in pressure to end the Vietnam War, but probably prevented future invasions of countries like Nicaragua, as voters recalled the sickening “quagmire.” 

Blogging note …

 I must go out for a bit. Blogging will resume when I return..

Anniversary …

Lewis Carroll was born on this date 190 years ago.

Something to think on …

Why is it that people with the most narrow of minds seem to have the widest of mouths?
— Lewis Carroll, born on this date in 1832

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

Jack London


The Call of the Wild: it's one of those classic titles, one of those quintessential American novels. And yet, little did I know: it's told from the perspective of a dog. 

But what a dog that Buck is! 

In its own way, Call of the Wild is perfect little novel: compact, clear, and knowing. Jack London writes with a refreshing confidence. He is attuned to plot and character, but equally, I think, to emotion. There were several moments in Call of the Wild when I truly felt for the dogs. 

That, I suppose, is the magic of London's novel: the degree to which dogs and animals assume human qualities. We feel for them because they are described as a person might be. There is pathos and empathy and connection. And yet, there is not a childish quality to this dynamic: London's animals are rough and rugged, and their travails gradually become our own. 

The "call" to which London -- and Buck -- increasingly refer amounts to a sort of primordial impulse, a longing to return to what's natural and fundamental. London makes a convincing case that Buck is motivated by this call, but he implies that people are, too. Not many of us seek a primal existence, but we do, I think, feel some call toward truth and honesty, toward a more natural condition distanced from technology, politics, and competition. 

We don't feel this all the time, but when we do, we heed the same call Buck does, and that London captures so effectively in his novel. 

Oh, the irony

 University slaps a trigger warning on George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four | Daily Mail Online.

… staff at the University of Northampton have issued a trigger warning for George Orwell’s novel on the grounds that it contains ‘explicit material’ which some students may find ‘offensive and upsetting’.

The poor, sensitive dears. 

Hmm …

… March for Life: Catholics for Choice Project Pro-Abortion Message on D.C. Basilica | National Review.

“I am tired of feeling shame and stigma for being a pro-choice Catholic. And I’m not here for people to judge my own personal relationship with God,” she added.

Hate to break the news to you, but Catholics don't get to pick and choose among doctrines. Being pro-choce is your right as a citizen. It is not your right as a Catholic. Find another church. And this stunt was pretty offensive.

Imagine that …

… Greece Snowstorm: Thousands of drivers left stranded as storm hits Athens - BBC News.

Why it was only in March 2020 the The Independent, the British newspaper ran a headline assuring us that “Snowfalls are just a thing of the past.”

Our town …

Woke' Mayor Kenney Loses Another Battle To Christopher Columbus | Big Trial | Philadelphia Trial Blog. (Hat tip, Paul Davis.)

Judge Patrick concluded the city's decision to approve the removal of the statue was "based on temporary and transitory events of disorder" and "clearly constituted arbitrary action" by the city. "Accordingly, the judge wrote, [the city's] claims should be dismissed."

 Kenney may well be the dumbest mayor in America. As for The Inquirer, I’m thinking of canceling my subscription.

Appreciation …

… In Praise of Lim. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

There is no single identity for Lim to discover and adopt. She must create a new person capacious enough to fit her international origins and adulthood. In America the complexity of her identity is doubly complicated — first by immigration and then by marriage and motherhood. As a poet, Lim doesn’t take much from Walt Whitman, but she does fulfill one of his great bardic boasts — she is large, she contains multitudes.

Something to think on …

A day spent without the sight or sound of beauty, the contemplation of mystery, or the search of truth or perfection is a poverty-stricken day; and a succession of such days is fatal to human life.
— Lewis Mumford, who died on this date in 1990

Tuesday, January 25, 2022

A preview …

 … Recognitions — By Flash Hits.

I met some rock players this afternoon at my local tavern. This is from an album that comes out in March.

Depicting glory …

…  VAN GOGH’S GOD.

Though he no longer took the Bible literally, he found inspiration in Scripture’s “lofty ideas.” Christ-haunted, he regarded Jesus as “a greater artist than all other artists” because his medium wasn’t marble, clay, or color, but “living flesh.” Every corner of creation pulses with divinity. “I think sometimes I see something deeper, more infinite, more eternal than the ocean in the expression of the eyes of a little baby when it wakes in the morning,” he wrote, adding, “All nature seems to speak. . . . I do not understand why everyone does not see and feel it; nature or God does it for everyone who has eyes and ears and a heart to understand.” 

Something to think on …

The only important thing in a book is the meaning that it has for you.
— W. Somerset Maugham, born on this date in 1874

Good question …

… Why did scientists suppress the lab-leak theory? | Matt Ridley.

Now we know what those leading scientists really thought. Emails exchanged between them after a conference call on 1 February 2020, and only now forced into the public domain by Republicans in the US Congress, show that they not only thought the virus might have leaked from a lab, but they also went much further in private. They thought the genome sequence of the new virus showed a strong likelihood of having been deliberately manipulated or accidentally mutated in the lab. Yet later they drafted an article for a scientific journal arguing that the suggestion not just of a manipulated virus, but even of an accidental spill, could be confidently dismissed and was a crackpot conspiracy theory.

About time …

… State Investigating Krasner's Failure To Prosecute Gun Crimes | Big Trial | Philadelphia Trial Blog.

Out of 1,810 total firearms cases in 2021, a total of 1,114, or 61.5%, were either dismissed or withdrawn.

Of the 1,810 gun cases, only 47, or a paltry 2.6%, were found guilty at trial. Another 545 cases, or 30.1%, pleaded guilty.

Hear, hear …

… The Last Leg Universities Stand On Is Collapsing - Foundation for Economic Education.

The tyrannical individuals, policies, and beliefs crippling the world today emanate from universities and the sphere of influence they enjoy. They continue to take your money and weaken young minds all while using their undue influence to make your life worse.

I had a very good college experience. But my encounters these with college grads these days does not impress.

See also: This Mom Is Helping Parents Discover Pro-America Content for Kids.

 

A common tale these days

… How Licorice Pizza Got Caught Up in the Culture Wars - The Atlantic. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

… some viewers have reacted negatively to the movie’s instances of coarsely accented Asian English, leading critics on social media and at least one Asian American cultural organization to argue that audiences and prize juries should boycott it. The Media Action Network for Asian Americans (MANAA) announced that to shower Licorice Pizza “with nominations and awards would normalize more egregious mocking of Asians in this country.”

Entanglement …

… Poems for the Conversos - Tablet Magazine. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)

Rachel Kaufman’s debut poetry collection explores the fragility of Jewish history, and all the places where it has already been broken.

Something to think on

If only we'd stop trying to be happy, we could have a pretty good time.
— Edith Wharton, born on this date in 1862

Wouldn’t surprise me …

…  A Covid Origin Conspiracy?

Newly released emails make more plausible the contention that Anthony Fauci and Francis Collins presided over the suppression of the lab-leak theory for political reasons.

Metaphors be with us …


Friedman is just getting started: biting-giant, chip-on-his-shouldered, Emperor-Burton-in-a-doorway-Putin is also America’s “ex-boyfriend from hell,” who refuses to let us “date other countries, like China” (we want to date China?) because “he always measures his status in the world in relation to us.”

The saga continues …

EITHER/OR BY ELIF BATUMAN. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Sardonic and adroit Either/Or makes for a fantastic read. While Selin does change over the course of her sophomore year, she also remains very much herself. She can be reserved and slightly baffling at times, and yet she’s also capable of making some very insightful or relatable comments. She’s intelligent, somewhat naive, and has a penchant for overthinking and obsessing over minor things. Her deadpan sense of humor and little idiosyncrasies make her character really pop out of the page. I could definitely relate to her many many uncertainties, as well as her fixation with understanding the person who never seemed to reciprocate her feelings.

The dumbest generation …

… Campus Reform | Prof pushes students at virtual 'die-in' to use 'radical activist tactics' for stricter COVID policies.

Apparently, none of these people know how to do research. Finding a half-decent college these days must be tough.

Appalling …

… Water cannon, tear gas at COVID-19 protests in Brussels | AP News.

It may just be time to take some of these pols and put them up against the nearest wall.

Faith vs. despair …

The Believer’s Brain. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Miller begins her story in the lab. That’s where she and her co-workers were examining data sets that they had compiled from brain-imaging tests. These compared self-described religious and spiritual folk with determined skeptics and nonbelievers. To her colleagues’ surprise, it turned out that faith strongly correlated with indicators of mental health. That finding was reinforced when the Columbia researchers looked at electroencephalograms (EEGs). These revealed that believers had higher levels of high-amplitude alpha waves. Miller knew that these brain signals tend to increase when patients are placed on SSRIs and that they fade out when patients are taken off the drugs. So this was an intriguing finding. The research unit then discovered that those recovering from depression who are believers had particularly elevated levels of alpha waves compared with those of recovering nonbelievers. This suggests that the original finding was not just a sign of correlation. It implies causation: that faith can alleviate despair.

Something to think on …

If you know what you are going to write when you're writing a poem, it's going to be average.
— Derek Walcott, born on this date in 1930

Saturday, January 22, 2022

See also …

Pandemic Lessons Learned: Rushed COVID Vaccines.

COVID-19 was regarded as an emergency, so the U.S. Food and Drug Administration skipped the approval process for use of the newly developed vaccines under Emergency Use Authorization. It can be said that the designs of the spike protein-based vaccines were also rushed. The COVID-19 vaccines are the only vaccines in history that were developed and distributed in the midst of a pandemic. All the other vaccines took years to be designed, tested, and approved.

Good for them …

… British Medical Journal Demands Immediate Release of All COVID-19 Vaccine, Treatment Data


“Today, despite the global rollout of COVID-19 vaccines and treatments, the anonymized participant-level data underlying the trials for these new products remain inaccessible to doctors, researchers, and the public—and are likely to remain that way for years to come,” BMJ said. “This is morally indefensible for all trials, but especially for those involving major public health interventions.”

Something to think on …

Growing old — it's not nice, but it's interesting.
— August Strindberg, born on this date in 1849

Friday, January 21, 2022

Blogging note …

 My wife broke her shoulder blade. She is in rehab. I have to deal with this. So blogging has to take a back seat for a bit.

It’s come to this …

… What next after the Hong Kong Hamstercide? - The Post.

To many in the West, this will sound like an absurd overreaction. But it’s what happens when your goal is zero Covid. Policy ceases to be about proportionality — about balancing costs, risks, and benefits. It becomes about absolutes. If the goal is zero, you cannot take chances.

Something to think on …

Free speech is my right to say what you don't want to hear.
— George Orwell, who died on this date in 1950

Our town …

POLICE COMMISSIONER’S ALL IN WITH CURBING CARJACKING.

Getting out of your car on the street, in driveways. parking lots, gas stations and ATMs are carjacking “hot spots.” The police state that a “bump and run” is when a carjacker’s car bumps intentionally into a victim’s car. When the victim gets out to look over any damage, the carjackers show their guns and take the victim’s car. If bumped, stay in the car and lock the windows and doors. Place your flashers on and tell the other driver to follow you to a police station.

The view from the left …

 Terry Teachout and the Last of the Conservative Critics | The Nation. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Terry Teachout was a full generation younger than this cohort, but he followed their arc: He got his start with National Review but eventually embraced a more philosophical and nonpolitical strain of conservatism. While he continued to write for National Review and other conservative publications, his work addressed a wider audience and eschewed the liberal-baiting that dominates right-wing political discourse. As The New York Times noted in its obituary, Teachout over time came to prefer “to work in an apolitical register, assessing art and culture on their own terms.” 

Something to think on …

One can't be angry when one looks at a penguin.
— John Ruskin, who died on tis date in 1900

Just so you know …

… Eugenie Scott Resurrects Misinformation on ID | Evolution News.

The notion of intelligent design dates back to Lao-tse, Heraclitus, Plato, and Aristotle, all of whom concluded that being as we know it could not be the result of a crap shoot, that there has to be a principle of intellgence at work in being.

Born of love

The anger of John Ruskin : Essays in Idleness. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

… the remarkable thing about Ruskin’s anger is the purity of it. He is appalled by the glibness of his cultural surroundings; by the aesthetic lies that are communicated through it. He must stand up to them. He must do so all by himself, and so may be forgiven if some of his assumptions go wrong. (Very few.) His prose is always graceful, and his production immense.

Something to think on …

Those who are capable of tyranny are capable of perjury to sustain it.
— Lysander Spooner, born on this date in 1808

Blogging note …

 Once again I have to head early. Blogging will resume this afternoon.

In case you wondered …

… How Journalism Abandoned the Working Class.

This “Great Awokening” has been impossible to miss if you consume mainstream news. But you don’t have to rely on your impressions. David Rozado, a computer scientist who teaches at New Zealand’s Otago Polytechnic, created a computer program that trawled the online archives of the Times from 1970 to 2018 to track the frequency with which certain words were used. What he found was that the frequency of words like “racism,” “white supremacy,” “KKK,” “traumatizing,” “marginalized,” “hate speech,” “intersectionality,” and “activism” had absolutely skyrocketed during that time.

Blogging note …

 I must, yet again, go out and run some errands. Blogging will resume later on.

A musical mystery …

… The Discovery of Buck Hammer - by Ted Gioia. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

A remarkable blues musician emerged from obscurity, but something about him just didn’t seem right

Something to think on …

Dissent is the native activity of the scientist, and it has got him into a good deal of trouble in the last years. But if that is cut off, what is left will not be a scientist. And I doubt whether it will be a man.
— Jacob Bronowski, born on this date in 1908

Monday, January 17, 2022

Who knew …

… Far-Right Extremist Suggests Treating People Of All Races Equally | The Babylon Bee.

"I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character," said the dangerous, alt-right extremist, according to sources. "I have a dream that one day little black boys and girls will be holding hands with little white boys and girls.”
Like many people my age this guy is still a hero to us.

Blogging note …

 Once again, I have business to attend to, which I want to get out of the before it rains. So blogging will resume this afternoon.

Something to think on …

The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and undernourishment.
— Robert Maynard Hutchins, born on this date in 1899

Cause for optimism …

… Goodbye Pandemic, Hello Endemic.

The Nature paper disclosed that protective (IL-2 secreting) T cells are induced by SARS-CoV-2 infection. Accordingly, we could foresee that a wider spread of Omicron infection would induce a wider range of cross-reactive T cell immunity, subsequently offering more widespread protection against potential future SARS-CoV-2 variants. As a result, we are likely very close to being able to say goodbye to the pandemic.

Tracking a decline …





The Atlantic’s Nervous Breakdown.


Not all Atlantic writers are of this type. Caitlin Flanagan’s recent essays on living for decades with cancer are phenomenal, and Conor Friedersdorf’s conservativish-contrarian takes are always a welcome respite from the doomsaying. But the general tone of the Atlantic suggests something about the mindset of the segment of elite America it represents and caters to: The Atlantic reader is more driven by alarmism and panic than the Fox News–viewing folks on the other side of the partisan divide whom they criticize. The Higher Perspective of the Atlantic is an elite species of panic—it has no interest in the concerns of someone who is worried about how to put food on the table after getting laid off from her restaurant job. Rather, it feels deeply the emotional burden of those coming to the realization that “Office Holiday Parties Really Might Never Be the Same.” This is the class of people who, amid an ongoing pandemic, identified with an unmasked and glamorous Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in a “Tax the Rich” gown at the Met gala, not with the masked minimum-wage underlings standing silently nearby who served her and her fellow partygoers.

An imaginative gem …

… Review of "The Morning Star" by Karl Ove Knausgaard | City Journal. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

… even translation problems can’t ruin The Morning Star. If its opening pages make us feel as if we’re in the midst of something resembling life as we know it, by the end we’re looking at the whole enchilada sub specie aeternitatis—from the perspective of the eternal—having along the way been vouchsafed an acute sense of the fragility of human existence, the futility of our efforts to fathom it and do something meaningful with it, and the fallaciousness of any illusion that we’ve accomplished something remotely important in the big scheme of things.

But invoked incorrectly …

… Updike invoked in Thinking on Scripture essay | THE JOHN UPDIKE SOCIETY. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

“Consider also this view of death by the atheist John Updike, from his novel, Pigeon Feathers:”

Wait. The atheist John Updike?


Please don’t celebrate …

January 16 is National Nothing Day, inaugurated in 1973 “to provide Americans with one National day when they can just sit without celebrating, observing or honoring anything.”

Today would also have been my brother’s 88th birthday (he died five years ago). Norm would have loved that his birthday coincided with National Nothing Day. 

Something to think on …

What is at first small is often extremely large in the end. And so it happens that whoever deviates only a little from truth in the beginning is led farther and farther afield in the sequel, and to errors which are a thousand times as large.
— Franz Brentano, born on this date in 1838

Body and soul …

… The Body of Notting Hill - The Catholic Thing. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

The Incarnation of Christ, who is at once fully God and fully man, is a singular event, unprecedented and unrepeatable. And yet, it also reveals something universal about reality in general. The Logos, the creative Word, of God, has primacy over the material world it brings into being. And yet, while the world of his creation is inferior to the uncreated spirit of God, that world is by no means merely incidental. It expresses in itself something of the truth about our Lord and indeed is one of the pathways by which we journey back to him and come to know him. “Every creature is, in itself, a theophany,” writes Henri de Lubac.

Decadence …

… No Country for Old Saints - The Catholic Thing. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

For the Saint went beyond popular imagination. Old-fashioned Catholics and most other Christians might assume that she could win converts by such behavior, but while the odd convert was won (among the dying, for instance), times had changed. By the end of the 20th century, the West and the “progressive” East, had been inoculated against the temptation to Christianity.

Few people nowadays are philosophically literate. 

Trust the science …

… Face masks may make men more attractive, study suggests - UPI.com.

Yeah, sure. Cary Grant would have looked better if he’d worn a mask. Maybe these were just dumb women.

Blogging note …

 I have urgent business to deal with today. Blogging will have to wait.

Something to think on …

Freedom requires guns.
— Franz Grillparzer, born on this date in 1791