Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Buckaloons

       There is a national forest recreation area near town called Buckaloons that is used mostly by local people for walking their dogs or loading and unloading watercraft. About a level mile in circumference it used to be a primary camping place for Seneca Indians until white people arrived when-predictably- they were decimated by war and disease. Today there are 60 campsites used by people looking to get away for a day or two, although busy roads are within one half mile so this is not a pristine wilderness. Still, it remains a refuge for wildlife-fox and squirrel and deer and nuthatch and whatever else exists in the broader Allegheny forest-for despite the roads there is access to the thousands of acres beyond. The Brokenstraw and Irvine creeks flow into the Allegheny river within the area, and offer habitat for fish and water birds; I have caught bass and chubs in the rivers and no doubt that is why the Indians favored this spot. To me, this is one of those areas great for day use or for travelers to stay over night if passing through the forest. There are more remote places to camp and hike but the convenience of this location ensures its popularity.    ...click on pictures to enlarge them



 

Saturday, December 24, 2022

Almanac


   I always check out the yearly almanac from the library, although I notice myself questioning the sources and wondering about the accuracy of the data more than in the past. That is the result of the division within our society and the deliberate distortions of reality among some people. I  consider myself a skeptical optimist, which means that I have tried to keep an open mind about things while maintaining a preference for the methods of science and logical reasoning. The cynicism and distrust I witness of our institutions is unnatural and distasteful to me; I accept that the data may be off by a few decimal points but that is the best human beings can do. I do not accept the cynical attitude that the majority of people have bad intentions.                                                                                                                                A couple of facts in this years almanac regarding money is that the wealthiest 30 U.S. individuals possessed over 2 trillion dollars in wealth as of April 2022 according to Forbes magazine. That is approximately what the U.S. spends on Social Security and Defense combined in one year.  The top 20% of people own 52.7 percent of wealth, the bottom 20% own 2.9 percent. That unequal distribution has been ongoing since 1970, with  the middle 60% also losing wealth consistently over the decades.                                    In the obituaries of 2022 is Peter Robbins, the voice of Charlie Brown in the 1965 Christmas special, and Jay Last, a physicist who helped create the semiconductors which laid the foundation of silicon valley.  Both are unknown to most people yet their influence continues long after their deaths. Many of the obituaries in the almanac describe accomplished people who are totally unknown except to their own generation and those who personally knew them. That exposes the profound temporariness of existence; people of every generation are forgotten by the next one, and only the most influential-the Einsteins or Lennons or Hitlers -survive the forgetting of time until what remains are the fragments that historians decide to preserve. Also in the almanac are people from other cultures whom western societies have totally neglected; history is written by the powerful. Nowhere in the obituaries are recorded the daily exchanges of the individuals who interacted with them; I do not suppose Buddhas family thought too highly of him when he abandoned them to seek his enlightenment.                                                             So an almanac is a potpourri of information that offers perspective, incomplete though it may be. It is an attempt to be objective in a world that desperately needs one.

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Fusion Power

     Scientists announced today that they had achieved controlled nuclear fusion ( Google it...) for the first time on December 5th, a difficult feat that they have been working on for decades. The technology has tremendous promise as a source of mostly clean, 'limitless' energy, but there remain many engineering obstacles until we achieve economical power station reality.  I do not want to minimize or criticize the potential importance of this breakthrough, but I compare it to the Wright Brothers first flight when what will be needed are rocket engines. As new people and money and computing power are flushed onto the problem, maybe breakthroughs will occur faster than the progress in flight, so let's hope humanity has the time.



Thursday, December 1, 2022

A Remarkable Woman


  This is Piper VanOrd, owner of an outdoor shop here in Warren, the go to location for canoe and kayak trips on the Allegheny River, as well as a source of all kinds of outdoor gear and clothing used here in the national forest.  Without any previous connection to Ukraine, she has traveled to the region several times since April of 2022, where she has helped set up a shelter for refugees in Poland while also buying and transporting supplies into Ukraine-everything from food to personal hygiene items to generators. Over the past ten months she has established many contacts in the region, and has become friends with some of the people there; "It is not about me" she says; her motivation for her hard work and dedication has been her selfless compassion and moral clarity to do what is right in an unjust war.

                           I am not on Facebook although I know Piper has a page where she keeps everyone updated about the people she has helped overseas as well as information about how to donate money to her efforts. If anyone is interested in learning more please search her name or Allegheny Outfitters; I can assure you that rather than some anonymous charity she will make sure the money goes to where it is desperately needed. Thanks                                                                                                          "Senseless barbarism. These are the only words that come to mind seeing Russia launch another missile barrage at peaceful Ukrainian cities ahead of New Year," Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tweeted in a reaction to the Russian attacks. "There can be no 'neutrality' in the face of such mass war crimes. Pretending to be 'neutral' equals taking Russia's side."                                                                                                                    

Thursday, November 3, 2022

Babble

    -I have not written here in a couple months and really do not have much new to say, but feel an obligation to say something to the three or four or fourteen people who actually read this blog. Like most Americans, Beth and I have been absorbing the news..."shooting up the evening news" ... as Jackson Browne once said, but it is not a healthy habit and generally serves to frustrate us. At such moments it is best to remember the essential advice of Buddhism  to not "grasp for opinion", for there is no changing human nature. Some people believe the earth is flat regardless of the facts, and the polarized nature of the country today simply exposes the wide diversity of perspective that human beings are capable of.  If the outright lies and delusions and moral depravity of  power hungry people force America into a violent civil confrontation, then this is just one more repeat of the historical record when people were forced into wars against slavery, or Nazism, or-more recently-against Mr. Putin. It is apparent that many people do not share my moral sense of justice and fair play, nor my respect for the science and facts and holistic thinking that I use to define truth, and I see clearly how and why societies and nations fall into wars.                           -In hindsight the overall death rate of Covid 19 was about 1.1% in the United States, ( John Hopkins University data) and more or less than that worldwide. Most of the dead were the elderly and those with comorbidity s -meaning everything from asthma to being obese. Did that mortality rate justify closing down the economy, or should the correct response have been to isolate the most vulnerable and allow things to progress normally? If the latter, many of today's supply chain problems might have been avoided and the present worldwide inflation may have been lessened. Of course, in April 2020 hospitals were being overwhelmed and much of the information about the disease was unknown, so the response was an attempt to minimize deaths while at least keeping the necessities of the economy functioning.  Those who were confined to their homes emerged with new perspectives on what was meaningful in life, while schoolchildren seem to have been negatively affected in their academics; covid affected everyone differently.                                                                                                                                                              -The war in Ukraine seems to encapsulate and expose all of the rhetoric that Americans claim to value regarding freedom and right and wrong:  A nation (Russia)with an egotistical leader(Putin) used specious excuses of nationalism and threats to its existence to invade its neighbor and reabsorb them by force into their 'empire'.  There was an alternative choice to coexist to the benefit of both nations, but Mr. Putin-being one of those aforementioned power hungry morally depraved leaders- chose instead to invade. After 8 months of war some American politicians are questioning their commitment by threatening to withhold economic support-despite the clear moral justification of the Ukrainians in defending their freedom against a despot. As of this writing the United States has spent about $60 billion? in Ukraine.                            By contrast we spent over $2 trillion in Afghanistan with almost 2,550 American soldiers lost and many wounded, and over $2 trillion in Iraq with at least 4,500 soldiers killed. In both of the latter conflicts the reasons for the fighting and the outcomes became questionable, if not totally wasted blood and money.  The core reasons for the Ukraine war appear to be similar to the reasons we fought for independence in the 1700's-freedom from what we considered a tyrannical power. No doubt threats of nuclear escalation may advise caution in Ukraine, but when forced into this war the Ukrainians have shown the courage and moral clarity that Americans should respect.                             That's my babble for today...top of my head thoughts that may or may not reflect the full truth of the world, but which I trust sound reasonable.       POSTSCRIPT: The American people-for the most part-rejected the election deniers in the mid term elections. That is encouraging to me. Here in Pennsylvania we elected a reasonable, intelligent governor over a January 6th participant and for senator we elected a  reasonable local man over a television star millionaire who does not even live here. 

Tuesday, September 13, 2022

TwoMoreBooks

  To anyone genuinely wishing to know how the world really works and is not satisfied with the simpleton soundbites provided by politicians or on Facebook and Twitter and some newscasts, here are two books to read. One details the virtual slavery and lawlessness that dominate much of the ocean trade, particularly the fishing industry, the other details the absolute corruption of the Russian empire, particularly Mr. Putin and his cronies. Most recently, Ravil Maagnov, a Putin critic "fell" from a hospital window in Moscow on September 1st and is the latest person to clumsily 'fall' from a high place.  Billions of stolen dollars go a long way in the hands of murderers, and the Putin book details the convoluted money laundering chain and violence and disinformation Putin and his thugs go to to protect their power.

      No, you are not going to be able to change the evil in the world, but try to be aware and support stores like Whole Foods and Aldi and Target, which do the best job at supporting sustainable fishing, and not support people like Mr. Trump who praise people like Mr. Putin. In my world at least, moral character, honesty and the rule of law mean something for a civil society to persevere. There are extremely brave, honest people trying to fight the thugs and thieves, and they are the ones doing their best to "drain the swamp" of the true slime.
 

Monday, August 22, 2022

Buzzard Swamp and the possible future...again

         Walked at Buzzard today as I do a few times a year and was thankful to see the beavers still active at pond #5. Their dam across the spillway was rebuilt with mostly mud after... DCNR workers?...demolished the first mostly wooden one. I am assuming it was the DCNR because they seem to have nothing better to do and I know it was not because the original wood structure had been causing any problem. This is an old algae and water lily choked pond emptying under the access road through a 5 foot berm; even the heaviest rain has plenty of room to expand laterally while the spillway is barely a trickle for much of the year; no raging torrents here. The beavers have made the pond level deep enough for fish and other wildlife.  
  I have not seen every species listed on the sign while walking here, but I have no doubt they are present for I have seen them elsewhere in the National forest and surrounding area. Otters, porcupines, bald eagles and other species not listed on the sign are relatively common as well.               Monarch butterflies have been added to the endangered species list because of habitat loss, pesticide use and the changing climate. There is ample milkweed here in the preserve but I did not see much of it being eaten by caterpillars. My daughter in law raises Monarchs to adulthood and does her best by growing milkweed in her gardens, but with the loss of oyamel trees that provide the Monarchs winter refuge in Mexico, this is not an easy fix. It would be sad to see the Monarch go the way of the passenger pigeon, but somewhere around 75-90% of the population has crashed in the last 10 years. (..an exact number is difficult to determine, yet along a different migration route in California their numbers have dropped from 4.5 million in the 1980"s to around 30,000 in 2019)  Unfortunately, as I have mentioned in other blogs, most species of insects have been affected by the loss of habitat, climate change and over use of pesticides. In many parts of the world total insect numbers have dropped by over 75% in the last 30 years...This is very disturbing...losing the butterflies and bees and flies and dung beetles and even mosquitoes will have profound effects on lifeforms up the food chain; insects decompose much of the dead, they pollinate many of our crops,and flowers, they provide food for birds and amphibians and fish...in truth all the effects of their loss is unknown, but this is a serious problem that most people are not aware of or do not care about. Abortion, and gun rights, and election integrity and economic inflation- as important as those issues may be- will seem minor when entire ecosystems collapse. I truly fear for our species over the coming century, and I do think that I am exaggerating. Never before have I hoped so fervently that I am wrong.
    ( ....as usual, click on pics to enlarge)
 

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Wuhan Virus, the latest information-until more comes out...

This is how science works: Over time, scientists look for new evidence to try to arrive at a consensus of what truth is. Below is an article claiming that the virus began at the Wuhan market. Yet other evidence based on 'influenza' internet searches near the market in December 2019, as well as traces of the virus mutations in animals(or lack thereof) suggests that Covid may have escaped from the lab-perhaps after an infected animal was transported from an original bat source 1,000 miles away to the market, then taken to the lab for further study? Either way, to blatantly 'blame' China for the virus when such research is done in labs worldwide is simply ignorant of how science works. There is some credible but unproven evidence that Lyme disease escaped from lab research off the New York coast. Irresponsible? Perhaps, but unfortunately humans are fallible creatures in whom good intentions ( the atom bomb was invented to be sure Hitler did not get one first) do not always foresee the consequences.

"An international team of researchers has confirmed that live animals sold at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market were the likely source of the COVID-19 pandemic that has claimed 6.4 million lives since it began nearly three years ago.

Led by University of Arizona virus evolution expert Michael Worobey, international teams of researchers have traced the start of the pandemic to the market in Wuhan, China, where foxes, raccoon dogs and other live mammals susceptible to the virus were sold live immediately before the pandemic began. Their findings were published Tuesday in two papers in the journal Science, after being previously released in pre-print versions in February.

The publications, which have since gone through peer review and include additional analyses and conclusions, virtually eliminate alternative scenarios that have been suggested as origins of the pandemic. Moreover, the authors conclude that the first spread to humans from animals likely occurred in two separate transmission events in the Huanan market in late November 2019.

One study scrutinized the locations of the first known COVID-19 cases, as well as swab samples taken from surfaces at various locations at the market. The other focused on genomic sequences of SARS-CoV-2 from samples collected from COVID-19 patients during the first weeks of the pandemic in China.

The first paper, led by Worobey and Kristian Andersen at Scripps Research Institute in San Diego, California, examined the geographic pattern of COVID-19 cases in the first month of the outbreak, December 2019. The team was able to determine the locations of almost all of the 174 COVID-19 cases identified by the World Health Organization that month, 155 of which were in Wuhan.

Analyses showed that these cases were clustered tightly around the Huanan market, whereas later cases were dispersed widely throughout Wuhan -- a city of 11 million people. Notably, the researchers found that a striking percentage of early COVID patients with no known connection to the market -- meaning they neither worked there nor shopped there -- turned out to live near the market. This supports the idea that the market was the epicenter of the epidemic, Worobey said, with vendors getting infected first and setting off a chain of infections among community members in the surrounding area.

"In a city covering more than 3,000 square miles, the area with the highest probability of containing the home of someone who had one of the earliest COVID-19 cases in the world was an area of a few city blocks, with the Huanan market smack dab inside it," said Worobey, who heads UArizona Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.

This conclusion was supported by another finding: When the authors looked at the geographical distribution of later COVID cases, from January and February 2020, they found a "polar opposite" pattern, Worobey said. While the cases from December 2019 mapped "like a bullseye" on the market, the later cases coincided with areas of the highest population density in Wuhan.

"This tells us the virus was not circulating cryptically," Worobey said. "It really originated at that market and spread out from there."

In an important addition to their earlier findings, Worobey and his collaborators addressed the question of whether health authorities found cases around the market simply because that's where they looked.

"It is important to realize that all these cases were people who were identified because they were hospitalized," Worobey said. "None were mild cases that might have been identified by knocking on doors of people who lived near the market and asking if they felt ill. In other words, these patients were recorded because they were in the hospital, not because of where they lived."

To rule out any potentially lingering possibility of bias, Worobey's team took one further step: Starting at the market, they began removing cases from their analyses, going farther in distance from the market as they went, and ran the stats again. The result: Even when two-thirds of cases were removed, the findings were the same.

"Even in that scenario, with the majority of cases, removed, we found that the remaining ones lived closer to the market than what would be expected if there was no geographical correlation between these earliest COVID cases and the market," Worobey said.

The study also looked at swab samples taken from market surfaces like floors and cages after Huanan market was shuttered. Samples that tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 were significantly associated with stalls selling live wildlife.

The researchers determined that mammals now known to be susceptible to SARS-CoV-2, including red foxes, hog badgers and raccoon dogs, were sold live at the Huanan market in the weeks preceding the first recorded COVID-19 cases. The scientists developed a detailed map of the market and showed that SARS-CoV-2-positive samples reported by Chinese researchers in early 2020 showed a clear association with the western portion of the market, where live or freshly butchered animals were sold in late 2019.

"Upstream events are still obscure, but our analyses of available evidence clearly suggest that the pandemic arose from initial human infections from animals for sale at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in late November 2019," said Andersen, who was a co-senior author of both studies and is a professor in the Department of Immunology and Microbiology at Scripps Research.

Virus likely jumped from animals to humans more than once

The second study, an analysis of SARS-CoV-2 genomic data from early cases, was co-led by Jonathan Pekar and Joel Wertheim at the University of California, San Diego and Marc Suchard of the University of California Los Angeles, as well as Andersen and Worobey.

The researchers combined epidemic modeling with analyses of the virus's early evolution based on the earliest sampled genomes. They determined that the pandemic, which initially involved two subtly distinct lineages of SARS-CoV-2, likely arose from at least two separate infections of humans from animals at the Huanan market in November 2019 and perhaps in December 2019. The analyses also suggested that, in this period, there were many other animal-to-human transmissions of the virus at the market that failed to manifest in recorded COVID-19 cases.

The authors used a technique known as molecular clock analysis, which relies on the natural pace with which genetic mutations occur over time, to establish a framework for the evolution of the SARS-CoV-2 virus lineages. They found that a scenario of a singular introduction of the virus into humans rather than multiple introductions would be inconsistent with molecular clock data. Earlier studies had suggested that one lineage of the virus -- named A and closely related to viral relatives in bats -- gave rise to a second lineage, named B. More likely, according to the new data, is a scenario in which the two lineages jumped from animals into humans on separate occasions, both at the Huanan market, Worobey said.

"Otherwise, lineage A would have had to have been evolving in slow motion compared to the lineage B virus, which just doesn't make biological sense," said Worobey.

The two studies provide evidence that COVID-19 originated via jumps from animals to humans at the Huanan market, likely following transmission to those animals from coronavirus-carrying bats in the wild or on farms in China. Moving forward, the researchers say scientists and public officials should seek better understanding of the wildlife trade in China and elsewhere and promote more comprehensive testing of live animals sold in markets to lower the risk of future pandemics.

Funding for the research was provided by the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. "

POSTSCRIPT: June 3rd, 2023- A Chinese researcher recently said something along the lines of "don't rule out a lab leak", so the secrecy among the Chinese government is cracking a little...My personal thought is that viruses from infected animals/humans were being studied in the lab-as is common- and someone had a lapse in protocol...

Monday, June 27, 2022

Hope or Hopeless


    "I used to think that the top global environmental problems were biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse, and climate change. I thought that with thirty years of good science we could address these problems, but I was wrong. The top environmental problems are selfishness, greed, and apathy, and to deal with these we need a spiritual and cultural transformation. And we scientists don't know how to do that." - Gus Speth, founder of World Resources Institute, environmental lawyer, in 2008

      Below is my recent email to Doug Mastriano who is the republican candidate for governor of my home state of Pennsylvania, who among other frighteningly ignorant behaviors- such as attending the January 6th riot- has stated that climate change is "fake science." 

>It is not necessary for me to outline all the reasons that your delusional attempts to de-certify my legitimate vote following the 2020 election are a disturbing threat to democracy; your public comments indicate you lack the moral and ethical fiber to understand my arguments. What is more disturbing is that so many of your fellow Republicans support, or, at least, enable such dangerous thinking.  If you and your comrades truly do not see that Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin are similar personalities and that the only thing differentiating them is the American constitution and the moral strength of people willing to defend the rule of law and moral decency, then for the survival of the Republic I hope you lose the election by a landslide.<

As I watch so many people accept so many simplistic 'explanations' and 'solutions' to complex social, economic and environmental problems, I must admit that I am losing hope for the future of this planet-never mind just the United States. It is not that people disagree with my viewpoints, rather that they refuse to seek the facts and reality about what is going on, which in some cases is just a simple Google search away. Too many of them are willing to ignore truth in order to stay in power and foster their agenda. Recently, some have fought tooth and nail to overturn Roe versus Wade while having no plan for the coming births of unwanted babies nor the increased misery of women and children -most of them black- because of insufficient resources. This by people claiming to be Christian followers of Jesus Christ. Although trillions have been spent on war and weapons in the past decades, to allocate money towards health care or day care is somehow un-American'socialism' in their way of thinking. To me, treating all life- not merely embryonic human life-with compassion is a more valid definition of 'God'..and even more vital and relevant is the larger problem of resource depletion in a world that simply cannot sustain billions more people seeking the American lifestyle. Drilling for more oil and throwing more pesticides on mono culture corn fields is Not going to save us from future suffering.

So now the west is running out of water, as predicted long ago:


    "In 1986, environmental journalist Marc Reisner published Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water, a landmark book surveying water use in the American Southwest. Having interviewed hundreds of people about the Southwest and learned the history of the region’s water infrastructure, Reisner concluded that more water was being pulled out of the West’s waterways than could be naturally replenished. He said the Southwest was due to run short on water, soon....Nearly 25 years later, a group of researchers has put Reisner’s assertion to the test, checking to see if there is any scientific truth behind it. Armed with modern data from across the Southwest, the group, led by ecologist John Sabo from Arizona State University, found that many of Reisner’s claims were legitimate, and still hold true today.

“We asked, is it really as bad as [Reisner] said it is in the book, and are we still where we were in 1986?” explains Sabo, who assembled a group of experts to assess water, dams, fish, soil and crops across the Southwest using modern techniques. “Now we know the answer to both those questions: yes.” 

   Yet some states are still not implementing concrete solutions such as building desalination plants or pipelines to the east, or large scale recycling of wastewater. As they restrict the water used by the farmers growing crops in the desert- a questionable practice to begin with-people nationwide had better get used to higher prices for food... and on and on...No, I am not as hopeful for the future as I wish I could be, but I read science a lot more than many people, and I have followed the decline for years. None of this is a surprise to me, although the pervasive ignorance and denial and outright corruption of some people have been eye opening.

Monday, June 6, 2022

Golf and Grandson

 


         Beth and I were visited by six year old grandson Slaton for a few days last week during which we golfed twice. Slaton has been a true natural golfer since he began swinging a club at age two, and can hit shots straight and true with a fast swing that nobody has had to teach him. His parents have encouraged him over the years and in the past year he has been receiving formal lessons near his home in Texas. Today his best drives with minimal roll can be 75 to 100 yards and strangers on a nearby tee began clapping after watching him chip onto a green when he was only 4 years old. On the 94 yard par three that we played last week he missed putting for a par by inches... Impressive for a 6 year old.  Beth and I only started golfing 5 seasons ago but now enjoy it as a wonderful way to get exercise without breaking the bank...                   


           We also took a hike to a local waterfall, and of course fooled around  a bit... (click on pics to enlarge...)

Saturday, May 14, 2022

Bees-updated


 A crab apple tree in front of the house is blooming now, offering nectar and pollen to insects, concealment for bird nests, then food in the winter when the berries are consumed mostly by starlings. The blossoms are short lived and fragile, and rarely last more than a week, but several species of bumblebees, leaf cutting bees, sweat bees, honeybees and flies pollinate them during that time. While there is a lot of press about the decline of honeybees, in my experience it is the bumblebees that do most of the pollinating for many of the wild and domestic flowers;                                                                          If they disappear the true contributions they provide will be noticed. 
     Bumblebee hives do not overwinter, so every spring a new queen who had sheltered in the ground or behind tree bark must start a new hive. That means finding a suitable place-usually underground-making comb cells, laying eggs and foraging for pollen and nectar with which to feed the larvae, until finally new worker bees emerge to expand the hive until autumn, when all of them die except a new queen who starts the process over. All summer those workers are pollinating many of the flowers we see along roadsides and in gardens, and while it can appear to be a thankless task for a hive that dies every year, that is natures
                                                      way. As human beings we should be appreciative I think.
         Below is a reprint of an experiment demonstrating the bumblebee ability to learn from observation, as published in Science magazine in 2017... Bumblebees are Not stupid insects deserving of the scorn some people give them...                                                                                              "The second experiment involved a platform on which rested three balls at various distances from the center. Bees were then presented with one of three different training scenarios: a trained bee that moved the furthest ball to the center, a magnet that could move the furthest ball to the center, or no training where just one ball was presented and placed in the center of the platform. The bees were then tested to see if they could accomplish the task of moving one of three balls to the center to receive a drop of sugar solution.
The results reveal that the bees were on average more successful when trained by other bees than with the magnet and that both were more effective than no training, with success rates of around 99%, 78% and 34% respectively. Intriguingly, unlike the demonstrations, the bees generally chose to move the ball closest to the center, a result that held even when that ball was black rather than yellow.
“This means that the bees didn’t just simply copy the demonstrator and could improve upon the demonstrator’s technique or strategy,” said Loukola. “The fact that they saw the task in different ways than the demonstrator shows a very impressive amount of cognitive flexibility.”




Sunday, April 17, 2022

Spring Visitors


          The top picture is of a common squash bug and the bottom an assassin bug-a 'blood sucking cone nose' specifically-both species abundant in the east. (Click on pics to enlarge). They look similar and there are many different types of both species, but generally the squash bugs are harmless except to plants while assassin bugs mostly feed on other insects.  The latter can inflict a painful bite if mishandled, but ignore humans otherwise.

    A friend sent me a text saying that squash bugs were frequent visitors to his house in spring, yet when he mentioned this to other people their immediate reaction was to "squish them". This reminded me of the human intolerance to insects which I attribute to ignorance and fear, and of course that same negative impulse applies to snakes and spiders and, unfortunately, to skin color, sexual orientation, religious and political differences, and many other biases equally hard to expunge from our behavior. Personally, I have grown from a child who killed insects as though they were not living things to a person who respects their right to live as much as I value my own-at least until they are attempting to harm me, at which moment I defend myself. That is a template for how I treat other human beings; do me no harm and we shall live in peace. 
    So insects enter our house searching for food, or warmth, or by accident, or simply because they have been sequestered in the walls all winter and now search for an exit. When a fly is beating itself against a window it wants nothing but to get out of the house; why should I 'squish it' for wanting to be free? Fear and ignorance are powerful motivators of our behavior, but not our only tools for improvement.

Friday, April 15, 2022

Required Reading For White People


 " It is hereby enacted and declared, that baptism of slaves doth not exempt them from bondage; and that all children shall be bond or free, according to the condition of their mothers." -Act Concerning Servants and Slaves, section 36

...just part of the systematic dismantling of human rights in the year 1705 by the Virginia legislature known colloquially as the  'slave codes'. This is part of the American history that some white people label as 'critical race theory' and wish to be forbidden in schools. The book is a collection of many short essays detailing the true history of the United States as experienced from the perspective of African Americans. The complicated intertwining of economics and the so-called Christian faith of that time and the genuine immorality and brutality -as well as the fear in southern elites regarding the growing slave population and the threat of rebellion-all this is discussed in this book. That many whites still fear to examine honestly our collective history and claim that it will cause 'bad feelings' in schoolchildren and other such nonsense reveals how far we have yet to go in race relations. It always amazes and dismays me that some people claim suppression of free speech in the 'woke' culture-yet have no problem suppressing the discussion when they are uncomfortable with the subject matter. In truth, there is a profound difference between  speech promoting narrow minded intolerance and speech promoting inclusion and tolerance in a holistic examination of history. Yelling 'fire' in a crowded theater may be free speech, but it is also a dangerous betrayal of the public good; so deliberate expressions of hate and intolerance become a cancer on society.          Personally I am not afraid of these discussions and have no problem admitting my white male privilege. I cannot possibly know the experience of a black or Hispanic or Asian or Indigenous person so the least I can do is listen to their grievances and try to rectify them. Some of my ancestors-and I speak collectively of my race-were legitimately what can be called 'white trash'. That is a lesson to be learned that we all should be willing to embrace for our growth as a society. Yet because the news still has videos of unarmed black men being shot during traffic stops and because the police are still mostly policing themselves, and because realtors still undervalue black owned homes, and because blacks of all socioeconomic levels still receive lower levels of health care, and because of other enduring inequities, I can clearly see that many persons remain crippled by ignorance. 

Monday, March 28, 2022

Back in the World



    I returned to Warren after six weeks in the south and west, with four weeks passed in the van traveling to National and State parks to hike and golf, and I also visited a friend in eastern California. After so much time off the grid I returned with a renewed aversion to the news and the superficial, simplistic soundbites of commentators and politicians; it saddened me to think that our leaders are chosen and important decisions are being made on such distorted, incomplete information. Being away from society for a month clarified the inanity of our culture-the exaggerations and sensationalizing and general 'dumbing down' of the complexities of human existence.                                                                                

  So while I was away the Ukraine war started and Omicron mostly came and went and I was blissfully unaware or only marginally aware while on the wide open desert roads through which I was driving.  Ignorance is bliss so long as the troubles of the world are not directly affecting you, although sticking ones head in the sand does not really solve anything, and the world is too connected anyway to avoid for long.      

    Upon returning home it was obvious that the alternate realities of Republicans and Democrats had not changed, and there truly is no reconciling with those who believe the world is flat. People who sow division to obtain or maintain power, or people who are incapable of compromise, or people who are incapable of seeing holistic viewpoints-unfortunately, they hold disproportionate power in societies, with Mr. Putin being the latest example. I suspect that Mr. Putin had no incentive to invade Ukraine while Mr. Trump was in power because Mr. Trump was doing his best to dismantle NATO without violence; it would have been nice to be a fly on the wall during their two hour off the record meeting back in 2018. It was only the American constitution and a few key, morally and ethically motivated people who provided the checks and balances to prevent Mr. Trump from overriding the will of the people as is happening in Russia. ...Civilization and freedom really are that tenuous, even here, and many Americans have the same blindness and simplistic inability to see the implications of their grabs for power.                     

    Meanwhile, people are blaming Mr. Biden for all their troubles, from inflation to gas prices to the Ukraine war as if they had no knowledge whatsoever of budgeting and personal choices and random fate. Have they not noticed all the twists and turns in their own lives that were beyond their control? Why on earth would they suppose that one man-or even one institution-can control all the thoughts and actions of the rest of humanity? Stop blaming others for the state of your personal life. Start using the freedom you possess to think critically and make better choices while you can. Your gas guzzling SUVs and pickup trucks and smart phone contracts and fancy nails and pizzas are not necessities, although one would be hard pressed to convince some of you otherwise. ..and on and on...obviously I did not miss this crap during my time in the van, but I am still sad that it is human nature and the state of our world.


Monday, January 3, 2022

This Keeps Me Awake at Night

"It will be months before the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection on the U.S. Capitol will release its first report on the causes of that day's deadly violence.
New polls show that Americans of different parties view it very differently, from whose fault it was, whether violent action is OK, and whether those who stormed the Capitol were mostly violent or peaceful.

WBUR is a nonprofit news organization and our coverage relies on your financial support. Please give today.For a year now, the images of people storming the Capitol to stop President Biden’s election certification have played over and over. And while most people have formed opinions about the people involved, one political scientist has dug deeper.Robert Pape, who directs the Chicago Project on Security and Threats at the University of Chicago, has been analyzing the identities of the more than 700 people arrested for breaking through the barricades that day.He's pored over their court documents and discovered some surprises. After months of looking through the reports, Pape says the picture remains the same: Over and over again, people interviewed by officials said they went to the Capitol on Jan. 6 to support former President Donald Trump and claim Trump as the legitimate president, not Biden.“This isn't just simply normal criminal behavior or escalations like street fighting,” he says. “This is clearly collective political violence done by hundreds and hundreds of people for essentially the same political purposes.”

Demographics breakdown of the riotersRight-wing extremist violence is usually strongly linked to skinhead gangs or militia groups. But as of Dec. 2021, he says 87% of Capitol rioters he’s analyzed were not members of violent groups like the Oath Keepers or Proud Boys.“We're used to thinking of extremists as on the fringe,” he says. “... What we see over and over in their demographics and in their motives really is a disturbing picture: That this is coming from part of the mainstream.” More than half of the Jan. 6 insurrectionists were white-collar workers such as business owners, architects, doctors and lawyers. Pape, who has decades of experience studying global political violence, says this statistic was unexpected. Out of the hundreds of people arrested for breaking into the Capitol, he says only 7% were unemployed at the time — nearly the national unemployment average. Normally, 40% of right-wing extremists have prior military service, whereas Jan. 6 Capitol riotersat at about 15%, he says. Pape also looked into the rioters' criminal backgrounds and found “30% of those who broke into the Capitol on Jan. 6 have a criminal history of some kind, often basically being arrested for drug misdemeanors,” he says. “But that compares to 64% of right-wing extremists.”Typically, right-wing extremists are young — normally under the age of 34. On Jan. 6, rioters were mostly in their 40s and 50s.“This is uncomfortable for a variety of reasons. It means a lot of our usual counter-violent extremist solutions just don't apply,” Pape says. “Usually, we think we'll get them a job. Well, we've already got over half business owners, CEOs and folks from white-collar occupations — that's not going to work.”Demobilizing tactics often involve helping young right-wing extremists develop better relationships and eventually get married and have kids. But he says many Jan. 6 rioters already are married and care for families. It’s crucial for community advocates, politicians, faith leaders and law enforcement to understand “we have a different type of problem on our hands going forward,” he notes.“We need to really come to grips with the fact that what we saw on Jan. 6 is not simply the usual bad apples acting out yet again,” Pape says.

'Among today’s senators and representatives, the overwhelming majority of racial and ethnic minority members are Democrats (83%), while 17% are Republicans. This represents a shift from the last Congress, when just 10% of non-White lawmakers were Republicans. Our analysis reflects the 532 voting members of Congress seated as of Jan. 26, 2021.' -Pew Research Center


  Yes-there are racist motivations within the Republican party, despite denials and regardless of the socio-economic diversity of the rioters. These people will defend lies and violence to stay in power and undermine our democracy...I find this disturbing, dangerous and definitely not over...The Democratic efforts to change election laws may not be perfect, but some basic rules to avoid cheating seem so common sense that the two parties Must cooperate in order to avoid future violence.