Japanese Navy accounces a crash program to build 12 new frigates by 2028 due to "the increasingly stern security environment around Japan."
Massive hoard of coins dating to the 4th century AD found on the seabed off Sardinia. The hoard had to be massive because the coins are the debased, silver-free folli of the declining empire, worth very little compared to the silver pieces of the 1st century.
Substantive NY Times piece on the intellectuals who have embraced right-wing "catastrophism," the belief that the US is somehow on the verge of collapse and liberals are promoting that collapse because they hate America. Ungated summary by Kevin Drum here. I have to say that it takes a weird mindset to look around America and see a collapsing society. Compared to what? Mexico? Russia? Brazil? The US in the 1960s?
Today's headline: Four Men Charged in the Case of the Missing Golden Toilet (NY Times). You'll be pleased to learn the object it is not merely a toilet but an "artwork." Thank you, Marcel Duchamp.
Microsoft announces an initiative to apply AI and cloud computing to chemistry in a big way: "Our goal is to compress the next 250 years of chemistry and materials science progress into the next 25." They think chemical analysis will be the "killer ap" for quantum computing when that becomes available.
Bizarre goings on among wikipedia admins: wikipedia statement, thread on X.
French police are investigating claims that antisemitic graffiti was spraypainted by Russian agents (Post on X, French news story).
Drunk grizzly bears keep being killed by trains in the Rockies. It seems they get drunk eating grain that falls off trains and ferments, and then pass out on the tracks. We're not talking about a few grains here and there but whole cars full, because, it seems, trains derail up there all the time.
Citibank fined $25 million for discriminating against Armenian Americans.
Kevin Drum thinks it may be time to stop forcing To Kill a Mockingbird on high school students.
The fascinating origins of the jungle gym in four-dimensional math.
FBI will move its headquarters to Greenbelt, Maryland. I worked on the environmental impact statement for this move back in 2015-2016 but then Trump nixed the plan as too expensive. Biden must have revived it. I think the FBI always prefered the Greenbelt site but there was a lot of local opposition, which I guess was overriden by the state government and Maryland's Congressional delegation.
Wolves eat elk and moose, which helps beavers to thrive, but on the other hand they also eat a lot of beavers, focusing on those who travel too far from their ponds, thus confining beavers to smaller ranges. (NY Times, original article)
Besides the big wins for abortion rights, Tuesday's election was a major defeat for Moms for Liberty, the book-banning ladies from Florida; they seem to have lost in all their high-profile efforts. I am actually a little ambivalent about this because I think there is a lot of harmful racial rhetoric on the left that I would rather not have in schools, but in practice teaching about Kendi-style antiracism seems to be quite rare and the rules people write to ban it could be read as banning all discussion of race.
NPR story inspired by a new book on American Girl dolls. Another product that has fallen into the uncanny valley where you can either ignore slavery entirely and be attacked for that or try to deal with it and be attacked for that.
Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor on the glass harp.
Ukraine
Spectacular video showing the destruction of a Russian column at Avdiivka.
Russian exile Vladimir Pastukhov argues that Putin needs the war in Ukraine to continue indefinitely, because Putin thinks staying on a war footing is the only way he stays in power. (Like Napoleon, I guess.) War, say Pastukhov, is a drug to which Putin is addicted. And at Threadreader.
Ukraine attacked the Zaliv shipyard in Kerch, damaging a new Russian frigate, the Askold (Uri, Noel Reports, Kyiv Independent) OSINT guys were divided about the damage shown in satellite photos, some calling it catastrophic, other not so impressed, but an up-close photo shows significant damage. And video of the attack. Interesting that shipyards in Crimea are full of Ukrainian sympathizers who gloatingly post all this stuff.
A threat on why Russia has lost so many tanks in Ukraine: lousy tanks, lousy battlefield doctrine, and not caring how many they lose.
Kyiv Independent on the Russian Lancet kamikaze drone.
British military official on the rate of munitions consumption in a contemporary peer conflict like Urkaine: "Think of a ludicrous number, double it, add a zero, and you’re still not there."
European military capacity: "Norwegian ammunition maker Nammo told lawmakers in Oslo...The company estimates Europe would need around 20 million shells for about a month of combat operations, with industrial capacity in the region at less than half a million shells."
Interview with a Ukrainian Captain who has been fighting since 2014. Says many Russians are very tough soldiers, including some who were just mobilized a few weeks before, and Russian commanders are willing to take losses in a way Ukraine cannot.
Kevin Drum thinks it may be time to stop forcing To Kill a Mockingbird on high school students.
ReplyDeleteI agree. It's a wildly outdated book which modern readers - particularly high school students - are deeply removed from. It depicts things that are deeply foreign and incomprehensible to young people today - society, ways of thinking, basic mannerisms and modes of speech... it's no Chaucer, but it's definitely a very alien and weird thing to read for a kid born in 2008.
While we're at it, can we also stop foisting other perennial-favorite Boomer books on kid? Old Yeller, Where The Red Fern Grows, Grapes of Wrath, Their Eyes Were Watching God... books about the 1920s and 30s, in rural backwaters, where people get brutalized senselessly, and the message of the book is something about "coming of age" or whatever?
Making a kid born in 2008 read books about a world 90+ years prior would be like if the Boomers had been made to read books from the mid 1800s.
(Perhaps they were? That period includes books like War and Peace, Les Misérables, Great Expectations, Little Women, Wuthering Heights, David Copperfield, Jane Eyre... perhaps the Boomers were subjected to the favorite literature of their own elder generations? It might explain the trend, if not excuse it - nostalgia is toxic, particularly when it guides the educations of entire generations.)
“Don't limit a child to your own learning, for he was born in another time.” - Rabindranath Tagore
Substantive NY Times piece on the intellectuals who have embraced right-wing "catastrophism," the belief that the US is somehow on the verge of collapse and liberals are promoting that collapse because they hate America. Ungated summary by Kevin Drum here. I have to say that it takes a weird mindset to look around America and see a collapsing society. Compared to what? Mexico? Russia? Brazil? The US in the 1960s?
ReplyDeleteYet another Republican move taken straight out of the Fascist playbook.
You claim that society itself is on the verge of collapse; you argue that, conveniently, the people imperiling it just so happen to be your political opposition; you explain that they're doing so knowingly and intentionally, because they are wicked and perfidious and they hate "The Nation" / "The People" / "Our Values" / etc; and then you use all of that fearmongering to justify... well, whatever you damn well please.
Restrict freedoms. Jail the opposition. Overthrow democracy. Invade and annex neighboring states. Conduct genocide / ethnic cleansing. "Die Völk" are imperiled! We are therefor forced to take every conceivable measure to protect ourselves and everything we hold dear! We must overthrow the government to ensure law and order! We must sow division to ensure unity! We must lie to ensure truth! We must subjugate to ensure liberty! We must wage war to ensure peace! We must kill to ensure life itself! We have no choice! Our hands are tied! Damn those filthy Jews / Liberals and their irrational hatred of Germany / America, forcing us to do all this! Oh, the humanity!
Bach on glass harp -- gotta' include the guy who was there first, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKRj-T4l-e8.
ReplyDeleteLove your blog.