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Sunrise and Sunset

2024-05-23

Photograph of recent sunrise from my house by me

At sunrise, there is often a mist that comes up and obscures the horizon. It is faint, but when you look towards something that is far away you will see that the details are obscured.

The weather never changes here. It is always sunny and nice, sometimes with puffy white clouds.

Online, in the New York Times, Reuters, and the Apple News app, things are getting violent and chaotic. What’s happening feels like stochastic terrorism. Just a week ago, the prime minister of Slovakia was shot five times and critically wounded. His life has been spared, but other, lesser known people will not be so lucky.

Now Biden is behind in the polls and he’s counting on a knock-out blow at the debate. I predict a finite probability that Trump will cancel the second debate after a weak performance in the first.

Yet those things aren’t going to affect us directly. What will affect us all is the unavoidable death-watch beetle of climate change, ticking away in the sea and air. The effects are already being seen in the abnormal weather patterns and sudden temperature extremes that we experience now.

Unprocessed COVID grief from 2020

2024-05-21
photo courtesy LuAnn Hunt via pixabay.com

Here’s a theory: the people of the United States are “in a funk” with rates of depression, anxiety, and just plain “disgruntlement” that are through the roof– because we have unresolved trauma from the pandemic. This theory is propounded in an article by clinical psychiatrists George Makari and Richard Friedman, published in The Atlantic in March. Mary Trump refers to it in her blog on Substack.

The theory claims that under normal circumstances in a national emergency, the people would unite under the leadership of an understanding and caring president like Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In 2020, however, we were deliberately divided by the man who held the presidency at the time because he believed that the key to his re-election was to divide the people into “us” and “them.”

In medical terms, we are suffering from PTSD. We have gone through a great trauma, more than a million of us have died, and we have suddenly been told we don’t have to worry about it anymore (although hundreds of people a week are still dying from COVID). What is worse, the trauma continues because Donald Trump continues to divide us. We can’t recover from the trauma while it is still going on.

Many, in fact most, people don’t show outward signs of PTSD. The damage only results in a somewhat diminished mood. Some people have nightmares, depression, irritability, and free-floating anxiety. A few people are completely unable to function at all.

The important thing to combat this problem is a therapeutic approach to current society. A wise, benevolent leader would do the things that bring us together– someone like Joe Biden. He doesn’t have to be a good golf player; FDR, for example, couldn’t even walk and had uncontrolled hypertension (for which there was no known treatment at the time). Trump, on the other hand, is the opposite of therapy.

Our natural tendency to avoid painful memories has induced us to forget or at least weaken our memories of the worst of the pandemic. Trump was president for the first ten months, the worst months although the death toll was still limited. The incident at the Capitol on January 6, 2021 puts a firm terminus on that period in our minds.

Yet we still forget just how bad things got in 2020 and 2021. Even after Biden became president and the vaccine came out there was still a lot of dying going on. The virus spread throughout the US despite all our isolation and masking, but there was a significant sabotage movement going on that only became stronger with time. Instead of uniting over our shared experience and having the benefit of mutual support, we divided into two warring clans: red and blue. We wasted much of our energy fighting over what was going on and what to do about it.

Then the same people who denied the seriousness of COVID and questioned vaccines and masks blamed the very people who were providing the vaccine and decreeing economic relief for the inevitable inflation and supply chain problems caused by the pandemic.

Trump’s propaganda has convinced us that his lies are the truth. There’s no other way to explain the survey that shows that over 15% of us believe that Biden is responsible for the Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade. That’s the opposite of the truth and beats the 5% of us who think the Earth is flat.

Our current malaise is a direct result of the divisive propaganda promulgated by Trump and his allies that caught us in a vulnerable time and is still preventing us from healing by continuing the trauma.

If this malaise prevents us from re-electing Joe Biden then our country will go down a very dangerous path. Newsweek quoted Mary Trump, niece of Donald Trump, as saying “He will destroy us.”

International Criminal Court Seeks Warrants for both Israeli and Palestinian Leaders; Warrant on Putin still active.

2024-05-20

I didn’t mean to imply that the size of the picture relates to the degree of culpability of the subject. War crimes and crimes against humanity committed on both sides are credibly alleged by the investigators from the International Criminal Court in their report. Requests for warrants were today addressed to a Court Judge. The subjects are three leaders on the Palestinian side and two on the Israeli side.

That means that both these sides are at fault in the atrocities which have been revealed to a horrified world by modern journalism. Yet both sides feel fully justified, even proud of what they have done and are still doing. Clearly, the minds of the participants are overtaken by delusions about what they are doing and why. I don’t want to say that the thing to do is put them on antipsychotic drugs, but that suggestion comes to mind.

On the other hand, Ukraine

This situation is entirely unlike that which is occurring in Ukraine. There, the Russian Army mounted a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on the flimsiest of pretexts two years ago. The Ukrainians have been fighting off the Russians although they are badly outnumbered and outgunned. Their equipment is mostly donated by friendly countries like us. It looks like in the long run, they will lose unless they get reinforcements.

The Ukrainians (who are at least somewhat democratic) had been relying on a treaty signed with Russia thirty-two years ago when Ukraine became an independent country. Russia promised never to violate Ukrainian territory in return for all of Ukraine’s nuclear missiles.

So I think the Ukrainians deserve all the help we can give. The Russian government is invading a smaller country and committing war crimes, and there’s already a warrant out for Vladimir Putin’s arrest. We have to stop him or he’ll keep doing it to one country after another.

Israel, Hamas, and Gaza

2024-05-20

Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem by jdblack via pixabay.com

Aside from everything else going on in the Gaza strip since October 7, there is one thing the Israelis seem to have neglected: the infrastructure needed to supply millions of suddenly homeless Palestinians, a hostile and impoverished people.

There is no police presence in the areas the IDF has denuded of habitable dwellings; there is no count of the remaining population, there is no coordinated effort to supply the necessities of life to these people such as water, food, and shelter.

As a result, after six, then seven months of war, the Palestinian people of Gaza are suffering another catastrophe, this one worst than the first.

Whether they deserve what happened is hard to comprehend. After all, more than half of them are women with children. Surely, children under twelve cannot be held criminally responsible for what Hamas has done.

What has happened, I have to keep reminding you, is a tit-for-tat increase in violence that has been going on for hundreds if not thousands of years. The perpetual war has been waxing and waning, but it clearly was ongoing in the second century AD (the Common Era), when the nascent Christians began to directly blame the Jews for the death of Jesus Christ.

I’m going to try not to get into first-century Jerusalem politics right now although it’s a fascinating subject. Suffice it to say that Jesus Christ, a legendary figure from the time the Romans occupied Jerusalem in about 30 of the Common Era. Many prophets were crucified during that period of time in Jerusalem. A single direct reference to Jesus is found in the History of Jerusalem penned by an eye-witness, Josephus Flavius. He also mentions several other martyrs to the cause of freeing Jerusalem from the Romans.

Nonetheless, a conspiracy theory grew up in the early second century that Jesus had been betrayed by his own people, the Jews (specifically the SanHedrin, a council of powerful locals) to be crucified. The Jews delivered him to the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate, who said what he said, offered the crowd Barabbas or Jesus (so it was the crowd’s fault, yes?) and then delivered Jesus to the Army to be murdered.

This conspiracy theory, that the Jewish “deep state” (the SanHedrin) had condemned Jesus for his anti-establishment teachings, has been orthodoxy in Europe since before the Middle Ages. The theory was only definitively shot down by a Pope in 1970. Many people still prescribe to it, including such far-right Republicans as Marjorie Taylor-Greene.

So, the revolt of Jerusalem occurred, and the Romans wiped the Temple off the face of the Earth in around 70 CE. A second, more desperate Jewish revolt occurred in the early second century, which was even more ruthlessly quashed. Nonetheless, Jewish people are reported to have lived in the Jerusalem area despite these thorough Roman military campaigns.

When the Muslims invaded shortly after their inception, they took over the site of the ruined temple in Jerusalem that had been destroyed by the Romans. They built a new complex of mosque and related buildings, including the Dome of the Rock shown in the photograph above. The Dome is said to contain the rock from which Mohammed ascended to Heaven in his final Night Journey. More importantly, it occupies the space previously held by the Jewish Temple and thus emphasizes the idea that Judaism is conquered.

Despite all this, the remaining Jewish population of the world benefited from the Diaspora. Since everyone spoke the same language, they naturally preferred trading with their own, and formed huge networks.

The campaign to return to the historic land of Israel is not a new thing.

a 70-year-old’s pains

2024-05-16

image from pixabay.com

Every morning by four or five o’clock I wake up with pain in my back, neck, and shoulders; I take some pain medicine and go back to sleep. By six I m fully awake. I get up slowly and stiffly. I have pain in my neck and shoulders especially until the medicine has really worked and it eases somewhat. I usually just sit on the porch and drink coffee with milk until it improves.

I have had pains in my midback since I was 18 and was involved in an accident. I was riding my bicycle when I was hit from the side by a small car (a Toyota Corolla), hit my back on the windshield/roof line, and catapulted into the street. I had some scrapes on my legs and a terrible pain in my back at the junction of the thoracic and lumbar spine (around waist level.) Xrays were negative– this was 1972, when CT scans were a distant dream.

I began having chronic back pain years later, but ibuprofen would usually help. I didn’t let it stop me from hiking, camping, bicycle riding, and generally being active, until around 2000. At that time, I was in another accident. I was driving a car that was T-boned from the right side by another driver who ran a stop sign. I was knocked out and bruised all over. The most serious problem was a concussion, and I have no memory of the two hours after the crash. Nothing about the ambulance ride or the first hour in the ER.

After that, I let the pain and the concussion limit my activity, which was a mistake.

Now, I’m disabled; I had major surgery in August 2016 to place titanium rods in my spine and cut away bone that was pressing on the nerves. The surgery gave me dramatic improvement, and I can now walk a mile or two. Every day walking is key to my continued improvement.

In other ways, though, the pain is worse. I have progressive arthritis in several areas– my left wrist, left ankle and foot, right knee, fingers, and so on. Thus, I have a lot of stiffness, especially in the morning. Stretching exercises (gently) do help.

So, at the age of seventy since about 5:30 PM on April 26, 2024, I am pretty fragile. What I’m doing now (typing) is a pretty low-stress activity. Pressure on the lower side of my wrists does induce intermittent numbness in my hands, but that’s something I can overcome by frequently lifting my hands off the keyboard.

That’s my story. I still enjoy life, but it’s a bit more circumscribed than it used to be.

Hamas in Qatar

2024-05-14

vector art from pixabay.com

This is a post about the Hamas representatives who are living in Qatar. According to the Sunday Times, a British newspaper, in an article dated April 20, 2024, the Emirate (Qatar) has hosted representatives of Hamas since 2012.

Hamas is important because, since its founding in 1987, it has been by charter dedicated to destroying Israel and killing Jews. According to them, clearing Palestine of Jews is a religious duty. Their preferred method of accomplishing this is by bombings and terror attacks on civilians.

Qatar has been hosting top political leaders from Hamas on the request of the Americans and the Israelis. They find it necessary to keep an open channel of communication with Hamas to allow for negotiations, mostly over hostage exchanges. The Hamas members in Qatar were apparently “out of the loop” on the Hamas leadership’s planning for the bloody raid of October 7.

According to the newspaper, recently the Qatari government has tired of hosting Hamas representatives. The Hamas leaders have occasionally been accused of plotting terror attacks; once the Qataris deported one of them for this behavior. The newspaper describes the Hamas negotiators as being “obstinate.” In addition, Republicans have pressured Qatar to expel Hamas recently. Parenthetically, the largest American air base in the Middle East is in Qatar.

It is possible that “after the war ends” Qatar will get rid of the Hamas delegation. If so, there are few alternatives, all of them dangerous. The Israelis have pledged not to attack anyone in Qatar, but those in other countries are easy prey for Israel’s expert assassins.

The other members of Hamas leadership are in Gaza: the only name mentioned is Yahyah Sinwar, who the Israelis are trying to kill. They thought he was in Rafah, but the Americans have warned them that he is currently in Khan Younis. In any case, he is likely to be in a deep underground tunnel surrounded by hostages, according to military sources.

Recent outbreaks of fighting in northern Gaza have exposed the power vacuum there. They also demonstrate that Israel cannot wipe out Hamas, not even if they destroy Rafah and the tunnels. There will always be remnants that regenerate, possibly under new names, to fill power vacuums like the one in Gaza, wherever the Israeli army has been through.

Why are we here?

2024-05-10

Billy the dog when he was young.

Billy and I go for a long walk almost every day. He tries to be around me as much as he can. When I’m at the computer he lies on the floor right behind me. He’s been that way ever since his buddy Boris died suddenly (a stroke) two years ago. He appeared on our driveway in 2016, about a month before I had spinal surgery (August 7). Boris was a dog that was supposedly owned by a lady who lived across the street, but Billy lured him away when we went for walks past his house. We never trained either dog to do anything but sit, and they were never interested in playing fetch. Billy is a very intelligent dog just the same. Boris was very loyal to him (and us).

But that’s not what I want to talk about. No. I want to know, why do we exist? Well, if we didn’t exist, we wouldn’t be here to think about it.

On the other hand, Copernicus (a Polish astronomer from the 1500s) suggested that the Earth revolves around the Sun rather than the Sun revolving around the Earth. This thought started a landslide that has resulted in the opinions of astronomers and cosmologists in the 2020s being a little different. We now hold that not only are we not at the center of the galaxy, much less the Universe, but that in fact the Universe has no center.

Thoughts of this sort are addressed in an article by Tim Andersen published online in Popular Mechanics on May 10, 2024. His conclusions are a little surprising.

Tim Andersen first addresses the tension between the so-called anthropic principle and the Copernican principle. The anthropic principle holds that we are here, i.e. we exist, because the Universe is specially tuned for our existence. All of the basic physical laws and measurements, such as the weight of the neutron and the speed of light, are that way because they make it possible for us to exist.

The Copernican principle demotes us to a not-special place and its mechanism for producing us is natural selection or evolution– notoriously a blind, stochastic process. The principles of natural selection were formulated by Charles Darwin in the 1800s. The beauty of natural selection is that it inevitably produces more and more complex organisms over time, eventually leading to us (and possibly beyond in the future, if we don’t blow ourselves up).

Tim Andersen says this tension can be explained by using the concept of the multiverse. In multiverses, there are infinitely many possible “setups” for the cosmological constants, and we just happen to live in a multiverse that supports human life. There are many multiverse theories, but the one he wants to explore uses what is called the theory of cosmological natural selection. This was first proposed by physicist Lee Smolin in 1992.

In this theory, the appearance of a black hole actually enables the birth of a baby universe. In this new universe, time stands still and the density of matter is infinite at the central point (the only point that exists initially). The point immediately begins to expand, “creating new matter and energy.” (In fact, the infinitely dense matter degenerates to finite density and releases energy from the transition.)

Just as our universe started at a single point as the Big Bang, every black hole starts anew. In the baby universe, black holes appear which are yet new universes, and so on. This is a bit speculative.

Andersen goes off on another tangent: carbon. Carbon monoxide is the second most common molecule in the visible universe, after molecular hydrogen, even more common than water.

In collapsing proto-stellar clouds of space gas formed in supernovae (explosions of large stars), stars form from the hydrogen and the carbon monoxide acts as a coolant, keeping the star from igniting until it is large enough. (Graphite– pure carbon– is used in nuclear reactors to slow down energetic neutrons resulting from fission and thus keep the reactor cool.)

It happens that carbon is also essential for all known life. Our bodies are mostly made of long chains of carbon with hydrogen on the side. So Andersen says that life is a byproduct of the formation of stars, which is a consequence of the universe’s evolution to create more black holes.

This is all a little hard to understand. At the end, Andersen says that it is possible that the Universe itself is alive. It’s like artificial intelligence (AI) in a way, only in a universe, not in a computer. At least it sounds good, better than an old man with a long white beard called G-d.

Two Thousand Pound Bombs

2024-05-09

vector graphic from pixabay.com

Will someone please explain to me what is the practical use of a 2,000 pound bomb in urban warfare?

Until it is explained to me, I have to assume that the purpose is to destroy an entire multi-story apartment building, or at least to render it uninhabitable.

President Biden made a decision, announced this week, to no longer supply Israel with 2,000 lb. and 500 lb. bombs. He is also, apparently, going to embargo 155 mm howitzer and tank cannon rounds. He is applying the only form of leverage available to our government. Previous Presidents have done the same thing to signal their displeasure to Israel.

If you consider refusing to support Mr. Biden in November because of the plight of Gaza, be aware that the former guy would be immeasurably worse. He was, after all, the guy who moved the US Embassy to Jerusalem and called Democratic Jews “traitors” to Israel.

The pro-Palestinian bias of Tik Tok (which is only natural because Tik Tok is so popular in Arab countries) accounts for the striking disconnect between young American’s attitudes towards Gaza and the attitudes of adults who don’t watch Tik Tok. Remember, there are only 170 million Americans who watch Tik Tok versus 2 billion people worldwide.

You could say that the unrest on campuses is a direct result of Tik Tok and the reactions of school authorities to anti-semitic protests.

Robert F Kennedy Jr’s Medical Problems as he described them in 2012 make him unfit for the Presidency.

2024-05-08
tags: ,

Robert F Kennedy Jr photo by Gage Skidmore

Here’s the thing. Mr. Kennedy is seventy years old. Mr. Trump is 77. Mr. Biden is 81. Actual comparison shows that Mr. Biden is the sharpest of the lot. Watch his State of the Union speech if you don’t believe me.

I am 70 and I wouldn’t take the job if you paid me. I would suck at it.

Mr. Kennedy, on the other hand, is apparently keen on becoming president.

There is, however, a small problem. It seems that he has a dead worm in his brain. This does not explain his affection for conspiracy theories. He did complain in a divorce action in 2012 that it was impairing his ability to think and do his job, i.e. deliver speeches.

Now, neurocysticercosis (having a dead worm in your brain) is not rare. The common pork tapeworm will do that sometimes, penetrating into the brain and encysting itself before dying. Usually this does not cause mental problems. If the worm should happen to penetrate one of your muscles, however, it will cause intense pain. This should give you a motivation for cooking your pork dishes thoroughly.

Mr. Kennedy, however, believes that this and other matters, like mercury poisoning (which he apparently really has, from eating too much tuna) have affected his ability to think.

What is worse, he has spasmodic dysphonia, which periodically makes him so hoarse he can barely speak. It is said that he had titanium implants in his vocal cords to counteract this. At his recent interview on Bill Maher’s show, his hoarseness was so bad even I could hardly understand him. So I don’t think the titanium implants are helping much.

Why, then, would he even consider running for President? He has to self-reflect a little bit, and realize that he’s not a good candidate. He has a florid case of narcissism that is driving his quixotic quest.

Another lump

2024-05-07
photo courtesy of pixabay and IAOM-US

Here’s the thing: I have this lump on my finger that appeared one morning about a month ago. It’s raised, about 1×2 cm, on the proximal phalanx of my left second finger. It’s hard, smooth, and it hasn’t gotten bigger in the last month.

I went to the doctor and he said, “I don’t know what it is either.” He ordered an Xray, which just showed arthritis in the base of my thumb. No calcifications in the lump, which is just barely visible as a soft tissue shadow.

So he sent me to a hand surgeon. I haven’t seen him yet.

Eventually, someone is going to have to cut it off and look at it under the microscope.

It doesn’t act like a malignant tumor; it’s not growing nor painful.

Just one more consequence of having turned 70 years old on April 26.