Insecurity and Inequality

  • A long NYT piece about the US economy, feeling bad, inequality, and insecurity;
  • Shorter items about hearing dialogue in movies; the latest anti-woke tantrum; and that “First they came for…” poem.

Here’s a big piece in NY Times, that could be about the necessity of everyone wanting *more* all the time — always comparing themselves to the neighbors, always needing to update to the latest model or version — to keep the capitalist economy going. Or it could be about how inequality is driven by how Republicans keep cutting taxes for the wealthy, over and over. (Because the Republican party is financed by oligarchs.)

NY Times, guest essay by Astra Taylor, 18 Aug 2023: Our Economy Thrives on Bad Feelings

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Veritasium, Star Talk, Sapiens

There is so much nonsense on the web — and so much news about nonsensical, irrational people — it’s refreshing to find occasional pockets of knowledge and wisdom. I should try to pay more attention to these, and less attention to the entirely predictable torrent of nonsense from the conspiracy theorists and politics in general.

Here’s a site I stumbled upon years ago, and discussed in this post but haven’t kept up with. It’s called Veritasium, which has a Facebook page, a YouTube channel (with 14.1M subscribers!), and its own site Veritasium: An element of truth, run by one Derek Muller Derek Muller, who apparently makes a living making videos on science and engineering topics for these sites. (Presumably through the ads embedded in the videos.) Here’s a sample YouTube video, about entropy.

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Jocks In, Academics Out

  • How that college in Florida is transforming itself to focusing on jocks, rather than academics;
  • How at least one commentator thinks Trump is doomed and will go to jail, while I’m not so sure;
  • Then several items about conservatives’ explicit homophobia, their simplistic take on the “war between good and evil,” and the increasing evangelical take on Jesus’ teachings as “weak”.

NYT, Michelle Goldberg, 14 Aug 2023: At a College Targeted by DeSantis, Gender Studies Is Out, Jocks Are In

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Corridors

  • The way I would have reimagined the Enterprise for Strange New Worlds;
  • Five rules for reading the news, from Big Think, and my thoughts about them;
  • Apocalyptic rhetoric from the right; conspiracy theories about the Maui wildfires.

I’ve enjoyed the current season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds well enough. (Though I’m extremely irritated by its not displaying the episode titles.) But it’s always bothered me about this franchise, extending from 1966 to the present day, that the producers and production designers keep re-imagining and changing everything when there’s no particular reason for doing so. (Never mind the early movies’ penchant for destroying the Enterprise again and again, so they kept having to get new ones.) The ship of course, and also the uniforms.

If I were making a Star Trek series set on the same Enterprise that James Kirk captained, but a decade or two before when Captain Pike commanded it, this is what I would do.

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Scales of the Universe

  • The 13 scales that define our physical universe;
  • A video that maps the Milky Way onto the United States, where on that scale our sun would fit between the ridges of a fingerprint;
  • Recalling again the famous Powers of Ten video from 1977;
  • And “Religion” from Philip Glass’ Naqoyqatsi.

Some sciency bits today. I’ve always been fascinated by timelines and by scales of time and space. Here are a couple new ones.

Big Think, Ethan Siegel, 14 Aug 2023: The 13 scales that define our physical Universe, subtitled “The visible Universe extends 46.1 billion light-years from us, while we’ve probed scales down to as small as ~10^-19 meters.”

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Why I Hate Pop Concerts

  • Today’s lead article is about those of us who dislike attending pop concerts, even of singers and bands we otherwise admire and adore;
  • Then, about PragerU; the “lost boys” on the American Right; and Lukianoff & Haidt’s book about Coddling, which I’m still reading my way through.
  • And the leading track from Philip Glass’s Powaqqatsi.

Why I don’t like attending concerts. Of pop singers, I should say; I’m fine with classical concerts.

Salon, D. Watkins, 13 Aug 2023: You don’t love live shows: I have questions for concertgoers who record everything, subtitled “I used to think I was the only one who detested attending concerts, but your actions show I’m not alone”

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The Slow Death of Lawns in Deserts

  • Major item today about the slow death of lawns in deserts, especially in the US southwest;
  • Then a few quick items, about the decline of Christianity, and Scientology’s psychological torture;
  • And a musical piece by Ludovico Einaudi.
– – –

This has been a long time coming.

LA Times, Editorial Board, 13 Aug 2023: Editorial: Say goodbye to grass that’s only there for looks. California can’t afford to waste water

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Feeding Voters a Fantasy World

The most alarming thing I’ve learned in the past decade is how so many ordinary people are not smart, not well-educated, are susceptible to political ideology and religious zealotry, and are driven by ideology and zealotry to try to take down those who are smart and well-educated.

I have to assume this has always been true — no reason to think otherwise — but with the advent of social media it’s become increasingly evident. Everyone can spout off their views, no matter how nonsensical, and make them plain to the world. For 30 years (from my 20s to my 50s) I lived in what would now be called a bubble at work and socially among other smart, well-informed people, and did not realize the true situation. It was probably better in the old days (!) when you conversed politely with family and friends and never discussed, or knew about, their private opinions (about politics or religion, as the advice went).

At the same time, that social media has brought birds of a feather closer together is doing disastrous things to our (in the US at least) politics.

Heather Cox Richardson, August 10, 2023

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American Fragility and the Latest Political Hijinks

  • David Brooks on a kind of American decline, echoing some points of a 2018 book I happen to be half-way through reading;
  • Quick links about slitting throats, Republican credulity, and firing Democrats;
  • John Scalzi on that Ohio ballot measure.

Here’s another coincidence about reading a book that turns out to so closely reflecting current events. (Recall this 4 Aug post.)

Today’s major item is an opinion essay by David Brooks in NYT. The coincidence is that I’m part-way through reading one of those books I’ve been meaning to get around to for the not-quite-five-years since it was published, Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt’s The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas are Setting up a Generation for Failure, published in 2018. And Brooks cites the book in this essay, though his points aren’t precisely those of the book.

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Needless Deaths, Groceries, and Trump vs. Jesus

  • David Wallace-Wells: why do Americans suffer so many “needless deaths” than other nations?;
  • Why groceries are expensive is not an American issue;
  • How some Trump-loving congregants deride Jesus’ teachings as “weak”.
  • And Hans Zimmer’s “Journey to the Line,” from THE THIN RED LINE, perhaps my favorite movie score of all time.

NY Times, David Wallace-Wells (subscriber-only newsletter), 9 Aug 2023: Why Is America Such a Deadly Place?

On the continuing theme of how the US is not the greatest nation on Earth, as the MAGA folks believe, on most measures of societal health.

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