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All posts for the month October, 2022

ON A STROLL THIS LOVELY AUTUMN DAY IN AMERICA…

Published October 26, 2022 by Nan Mykel

 

 

ON A STROLL THIS LOVELY AUTUMN DAY…

I had received the following earlier in my e-mail, uninvited:

Americans Who Want Deadly Close-Quarter-Combat Power In Their Pocket…

This FREE Spring-Loaded Karambit Knife Shreds Flesh & Tough Material Like A Razor-Steel Raptor Claw

From <https://tacticalusa.com/offers/karambit/v2/?AFFID=1031&click_id=1023f87d09f5d266f7dc51ededd73e&SID=350015>

This afternoon when I visited Peddlers Junction at our town mall I was treated to the view of other flesh-destroying weapons:  There were many knives, including one knife emblazoned with the word TRUMP on the knife itself, and there were all sorts of swords, even brass knuckles….

In case you’re wondering, I didn’t make a purchase at either of these spaces, remaining I suppose a sitting duck.

SABOTEURS

Published October 24, 2022 by Nan Mykel

 

Do you think they’ll sue me for defamation and invasion of privacy?   

Not likely, since it’s me on the left and my youngest daughter on the right.

Though it looks like they’re up to something sneaky, it’s one of many photos taken today, during a visit to my daughter.  But this is the only one so funny that I’d risk my reputation as a beauty queen to come clean.

Besides, I thought we could all use a good laugh.

 

VOMITUS

Published October 24, 2022 by Nan Mykel
A broken window at a hospital in March in Mariupol, Ukraine. Russian officials have made clear that their goal is to replace any childhood attachment to home with a love for Russia.

Emma Bubola, a Times reporter based in London, spent weeks locating Ukrainian children and families affected by Russia’s resettlement policy.

Sign up for the Russia-Ukraine War Briefing.  Every evening, we’ll send you a summary of the day’s biggest news. Get it sent to your inbox.

As Russian forces laid siege to the Ukrainian city of Mariupol this spring, children fled bombed-out group homes and boarding schools. Separated from their families, they followed neighbors or strangers heading west, seeking the relative safety of central Ukraine.

Instead, at checkpoints around the city, pro-Russia forces intercepted them, according to interviews with the children, witnesses and family members. The authorities put them on buses headed deeper into Russian-held territory.

“I didn’t want to go,” said Anya, 14, who escaped a home for tuberculosis patients in Mariupol and is now with a foster family near Moscow. “But nobody asked me.”

In the rush to flee, she said, she left behind a sketchbook containing her mother’s phone number. All she could remember were the first three digits.

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began in February, Russian authorities have announced with patriotic fanfare the transfer of thousands of Ukrainian children to Russia to be adopted and become citizens. On state-run television, officials offer teddy bears to new arrivals, who are portrayed as abandoned children being rescued from war.

In fact, this mass transfer of children is a potential war crime, regardless of whether they were orphans. And while many of the children did come from orphanages and group homes, the authorities also took children whose relatives or guardians want them back, according to interviews with children and families on both sides of the border.

As Russian troops pushed into Ukraine, children like Anya who were fleeing newly occupied territories were swept up. Some were taken after their parents had been killed or imprisoned by Russian troops, according to local Ukrainian officials.

This systematic resettlement is part of a broader strategy by the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, to treat Ukraine as a part of Russia and cast his illegal invasion as a noble cause. His government has used children — including the sick, poor and orphaned — as part of a propaganda campaign presenting Russia as a charitable savior.

A Quora Surprise

Published October 23, 2022 by Nan Mykel

I never know what to expect on Quora, but I remain curious:

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The real reason is going to blow your mind. You might want to finish reading this out of doors so you don’t splatter your kitchen ceiling with brains.


(it’s because Obama didn’t break any laws)

Whoa, right? Get ready for another shocker!


(the right-wing media is lying to you – like, a lot)

And they do it with apparent impunity because y’all never, ever, learn. Let’s work through a couple recent examples, and I’ll show you how it works…

Trump gets caught stealing documents. Right-wing media finds a story about Obama reserving documents for his Presidential Library, which remain in the care of the National Archives and Records Administration. Right-wing narrative: “Obama does the same thing!”

DeSantis’ little stunt goes bad. Right-wing media finds a story about unaccompanied minors being resettled…using airplanes! Right-wing narrative: “Biden does the same thing!”

Let’s say Trump gets caught doing something wrong again. It’s gonna happen. The right-wing media will jump into gear. “Can we find anything remotely similar that Hillary/Obama/Biden did”?

They want something that actually happened. It would be super if they actually also did something illegal, but ok, that’s unlikely. “Just get me what you got!”, I imagine the Fox talking heads yelling at their assistants. They twist the facts to make it seem like a great whataboutism, leaving out key information, then the hordes go online with it. “Well, libs, whatabout this, lulzzz?”

You get spanked by a dose of reality, but then you turn around and go straight back to the poisoned well of disinformation for more. “Ah-ha, what about this? What about that”?

You don’t say, “gee, maybe our guy is doing something bad?” You don’t reflect upon why you’re supporting such a person. You look for a way to deflect from what your guy is doing. Can you see the problem? And, incidentally, nobody is deflected for long. It just takes a quick google search and we can all see it’s a lie. Why can’t you?

INSULIN METAPHOR FOR TODAY’S VALUES

Published October 22, 2022 by Nan Mykel

Image Facebook.com

This is a reblog from Ned Hanson’s site:

On January 23rd, 1923 Banting, Best, and Collip were awarded the American patents for insulin. They sold the patent to the University of Toronto for $1 each. Banting notably said: “Insulin does not belong to me, it belongs to the world.” His desire was for everyone who needed access to it to have it.

In order for the insulin to be mass produced and widely available, the pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly and Co. were given the rights to do so. While this incredible advancement was intended as a gift from the discoverers, Eli Lilly and the two other major insulin producers, Sanofi and Novo Nordisk, have turned insulin into profit machines, assisting in bringing in billions of dollars in profit every year. By 1923, insulin was the highest-selling product in Eli Lilly’s history, and profits from it accounted for over half of the company’s revenue. As we know, the prices have continued to skyrocket ever since.

A gift to the world has become a tool for price gouging patients all over the world. The greed of the pharmaceutical industry is keeping insulin out of the hands of millions. This greed leads to the loss of countless lives and dampens the dream of Banting, which was to make insulin a gift that belongs to the world.

The Mystery of Reality

Published October 22, 2022 by Nan Mykel

Image: Wallpapercave.com

Seriously, what is going on?

Google reports that the Supreme Court’s 2010 ruling in CITIZEN’S UNITED VS. FEC asserted that “corporations are people and removed reasonable campaign contribution limits, allowing a small group of wealthy donors and special interests to use dark money to influence elections.”

Could that have made the country so crazy?  The love of money, someone once said, is the root of all evil.  And craziness?  Manicky, that’s what it feels like, with more than a tad of paranoia.  Maybe it wouldn’t have been so bad if some powerful churches hadn’t caught the rush for power, too.  Biden should be appreciated for not just cashing in his marbles and going home.  If there was ever a thankless job situation, he inherited it.

I read Quora whenever it catches my eye, and today I read a Tweeted quote from Trump in February of 2016, It was a direct quote from Mussolini: “It is better to live one day as a lion than 100 years as a sheep.”  No surprise; lions slaughter sheep.

While we can still hope I’m singing, “What the world needs now is love, sweet love…”

Sex and Gender: Diversity in Chimps, Bonobos, and Us

Published October 22, 2022 by Nan Mykel

Sorry I missed this earlier. Thanks for telling me, Annie:

annieasksyou's avatarannieasksyou...

Photo by Keith Lobo on Pexels.com

Frans de Waal is a Dutch biologist and primatologist who thinks humans have some silly ideas/constructs about sex and gender. He’s written a number of books, most recently Different: Gender Through the Eyes of a Primatologist.

I heard him express his strong opinions on Alan Alda’s Clear and Vivid podcast and found them thought-provoking—an interesting perspective as Americans seek to navigate one of a number of “us vs them” issues.

Please keep in mind that this is my summary of a podcast discussion evoked by the contents of his book. It is, inevitably, a superficial rendering of some very complex topics.

Based on his research and observations, de Waal says:

“Some conservative politicians say there are men and women—that’s all.” But “things are not so simple—with us and our closest relatives.”

For Starters, What Are We Talking About?

De Waal made quick…

View original post 1,897 more words

Do Bonobos Embarrass You?

Published October 21, 2022 by Nan Mykel

This, from Three Quarks Daily:


The Gendered Ape, Essay 6: Those Embarrassing Bonobos!

POSTED ON MONDAY, OCT 17, 2022 2:15AM BY FRANS DE WAAL

Editor’s Note: Frans de Waal’s new book, Different: Gender Through the Eyes of a Primatologist, has generated some controversy and misunderstanding. He will address these issues in a series of short essays which will be published at 3QD and can all be seen in one place here. More comments on these essays can also be seen at Frans de Waal’s Facebook page.

by Frans de Waal   Of all the great apes, the bonobo is built most like our ancestors, including relatively long legs and the shape of their feet. Here standing upright, an adult female (left) and adolescent male. Since bonobos are genetically equally close to us as chimpanzees, they deserve the same attention in relation to human evolution. Photograph by Frans de Waal.

It’s not always easy to talk about bonobos at academic gatherings. There is no issue with fellow primatologists, who are used to straightforward descriptions of sexual behavior and know the recent evidence. But it’s different with people outside my field, such as anthropologists, philosophers, or psychologists. They become fidgety, scratch their heads, snicker, or adopt a puzzled look. Why do bonobos stump them?

One reason for the discomfort is excessive shyness about erotic behavior, which bonobos exhibit in all positions that we can imagine, and even some that we can’t. Moreover, these apes do it in all partner combinations. People assume that animals use sex only for reproduction, but I estimate that three quarters of bonobo sex has nothing to do with it.

But there is a deeper reason why bonobos are the black sheep of our extended family despite being as close to us as chimpanzees. They fail to conform to the traditional model of the human ancestor. Most evolutionary scenarios of our species stress male bonding, male dominance, hunting, aggression, and territorial warfare. This is how our species conquered the earth, it is thought.

Chimpanzee behavior, which can be quite violent, lends support to this narrative. This ape is therefore happily embraced as model. The peaceful, female-dominated bonobo, on the other hand, doesn’t fit. The species is sidelined, such as in “The Better Angels of Our Nature,” in which Steven Pinker calls bonobos “very strange primates.” And Richard Wrangham, in “The Goodness Paradox,” portrays them as an evolutionary offshoot, who “have gone their separate way.” In other words, bonobos may be delightful apes, they are bizarre and irrelevant. Let’s just ignore them!

According to pioneering fieldworker Takayoshi Kano and his students, bonobo groups in the forest regularly “mingle” and “fuse” without any fighting. They share food between communities and occasionally adopt orphaned youngsters from their neighbors. All of this presents a huge contrast with chimpanzees, which know only various degrees of hostility between communities.

My own studies made matters worse by describing bonobos as polyamorous flower children. Intense erotic contact, known as GG-rubbing, is common among females. It allows them to form the powerful sisterhood that is the glue of their society.

Since the species has thrown a huge wrench into popular origin myths, we see regular attempts to revise our views, such as when journalists or political pundits tout observations of bonobo aggression and predation. Unfortunately for them, predation means very little. In biology, it falls under feeding behavior, not aggression. Anyone who has been chased by a bull realizes that a species’ diet says little about its aggressiveness.

But it’s true that bonobos occasionally fight. In fact, their extensive sexual activity would make no sense if their society were free of social tensions. The main purpose of this activity is to keep the peace. “Make love – not war” is a bonobo slogan.

Until now, however, there is not a single observation of one bonobo killing another, neither in captivity nor in the wild. A recent count of lethal aggression among bonobos and chimpanzees in Africa listed 152 incidents. Of those, only 1 concerned bonobos, and this was a suspected killing, not an observed case. All other cases concerned chimpanzees.

Bonobos may be genetically equally close to us as chimpanzees, but anatomically they are more like us. Harold Coolidge, the American anatomist who gave the bonobo its species status, already concluded in 1933 from his dissection of a bonobo corpse that this ape “may approach more closely to the common ancestor of chimpanzees and man than does any living chimpanzee.”

I had to think of this when “Ardi” was discovered, a 4.4 million year old Ardipithecus fossil from Ethiopia. Her unusually small blunted canine teeth indicated that she was relatively peaceful. The discoverers could only think of chimpanzees as a comparison, however, when they concluded that Ardi’s physique set her apart from her ape forebears. As usual, the bonobo was overlooked.

With their long legs and frequent upright gait, however, bonobos resemble our immediate ancestors more than any other living ape. Not only does Ardi look very much like an upright bonobo, her assumed peacefulness also brings bonobos to mind.

But we’ll have to wait for a new generation of anthropologists before they will dare to contemplate that perhaps we descend not from a blustering chimp-like ancestor but from a gentle, empathic bonobo-like ape.

FURTHER READING

Commentary on a revisionist 2007 New Yorker article that tried to spin-doctor bonobos into aggressive apes: www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/07-08-08/

Anatomical comparison between bonobos and human ancestors by Adrienne Zihlman et al. (1978): www.nature.com/articles/275744a0

Lethal aggression among wild apes analyzed by Michael Wilson et al. (2014): www.nature.com/articles/nature13727

For further details and references to the literature, read “Different: Gender Through the Eyes of a Primatologist” (Norton, 2022). A video about the book can be seen here:  https://fb.watch/ffbauZBzNb/

From <https://3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2022/10/the-gendered-ape-essay-6-those-embarrassing-bonobos.html>

FELLOW AMERICAN FARMERS:

Published October 21, 2022 by Nan Mykel

 

 

All right, I moved to the city, but the first seven years of my life were the happiest, and on my grandparents’ farm on Old Dowd Road in Charlotte, North Carolina.  I attended the Church right across the road, and my grandmother was a saint.  When I once asked her if we hated Hitler, she said, “No, we just don’t like his ways.”

With an early upbringing like that, how could I vote for Trump?  Was he trying to buy our vote back in 2020 when he gave 46 billion dollars to aid farmers?  If so, it seems he may be getting paid back in votes.  It’s true  these days that farm folk are needy, but voting for what amounts to the death of Medicare and Social Security is  cause for re-thinking it.  If my grandmother were alive today I know she would say, “We don’t hate Trump, we just don’t like his ways.”  Is there one of the Ten Commandments he hasn’t trashed?  (I haven’t counted).

I love to remember my days on the farm…eating a warm tomato in the field, playing on the quartzite in the red clay under the clothesline, watching the ants in the ant parade, and the lovely smell of the land after a heavy rain.  I just can’t get my head around the notion of rural dwellers voting for a big fat liar.  (I’m responding in part to a NYTimes column by Paul Krugman that got my dander up.)

Talk back to me in commens, if I’ve been able to facilitate that.  Maybe you can explain how you could vote for a liar and risk our democracy…or decide not to vote for him?

Uncle

Published October 20, 2022 by Nan Mykel

 

 

I’m feeling very judgmental toward humanity these days.  Who put what in the water?  What values have we swallowed, whole hog?  We’re letting avarice replace brotherhood and trying to replace human efforts by robots and plants!  There’s a new industry opening up that would replace human workers by robots…and plants!  If I read right, you can order a gadget that allows a plant to conduct the movement of a robot.

Given what we know about the mysteriousness of fungi and their everywhereness, the question is WHY?  Hard to believe it’s to avoid climate change.  This burgeoning industry appears to me to be more motivated by misdirected energy.  I kid you not. Look up plant directing robots, and see how slow workers are in contrast to the robotic world.  And what are we going to do with a generation of prohibited abortions?  Cannon fodder.  Sorry, that I may sound bitter and discouraged; I am.  Where are the leaders of the real Christian churches?  How can so many people endorse lies?

Will a culture gone mad or climate change remove us first?

P.S. I stumbled across a new book deriding climate change sience. I wonder what dark money may have paid for the publishing of that cultural gift.  Alright, I’m going back to bed now.

 

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