Archives

All posts for the month July, 2024

WHAT I’VE LEARNED IN 88+ YEARS

Published July 29, 2024 by Nan Mykel

FOR ME AND MY CHILDREN:

LESSONS

1. Pick your parents

2. Make your Inner Sanctum comfy

3.  Tend your inner fire

4.  Follow your curiosity

5.   Respect your creativity

6.   Feed yourself with nature’s beauty

7.  Connect, connect, connect!

 

In the Off Chance You Believe in God…

Published July 27, 2024 by Nan Mykel

Know that He’s displeased with His earthlings.

As if the Supreme Court wasn’t bad enough,  there’s out of control wild fires lapping our …everything, I guess.  As of today 71 thousand acres are ablaze in California, and the largest in the U.S. is in Oregon, where  the total land burned or burning in Oregon reached more than a million acres on Friday, meaning the size of land burning in the state is now greater than the entire state of Rhode Island.

As of Friday morning, there were 125 active fires burning in Oregon, totaling 1,018,218 acres.

This past Sunday was the warmest single day ever recorded, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service, the European Union-funded research organization. That is, until Monday, when global temperatures inched up a bit more. Then Monday became the hottest day in modern history.

On Thursday, António Guterres, secretary general of the U.N., addressed the global heat wave and called for new efforts to protect the vulnerable and workers, as well as to make population centers more resilient.

“Let’s face facts,” he said. “Extreme temperatures are no longer a one-day, one-week or one-month phenomenon. If there is one thing that unites our divided world, it’s that we’re all increasingly feeling the heat. Earth is becoming hotter and more dangerous for everyone, everywhere.”

Smoke from the fires has reached the east coast.

“Extreme heat is the new abnormal,” Guterres said.


The state agreed to take steps to cut greenhouse gas emissions from transportation. It’s the latest of several victories for youth-led climate lawsuits.

Author Headshot By David Gelles

 

QUICK, TAKE AN ALKA SELTZER

Published July 25, 2024 by Nan Mykel

Such dumb refrains keep falling off my brain these days, and the current “Supreme” Court keeps feeding my fire.  Better an Alka Seltzer than a fentanyl, I reckon, but Jeeze!  If God or the Devil tried to publish a drama based on current news, it would be difficult to find a publisher: too bombastic/fantastic  to be believed.

As Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in a blistering dissent along with the other two liberal justices, the ruling creates a series of “nightmare scenarios” for what a president is now allowed to do. “

She added: “The relationship between the president and the people he serves has shifted irrevocably. In every use of official power, the president is now a king above the law.”
The decision, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, significantly raises the stakes of the coming election. Not only does it make clear the importance of a president’s appointments to the Supreme Court — all three of Mr. Trump’s nominees voted to give him the immunity he sought — but it also hands Mr. Trump carte blanche to act even more determinedly in a second term than he did in his first. The chief justice explicitly said that Mr. Trump’s speech and tweets on Jan. 6, 2021, urging his supporters to go to the Capitol and disrupt the certification of the vote, could well be protected as a standard use of the presidential bully pulpit. The court sent the case back to the district court to make factual determinations on that and other questions, a process that, including appeals, will take months if not longer.

And yet we know that Mr. Trump’s speech and tweets led to a violent insurrection. Now that Mr. Trump knows he could get away with that, how much worse would things get in a second term? The most urgent danger is his possible abuse of the legal system, because as the dissent suggests, if every conversation between the president and the Justice Department is considered a protected official act, there is no limit to the kinds of illegal conduct that could be plotted, even fabricating evidence.

What doesn’t count as an official act? The justices in the majority would not say, but it is hard to identify any clear guiding principle — perhaps because they couldn’t find any.

Prior to this decision, there was no grant of criminal immunity to presidents; though the authors of the Constitution gave a form of that privilege to members of Congress, they declined to do so for the chief executive. For a conservative majority that pretends to rely on historical precedent, the newly created standard is remarkable for its lack of basis in the Constitution, law or any precedent of the court. It was made up out of thin air.

The product of the majority’s invention runs counter to the entire notion of a government based on the rule of law. It also runs counter to the long-settled understanding of a president’s exposure to criminal prosecution, regardless of whether his acts were considered “official.” As Justice Sotomayor pointed out, why would Richard Nixon have accepted a pardon for his role in the Watergate scandal if not because everyone agreed that he could otherwise be prosecuted for his actions?

 

 

 

HALLELUJA?

Published July 23, 2024 by Nan Mykel

The Christian Nightmare will surely unfold in reality soon, won’t it?  When “God’s ambassadors” realize they have  captured not God nor Jesus, but someone of a very different ilk?  Somewhere not so long ago I read that the fastest growing religious folks were the new Christian immigrants, but I couldn’t find it again..

A growing Christian supremacist movement that labels its perceived enemies as “demonic” and enjoys close ties to major Republican figures is “the greatest threat to American democracy you’ve never heard of,” according to a new report from the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The SPLC, a civil rights organization that monitors extremist groups, released its “Year In Hate And Extremism 2023” report recently.

 A significant portion of the report, which tracked burgeoning anti-democratic and neo-fascist movements and actors across America, is devoted to the New Apostolic Reformation, “a new and powerful Christian supremacy movement that is attempting to transform culture and politics in the U.S. and countries across the world into a grim authoritarianism.

“Emerging out of the charismatic evangelical tradition, the NAR adheres to a form of Christian dominionism, meaning its parishioners believe it’s their divine duty to seize control of every political and cultural institution in America, transforming them according to a fundamentalist interpretation of scripture.”

NAR adherents also believe in the existence of modern-day “apostles” and “prophets” — church leaders endowed by God with supernatural abilities, including the power to heal. In 2022, a handful of these “apostles,” the report notes, issued what they called the Watchman Decree, an anti-democratic document envisioning the end of a pluralistic society in America.

The apostles claimed they had been given “legal power and authority from Heaven” and are “God’s ambassadors and spokespeople over the earth,” who “are equipped and delegated by Him to destroy every attempted advance of the enemy.” Re Christopher Mathias in Huffington Post

Here’s what to know about the outages.

Airlines, health care systems, banks and scores of other businesses and services around the world began to slowly recover recently from severe disruptions caused by a global technology outage. But issues persisted throughout the day with no clear end in sight, as businesses manually updated their systems and airlines struggled to get crews and planes to where they were needed.  The outage was attributed to a software update issued by CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity firm whose software is used by myriad industries around the world. The disruption, which reached what some experts called “historic” proportions, was a stunning example of the global economy’s fragile dependence on certain software, and the cascading effect it can have when things go wrong.

The incident strengthens my concern–correct or not–that folks who have grown so dependent on the internet and destablized education (“dumbed down”) will be fodder for the more powerful, here/or abroad.

__________________

MAYBE A RE-PRINT:

End Of

We came, we tried, we fought

and ate each other up.

We lived and died by our own hand.

If 2 survived and met on a plain,

would we hug one another

or kill again?    –Nan

 

Camel Racing

Published July 18, 2024 by Nan Mykel

I’ve discovered another hole in my education:  Camel racing. So, I thought I’d share my new info with those of you attending:

The dromedary is the camel used in camel racing. In fact, the dromedary’s name comes from the Greek verb dramein, which means “to run.” Many camels are specially raised for racing. They train on treadmills and in swimming pools.  If that isn’t a sight, there’s always ostrich racing. Camel racing is serious business abroad in Kenya, Sudan, Egypt, India, and Australia—but particularly in the Arab countries of the Middle East.  

SPEED
Horses:  44 mph  — An average thoroughbred and a camel can both do 40 mph for short(ish) distances. A camel can maintain around 25mph for an hour whereas a lot of horses would struggle with that.
Giraffe:  37 mph
Common ostrich:  43 mph
How fast are humans??  Running at 40 mph would require an immense amount of power output and energy expenditure, which is beyond the capabilities of the human body in its current form. In comparison, some animals like cheetahs can reach speeds of around 60-70 mph due to their specialized anatomy and physiology, which are optimized for high-speed running.
VERY FASTEST:
The peregrine falcon is the fastest bird, and the fastest member of the animal kingdom, with a diving speed of over 300 km/h (190 mph)

CRUELTY TO CHILDREN  –  Beyond the fact that all races involving animals carry a certain element of cruelty, camel racing has a particularly notorious legacy of recruiting young boys, in some cases children abducted and trafficked from destitute villages in South Asia, to be jockeys.  Children are often favored as jockeys because of their light weight, and in order to maximize the camels’ speed they often will fast for days at a time prior to each race.[5] It has been reported that thousands of children (some reported as young as 2 years old) are trafficked usually from countries such as Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Iran, Pakistan, and Sudan for use as jockeys in Arab States of the Persian Gulf.[6] In 2005, aid workers estimated a range of 5,000 – 40,000 child camel jockeys in the Persian Gulf region.[7][8]

The above info is from a brief visit to Google and Wikipedia.  The practice was supposedly outlawed, but a heart-wrenching video of footage of a BBC show about the cruelty revealed very young  forced child jockeys, even after they were outlawed in 2005.  In some places child riders have been replaced by small robot riders, apparently controllable from the sidelines.

CRUELTY TO THE CAMELS – An investigation by PETA Asia into camel rides in Egypt showed that the animals were severely beaten on the testicles and in the face with sticks, leaving them with bloody woundsMay 1, 2024

______________

YOU DON’T HAVE TO GO ABROAD TO WATCH  —  One of Nevada’s most iconic family events started because of a prank war between Virginia City’s Territorial Enterprise and the San Francisco Chronicle. In 1959, the editor of the Enterprise wrote a fake story about camels racing in Virginia City. The Chronicle didn’t realize it was a hoax and printed it. The following year they borrowed camels from the San Francisco Zoo and took them to Virginia City to race them. And that’s how a tradition was born. This year the races are scheduled over the September 6 weekend of 2024.  Details may be found via Google at the international-camel-ostrich-races.

DEAR JOE

Published July 17, 2024 by Nan Mykel

(She is 81, like he is this year)

A poem by Bonnie Prince titled  High Flight for Joe Biden

Dear Joe. my dear old Joe,

You may think you are eternal

flying with angels above the clouds,

cock-sure, infallible, beyond gravity,

while hoping you appear in control,

divine, just short of godliness,

but, like all of us,

like me, also in my 81st year,

you are dying,

sloping down, descending now,

no longer resplendent, no longer godly,

no longer ascendant.

 

You are moving like all of us, elliptical,

oblique, moving in an ellipse,

an eclipse, circling the airport,

down toward commoners’ ground,

locked, like all of us,

in the epicycles of being 81,

looking in the self-confirming mirror,

vision warped by the gravity,

the trajectory

of hubris.

 

Dear Joe, I love you, but

I want you, now,

more than ever,

to see yourself caught

in the continuum of time and space,

that web that even eternal Einstein

could not exit.

 

Dear Joe, we both are hoping

for damage control,

praying for one last replay

of a fireworks display

to enlighten the world,

and one last chance to tell

the earthlings that the promise

of our being on the planet

mattered, that  our presence

in the world mattered,

and we were loved

for the lives that we lived,

and we made a difference.

 

You and I, Joe, each of us at 81,

we share the same trajectory.

Yet the gravity of anatomy, of biology,

is aiming downward now, dead serious.

Joe, we both are gravely mortal,

floating between cloud and soul.

 

Joe, we both are hang-gliding

on the wing of the lobe of our mind,

trying to find balance,

a stance, on the planet,

our wings are feeling gravity

taking us down now, gliding

to a lower level

seeking equity; seeking equilibrium.

 

Joe, I know how you feel,

but we both are 81 now.

We both are high-flying drones,

guided by satellite or instrument,

by North Star or lodestone,

by magnetic or electronic field,

by intuition, or vision, or AI,

but always inescapable  anatomy,

metabolically

in the biology of finality.

 

We are deep in mortality mode,

without a court appeal

without a safety net.

Our  landing gear are deployed,

hoping for a gentle touch,

a soft touch-down at the moment

of contact when our tires

jerk on the runway,

and we glide, seatbelts fastened

to a stop on the tarmac and taxi

down to the finale, grateful, at least

we did not crash

glad to slide,

on a slow play of earth and sky,

at the end of our Earth time,

our time for the final display,

the hubris of our lives, arrayed

against the promise

of our birth,

as told by our parents

our glide path.

 

Hey dear Joe,

we both are running

out of time.

 

Dear Joe, it’s quite likely

that we are all

in decline, but maybe

your taste for the ultimate Presidency

will buoy you up

and you can still

go viral after all!

 

And the last spark of light

that is uniquely our self,

the frail glint-mark

of sparked flint

that we finally make

upon the endless canvas

of the cosmos

will be inter-stellar.

 

Bonnie Prince    July, 2024

 

 

 

Too much going on

Published July 17, 2024 by Nan Mykel

J.D. Vance’s Mysterious Change of Heart –  Keith Wilson reminds us of the mysterious change of heart of  Trump’s vp choice.  What could possibly have motivated it? :

  • “I’m a ‘Never Trump’ guy.  I never liked him.”
  • “My God, what an idiot.”
  • “Mr. Trump is unfit for our nation’s highest office.”
  • “I think there’s a chance, if I feel like Trump has a really good chance of winning, that I might have to hold my nose and vote for Hillary Clinton.”
  • “I go back and forth between thinking Trump is a cynical asshole like Nixon who wouldn’t be that bad (and might even prove useful) or that he’s America’s Hitler. How’s that for discouraging?”
  • “But I think that I’m going to vote third party because I can’t stomach Trump. I think that he’s noxious and is leading the white working class to a very dark place.”
  • “Trump makes people I care about afraid. Immigrants, Muslims, etc. Because of this I find him reprehensible. God wants better of us.”
  • “Fellow Christians, everyone is watching us when we apologize for this man. Lord help us.”

_____________

_______________

The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists  on  three understandable, but mistaken,  beliefs about A.I.:

1.  Other issues are more important?  Any credible existential threat is one too many and all must be engaged in parallel. If you accept that AI might pose an existential threat, then it should be a societal priority to address this threat, even if you are more concerned about another issue.

2. The chance of humanity being made extinct by A.I. is only 5%?   A five percent  chance of causing human extinction is unacceptably high. (How would you feel about boarding a plane with a                5% chance of surviving?)

3.  AI is not yet an extinction risk?   NOT YET: As Stephen Hawking put it, ignoring the possibility that AI could be catastrophic for humanity “would be a mistake, and potentially our  worst mistake ever.” (VOX, 2018)

The author of the Bulletin article is  Jack Kelly who writes:

In 2022 a “survey of thousands of AI researchers found that the median guess for the date when AI would be at least 50 percent likely to overtake human intelligence in all possible tasks was 2060. A year later, that timeline had dropped to 2047. There is now broad expert consensus that human-level artificial intelligence is probable within the lifetimes of most people alive today. Expert predictions should be used to alert us to potential future threats—just as the climate movement has rallied in response to warnings from scientists about carbon dioxide emissions. The world’s collective failure to heed climate warnings offers a painful lesson that should not be repeated. Regardless of the exact timeline, the hard problem of how to properly regulate and control this extremely powerful technology (both technically and politically) is one that must be tackled now, rather than waiting until we are faced with a crisis.”

“Treating AI regulation as a tradeoff in which government can either regulate existing misuse cases such as deepfakes or regulate development of potentially dangerous future models ignores the fact that it is critical to do both. The October 2023 White House AI regulation executive order does exactly that: It addresses existing harms like bias and discrimination, data privacy, and worker’s rights—and also institutes forward-looking principles to reduce existential risk by testing and evaluating models for dangerous capabilities. This is a clear example of how near-term and longer-term concerns can be addressed together.”

_____________
QUOTE OF THE DAY – Dayen:  “In our messy reality, political violence exists as a background hum.”

____________

Great metaphor for Joe Biden:  go to Goggle:  turtle on skateboard

JUST A DAMN MINUTE!!

Published July 16, 2024 by Nan Mykel

As though it was not sufficient to take Woke away, and support charter schools and halt affirmative action funds–many of which have been continuing from the past (as at O.U.)–and snip at universities’  freedom of speech and lower teachers’ standards and threaten to wipe out the national Board of Education  (see Trump’s plans) and move toward putting chaplains in some public schools [see Florida] but a number of colleges are closing, nationwide.  Higher education was experiencing financial challenges  even before the pandemic, from dwindling enrollment to rising tuition to doubts about the value of a degree. Colleges are losing room and board revenue and associated fees, and even facing lawsuits from angry families demanding tuition refunds. The core product — teaching and learning — has come under attack for dubious quality  (and more recently for attacks on student’s and   professors’s freedom of speech).  –See at least Ohio’s manipulative actions.  Higher education is indeed in crisis, 

According to surveys, nearly half (45%) of US companies plan to eliminate bachelor’s degree requirements for some roles in 2024. This follows a significant trend in 2023, where 55% of companies already did away with degree requirements. According to surveys, nearly half (45%) of US companies plan to eliminate bachelor’s degree requirements for some roles in 2024. This follows a significant trend in 2023, where 55% of companies already did away with degree requirements.

About one university or college per week so far this year, on average, has announced that it will close or merge. That’s up from a little more than two a month last year, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association, or SHEEO.  Recently closed or planning to close colleges and universities, plus cutting back positions or merging, include: Birmingham-Southern College in Alabama, Fontbonne University in St. Louis and Eastern Gateway Community College in Ohio all announced that they would close — Birmingham-Southern in May, Fontbonne next year and Eastern Gateway by June, unless it gets a financial bailout. The private, for-profit University of Antelope Valley in California was ordered by the state in late February to shut down because of financial shortfalls. Lincoln Christian University in Illinois and Magdalen College in New Hampshire will close in May, Johnson University of Florida in June and Hodges University in Florida by August. The College of Saint Rose in New York, Cabrini University in Pennsylvania, Oak Point University in Illinois, Goddard College in Vermont and the Staten Island campus of St. John’s University will all be shuttered by the end of this semester. Notre Dame College in Ohio will also close its doors at the end of this semester, stranding for a second time students who transferred there from Alderson Broaddus University in West Virginia, which shut down just days before classes were scheduled to begin the year before. —
AND…Maybe it sounded like a good idea to some, but after Florida’s governor moved to allow chaplains in Florida’s public schools, the Satanic Temple asked to be included….(Miami Herald).

________________

ANNOUNCEMENT:  I am seven years older than Biden.  Personally, I can’t understand why he wants the job.  I don’t, thank you very much.

A chat with my plants

Published July 15, 2024 by Nan Mykel

Botanical research has revealed that plants are capable of reacting to a broad range of stimuli, including chemicals, gravity, light, moisture, infections, temperature, oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations, parasite infestation, disease, physical disruption, sound, and touch.  But what about thoughts?  Maybe if thoughts are turned into sound?  Wouldn’t it be great if under SOUND was a dictionary!  Then I could really talk to my plants, which bloom in a sunny corner of my bedroom.   (At that point, imagining creeps in, that bottomless state where grand icebergs nestle among majestic clouds.)

Two plants in my bedroom appear determined to survive me:

TO MY TWO

I see you morning and night–often

twice during the night, my dear popinjays.

(Popinjays sounds affectionate, but

apparently that word selection

is in error.)  You head for the light,

which is right, in all situations.

No tantrums; no runny nose–rather

an exemplary example of

evolution’s creation, doing

your  best while counting  upon the less

dependable me that I see in

the mirror of my  focus-impaired

human brain.  I reckon we should have

called it quits before igniting our

planet. You would be outside in the

fresh air and I would be just a dream.

But by whom?  As they said at my old

school: Who, What, When, Where, and How?

But please–don’t let me interrupt

your blooming. 

Nan

 

WAITING

Published July 13, 2024 by Nan Mykel

W A I T I N G

Old, tall and alone, he sits
in Outpatient Surgery’s
waiting room amidst many,
neither speaking nor spoken to;
no eye contact nor observation
of those around him. For
hours, impervious to his setting,
staring ahead at his hopes or
memories?  Though drawn,
I remain afraid to reach out.
Later, while getting the car,
I see him heading down the
 sidewalk among many, still
alone.
What was I afraid of?
 He has followed me
home to this page.
                                                   Nan   7/13/24
Scottie's Playtime

Come see what I share

Chronicles of an Anglo Swiss

Welcome to the Anglo Swiss World

ChatterLei

EXPRESSIONS

Anthony’s Crazy Love and Life Lessons in Empathy

Loves, lamentation, and life through prose, stories, passions, and essays.

The Life-long Education Blog

Let's Explore The Great Mystery Together!

Ned Hamson's Second Line View of the News

Second Look Behind the Headlines - News you can use...

Evolution of Medical profession-Extinction of good doctors

choosing medical career; problem faced by doctors; drawbacks of medical profession;patient tutorials

Petchary's Blog

Cries from Jamaica

Memoirs of Madness

A place where I post unscripted, unedited, soulless rants of a insomniac madman

Life Matters

CHOOSE LOVE

Mybookworld24

My Life And Everything Within It

Mitch Reynolds

Just Here Secretly Figuring Out My Gender

Frank J. Peter

A Watering Hole for Freelance Human Beings Who Still Give a Damn

Passionate about making a difference

"The only thing that stands between you and your dream is the will to try and the belief that it is actually possible." - Joel Brown

Yip Abides

we're all cyborgs now

annieasksyou...

Seeking Dialogue to Inform, Enlighten, and/or Amuse You and Me