Here's the article at The Week I was looking for. Found via Peter Whiteford's twitter feed:
How robots became a scapegoat for the destruction of the working class
Friday, May 03, 2019
The gigantic Murdoch problem
I agree with a lot of this article, particularly the way it criticises the genuine journalists working within Murdoch who put up with the editorial bias of their employer. It's moved into outright cowardice, really. Anyway, this is it:
News Corp: Democracy’s greatest threat
News Corp: Democracy’s greatest threat
What did we do before the internet?
I went looking at The Week for an article on robots taking jobs, and saw this great contribution to humanity there instead:
I put Pringles in the fridge and it changed my life
I still read it. Might even try it.
I put Pringles in the fridge and it changed my life
I still read it. Might even try it.
Far too late
The SMH repeats the news from the Washington Post:
Facebook said on Friday it had permanently banned several far-right figures and organisations, including Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, Infowars host Alex Jones, commentator Milo Yiannopoulos, and conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer, for being "dangerous", a sign that the social network is more aggressively enforcing its hate speech policies under pressure from civil rights groups.
Thursday, May 02, 2019
Helen's made a goose of herself, again
Only yesterday I mentioned Helen Dale in the context of climate change, noting that she had once at least called on libertarians to stop denying it.
I had missed, though, that only last week she had a nasty sounding tweet about Greta Thunbergpril:
She explains at the Spectator this was "fairly obviously" a joke.
Very few people took it that way. Helen has apparently deleted Twitter from her phone, such was the blowback she was getting. And given that Dale herself has claimed she probably has a degree of Aspergers, it is very hard to see her tweet as anything other than (at least) somewhat callous from a person who should know better. (Jealousy at the attention Thunberg has received is another theory I've seen in the Twitter response.)
Now look - I don't hold any great interest in Greta Thunberg and have paid her very little attention. I actually share Dale's view in her Spectator attempt at self-justification that under 18's should basically never be shoved into political leadership roles. And Britain in particular is having an outbreak of idealistic climate protest founded on exaggerated slogans and claims. (I am extremely rarely impressed by any form of protest, though. Not a joiner that way.) I just take the view of "at least their heart is in the right place" and don't resent that it might have some political consequences in a useful direction.
I still say, though, that it's hard not to see behind Dale's Tweet the typical libertarian ideological motivation to just ignore climate change - either deny it exists, or deny it's bad enough to do anything about, or deny we're capable of doing anything about it and put all the eggs in the techno basket of successful geo-engineering that would have to done for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.
She belongs on a seasteading "nation" with all other libertarians.
I had missed, though, that only last week she had a nasty sounding tweet about Greta Thunbergpril:
She explains at the Spectator this was "fairly obviously" a joke.
Very few people took it that way. Helen has apparently deleted Twitter from her phone, such was the blowback she was getting. And given that Dale herself has claimed she probably has a degree of Aspergers, it is very hard to see her tweet as anything other than (at least) somewhat callous from a person who should know better. (Jealousy at the attention Thunberg has received is another theory I've seen in the Twitter response.)
Now look - I don't hold any great interest in Greta Thunberg and have paid her very little attention. I actually share Dale's view in her Spectator attempt at self-justification that under 18's should basically never be shoved into political leadership roles. And Britain in particular is having an outbreak of idealistic climate protest founded on exaggerated slogans and claims. (I am extremely rarely impressed by any form of protest, though. Not a joiner that way.) I just take the view of "at least their heart is in the right place" and don't resent that it might have some political consequences in a useful direction.
I still say, though, that it's hard not to see behind Dale's Tweet the typical libertarian ideological motivation to just ignore climate change - either deny it exists, or deny it's bad enough to do anything about, or deny we're capable of doing anything about it and put all the eggs in the techno basket of successful geo-engineering that would have to done for hundreds, if not thousands, of years.
She belongs on a seasteading "nation" with all other libertarians.
A diet would help
I don't know anything about the rapper/comedian/actor Adam Briggs apart from seeing him on The Weekly from time to time. I'd put him in the category "mostly harmless". But last night on the show, he joked, as on Twitter, that as an indigenous man he may be 32 but (in terms of much lower indigenous life expectancy), that's like 67 in "white years":
Look, the guy's from Shepparton and it seems he has lived either there or in Melbourne all his life. As such, he has (unlike some fellow indigenous) ready access to healthy food and all the medical services he could need. Yet he clearly carries quite a lot of excess weight - and on his gut, which is well recognized as the worst kind of overweight to be.
He may well be the equivalent of 67 in "health" years (I am surprised he is only 32 - he could pass for much older), but it's a bit rich to even joke that it's due to just being a "Blackfulla".
Look, the guy's from Shepparton and it seems he has lived either there or in Melbourne all his life. As such, he has (unlike some fellow indigenous) ready access to healthy food and all the medical services he could need. Yet he clearly carries quite a lot of excess weight - and on his gut, which is well recognized as the worst kind of overweight to be.
He may well be the equivalent of 67 in "health" years (I am surprised he is only 32 - he could pass for much older), but it's a bit rich to even joke that it's due to just being a "Blackfulla".
Judith not good at analogies (when it suits her)
Whenever The Australian or AFR run articles by the likes of Judith Sloan or Alan Moran on climate change economics, they should (but don't) put a large rider in bold "READERS SHOULD KNOW: THIS ECONOMIST DOES NOT BELIEVE CLIMATE CHANGE IS REAL OR NEEDS TO BE ADDRESSED IN ANY MANNER AT ALL.". Because, of course, if your analysis is springing from that fundamental belief, there is no reason to trust its objectivity at all.
So I see today that Sloan's column in The Australian on the modelled costs of Labor's climate plan is able to be accessed.
To be honest, much of her account of the uncertainties is pretty well aligned with what I heard on Radio National this morning - she could have put more effort into poohing-poohing Labor's policy than she did. Is this a sign of a crack in her noggin that is letting in light that action is going to happen and she had better start sounding like she hasn't always been a flat earth climate change denier when talking about policy responses?
But my main reason for posting about this: she claims to be completely puzzled by Bill Shorten's "fat person eating 10 big macs" analogy. It's not perfect, but the point is clear enough: the fat person [Australia] can't just continue with the easy and fast fix for hunger [energy needs] by eating fast food all the time [building coal power stations], because we all know that in the long run it will hurt/kill them [climate change effects]. They have to put the effort in to get a better diet [clean energy and reducing all emissions] even if a good meal costs more than a Big Mac [that's where the analogy starts to go off road - although if the only choice were restaurants, it might work.]
She's just being deliberately obtuse in saying she doesn't understand it.
So I see today that Sloan's column in The Australian on the modelled costs of Labor's climate plan is able to be accessed.
To be honest, much of her account of the uncertainties is pretty well aligned with what I heard on Radio National this morning - she could have put more effort into poohing-poohing Labor's policy than she did. Is this a sign of a crack in her noggin that is letting in light that action is going to happen and she had better start sounding like she hasn't always been a flat earth climate change denier when talking about policy responses?
But my main reason for posting about this: she claims to be completely puzzled by Bill Shorten's "fat person eating 10 big macs" analogy. It's not perfect, but the point is clear enough: the fat person [Australia] can't just continue with the easy and fast fix for hunger [energy needs] by eating fast food all the time [building coal power stations], because we all know that in the long run it will hurt/kill them [climate change effects]. They have to put the effort in to get a better diet [clean energy and reducing all emissions] even if a good meal costs more than a Big Mac [that's where the analogy starts to go off road - although if the only choice were restaurants, it might work.]
She's just being deliberately obtuse in saying she doesn't understand it.
Suicide, poison and phones
The Washington Post has an article noting the increase in girls trying suicide by poison (boys prefer guns and strangulation), but it then talks more broadly about the rise in youth suicide and the search for a plausible causes. Some think the rise of the mobile phone is more than a coincidence:
Spiller said he and others have overlaid their findings with other data to try to identify why the rates have spiked so sharply since 2011. They studied data from the rise of opioid addiction and deaths in recent years, thinking that the sharp increase could be due to increased access to drugs or fallout from parents’ deaths or addictions. But the timing did not fit precisely — the beginnings of the opioid epidemic traces back years before the 2011 spike.
They also compared it against economic data, but much of the country’s downturn occurred in 2008 or 2009.“Unfortunately, we can’t definitely answer the why. That’s not how the data works,” said John Ackerman, a co-author and clinical psychologist at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.Ackerman and Spiller, however, suspect the sudden increase in recent years has to do with the advent of smartphones and how they have made social media much more pervasive in young people’s lives.The iPhone 3 came out in 2008, Spiller notes, and the Android phones had come into widespread use by 2011. Adults adopted such devices first, but within a year or two, such smartphones became more common among adolescents.For years now, across all demographic groups, the death rate from suicide has been rising broadly. Experts cannot easily explain it. There is no single factor driving the phenomenon.
Vegan health
Isn't it kind of obvious that veganism (as opposed to mere vegetarianism - especially of the variety where dairy and eggs are still eaten) isn't that great a health plan for humans when pro-vegans have to write articles about the great care that must be taken by vegan pregnant mothers to get all the nutrition they and their embryos need?
Yesterday, I saw on twitter some young women who said she was going to try eating some form of flesh again for health reasons, but she tried mussels and found them repulsive. She also went on and on about how traumatic it had been and how the mere idea of eating flesh (even of a brainless bivalve) makes her skin crawl. It sounded to me like some borderline form of anorexia.
I know that most people have some image of eating some forms of animal food as being repulsive - I wince at the idea of eating roasted bone marrow on My Kitchen Rules for some reason, and lamb brains are icky too - but to have a generic revulsion for all form of animal protein, including all forms of seafood, seems pretty exceptionally broad.
Anyway, you do read of her type of health issue from time to time - did I post about the vegan Youtube woman who secretly started eating a small amount of meat again on doctor's advice? I'm not sure how many vegans do have to give it up for health reasons, but it seems to be a not insubstantial problem...
Yesterday, I saw on twitter some young women who said she was going to try eating some form of flesh again for health reasons, but she tried mussels and found them repulsive. She also went on and on about how traumatic it had been and how the mere idea of eating flesh (even of a brainless bivalve) makes her skin crawl. It sounded to me like some borderline form of anorexia.
I know that most people have some image of eating some forms of animal food as being repulsive - I wince at the idea of eating roasted bone marrow on My Kitchen Rules for some reason, and lamb brains are icky too - but to have a generic revulsion for all form of animal protein, including all forms of seafood, seems pretty exceptionally broad.
Anyway, you do read of her type of health issue from time to time - did I post about the vegan Youtube woman who secretly started eating a small amount of meat again on doctor's advice? I'm not sure how many vegans do have to give it up for health reasons, but it seems to be a not insubstantial problem...
More Shinto
Surely I can't be the only person who was surprised at the apparent simplicity of the ceremonies for the replacement of the Japanese Emperor? But I see now that there is more Shinto stuff to come, but not til October:
As Emperor Naruhito ascended the throne on Wednesday, a key imperial succession ritual related to Shinto rekindled controversy over the separation of state and religion that is stipulated in the Constitution.Interested readers in what goes on in Shinto ceremonies for an ascending Emperor might like to read this previous post from 2017.
Shinto is a Japanese indigenous religion in which the emperor is venerated as a descendant of a sun goddess. In the ritual, the emperor inherited the imperial regalia, which are said to have been bestowed by the sun goddess Amaterasu Omikami as proof of his ascension to the throne.
As the Kenji to Shokei no Gi rite marking the emperor’s enthronement was staged as a state occasion financed by public funds, critics pointed to the possibility that it violated the Constitution banning the government from engaging in religious activities.
Japan’s postwar Constitution stipulates no religious organization shall receive any privileges from the state or exercise any political authority.
The regalia, called Sanshu no Jingi, consist of a sacred mirror, sword and jewel. In the ritual, the jewel and a replica of the sword were passed to the new monarch together with the state and privy seals.
Besides the regalia inheritance ceremony, the government decided in April last year to publicly fund the main Shinto-linked imperial succession rituals to be held in the fall, following the precedent set for the ceremonies of Emperor Emeritus Akihito’s enthronement in 1990.
The upcoming key rituals are Sokuirei Seiden no Gi on Oct. 22 to proclaim the enthronement of the emperor and the Daijosai grand thanksgiving rite in November, in which the emperor will make offerings to ancestral deities and pray for the peace and prosperity of Japan and its people.
Seasteading enthusiasm dwindles
According to Slate, the libertarian dreams of seasteading seem to be fading. Peter Thiel, apparently, seems less enthusiastic these days.
I kind of wish it would work, so that a few score of the most dangerous libertarians (Kochs, Thiel, Stark*, etc) - those who either deny climate change or think you just watch the world burn and then work out if you can science your way out of the extremes - could be set adrift in the Pacific Ocean and lose all influence in the rest of the world.
* Oh wait, he's taken care of.
I kind of wish it would work, so that a few score of the most dangerous libertarians (Kochs, Thiel, Stark*, etc) - those who either deny climate change or think you just watch the world burn and then work out if you can science your way out of the extremes - could be set adrift in the Pacific Ocean and lose all influence in the rest of the world.
* Oh wait, he's taken care of.
Wednesday, May 01, 2019
Not exactly the law and order country
India seems to have a very real problem with mob justice. It sounds like a rather lawless and dangerous place (if not for visitors, then at least for residents!) Some examples from today's perusal of the Times of India:
Some peculiar artwork decision with this sad story, too:
Bear in the mind the undue influence that WhatsApp has for spreading false rumour there too, and the number of deaths it has caused, I'm adding it to my list of "no hurry to visit" countries.
Some peculiar artwork decision with this sad story, too:
Bear in the mind the undue influence that WhatsApp has for spreading false rumour there too, and the number of deaths it has caused, I'm adding it to my list of "no hurry to visit" countries.
Negative interest
Aren't conservatives going on and on about the Folau matter to a ridiculous degree? Yeah, sure: climate change is a crock of no interest but the really important thing is whether a rugby player will get booted or not.
My interest level in this is already in negative territory. I could only be less interested if it were a racing horse up for a Code of Conduct hearing for tweeting offensive stuff about jockeys.
My interest level in this is already in negative territory. I could only be less interested if it were a racing horse up for a Code of Conduct hearing for tweeting offensive stuff about jockeys.
Product endorsement - curry chips
Maybe it's because I usually only buy them when especially hungry due to missing out on lunch, but I find that the "curry night Korma" flavoured chips by Tyrells are especially delicious:
This easily remains my preferred chip brand. Not oily (Smiths are the worst at that) and flavours that are not too overpowering.
This easily remains my preferred chip brand. Not oily (Smiths are the worst at that) and flavours that are not too overpowering.
Libertarians clinging to climate change denial
I see that the annual "We Hate Tax" conference, run by some libertarian mob together with some other/associated "we hate tax!" group, has the following guests (with my added commentary in brackets):
Local speakers including former Finance Minister Nick Minchin [well known climate change denying politician], Tom Switzer from the Centre for Independent Studies [dunno], John Roskam [runs Rinehart funded pro-actively climate change denying IPA] ..., LNP Senator Amanda Stoker [can't find direct climate position - but seems to love coal] , climate blogger Jo Nova [most prominent solo climate change denying blogger of Australia, also a goldbug with a husband very suspicious about the great banking families of Europe - nudge, nudge, wink, wink], and Professor Sinclair Davidson [runs persistently climate change denying Catallaxy, almost certainly a "I don't deny, I'm just not convinced" disingenuous type - he won't actually tell us anymore if he personally believes that AGW is real and worth addressing] and Dr Chris Berg from RMIT University [the more affable face of IPA who also stays silent on climate change, and deserves derision for giving moral support to deniers even if he isn't one himself].This reminds me: in 2014, I gave rare praise to Helen Dale for at least having stated this in 2013:
5. Libertarians in particular need to drop their widespread refusal to accept the reality of climate change. It makes us look like wingnuts and diverts attention from the larger number of greenies who spew pseudoscience on a daily basis.Sorry Helen: they're not listening to you. (And anyway, your willingness to work for denier - or "I'm not convinced" twit - Leyonhjelm shows you didn't really treat it as an important issue yourself.)
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