As you might expect, the absolutely worst takes on a viral Twitter dispute between a woman and a black man would come from Catallaxy; the only question being which of these two favourite targets (for misogyny and racism respectively) they would end up favouring.
The most remarkable comments, to me, come from one S Davidson, whose sentiments are all against the black man for being a "busy body".
Seeing his view on victimhood doesn't seem to extend to a black man being the subject of a white woman saying "I'm going to tell them there's an African American man threatening my life" when he 100% clearly isn't, and then carrying out the threat in (eventually) hysterical voice, all I can say is that he should never be let anywhere near jury service, ever. "Just too gormless" they should write against the name.
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Tuesday, May 26, 2020
What a threshold
Parts of India routinely get ridiculously hot. The news today:
In England, by comparison, you get the impression it's something like two days above 28 degrees.
I would still like to know what happens to the death rate in India during its heat waves. I mean, surely it must increase substantially, but you never hear about this. (Unlike when you have a heat wave in Europe or Russia.)
Update: yes, there is research about this, and I think I might have even linked to this paper before. But the numbers cited for increased deaths always sound too low to me.
NEW DELHI: Heatwave conditions intensified in most of the northern states of India on Monday, with Churu in Rajasthan scorching at 47.5 degrees Celsius and the mercury breaching the 46-degree mark in parts of the national capital.And look at the rather extraordinarily high threshold they seem to set there for calling it a heatwave:
In England, by comparison, you get the impression it's something like two days above 28 degrees.
I would still like to know what happens to the death rate in India during its heat waves. I mean, surely it must increase substantially, but you never hear about this. (Unlike when you have a heat wave in Europe or Russia.)
Update: yes, there is research about this, and I think I might have even linked to this paper before. But the numbers cited for increased deaths always sound too low to me.
Another nice sounding, almost vegan, recipe
I get so surprised when I see a vegan-ish recipe that I think would taste good, I like to record it here. (I think the last one I noted was from the Washington Post too, and I still haven't cooked it).
Anyway, here it is - a curried chickpea salad. It contains a lot of things I like.
Anyway, here it is - a curried chickpea salad. It contains a lot of things I like.
Moat swimming popular in Japan
A Japanese man was arrested in Tokyo on Monday after swimming across the Imperial Palace's moat to scale an outer wall, entering off-limits parts of the grounds, police said.
They said the man appeared to be in his 40s and was arrested mid-morning after emerging on palace grounds shortly before Emperor Naruhito was scheduled to conduct a rice planting ceremony elsewhere on the imperial property.
The report goes on to note the recent history of other men who have swum across the moat.
In America, I suspect they would die in a hail of gun fire.
Don't tell your paranoid friend...
A paper that has recently appeared in Science Advances doesn't seem to yet have had the publicity in the media that I thought it might get:
Remote, brain region–specific control of choice behavior with ultrasonic waves
The abstract:
Remote, brain region–specific control of choice behavior with ultrasonic waves
The abstract:
The ability to modulate neural activity in specific brain circuits remotely and systematically could revolutionize studies of brain function and treatments of brain disorders. Sound waves of high frequencies (ultrasound) have shown promise in this respect, combining the ability to modulate neuronal activity with sharp spatial focus. Here, we show that the approach can have potent effects on choice behavior. Brief, low-intensity ultrasound pulses delivered noninvasively into specific brain regions of macaque monkeys influenced their decisions regarding which target to choose. The effects were substantial, leading to around a 2:1 bias in choices compared to the default balanced proportion. The effect presence and polarity was controlled by the specific target region. These results represent a critical step towards the ability to influence choice behavior noninvasively, enabling systematic investigations and treatments of brain circuits underlying disorders of choice.
Brit Hume is a lost cause
I think he used to have a reputation as one of Fox News's moderates. Now he's just a Trump defending moron:
Sinclair Davidson's moderation skills on display again
Sure, Clementine Ford is an annoying version of a feminist who thinks she can joke about men not dying fast enough while (presumably) being upset about men (like Alan Jones) making violence suggestive language about women.
Personally, I have long thought she is best ignored, but it's fair enough that people complain about her getting grants to continue doing whatever she does.
So, of course, the quality of Catallaxy comments about her is going to be great (that's sarcasm), and include argument over whether she is attractive or not. Because that matters in a debate about what she said. This comment struck me as particularly unpleasant, though:
Why has no journalist in the country ever challenged this academic for what he allows and doesn't allow at a blog he can moderate?
Personally, I have long thought she is best ignored, but it's fair enough that people complain about her getting grants to continue doing whatever she does.
So, of course, the quality of Catallaxy comments about her is going to be great (that's sarcasm), and include argument over whether she is attractive or not. Because that matters in a debate about what she said. This comment struck me as particularly unpleasant, though:
Why has no journalist in the country ever challenged this academic for what he allows and doesn't allow at a blog he can moderate?
Miranda Devine - expert on black America
What lulz. Miranda Devine turns up in the New York Post, saying that Biden has lost blacks because of his "you ain't black" statement last week:
“Ain’t black” is Biden’s “deplorables” moment. Yet his supporters seem oblivious to the lethal blow it has delivered to his prospects, just as Hillary Clinton didn’t comprehend the catastrophe of her “basket of deplorables” insult to half of America in 2016.Candace Owens! The last time I clicked on something by her, a couple of weeks ago (via Twitter) she was arguing that people shouldn't get so hung up (pardon the pun) on the history of American lynchings. There were "only" 3,500 blacks lynched over the entire American history, so yeah, it was bad, but let's not get carried away about its significance. (I paraphrase ever so slightly.)
Biden confirmed what Candace Owens’ “Blexit” movement is all about, the exit by black Americans from a Democratic Party that takes their vote for granted and traps them in a victim narrative.
A sad story about the movie business
Of course, this would have happened thousands of time before, but it's still sad reading about how a guy who, at the age of 62, finally sold a script for a movie, but had the idea taken over by someone famous, who then made dubious claims about the lack of influence of the original work.
The quasi villain is Richard Curtis, who I personally would have liked to see retire from creative writing 30 years ago. (I think that allows for his TV work, but kills off all of his movies - especially Love Actually.)
The quasi villain is Richard Curtis, who I personally would have liked to see retire from creative writing 30 years ago. (I think that allows for his TV work, but kills off all of his movies - especially Love Actually.)
Monday, May 25, 2020
A close examination of COVID-19 spread
Interesting story at Science, about how a South African hospital was able to do a very careful trace of how COVID-19 spread through it:
On 9 March, a patient who had recently traveled to Europe and had symptoms of COVID-19 visited the emergency department of St Augustine’s, a private hospital in Durban, South Africa. Eight weeks later, 39 patients and 80 staff linked to the hospital had been infected, and 15 patients had died—fully half the death toll in KwaZulu-Natal province at that time.There is more at the link above.
Now, scientists at the University of KwaZulu-Natal have published a detailed reconstruction of how the virus spread from ward to ward and between patients, doctors, and nurses, based on floor maps of the hospital, analyses of staff and patient movements, and viral genomes. Their 37-page analysis, posted on the university’s website on 22 May, is the most extensive study of any hospital outbreak of COVID-19 so far. It suggests all of the cases originated from a single introduction, and that patients rarely infected other patients. Instead, the virus was mostly carried around the hospital by staff and on the surfaces of medical equipment.....
The report, which reads like a detective novel, tracks the virus’s spread through five hospital wards, including neurology, surgery, and intensive care units (ICUs), as well as to a nearby nursing home and dialysis center. Remarkably, no staff infections seem to have taken place in the hospital’s COVID-19 ICU, arguably the riskiest area of the hospital. That may be because patients are less infectious by the time they are admitted to intensive care, or because staff there are more diligent about preventing infection, the authors note.
The first patient, who sought help for coronavirus symptoms, only spent a few hours at the hospital, but likely transmitted the virus to an elderly patient admitted the same day for a stroke. The pair were in the hospital’s emergency department at the same time; the first patient was kept separate in a triage area, but that room was reached through the main resuscitation bay, where the stroke patient occupied a bed. (The emergency department was closed in April and opened again this month with an altered layout to improve infection control.) The two were also seen by the same medical officer.
The stroke patient, who developed a fever on 13 March, probably infected the first staff case, a nurse caring for her who developed symptoms on 17 March. A further four patients may have caught the virus from the stroke patient, including a 46-year-old woman admitted for severe asthma who had a bed opposite hers. Both she and the stroke patient died.
But on the whole, patients infected few other patients directly. Instead staff members spread the disease from patient to patient and from department to department—perhaps sometimes without becoming infected themselves. “We think in the main it’s likely to have been from [staff] hands and shared patient care items like thermometers, blood pressure cuffs, and stethoscopes,” says Richard Lessells, an infectious disease specialist at the KwaZulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform and one of the study leaders. He and the other authors found no evidence that aerosol transmission contributed to the outbreak.
COVID-19 problems in India
I can't embed this, but there's a short video report on CNA about how the Right wing in India is using COVID-19 to spread ill will towards Muslims. (Apparently, social media is being used to spread claims such as one that Muslims are spitting on food they sell so as to ensure the spread of the virus.)
Once again, as example of the way social media can be a dangerous menace.
Once again, as example of the way social media can be a dangerous menace.
Word salad of the day
Stan Grant got to write a real word salady piece for The Conversation about the Uluru statement (regarding aboriginal representation in parliament or otherwise), and I am pleased to see that lots of comments are along the lines of this first one:
Stan Grant is ponderous in a very Paul Kelly fashion. So many words to so little effect.
Quick movie review - Jojo Rabbit
Watched it on Saturday.
It often made me laugh, but I can see why it had a limited box office take. The tone changes are way, way too abrupt. There is one way I thought the film could go some way to redeem that - but it is sort of a spoiler so I will put it below in small print.*
Other than that, the film often looked a lot like a Wes Anderson one, and I see lots of critics noticed that in their reviews. (I actually read little about this film before seeing it.) That's not a bad thing, it's just an observation.
I think Taiki Waititi is very talented, and obviously likes to mix up humour with a bit of pathos or sentimentality (even What We Do in the Shadows had romance in it.) But the broader the satire, the harder it is to pull that off satisfactorily, and a lot of this is pretty broad satire. So the sudden switches to bleak seriousness are pretty disorientating.
Overall, nice try, well made and well acted. But not a complete success.
PS: I think the film shows how we often undervalue the great job that can be done by child actors. The lead kid in this was really good, in a challenging role. Yet we never seem to see kids seriously considered for acting awards. I wonder why...
* I thought it would have been a nice touch if the father had turned up at the end. No such luck.
It often made me laugh, but I can see why it had a limited box office take. The tone changes are way, way too abrupt. There is one way I thought the film could go some way to redeem that - but it is sort of a spoiler so I will put it below in small print.*
Other than that, the film often looked a lot like a Wes Anderson one, and I see lots of critics noticed that in their reviews. (I actually read little about this film before seeing it.) That's not a bad thing, it's just an observation.
I think Taiki Waititi is very talented, and obviously likes to mix up humour with a bit of pathos or sentimentality (even What We Do in the Shadows had romance in it.) But the broader the satire, the harder it is to pull that off satisfactorily, and a lot of this is pretty broad satire. So the sudden switches to bleak seriousness are pretty disorientating.
Overall, nice try, well made and well acted. But not a complete success.
PS: I think the film shows how we often undervalue the great job that can be done by child actors. The lead kid in this was really good, in a challenging role. Yet we never seem to see kids seriously considered for acting awards. I wonder why...
* I thought it would have been a nice touch if the father had turned up at the end. No such luck.
Saturday, May 23, 2020
Fear of not social distancing
As I am sure others may have noticed, I get the impression that, at least as far as supermarkets are concerned, a lot of shoppers are no longer taking social distancing all that seriously.
I am finding that I now get the feeling, when people push past close to me with no obvious concern, that I am passing through the invisible cloud of their exhaled breath, containing God knows what. The whole of a busy supermarket now feels like it could be an invisible viral soup.
Of course, what I should be doing is wearing a facemask to help counter this feeling of helplessness in the face of my fellow careless humans. But I took a punt and didn't put one on today, and regretted it.
I wonder how many other people have developed this mild form of germophobia...
I am finding that I now get the feeling, when people push past close to me with no obvious concern, that I am passing through the invisible cloud of their exhaled breath, containing God knows what. The whole of a busy supermarket now feels like it could be an invisible viral soup.
Of course, what I should be doing is wearing a facemask to help counter this feeling of helplessness in the face of my fellow careless humans. But I took a punt and didn't put one on today, and regretted it.
I wonder how many other people have developed this mild form of germophobia...
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