You know, I don't believe I have ever watched more than 30 minutes of any movie by the late Joel Schumacher, and that was probably Flatliners, which I thought very silly.
He was openly gay, and from what I have read and seen, it is easy to see a gay sensibility in some of his comic book movies at least. He was no ordinary gay dude: he claimed to have slept with "up to" 20,000 men. Let's see - at age 80 and assuming 60 years of highly active sex life, that works out to 333 men a year. If you allow for some slowing down in his 70's, the maths could easily indicate more than 365 in a year, or a new partner every day.
Of course, he could have been lying. And the actual quote is "10,000 to 20,000". I'm just looking at the extreme. But seriously, whether straight or gay, and whether 10 or 20 thousand, numbers in that range indicate something more like pathological compulsion than anything healthy.
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Topical Nazi killings
With all the talk of Black Lives Mattering, it's topical that France 24 should point out something I hadn't heard of before - the appalling treatment by the Nazis of black soldiers fighting for France in World War 2:
“It started at the end of May 1940, in the Somme region,” Fargettas explained. “There was no order from high up saying that colonial prisoners of war should be killed or even ill-treated. It was impulsive, but the German military hierarchy did nothing to even try to stop it.”
This hatred of black soldiers goes back to the First World War, Fargettas continued: “The Germans used them to accuse the Allies of savagery on the battlefield. The German army had itself been rightly accused of atrocities against civilians, especially in Belgium. Consequently, in response they used the image of the African sharpshooter as a propaganda weapon.”
The peace settlement adumbrated in the Treaty of Versailles meant that the Ruhr and Rhineland, along Germany’s western border, were occupied by France. Many troops from French colonies were stationed there. “In Germany there was a very intensive, mendacious propaganda campaign accusing African soldiers of mass rape and kidnapping. This is what the Germans called the “black horror on the Rhine”; slander which the Nazis would reuse.”
When many Wehrmacht soldiers entered France in May 1940, they had memories of this propaganda. African soldiers were abused by the invaders throughout the country. “These troops often fought very well, while of course the Germans sustained many losses despite their success in the Battle of France, so that produced anger which added to all the resentment already stored up,” said Fargettas.
On June 19, 1940, the violence culminated in the Chasselay massacre. This was two days after Marshal Philippe Pétain’s notorious announcement that he would seek an armistice with the Nazis. The 25th regiment of Senegalese riflemen was posted to the northwest of Lyon, to delay the enemy’s entry into France’s third largest city.
“The Germans expected to seize Lyon quite easily,” Fargettas recounted. “But on the morning of June 19, they faced very strong resistance, in battles lasting for several hours. After the Wehrmacht won the first battles in the afternoon, they executed French as well as African prisoners. But on the next day – after the last pockets of resistance were defeated – they divided the prisoners into two: The French on one side, the Africans on the other. They led the latter down an isolated road. They were sent to a field and machine-gunned.” During these massacres, some French soldiers were also executed or wounded for trying to intervene.
More Trump watch
I hope this is true (the bit about him not wanting to go out on stage)...
...because I did watch some of the speech being live streamed, and I did think at the time that he seemed to be taking a long, long time to come out on stage, and wondered whether it was because he was backstage throwing a fit over the empty seats.
...because I did watch some of the speech being live streamed, and I did think at the time that he seemed to be taking a long, long time to come out on stage, and wondered whether it was because he was backstage throwing a fit over the empty seats.
Monday, June 22, 2020
Man in denial
OK, maybe there is a bit too much gloating and laughing going on about how Trump's campaign didn't even half fill its stadium; but on the other hand, there seems to be people in denial at Catallaxy:
I wonder how the Steve Kates brain is processing the estimate of only 6,200 at the stadium; and the absolute lack of evidence of protesters causing any significant problem around it? Cult members watching the decline of their cult can take quite a while to process it...
I wonder how the Steve Kates brain is processing the estimate of only 6,200 at the stadium; and the absolute lack of evidence of protesters causing any significant problem around it? Cult members watching the decline of their cult can take quite a while to process it...
Low on my list of travel priorities
A few weeks ago I noted how Bangladesh was upset at its portrayal in the Netflix action movie Extraction, which was meant to be set in an extremely grim looking Dhaka, although none of it was filmed there.
So, on the weekend I was looking at the back catalogue of Youtube videos by one of the travel vlogging couples I don't mind mind watching, Kara & Nate. They were in Dhaka a year or so ago, and put out several videos. As always, they try to find the most positive things to say (not sure whether there are sponsorship reasons for some of that). But gee, it would take a lot more than their "this is crazy!" amusement to make me want to go to Dhaka:
They seemed to be the only Westerners in the entire city, but I am not exactly surprised that it is low on people's "must see" list.
So then, seeing I seemed vaguely interested in Bangaldesh, Google threw at me the next day a 30 minute story by Al Jazeera news from 2017 called "Bangladesh's biggest brothel", about an appalling shanty town in the Bangladeshi countryside that has about 1,500 prostitutes, many of whom spoke openly about their lives and problems.
It was awful.
Whoever works in the Bangladesh Tourist Board (and they do have one) has their work cut out for them.
So, on the weekend I was looking at the back catalogue of Youtube videos by one of the travel vlogging couples I don't mind mind watching, Kara & Nate. They were in Dhaka a year or so ago, and put out several videos. As always, they try to find the most positive things to say (not sure whether there are sponsorship reasons for some of that). But gee, it would take a lot more than their "this is crazy!" amusement to make me want to go to Dhaka:
They seemed to be the only Westerners in the entire city, but I am not exactly surprised that it is low on people's "must see" list.
So then, seeing I seemed vaguely interested in Bangaldesh, Google threw at me the next day a 30 minute story by Al Jazeera news from 2017 called "Bangladesh's biggest brothel", about an appalling shanty town in the Bangladeshi countryside that has about 1,500 prostitutes, many of whom spoke openly about their lives and problems.
It was awful.
Whoever works in the Bangladesh Tourist Board (and they do have one) has their work cut out for them.
Unmasked
I was in the Queen Street Mall in Brisbane on Saturday, and it was a cool, showery day. I thought, seeing I had some left in the car, I would wear a mask, given that I usually associate such weather with catching a cold. I also wasn't sure how crowded it would be.
Turned out it was pretty busy, and that nearly no one was wearing a mask. I was paying close attention once I realised I seemed to be alone, and I spotted exactly two people wearing them - both Asian. There are always plenty of young Asian people in the city, and even most of them were not wearing them.
It's true, with days going by with no new cases in Queensland, let alone Brisbane, there should be little to fear. But I still would feel more comfortable if wearing them was treated as standard for a few months yet.
By the way, I presume that we ought to be seeing very little transmission of ordinary colds and flu this winter season due to the hygiene care that shops and other places are still taking. Is anyone trying to keep of that through our GPs, I wonder?
Turned out it was pretty busy, and that nearly no one was wearing a mask. I was paying close attention once I realised I seemed to be alone, and I spotted exactly two people wearing them - both Asian. There are always plenty of young Asian people in the city, and even most of them were not wearing them.
It's true, with days going by with no new cases in Queensland, let alone Brisbane, there should be little to fear. But I still would feel more comfortable if wearing them was treated as standard for a few months yet.
By the way, I presume that we ought to be seeing very little transmission of ordinary colds and flu this winter season due to the hygiene care that shops and other places are still taking. Is anyone trying to keep of that through our GPs, I wonder?
Sunday, June 21, 2020
Ha!
Yes, this is amusing:
Referencing the half full stadium that Trump and his campaign was claiming had issued one million tickets to his cult members.
Update: liked this, too:
Referencing the half full stadium that Trump and his campaign was claiming had issued one million tickets to his cult members.
Update: liked this, too:
Friday, June 19, 2020
Most postmodernism from Republicans
It's been pretty funny reading Twitter about this today:
So, for a Republican, "son" means just whatever they want it to mean: a young dude he's "raised", probably more like "been in the same family house with", but that's close enough for fake outrage when arguing with a black man.
Gaetz is also single, leading many to speculate on whether this is a gay relationship. I expect not, as this would be the weirdest way ever to come out.
Many raised doubts about Gaetz’s claim of a secret son. He never mentioned his son in his biographical data or elsewhere. An old photo surfaced online of Gaetz with Nestor in which the congressman refers to him as a “local student.”
He also appeared as an intern in one photo. Which explains this tweet:
The appalling Tucker Carlson had Gaetz and his "son" on his show, yet never asked the obvious question: how did a (then) 31 year old single man manage to adopt a 12 year old Cuban "son".
The answer appears to be as simple as this:
So he's not a son, biologically (of course) or legally. I saw someone sympathetic to Gaetz said that Nester was mainly raised by Gaetz's parents, which would make more sense.Gaetz told People Magazine in an interview that he never formally adopted 19-year-old Nestor but that Nestor has lived with him since immigrating from Cuba at age 12.
So, for a Republican, "son" means just whatever they want it to mean: a young dude he's "raised", probably more like "been in the same family house with", but that's close enough for fake outrage when arguing with a black man.
Gaetz is also single, leading many to speculate on whether this is a gay relationship. I expect not, as this would be the weirdest way ever to come out.
The unifying President
Trump is so appallingly un-Presidential in language and sentiment that this has become normalised, but it shouldn't be. This thread is correct:
Thursday, June 18, 2020
Trump watch
What a baby.
And here he is trying to suck up to the police unions, again, as authoritarians are want to do; as well as making inappropriate pre-trial comments on what will be a high profile case with the potential to cause further rioting:
He has no idea how to be a responsible President.
Branch stacking
Is it just me, or is my sense correct that most of the public find branch stacking scandals to be pretty uninteresting and less important than most journalists find them?
How to respond to racism
In the case of Sinclair Davidson, you leave it up on the blog you can moderate.
Why?
And why does RMIT tolerate staff who moderate a blog leaving it up?
Update: If I am not mistaken, it has been removed - but with no explanation.
While that is good, I remain somewhat puzzled as to why he doesn't make it clear that such clear racism is not to be posted in comments.
Update 2: wait: although the original comment is gone, it had been copied into another person's comment, in full, so it is still in the thread!
Sinclair, Sinclair: if you are (and I assume you are) the one who deleted the original comment - why not make a clear statement on the blog that it was unacceptable and such blatant racism is not to be repeated??
Set some standards and be clear about it, for God's sake.
Update 3: the reposting of the comment is now deleted. Again, no comment from Sinclair on the blog as to why, though.
Why?
And why does RMIT tolerate staff who moderate a blog leaving it up?
Update: If I am not mistaken, it has been removed - but with no explanation.
While that is good, I remain somewhat puzzled as to why he doesn't make it clear that such clear racism is not to be posted in comments.
Update 2: wait: although the original comment is gone, it had been copied into another person's comment, in full, so it is still in the thread!
Sinclair, Sinclair: if you are (and I assume you are) the one who deleted the original comment - why not make a clear statement on the blog that it was unacceptable and such blatant racism is not to be repeated??
Set some standards and be clear about it, for God's sake.
Update 3: the reposting of the comment is now deleted. Again, no comment from Sinclair on the blog as to why, though.
Meanwhile, in movie making land
I like those visual effects videos which have long showed how much green screens have taken over TV and movie production; but this video showing the next level - virtual sets using massive LED screens - is even more fascinating:
Wednesday, June 17, 2020
Some quantum stuff to consider
This paper (or article) at arXiv is written at a relatively non-technical level. I have only skimmed it at the moment, but will come back to read it later:
Bell's Theorem, Quantum Probabilities, and Superdeterminism
Bell's Theorem, Quantum Probabilities, and Superdeterminism
Things not going well in Alabama
A report in the Montgomery Advertiser about the local council considering making mask wearing in public compulsory (my bolds):
Jackson Hospital pulmonologist William Saliski cleared his throat as he started describing the dire situation created by the coronavirus pandemic in Montgomery to its City Council before they voted on a mandatory mask ordinance. "It's been a long day, I apologize," he said."The units are full with critically-ill COVID patients," Saliski said. About 90% of them are Black. He said hospitals are able to manage for now, but it's not sustainable. "This mask slows that down, 95% protection from something as easy as cloth. ... If this continues the way it's going, we will be overrun."More doctors followed him to the microphone, describing the dead being carried out within 30 minutes of each other, and doctors being disturbed when people on the street ask them if the media is lying about the pandemic as part of a political ploy.After they spoke, and before the council voted on a proposal by Councilman C.C. Calhoun to mandate mask-wearing in public in Montgomery, Councilman Brantley Lyons questioned whether masks and six-foot distancing really helps. They do, the doctors replied. Lyons was unmoved. "At the end of the day, if an illness or a pandemic comes through we do not throw our constitutional rights out the window," Lyons said.From the crowd, doctors called for him to visit the hospital sometime.Instead, the council killed the ordinance after it failed to pass in a 4-4 tie, mostly along racial lines, with Councilman Tracy Larkin absent. Councilman Clay McInnis voted with three Black council members — Calhoun, Oronde Mitchell and Audrey Graham — in favor of the ordinance. Lyons, Charles Jinright, Richard Bollinger and Glen Pruitt voted against it.
Bad news for the Fox News audience, then
An odd study:
In the study of people aged over 55, published in Alzheimer's & Dementia, researchers found 'repetitive negative thinking' (RNT) is linked to subsequent cognitive decline as well as the deposition of harmful brain proteins linked to Alzheimer's.
The researchers say RNT should now be further investigated as a potential risk factor for dementia, and psychological tools, such as mindfulness or meditation, should be studied to see if these could reduce dementia risk.
Lead author Dr Natalie Marchant (UCL Psychiatry) said: "Depression and anxiety in mid-life and old age are already known to be risk factors for dementia. Here, we found that certain thinking patterns implicated in depression and anxiety could be an underlying reason why people with those disorders are more likely to develop dementia.
"Taken alongside other studies, which link depression and anxiety with dementia risk, we expect that chronic negative thinking patterns over a long period of time could increase the risk of dementia. We do not think the evidence suggests that short-term setbacks would increase one's risk of dementia.
Adam Creighton re-confirms his foolishness
Look, as I have said before, I have never held Creighton in high regard; but with today's column in The Australian: Coronavirus: Inflated pandemic estimates weaken climate forecasts, he re-confirms himself as the most ignorant fool.
He decided early on to go with one take on the COVID-19 problem and he is sticking to it, obviously in such a way that no evidence is going to change his mind.
Most of the column is devoted to the COVID pandemic, but when it gets to climate change, he only quotes this:
Yeah, the man to trust.
The rule of thumb should apply - if anyone is running with "climate change is no problem" line after all this time, they are not to be trusted on any topic, even one they are supposedly an expert on, such as economics. It's a solid marker for foolishness, not knowing how to tell a genuine expert from a charlatan, and an inability to admit to past error.
He decided early on to go with one take on the COVID-19 problem and he is sticking to it, obviously in such a way that no evidence is going to change his mind.
Most of the column is devoted to the COVID pandemic, but when it gets to climate change, he only quotes this:
This claim has been debunked years ago - Creighton reads only what he wants to on the topic, obviously. As for quoting Benny Peiser - his qualifications:Climate modelling was struggling even before the pandemic, given the planet has warmed about half as much as forecast by the first Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report in back 1990.“Almost the entire alarm about global warming is based on model predictions. If you just look at the last 30 to 40 years of data, nothing spectacular has happened, there’s no sign temperature increase is accelerating,” says Benny Peiser, founder of the Global Warming Policy Foundation in London.
Peiser studied political science, English, and sports science.
Yeah, the man to trust.
The rule of thumb should apply - if anyone is running with "climate change is no problem" line after all this time, they are not to be trusted on any topic, even one they are supposedly an expert on, such as economics. It's a solid marker for foolishness, not knowing how to tell a genuine expert from a charlatan, and an inability to admit to past error.
Movie scene debunked
I guess if you haven't seen Da 5 Bloods yet, but you think you will give it a try, you won't want to read this article that debunks a key scene in the movie.
But if you have seen it, you will be interested.
I see that the movie continues to get many more realistic reviews from audiences than from professional critics.
But if you have seen it, you will be interested.
I see that the movie continues to get many more realistic reviews from audiences than from professional critics.
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
Where does my Himalayan rock salt come from?
I've lately been using Himalayan rock salt (crushed pretty fine) in cooking (Coles own brand), and I like it. It flows easily, and is sort of easier to see where you have applied it compared to your common white cooking stuff. I didn't buy it, but I assume it must have dropped in price in order for Coles to be doing their own in-house branded version.
It's from Pakistan, apparently, and that made me curious as to what the salt mines there might look like. NPR reports:
I posted recently about the Indus valley civilisation, and noted that Harappa has a big archaeological site that looks as if it would be good to visit. But it's in Pakistan too.
It's a pity that it is considered a very unsafe place to travel, as it looks as if it could have a decent tourist industry if it could get its act together.
It's from Pakistan, apparently, and that made me curious as to what the salt mines there might look like. NPR reports:
The salt is mined from rolling red-brick hills that rise from marshes in Khewra, about two hours from the capital, Islamabad. They are hundreds of miles from the iconic snowy peaks of the Himalayas, and the area shimmers with heat. The hills — known as the salt range — are distant tendrils of the Himalayas and are a remnant of a lagoon that existed some 600 million years ago, said Shahid Iqbal, a lecturer in the department of earth sciences at Quaid-i-Azam University.Here's a France 24 video about the salt mining enterprise there, including tour into a pink salt mine cave:
Mining here was once a small-time industry that attracted little attention. Some 400,000 tons of salt are exported a year, largely as crude rock, according to Nadeem Babar, the adviser to Pakistan's prime minister on petroleum and natural resources. About a quarter of those exports were shipped at around $40 a ton to India — Pakistan's neighbor, with which it has fought four wars. The salt was literally blown out of mines, hauled in trucks and dispatched some 160 miles to the border.
I posted recently about the Indus valley civilisation, and noted that Harappa has a big archaeological site that looks as if it would be good to visit. But it's in Pakistan too.
It's a pity that it is considered a very unsafe place to travel, as it looks as if it could have a decent tourist industry if it could get its act together.
Foreign viewing
My son's starting to complain that I only ever want to watch foreign made shows on Netflix now, and he might have a point. It's starting to get hard to remember the last English speaking series we watched - probably Haunting of Hill House. [Update: how could I forget - it was Lost in Space, season 2.]
But this has been a great thing about Netflix, the variety of high quality foreign shows. I guess I could always have watched Nordic noir crime on SBS, but dark crime is a genre that doesn't hold much interest to me, generally speaking. And don't go pointing to my fondness of Babylon Berlin as hypocrisy - while lots of bad crimes happen, often in seedy settings, it also has Weimar politics, young Nazis, prostitution, drug addiction, cults, gay bars, military spying, lots of scenes confirming that German food has always been pretty crap, a rich sooky son with a haircut that really annoys me, and a nutty hypnotist whose radio show (my son said, wittily) is like an early successful podcast (for the alt.right of the day, I would add).
We finished watching the third season of BB last night, and I ended up enjoying it a lot, even though I still think it was not quite as satisfying as the first two seasons. Did anyone else notice how much Gereon seemed to get beaten up and injured in this season? It's a wonder he sticks with the job, really.
I am still dissatisfied with the unexplained mystery about his brother (or is he?) Anno. Actually, I think this Reddit theory about him might have something going for it.
Anyway, it seems they planned on season 4 to start being made later this year. I hope COVID-19 doesn't stuff that up.
But this has been a great thing about Netflix, the variety of high quality foreign shows. I guess I could always have watched Nordic noir crime on SBS, but dark crime is a genre that doesn't hold much interest to me, generally speaking. And don't go pointing to my fondness of Babylon Berlin as hypocrisy - while lots of bad crimes happen, often in seedy settings, it also has Weimar politics, young Nazis, prostitution, drug addiction, cults, gay bars, military spying, lots of scenes confirming that German food has always been pretty crap, a rich sooky son with a haircut that really annoys me, and a nutty hypnotist whose radio show (my son said, wittily) is like an early successful podcast (for the alt.right of the day, I would add).
We finished watching the third season of BB last night, and I ended up enjoying it a lot, even though I still think it was not quite as satisfying as the first two seasons. Did anyone else notice how much Gereon seemed to get beaten up and injured in this season? It's a wonder he sticks with the job, really.
I am still dissatisfied with the unexplained mystery about his brother (or is he?) Anno. Actually, I think this Reddit theory about him might have something going for it.
Anyway, it seems they planned on season 4 to start being made later this year. I hope COVID-19 doesn't stuff that up.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)