Monday, March 14, 2022
Wingnuts are so, so gullible
I suppose I'd better get around to pointing out the gullibility (and complete lack of interest in details) of Trump supporting conservatives in the US, and Australia, about the idea that American would be carrying out bio-weapons programs in Ukraine. As Allahpundit notes:
The “debate” over U.S. bioweapons in Ukraine isn’t a debate about bioweapons at all, of course. It’s not even a debate about how much you should trust the U.S. government, the only source for information on what’s happening in these labs. Any conservative worth his salt when asked how much the federal government should be trusted would say, “Not much.”
The actual “debate” here is this: Should you trust the U.S. government more than you trust the Russian government? Carlson’s answer, implicitly and characteristically, is no. Griffin’s answer, and the answer most Americans would give, is yes.
The Dispatch has a nice explainer today about the Ukrainian labs. They’re not new and they’re not secret.
There are laboratories in Ukraine that receive funding from the U.S. government as part of the defense threat reduction program. The USSR had a massive secret biological weapons program known as Biopreparat, and when the USSR collapsed the scientists and facilities did not just evaporate. The U.S. program, run as part of the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program under the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, provides funding to prevent the proliferation of bioweapons and make sure that the next plague does not emerge accidentally from an old Soviet lab. This involves helping make sure scientists with the skills that could be used to create bioweapons stay at home and work on important medical research instead (so they are less likely to get poached by higher-paid gigs in China, or Iran, or North Korea, for example). This program involves upgrading the facilities in the former USSR where the remnants of the Soviet bioweapons program might lay in order to ensure their security and guard against theft or accidental leaks.
In fact, just days before Russia began its propaganda barrage about these documents, the head of the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program Robert Pope expressed concern about the effects of the war in Ukraine. In an interview with the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, Pope said that he did not believe that Russian forces would deliberately target any of the Ukrainian biolabs because they “know enough about the kinds of pathogens that are stored in biological research laboratories,” However, Pope was concerned that the facilities could be damaged by conflict, which could lead to disastrous consequences.
That’s why the U.S. and the Ukrainians are rushing to destroy pathogens in the lab as the Russians advance. It’s not a matter of “covering up evidence,” it’s a matter of not wanting anything to escape the lab if a Russian shell should accidentally hit it. We’ve already seen one near-miss on a Ukrainian facility hosting a weapon of mass death, remember.
Again, not only is this not a secret, the U.S. has acknowledged the labs before — including during the Trump administration, Greg Sargent notes. And even if you’re disinclined to believe Trump’s State Department, basic common sense points to an innocent explanation for the facilities. As Dispatch reporter Andrew Fink says, it would be batty for the U.S. to outsource something as sensitive as a bioweapons program to a country that’s crawling with Russian spies and which contains many Russian sympathizers. (Although far fewer now than it did two weeks ago.) We’d be asking for trouble, whether Russian penetration of the lab or a Wuhan-style accident that brings about a global pandemic. It makes no sense.
The Washington Post also did a "fact checker" analysis article about it too.
In Australia, Putin sympathisers can't be bothered waiting for, or reading, the details:
CL, like Tucker Carlson, now thinks Glenn Greenwald is some kind of honest commentator. As Bernard Keane says of Pilger:
Sunday, March 13, 2022
A very strange country
I'm talking Pakistan, which, according to this somewhat amateur-ish but nonetheless entertaining/horrifying video, contains the world's most dangerous road.
It's kind of inconceivable to Western eyes that anyone in their right mind would use it:
I see that there are actually many contenders for "most dangerous road in the world" on Youtube, and many people who have made this trip in Pakistan so as to get the clicks. (It would seem it's sold as a 4WD adventure type of thing to do?)
I am also curious as to what goes on at the end destination, the rather un-Pakistani sounding "Fairy Meadows". When you get there in the video, you can see substantial wood building construction in the background, indicating there is actually a decent road to get there. Let's check that out. Nope, doesn't seem there's anything else:
I guess the wood is from trees there? I dunno.
Anyway, this is the description of the road at www.dangerousroads.org:
Is Fairy Meadows Road Safe?
It’s said to be one of the most dangerous roads in the world. Getting to Fairy Meadows is a huge risk that prevents many from enjoying the view. In 2013 the road was ranked as the second deadliest highway in the world, because it's a 'treacherous high altitude, unstable and narrow mountain road'. The most dangerous part of the road involves a narrow 6-mile ascend on an unpaved and uneven road. There are no barriers to prevent a vehicle from falling off the cliff to a fiery death. The road is no wider than a standard Jeep Wrangler and there’s plenty of through traffic. One false move and it’s a very long drop. The first part of the road can be driven by a 4x4 vehicle, but the concluding sections, all the way to Fairy Meadows, needs to be traversed by foot or by a bicycle owing to the congested narrow lane.
Friday, March 11, 2022
Not just me
There's an interview article with Al Pacino in the New York Times which seems mostly about his gratitude at starting his career with The Godfather. This is the opening paragraph:
It’s hard to imagine “The Godfather” without Al Pacino. His understated performance as Michael Corleone, who became a respectable war hero despite his corrupt family, goes almost unnoticed for the first hour of the film — until at last he asserts himself, gradually taking control of the Corleone criminal operation and the film along with it.Key words: "understated performance".
And further down:
There is an intense quietness to how you play Michael in “The Godfather” that I don’t think I ever saw again in your other film performances, even the later times you played him. Was that a part of yourself that went away or was it just the nature of the character that called for it?
I’d like to think it was the nature of that particular person and that interpretation.
I had written in my very, very late review (2016):
Which bring me to Al Pacino's acting - for a movie about his character's descent into the banality of the Mafia's brand of corporate evil (where murder is nothing personal - just "business"), we really don't get much insight into why he takes the path. His acting after his character has taken the first step (with the murder in the restaurant) is really just somewhat static, unemotional staring for the most part. (The character seems a lot more unengaged in life than his father.) The problem may well be with the script - I assume the novel gives more insight into his inner emotions, but the movie sure doesn't.
Well, at least I know I wasn't imagining the static nature of his acting...
This is pretty hilarious
At the Washington Post, a deeply ironic story about how a judge is citing Tucker Carlson's period of voter fraud skepticism as evidence that the network knew there was malice involved in the other hosts who went in boots and all.
Thursday, March 10, 2022
How is the effect of conspiracy and poisonous partisan performative narrative ever going to be stopped??
On the matter of Joe Biden and his mental acuity: of course he's not going to be as sharp as person 20 or 30 years younger, and all politicians will make rhetorical slips.
But frankly, I find it sickening to read the wingnut Right (or anyone, really) continuing to tell each other that he is dangerously senile. I mean, to anyone who has ever watched a close relative develop dementia, the idea that a person can deliver a hour long address, or this shorter one, and still be suffering dementia is ridiculous, and I find it actually offensive:
Yes, I know this is largely a speech read off a teleprompter with a few
asides - but it is delivered fluently, at quick pace, with barely an
error. What's more, the argument presented is cogent and rhetoric
reasonable. And yet, the wingnut Right will claim he should be shunted out of the Presidency due to mental health; and the effect of edited bits of other appearances has some broader effect on the public - with too large a number buying into this narrative. (Fortunately, there is some sign of a recovery in his approval ratings, no doubt due to a solid performance on Ukraine.) The wingnut Right will circle jerk themselves into all kinds of bullshit fantasies - that Biden's frailty tempted Putin into the Ukraine invasion (when they're not blaming Western defence departments for going too gay and woke).
Certainly, the wingnut Right have built themselves a fantasy world and they aren't leaving it anytime soon.
I just don't know it is going to be broken - certainly, I reckon there should be a lot more calling out of the media and any politician being offensive idiots who need to stop building performative* false narratives as a way to make money - in the US, they are on the verge of killing democracy.
* This is what makes me so sick watching clips of Fox News or Sky News here - there is so clearly performance as part of the show, with no care at all about the effect of it.
Update: more on the matter of "conversative" criticisms just being performance art -
Wednesday, March 09, 2022
A reminder: record rains and climate change
I wrote this in 2011 (unfortunately without a link to the CSIRO report it extracts):
In terms of the climate change debate, I have never paid all that much attention to the particular regional rainfall changes for Australia forecast by CSIRO and the like. I just always assumed that regional forecasts under climate models were going to be more rubbery than the general effect of increased heat waves, which I consider a big enough worry. This explains why I wasn't really aware that there had been predictions of both extended droughts and intense rainfall under AGW. But as Tim Lambert notes, the report Bolt tries to slur as being warmenist propaganda that puts the emphasis all on drought, has this:
Climate change is also likely to affect extreme rainfall in south-east Queensland (Abbs et al. 2007). Projections indicate an increase in two-hour, 24-hour and 72-hour extreme rainfall events for large areas of south-east Queensland, especially in the McPherson and Great Dividing ranges, west of Brisbane and the Gold Coast. For example, Abbs et al. (2007) found that under the A2 emissions scenario, extreme rainfall intensity averaged over the Gold Coast sub-region is projected to increase by 48 per cent for a two-hour event, 16 per cent for a 24-hour event and 14 per cent for a 72-hour event by 2070. Therefore despite a projected decrease in rainfall across most of Queensland, the projected increase in rainfall intensity could result in more flooding events.Very prescient, as it turns out. (Not to say that you can directly attribute any particular extreme weather event to AGW yet.)
Last week, I pointed out a different paper which indicated the same thing (modelling indicates longer droughts but broken by intense rain) at Catallaxy, a.k.a the "centre right" blog where climate science goes to die. This was followed by the glib "so, everything's consistent with AGW" response that shows that even though a weather event may (after all) be consistent with climate modelling of some years ago, they will insist on claiming that it either isn't, or that it doesn't matter.
And what is Andrew Bolt doing today, 11 years later?:
Jowl vote noted
Allahpundit from Hot Air notes:
And he explains well at Hot Air the appalling state of the Republicans:The flaw in Barr’s logic about supporting a primary challenger to Trump while committing to supporting the eventual nominee in the general election is that it ignores the fact that the GOP has been in a hostage crisis since 2016. There are two major camps in the party, the Trump-loving MAGAs and the Trump-tolerating “Never Democrats.” (Never Trumpers are a third component but a small one at five to 10 percent.) Since 2016, Trump and his MAGAs have threatened constantly to bolt the party if they don’t get their way. Trump palpably doesn’t care about the GOP as an institution; if he did, he would have held his fire against top-tier candidates like Doug Ducey and Brian Kemp this cycle rather than settle election grudges with them. Meanwhile, something like a third of Republican voters say they support Trump more than they do the party.
If Trump left the GOP out of pique and demanded that his fans come with him, there’s no telling how many would do so but it would almost certainly be enough to spoil Republicans’ chances in the general election. Because of that, the party has no choice but to cater to him and them even though they’re a minority of the base. By comparison, 56 percent of Republicans said they support the party more than they support Trump according to a poll released in January. That’s the “Never Democrats” group, the Bill Barr contingent that’s open to (or even enthusiastic about) a different nominee in 2024. But the GOP establishment feels free to take that majority for granted in pandering to Trump and his whims. Why?
Because the “Never Democrats” won’t shoot the hostage. They won’t stay home or bolt the party if they get stuck with Trump as nominee again but the MAGAs will if they get stuck with someone else, and that explains the entirety of Republican politics over the last six years. Barr’s embarrassing capitulation in the interview captures the asymmetry as succinctly as we’ll ever see. “Never Democrats” means … never Democrats. If that requires reelecting the tinpot authoritarian who inflamed a mob on January 6 to try to hold on to power illegally then so be it....
Few Republicans have been as critical of Trump over the past year as Chris Christie has but Christie won’t rule out voting for Trump in 2024. Mitch McConnell delivered a floor speech after Trump’s impeachment trial blaming him for the insurrection, an attack that permanently ruptured their relationship, yet McConnell has pledged to support Trump in 2024 if he’s the nominee as well. To find a Republican willing to say that Trump’s attempt to seize power illegally in 2020 is disqualifying for future office, you have to look to a critic as strident as Liz Cheney. The “Never Democrats” wing, true to their name, simply won’t withhold their votes or even threaten to withhold their votes in a general election.
And so we’re almost certainly going to get more Trump. Congratulations to Barr, Christie, McConnell and all the rest.
Nuance on NATO
A good column at the Washington Post looking at the conservative's "but it's our fault for encouraging NATO expansion" line - especially with respect to the version espoused by the dribbling bow tie on Fox News that it's specifically Biden's fault.
Best Batman takes
Tuesday, March 08, 2022
Poor medical outcomes in remote aboriginal communities
I watched the 4 Corners show last night on aboriginal deaths from rheumatic heart disease in the remote community of Doomadgee.
This is a difficult issue, as the individual treatment the three women received appeared inadequate. (Although, it should be noted, there was really not enough detail provided to make confident assessments of what was going on.)
But - there was absolutely no contextualising the difficulties of providing good medical treatment in those communities. And perversely, Aboriginal leadership (and locals) crying "racism" - as they did repeatedly on this show - as the root cause is not going to help. It's already hard enough to get medical staff to work at remote aboriginal communities, because they are isolated, often socially dysfunctional, and dangerous. Throw in "and the locals will riot and call you racist if they think you caused someone's death" and you are only going to exacerbate the staffing problems.
I mean, there was frequent reference to the ill women being assessed at night through a metal grill at the hospital. Was there any attempt to explain why these places have to be run like that at night? No, none at all.
This is a well known problem, and the ABC has at times run stories on nurses who bravely try to work at remote locations. (In fact, I heard one story again on the radio today.) And here are some extracts from an article in BMJ Open last year:
As I said, this seems some really important background if you're going to talk about cases involving poor outcomes, even in individual cases.
Update: I think I should also have added - given that the problems of working in these remote communities are well known, it would suggest that those who nonetheless try to give it a go are far from racist.
Conservative blogger watch
As far as I can make out, over years of reading, Currency Lad is about 50 and never been married. I wonder if he ever wonders why:
Less than optimal
This is a pretty surprising image to see out of Sydney, where (apparently) you can lose your car to a flood while on top of a high bridge above other water:
Sounds like an interesting, if depressing, read
At Slate, a review of a book about the incredible scandal that is Alex Jones and the Sandy Hook "truther" movement. Just an appalling situation that it has taken so many years for the American system to deal with.
Monday, March 07, 2022
Some random notes
* Forgot to say during last week's flood event - doesn't anyone question the number of private pontoons that are allowed on the Brisbane river? I mean, the last big flood taught us that they need to be super secure or else they cause havoc downstream, but this time there seemed to be dozens nonetheless careening down the river.
* I couldn't believe some of the stories from Hertz in America, where they report a car stolen if a credit card is knocked back when someone rings up wanting an extension. Then years later, hapless renters can be arrested even when they know the card payment later went through and the car was returned. Just hopeless administration, probably worsened by having so many different states with different laws complicating matters further.
* You want to know about an academic who seems to be a one person grievance industry? (I think Greg Jericho, who I think is sensible on most things except trans matters, re-tweeted - them? - complaining about the ABC doing something apparently wrong when referring to drag and trans during the Gay Mardi Gras telecast). Here are some selection from their (I think that's right?) twitter account:
And yet, I still don't think the West is militarily weak and swooning for Putin and Christofascism is the way forward.
* Speaking as I was of the Brisbane River - it makes no sense whatsoever that my city, with its shallow, flood prone river, and big but shallow bay with one deep channel through it, should be being considered at all for a new defence base for nuclear submarines, as I heard on the radio this morning.
* Trump, being an idiot, all over again.
* Helen Dale, writing about the Ukraine war on 28 February, makes some bad calls:
We now know that not only does Nato lack the capacity to intervene militarily on Ukraine’s behalf, but it also can’t even impose effective economic sanctions. Germany is so dependent on Russian gas that, while Western powers work to suspend Russia’s participation in the SWIFT international banking system, Germany has won itself a special carve-out, otherwise it won’t be able to pay Gazprom and German grannies will turn into popsicles next time there’s a cold snap. ‘We are currently seeing the downsides of a sovereign nation constructing a barrel-shaped pipeline and then obligingly bending over it,’ Bond observes drily.She should stick to esoteric fiction.
Friday, March 04, 2022
What, indeed...
Update: lots of people saying this was a big exaggeration for propaganda purposes. All the same, it's a worry to hear of any military engagement anywhere near nuclear power plant.
Superyachts considered
Am I alone in this? When I see pictures of Russian owned "superyachts" that look like this:
or this:
my thoughts run to "why does anyone want to own something that looks a mini cruise ship anyway?"
I mean, they must cost a mint to operate (although maybe that can be charged to a company?), but seriously, who has that many family and friends that they can entertain on it and make it seem inhabited? I imagine most of the time they are far from fully occupied, and feel kind of empty and wasted.
And if you let people you don't know well take a holiday on them, as some sort of reward for hard work, or for sleezy deal making, don't you get problems with bad behaviour?