April 29, 2023
"I don’t think I know when life begins. I don’t think any of us know when life begins; certainly the scientists don’t."
Said LeRoy Carhart, quoted in "LeRoy Carhart, abortion doctor whose battles reached Supreme Court, dies at 81" (WaPo).
The legal way to analyze the question has been to say that because we can't know when life begins, the issue is who should decide (and to give the decision-maker role either to the individual who is pregnant or to the people acting through their legislatures).
But Carhart's quote seems to say more than someone must decide, so let the woman decide.
"She has made a living as a yoga teacher, though she doesn’t really like teaching and has a penchant for skewering the pieties of her profession..."
"... in Instagram parodies filmed by her husband. She has appeared in videos as a clueless self-care influencer, sometimes wrapped in a shearling rug, hawking tinctures with names like One Per Scent and Abundance, thanking Mercedes-Benz for ferrying her to ayahuasca ceremonies, and browbeating a pair of 'students' played by naked American Girl dolls marked up with Sharpies."
I'm reading "From "A Daughter of a Warhol Superstar Tells Her Story at Last/After an unruly childhood in the Chelsea Hotel and online fame as a yoga parodist, Alexandra Auder writes an ode to bohemian Manhattan and her singular mother, Viva" (NYT).
"Write the story of a specific hurt you want to forgive. Then write it again as more of an observer..."
"I've been having some crazy deja vu, because I'm an adult, 26, and, throughout childhood, I was called 'too feminine' and 'over the top,' and here I am now being called all those same things..."
"I solved this very simple with my kids. Clean up or the toys go in jail. I swept everything in a black garbage bag..."
A comment on the NY Post article, "My husband didn’t do any chores while I worked 10-hour days so I’m getting a divorce."
"Andy Dick, Anchor-Head McGillicuddy, and Shakespeare"/"Beatnik Three Stooges"/"They are all Bob Dylan"....
"You see adverts on television with models who are very thin, but the mermaid is like a tribute to the great majority of women..."
Said the headteacher, defending his students, who were asked to make a sea-themed statue for their town. The teacher is quoted in "'Too provocative' mermaid statue causes stir in southern Italy/Art school headteacher hails ‘tribute to the great majority of women who are curvy’ amid social media uproar" (The Guardian).
Go to the link to see the statue, which has huge globular breasts and a giant ass. I'd never even thought of a mermaid's ass before, and now I'm trying to think of how the human ass converges with the fish tail in the mermaid anatomy.How can we shift to electric cars when we're already seeing that we are going to be told that we must give them up?
While electric vehicles are essential to reducing carbon emissions, their production can exact a significant human and environmental cost.
They are "essential" but they are evil. Let's all switch — we must! — and then, when our trusty old gas cars are gone, we will be told electric cars are hopelessly bad. The argument is visibly cued up! What are we supposed to do? Not worry about that point in the future, but just concentrate on giving up the gas cars?
April 28, 2023
"The dominance of the studios has both formed and deformed the American cinema and world cinema."
"Did you have the impulse to ask anybody for permission, and were you concerned with how your ex-husband would feel?"
A question for the memoirist, quoted in "Maggie Smith Tries to Make the Divorce Memoir Beautiful/Her new book, 'You Could Make This Place Beautiful,' is an exploration of what happened to her marriage after she became a well-known poet" (NYT).
I clicked on this because I thought I was going to read something about the 88-year-old actress, Maggie Smith, but it's about a 46-year-old writer with the same name. She's most famously the author of the "official poem of the pandemic," "Good Bones." The poem contains the line that is the title of the new book, "You Could Make This Place Beautiful." I think it's a pretty good poem, so go to the link and read it.
Anyway, having determined that this article was not about the actress Maggie Smith, I ended up wanting to blog it because of that question from the audience at one of her book-tour appearances. It's the classic ethics question for all writers who use their own life as material.
Smith answers:
"Even as her Republican peers sought to isolate her in the wake of her impassioned comments against a proposed ban on what doctors call gender-affirming medical care for children..."
"He came in our store and put his hands on me with no provocation. Do I think he should have been killed for doing that? Absolutely, unequivocally, no!"
April 27, 2023
"We believe in the democratization of content."
"Mr. Teixeira’s lawyers described him as compliant — and said he sat on the porch reading a Bible as he waited to be arrested..."
"The cross-examination has turned to an email [E. Jean] Carroll received... [that] refers to Trump, a 'scheme,' and states 'we must do our patriotic duty.'"
From "Live Updates: E. Jean Carroll Is Being Cross-Examined Over Trump Rape Allegation/Defense lawyers questioned why the writer could not remember the precise day she claimed that Donald J. Trump had raped her in the 1990s. She responded, 'I wish we could give you a date'" (NYT).
Out at 5:42 a.m.
I want to write a post expressive of my dismay that the 2024 presidential campaign is turning into an inevitable repeat of the already awful 2020 campaign. It was bad enough to go through the 2020 campaign once and it's bad to go through any presidential campaign twice, but to go through the 2020 campaign twice is just such an outrage. Why aren't people kicking and screaming as we're dragged into this?!
I was thinking What can I do? And all I thought of was rooting for Bobby and Vivek.
"Unless I am in unbearable pain, I should be able to live right up to the last moments."
Writes Paul Woodruff in "My death is close at hand. But I do not think of myself as dying" (WaPo).
"The same justices who feel harassed and exposed because reporters are combing through their undisclosed financial dealings right now could have solved this problem..."
Write Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern, in "King Roberts/The chief justice’s latest trick to ward off oversight is the ploy of a royal, not a judge" (Slate).
“Testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee by the Chief Justice of the United States is exceedingly rare, as one might expect in light of separation of powers concerns and the importance of preserving judicial independence.”
Was Durbin seeking "minimal accountability" or a theatrical occasion to smack the Chief Justice around? Roberts had good reason to suspect the latter.
And speaking of theatrical: that Lithwick and Stern piece in Slate. All this talk of emperors and wielding a scepter!
I remember when that was the rhetoric of the right. Here's Ed Meese in 1997, railing about "The Imperial Judiciary":
"The last time the Supreme Court decided whether a work produced using a machine was eligible for copyright was in 1884."
I'm thinking of quoting one of the Bobs — Dole or Dylan — for the title of this post I've been trying all morning to write.
Where's the outrage?
An’ here I sit so patiently
Waiting to find out what price
You have to pay to get out of
Going through all these things twice
"In video obtained by The Times... Mr. Carlson is shown off camera discussing his 'postmenopausal fans' and..."
"For all of his early promise, Nate Silver ended up swallowing, and even pushing what might be the single concept most destructive to the republic right now: bothsidesism."
Says the first commenter in a discussion at Metafilter, "The end of the road for FiveThirtyEight?"
The end of the road for FiveThirtyEight?
With any luck! Because: Fuck that guy, and Christ, what an asshole and all that.
And someone else:
won't disagree with anyone who says some variation of "fuck Nate Silver," but having journalistic outfits of even marginal merit get hollowed out and obliterated on a weekly basis by an increasingly thinner gamut of omnivorous corporations has been extremely grim the past few years
April 26, 2023
"If they really think I’ve stolen the place [of a female runner], I don’t mind giving the medal back.... But I don’t want to apologize, because I didn’t do anything wrong….”
"Given the stakes, Biden needs to make the case... why [Kamala] Harris is the best choice to succeed him, should he not be able to complete his [second] term...."
"Carroll says she has not been able to form a romantic relationship since the encounter. She said she hasn’t had sex since then, either."
E. Jean Carroll testified today, reported in "Live Updates: E. Jean Carroll Accuses Trump of Rape in Testimony/The writer’s account of an assault was detailed and harrowing. She said an amusing encounter at Bergdorf Goodman turned terrifying and ended her romantic life forever" (NYT).
"Then suddenly that bucket is not just cream and sugar, it’s something else."
"Most pop songs can fit over most pop songs … You could go from Let it Be to No Woman, No Cry and switch back."
A musicologist for Sheeran has said the chord sequence is not unique, and gave numerous other examples of its use in songs by artists such as Donovan and the Seekers....
Sheeran has been accused of plagiarism numerous times before. In April 2022 he won a UK court battle over biggest hit, Shape of You.... In 2017, he added writers of the TLC song No Scrubs to the credits of Shape of You, after similarities had been spotted by fans, though no legal case was brought against him. Also in 2017, he settled out of court after songwriters of the Matt Cardle song Amazing claimed it had been copied by Sheeran for his song Photograph. Sheeran later said he regretted the settlement, as “the floodgates opened” to further plagiarism claims....
He made a target out of himself. Avoiding 2 fights early on, he attracted these new disputes, and he must fight or continually pay out money for the routine privilege of singing simple pop songs, which, as he testified, all sound alike.
"She’s very liberal. I mean, I’m very liberal, but she’s another level. Which she should be, and I’m glad."
April 25, 2023
"Nate Silver Out at ABC News... ABC News is expected to retain the FiveThirtyEight brand, with plans to streamline the data-driven site."
Silver founded FiveThirtyEight in 2008, eventually bringing it to The New York Times. Silver would go on to sell the site to Disney’s ESPN; it later was moved to the ABC News division. His departure will be the first time that Silver has not been involved in the site since it launched 15 years ago....
A lot of people getting fired these days....
April green at sunrise.
"Members of an 'autonomous movement' called Tyre Extinguishers said they recently 'disarmed' 43 SUVs in 'one of the wealthiest areas' of Boston by letting the air out of the tires..."
"As the loons fly northward, they’re encountering atmospheric conditions that causes ice to develop on their bodies."
Teaching in Afghanistan.
These Afghan teachers are risking their lives, crossing a dangerous river on inflated inner tubes, to get to their pupils.
— BBC World Service (@bbcworldservice) April 24, 2023
More extraordinary teachers 🎧 https://t.co/Gbxrb9zA2v pic.twitter.com/wTmxWXuMER
April 24, 2023
"Tucker Carlson is leaving Fox News."
[I]t was Carlson’s comments about Fox management, as revealed in the Dominion case, that played a role in his departure from Fox, a person familiar with the company’s thinking told The Post.... His Fox News colleagues were stunned by the departure, which seemed out of the blue.
He's already done his last show, and there's no one cued up to take his slot, which will just be filled with "rotating Fox News personalities" for now.
The NYT article brings up a lawsuit filed by "a former Fox News producer, Abby Grossberg, who claims that he presided over a misogynistic and discriminatory workplace culture." She says "that on her first day working for Mr. Carlson, she discovered the work space was decorated with large pictures of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wearing a swimsuit."
Also at the NYT, there's a piece by Hart Seely that went up 2 days ago — "The Fearful Verses of Tucker Carlson" — consisting entirely of overheated sentences spoken by Carlson, mostly begin with the words "This is" (each linked to video): "This is chaos," "This is shocking," "This is what the collapse of civilization looks like," etc. etc.
I'm getting a "How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb" vibe from this NYT headline.
I want to link to this NY Post article about Hunter Biden, but it begins with such a trashy first line.
Hunter Biden is believed to be hiding out at the White House while his baby mama goes on the warpath.
If it's true that Hunter Biden is living at the White House to avoid legal consequences in a child support suit, that's important. But we've got the passive voice on top of mere belief — "is believed" — and that's next to meaningless.
Then there's "on the warpath." Ugh! Leave Native Americans out of this.
And then "baby mama." Ugh! It's not cute. It's not cool. It's just asinine and sad.
The article continues:
"Just as Teddy Kennedy’s challenge to Carter came at a time of national 'malaise,' now Bobby Kennedy, Jr.’s challenge to Biden comes at a time of national demoralization."
Writes James P. Pinkerton, in "Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Takes on the Uniparty with a Pledge to Put Americans First" (Breitbart).
"Biden once called 'transgender equality' the 'civil-rights issue of our time'... He’s also called Florida’s anti-trans policies 'close to sinful'..."
Writes Sarah Jones, in "Will Democrats Fight for Trans People? The party can’t cede an important civil-rights issue to conservatives" (Intelligencer).
"I am not a rapist. I hate rapists, I think rapists should be raped and murdered. If I am guilty of anything, it’s bad storytelling in the style of douche."
Said David Choe, quoted in "Unpacking David Choe’s ‘Rapey’ Podcast Comments" (The Cut).
Choe is one of the actors in the popular new Netflix series "Beef." The podcast remarks are from 2014, and we're told "some viewers are calling for accountability." I'm not sure what form of "accountability" they are or should be asking for. The story he told on the podcast concerns crossing lines with a masseuse, similar to the accusations against Al Gore some years back.
ADDED: To say "I hate rapists, I think rapists should be raped and murdered" is to show that you have a narrow conception of what rape is. Of course, that's also why Choe could do what he said he did and exclude himself from the set called "rapists." But if you actually cared about sexual abuse, you wouldn't focus on restricting the category. You focus on restricting the category to protect the interests of those, including you, who engage in sexual abuse. Look at the reasoning behind "rapists should be raped and murdered." That's saying: Rapists are those who are irredeemable, utterly worthless monsters. And: That can't be me!
(And let me add that even "irredeemable, utterly worthless monsters" shouldn't be "murdered." You should recommend the death penalty, not murder. If you think the death penalty is murder, you should oppose the death penalty.)
April 23, 2023
"In hindsight, the twenty-tens saw the emergence, growth, dominance, and incipient decay of the largest social networks...."
Writes Kyle Chayka, in "BuzzFeed, Blue Check Marks, and the End of an Internet Era/Just a decade ago, Twitter and BuzzFeed were the popular poles of online life. Now their struggles are emblematic of where social media went wrong" (The New Yorker).
Suddenly, it's a problem for Miller to use its slogan "Champagne of Beers."
The Comité Champagne asked for the destruction of a shipment of 2,352 cans on the grounds that the century-old motto used by the American brewery infringes the protected designation of origin "Champagne." The consignment was intercepted in the Belgian port of Antwerp in early February....
It's suddenly a problem because normally Miller is not exported to the EU, but somebody in Germany ordered this shipment. Who knows why? The unnamed buyer "was informed and did not contest the decision" to destroy the canned beer.
The slogan is 120 years old. Originally it was "The Champagne of Bottle Beers."
"I don't quite understand the emphasis on relationships/friends/etc. I'm an introvert, always have been..."
"I have never spoken to [Dylan Mulvaney], nor will I. I try to be, for the LGBT community, the adult in the room. She is not."
Said Caitlyn Jenner, quoted in The NY Post.
Jenner also weighed in on Trump '24: "I think Trump is going to win this thing… He is a great man and he did tremendous things for this country.... We need an adult in the room and that adult right now is Donald Trump and that’s just kind of the way I feel right now."
She likes that word "adult." But that's a high level of generality. If you make looking for the adults your guiding principle, good luck finding your way around America.
I retreat to the OED. Here's the relevant definition, 2b: "Mature in attitude, outlook, behaviour, etc.; emotionally and mentally grown-up." There's a historical example from 1927 that I assure you I read only after writing the previous paragraph:
"It is a widely-held notion in Europe..that the American is not adult, that he remains all his life a child."