July 22, 2023
"Smith has a herculean task before him. He must present a persuasive narrative that Trump and his henchmen and women (yes, you, Ginni Thomas) were determined to pull off a coup."
The prose of Maureen Dowd, in "The Moment of Truth for Our Liar in Chief" (NYT).
"The hammerhead worm... slithers like a snake and resembles a piece of whole-wheat spaghetti, led by its mushroom-shaped head."
"Once, her daughter’s drama teacher assigned her the monkey role in a school play. 'I think it was The Wizard of Oz'...."
RFK Jr. is — by far — the most approved-of political figure in the United States right now.
According to a new Harvard Harris poll:
By "approved-of," I mean the gap between "favorable and unfavorable." He's up 21 points, and the next highest is
July 21, 2023
"During World War I, eating less was considered patriotic, a way of freeing up precious caloric resources for American troops fighting abroad."
Hey, I wonder how Threads is doing?
Ah, I see USA Today is keeping up: "A flash in the pan? Just [2] weeks after launch, Instagram Threads app is already faltering."
Daily traffic was 49 million in Week 1 and 23.6 million at the beginning of Week 2. And the time spent on the app has fallen by an even greater percentage, from 21 minutes July 7th to 6 minutes on July 14th.
The author of that article, Jennifer Jolly, offers Threads some advice: "For Threads to wipe out Twitter, it must tackle news with the best content moderation the world’s ever seen, ban polarizing public figures who peddle dangerous misinformation, and make everyone who uses the app agree to some basic rules of engagement."
He may not be 100% right, but he's right in the sense that you ought to consider which of these 5 seemingly essential elements of life you really want in your own life.
"The federal judge overseeing former President Donald J. Trump’s prosecution on charges of illegally retaining dozens of classified documents set a trial date on Friday for May 2024..."
"In rare move, Grassley releases unverified FBI source report alleging Biden involvement in bribe..."
Details of the unclassified document, known as an FD-1023, have emerged in recent months as Republicans search for any evidence that President Joe Biden engaged in the controversial overseas business dealings of his son Hunter Biden, which the president and his aides have repeatedly said he didn't do....
Democrats pounced on Grassley for publishing the FD-1023, accusing him of selectively highlighting uncorroborated information to hurt a political opponent....
"When clicking on the 'comments' link, I braced myself for the onslaught of prohibitionists and finger-waggers..."
A highly approved-of comment on the NYT article "Why Does Day Drinking Feel Different? A buzz in the sun can hit harder than dinnertime drinks. Experts shed light on the science."
"A reëlected Trump would be a President subject to no constraints at all..."
July 20, 2023
Sunrise — 6:01, 6:03.
"[D]ogs walking on the main streets must have their DNA on file with the local government. People must carry dog 'passports'..."
From "This mayor, tired of poop on his streets, is making dogs get passports" (WaPo). The city is Béziers, in southern France, and it's been around since 575 BCE.
"Once she was deported from the U.S., [Maria Butina] became a member of Russia’s parliament and, of course, the host of her own TV program...."
"I did have one couple; they called off their wedding because the mom of the bride was so particular and worried about what people thought..."
"Republicans Have So Little Hunter Biden Evidence They Shared His Nudes/Instead Marjorie Taylor Greene waved the photos around in a congressional hearing."
... Greene tried to claim that Biden engaged in sex trafficking and listed payments to sex workers as a tax writeoff. As part of her argument, she held up poster-size prints of Biden’s nude photos, which were taken off his laptop....
Not only was Greene’s decision to wave Biden’s nudes around wildly inappropriate for a congressional hearing, but it may also have violated D.C. revenge porn law....
"The finding that Ms. Carroll failed to prove that she was 'raped' within the meaning of the New York Penal Law does not mean..."
Wrote Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, quoted in "Judge clarifies: Yes, Trump was found to have raped E. Jean Carroll" (WaPo).
Kaplan said New York’s legal definition of “rape” is “far narrower” than the word is understood in “common modern parlance.” The former requires forcible, unconsented-to penetration with one’s penis. But he said that the conduct the jury effectively found Trump liable for — forced digital penetration — meets a more common definition of rape. He cited definitions offered by the American Psychological Association and the Justice Department, which in 2012 expanded its definition of rape to include penetration “with any body part or object.”
Read the judge's opinion here. Excerpt:
"I felt like I was imprisoned in my own body... I now have a psychiatrist. I now vomit a lot more."
Said Samantha Casiano, quoted in "Woman suing Texas over abortion ban vomits on the stand in emotional reaction during dramatic hearing/Three plaintiffs testified about the trauma they experienced carrying nonviable pregnancies" (NBC News).
Casiano's wanted an abortion after her doctor told her — at 20 weeks of pregnancy — that her baby had anencephaly and could not survive. She did give birth to the baby, and the baby lived 4 hours.
July 19, 2023
"So, how much should we worry about the harm our pets are doing to the environment?"
Photo by Meade, from the blog Puparazzo, 2014.
"Now I’m as important as everyone else with a credit card!"
Finally got my blue check! Now I’m as important as everyone else with a credit card! hopefully I can get paid to tweet now @elonmusk. I have shit to say!
— Roseanne Barr (@therealroseanne) July 18, 2023
"'There are obvious anatomical differences' between men’s and women’s knees... Not just the knees, in fact — the whole leg...."
"CMT censored this video, and that's a clear indication that it's great, so I looked it up, and it sure is!"
That's the top-rated comment on the Jason Aldean video "Try That in a Small Town" (YouTube).
I looked that up and watched it after noticing the NYT article "Jason Aldean Video for ‘Try That in a Small Town’ Pulled Amid Backlash/The country singer, who released the song in May, said the tune is an ode to the 'feeling of a community' he had growing up. Critics say it is offensive."
"When I asked a Pikeville, Ky., businessman why he thought the Democratic Party had become 'unhinged,' Henry, as I’ll call him here..."
Said the Berkeley sociologist Arlie Hochschild, quoted in a NYT op-ed by Thomas B. Edsall, titled "'Gut-level Hatred' Is Consuming Our Political Life."
"They’re taking really fun technological toys out into the desert and experimenting and trying new things, and basically screwing with ravens—which is a hilarious concept."
From "Can You Save One Species by Annoying Another? In 'Eco-Hack!,' the filmmakers Brett Marty and Josh Izenberg document a conservation biologist’s novel strategy for rescuing the desert tortoise: booby traps" (The New Yorker). I'm quoting filmmaker Brett Marty in the post title and conservation biologist Tim Shields in the text of the post.
July 18, 2023
"In both films, the [Barbie] doll ultimately decides she must leave her home."
I'm reading "The banned Barbie film: her anguished first role as Karen Carpenter/Todd Haynes animated the impossibly slender doll to show what drove the singer to her early death. The film has more in common than you might expect with Greta Gerwig’s blockbuster" (The Guardian).
The shockingly lazy conversion of office space into a $520,000 residence.
"The book’s popularity seemed to be fueled in part by the recent re-election of President George W. Bush..."
From "Harry G. Frankfurt, Philosopher With a Surprise Best Seller, Dies at 94/He spent his career exploring will and deceit. Then came a sudden success: a bluntly titled book that found that one strain of dishonesty with a barnyard name was worse than lying."
"Barely one-in-five voters think affirmative action programs have been successful..."
Rasmussen Reports reports.
"In a nation of twelve million people, there have been at least a dozen massacres by gangs fighting over turf, killing more than a thousand Haitians last year alone."
Writes Jon Lee Anderson, in "Haiti Held Hostage Gangs control the capital. Foreign help is scarce. Can the embattled island nation save itself?" (The New Yorker).
"Up until that point in my life, in conformance with King Frederick II’s proscription against inebriation among falconers, I had resolved..."
July 17, 2023
"Everything that you think is solid is actually fleeting and ephemeral. The only thing that is quasi-permanent..."
Said Joyce Carol Oates in a NYT interview.
Oates was married from 1961 to 2008 and from 2009 to 2019. Both marriages ended when the husband died.
"Whereas politics attend to concrete social matters, every great work of art is itself the manifest solution to a totally invented problem."
Writes Alice Gribbin, in "Why Good Politics Makes for Bad Art/Affirmation is available everywhere. Why ruin aesthetics?" (Tablet).
"The agenda being pursued has deep roots in the decades-long effort by conservative legal thinkers to undercut what has become known as the administrative state..."
Scuppered.
July 16, 2023
"These are the kind of comments that might provoke some judges to issue a gag order.... Trump is likely trying to provoke a legal battle so he can portray himself as a victim of censorship ...
Quoted in "Trump’s outbursts met with silence so far by prosecutor, judge/Other defendants might get in trouble for publicly calling the prosecutor a deranged drug user. Not Donald Trump" (WaPo).
Why would Trump debate?
ADDED: I want to see him in the debate, but the reasons against participating are obvious and strong. So join me in brainstorming reasons why he should participate. I'm thinking it would demonstrate courage and confidence — bravado. It would be consistent with a positive image of his character.Trump strongly suggests to Maria Bartiromo that he will not participate in the first GOP debate pic.twitter.com/3l3Xpc8mT6
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) July 16, 2023
"COVID-19. There is an argument that it is ethnically targeted. COVID-19 attacks certain races disproportionately. "
"I never thought about threatening companies as a free-speech issue that courts would get involved with."
"[U]ses of the 'gaze' today—be it the male gaze, the white gaze, the straight gaze, and so forth—seem more invested in matters of identity..."
"A substance that has long been associated with parties could be mainstreamed and medicalized..."
From "The Rebranding of MDMA/Ecstasy used to be known as Therapy. What kind of drug could it become next?" (The New Yorker).
"If a digital replica of you — without your bothersome need for money and the time to lead a life — can do the job, who needs you?"
Asks James Poniewozik in "We Are All Background Actors/Why should you care about the strikes in Hollywood? Because they are much more than a revolt of the privileged" (NYT).
You could, I guess, make the argument that if someone is insignificant enough to be replaced by software, then they’re in the wrong business....
“We are all going to be in jeopardy of being replaced by machines,” Fran Drescher, the actors’ guild president, said in announcing the strike....
You may think of Hollywood creatives as a privileged class, but if their employers think about them like this, are you sure yours thinks any differently of you?...
You may never notice background actors... Yet they’re the difference between a sterile scene and a living one. They create the impression that... there is a full, complete universe....
Poniewozik, the TV critic for the NYT, interweaves 3 themes that I think are quite different and I'd like to separate:
1. The work done by background actors — how valuable it is to us, the viewers, who ought to want movies and TV shows made with real actors filling out the scenes.
2. The need to make acting a good enough career with a reliable income for a wide swath of human beings. They'd like to pay you for one day's work, while they scan your face, a face they could then use a million times, instead of hiring a thousand actors a thousand times.
3. The extent to which computers are coming to replace all human workers. Time for all of us to dig in and resist the threat?
Are any — or all — of these concerns enough to outlaw the face-scanning shortcut? Let's keep the 3 ideas separate:
1. If there is aesthetic value to using real background actors, then it's like other aesthetic choices — e.g., shooting on location — that increase the cost of a production. We, the viewers, make the ultimate choice. If we love and lavish money on expensive productions with more elaborate realism, then we might get more of them. But we might also love movies and TV shows that wouldn't be made at all if the costs weren't kept down.
2. This is the real labor issue. The actors have a union and they are sticking together. And yet Poniewozik's argument is that they are us. How so?
3. Here, maybe we are all doomed. Is it time to wake up?