September 16, 2023
"There’s something poignant about watching a guy who used to delight in his Irish gift of gab be muzzled."
Writes Maureen Dowd, in "Go With the Flow, Joe!" (NYT).
"As her taxi approached Russell Brand’s home, Alice remembers the driver begging her not to go inside."
"[T]he people who really believe that the Biden family is corrupt are Republicans. Unsurprisingly, Democrats are much less convinced..."
From "What Americans Think Of The Biden Impeachment Inquiry/Most aren't convinced President Biden is implicated in his son's wrongdoing" (FiveThirtyEight).
"It is clear this is not about a handful of badly trained dogs - it is a pattern of behaviour and it cannot go on."
And Tory peer secretary Lord Baker... [said t]he American bully XL was "born to be aggressive and bred to be aggressive," he said, adding they had "no place in the large dog-loving public of the country".
Here's a Guardian article from last month, "Perfect pets or dangerous dogs? The sudden, surprising rise of American bully XLs/Of the 10 fatal dog attacks in the UK last year, more than half involved a bully XL. But plenty of British owners love the breed. Should it be better regulated – or outright banned?":
"What utter nonsense. If this many men were thinking about the Roman Empire every day, they would not be voting for Republicans..."
That's the top-rated comment — from someone named Paula — on the NYT article, "Are Men Obsessed With the Roman Empire? Yes, Say Men. Women are asking the men in their lives how often they think about ancient Rome. Their responses, posted online, can be startling in their frequency."
"That’s up to them if they want to do impeachment or impeachment inquiry. I have no idea whether they will or not, we do have a lot of other things. But it’s quite important, and they did it to me."
September 15, 2023
"Kim Davis is ordered to pay $100,000 to same-sex couple she denied marriage license."
I'm blogging this because I blogged so much about Kim Davis back in 2015. Click on the Kim Davis tag to see what I said back then. I'll flag this one as the most helpful.
Yesterday's TikTok trend: Women have no idea how often men think about the Roman Empire.
"Your blatant efforts achieved your goal as the U.S. Attorney in Delaware today filed gun charges against our client..."
"I can’t describe the feeling it gives you. It reminded me of when other cultures say, 'Don’t take my picture because it is taking away your soul.'"
Said Tim Burton, quoted in "Tim Burton hits out at ‘disturbing’ AI, likens it to a robot ‘taking’ your soul" (CNN).
He was referring to a Buzzfeed article that used AI to rework Disney movies — “Frozen,” “The Lion King,” “Sleeping Beauty,” and “The Little Mermaid” — into Tim Burton movies.
"It takes something from your soul or psyche; that is very disturbing, especially if it has to do with you. It’s like a robot taking your humanity, your soul.""I think it’s very unlikely. What, what did I do wrong? I didn’t do anything wrong. You mean because I challenge an election, they want to put me in jail."
"People said, 'Would you like to pardon yourself?' I had a couple of attorneys that said, 'You can do it if you want.'... I had some people that said, 'It would look bad if you do it, because I think it would look terrible.'... Let me just tell you. I said, 'The last thing I’d ever do is give myself a pardon.'... I could have had a pardon done that would have saved me all of these lawyers and all of this — these fake charges, these Biden indictments."
Very unlikely ≠ impossible.
The last thing ≠ a thing that will never happen.
Of course, Trump is reserving the option of pardoning himself. But for now, running for office — for the position that will be necessary if he is ever to pardon himself — he asserts his innocence.
"At first glance, the book is just 26 pages of beautiful women with impressive bone structure, surrounded by or covered in flowers. But look closer..."
September 14, 2023
"[W]ere Biden to step down, Harris would become the Democratic front-runner.... Yet her conspicuous weaknesses would ensure a contested primary."
Writes Eric Levitz, in "The Case for Biden to Drop Kamala Harris" (NY Magazine).
"On the night of November 10, 1619, René Descartes dreamed that he was stumbling down the street pursued by ghosts."
"The DNC seems to have forgotten the purpose of the modern primary system, which is to replace backroom crony politics with a transparent democratic process...."
"I would talk to you differently knowing no right-wing conservatives could run with what I say. I shut down sometimes..."
"Over the years, she filled it with leopard print, red carpet, crystal chandeliers, ornate gold upholstery, and a Pepto-pink marble bathroom...."
From "The Townhouse Where Ivana Trump Died Has Been Hard to Sell" (NY Magazine).
"I married a progressive woman. She did not make me change my name when we got married."
Says a man commenting on the NYT article that's only about whether women do or don't take their husband's last name.
"What 'Beans' says, basically, is that people don't listen at all."
That's Len Chandler, who "never achieved the name recognition of some of those with whom he shared stages and causes" but "did write at least one song with lasting appeal: 'Beans in My Ears,' which the Serendipity Singers turned into a Top 30 hit in 1964."
"I intended the comment as a mockery of lawyers. I laughed at the ridiculousness of how these incidents are litigated..."
September 13, 2023
"Nutt dislikes drawing on canvas except with charcoal, which he also dislikes, but for a different reason."
From "Jim Nutt’s Art Remains a Mystery. Even to Him. In his first show of new work in over a decade, he has been occupied with a single subject: a portrait of a woman, in which he finds endless variation and human emotion" (NYT).
"Mexican politicians were shown two mummified corpses this week that a UFO expert claimed are 'a clear demonstration' of 'non-human' aliens."
"In January 2022, Dr. Kershnar appeared on a respected philosophy podcast, Brain in a Vat.... The guest presents a thought experiment..."
"I don’t know how this would ever happen or what would have to happen to get this to change, but just as a whole, the parents, the community in general, just need to trust the teachers."
[There's a] crisis of teachers quitting because they were pushed to their limits by children’s pandemic-related behavioral and emotional setbacks, staffing shortages that forced them to take on roles beyond their normal remit, including lunch and bus duty, and... culture war vitriol.... [And f]ewer college and university students want to become teachers, and the new teacher pipeline is drying up....
"'You mean, that’s it?' I gasped. 'We have Zach again?' I added incredulously. If the worst thing humanly imaginable happened—i.e., Donald Trump’s reĂ«lection—I will not sound more disbelieving or distraught...."
Writes Adam Gopnik, in "No, Not Aaron Rodgers! It’s hard to name a position in the history of sports so manifestly cursed as that of quarterback for the New York Jets" (The New Yorker).
I love the way Donald Trump intrudes himself even into an article about football almost as much as I love the diaeresis in "reëlection" and the screwy use of "happened" in "If the worst thing... happened... I will not sound...."
"Biden has in many ways remade himself as president. He is no longer the garrulous glad-hander I met when I first covered Congress..."
"I knew not to try to quantify key aspects other than climate change in my research because it would dilute the story that prestigious journals like Nature and its rival, Science, want to tell."
Brown himself does not seem to be claiming any malfeasance on the part of the journal. He did not claim that the peer reviewers reading his work pushed him to focus more on climate — or that the journal’s editors pressured him to frame the study that way. Rather, he says that the problem is an overall culture of climate science: One that encourages focusing on climate variables (warming temperatures, drying vegetation) over other factors, like fuel loads (the amount of vegetation available to burn) and humans sparking wildfires....
"But local drug dealers had long since filled the void with heroin, which was being cut with fentanyl and carfentanil, a chemically related synthetic opioid that is up to 100 times stronger than fentanyl..."
"There's a quote people often falsely attribute to Eleanor Roosevelt — 'Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people.'"
"So What if a Candidate Livestreamed Sex Acts with Her Husband?"
For this story, I'm linking to Jack Shafer at Politico, because his headline is — almost verbatim — the question I had for my search as I looked for an article about Susanna Gibson, a Democratic nominee for a seat in the Virginia House of Delegates.
For the Annals of Men in Shorts.
Amazing to dress like that at a serious job, but other than that, I see no problem with his use of sarcasm. As far as I'm concerned, he can go on to all the tricks — irony, metaphor, bathos, puns, parody, litotes, and satire..@SenFettermanPA reacts to Speaker McCarthy moving forward with a House impeachment inquiry into POTUS…
— Liz Brown-Kaiser (@lizbrownkaiser) September 12, 2023
(Just watch) pic.twitter.com/jg3aeyDW7F
September 12, 2023
"I only got married because I was 37 years old … and people would think I was queer if I weren’t married."
[Tim Scott] has never been married. There is no indication that he has plans to get married. And that’s a problem for some Republicans who, like nagging parents, want to know why Scott, 57, is unmarried.That article was published a week ago. I ran across it this morning after doing a search prompted by this headline in today's Washington Post: "Tim Scott’s girlfriend/The unmarried Republican presidential candidate doesn’t like talking about his new relationship very much. But he is talking about it."
Much has been made of Mississippi’s stringent rule preventing third-grade students from moving to fourth if they aren’t reading proficiently...."
Writes the Editorial Board of The Washington Post, in "Holding kids back can’t explain Mississippi’s education ‘miracle.'"
"The Siamese crocodiles, including 69 adults and 6 babies, were confirmed to be missing after about four months worth of rain...."
It says in "Dozens of escaped crocodiles lurking in floodwaters, Chinese city warns" (WaPo)
Maoming has some of the country’s largest crocodile farms, with crocodile skin manufacturing facilities in nearby cities. Crocodile meat is also a local delicacy. The farming and trade of live crocodiles is allowed under Chinese law, and cases of farmed reptiles running loose are not uncommon in the country....
"Douthat is highly skilled at addressing liberal Times readers in a manner that makes clear he is not one of them, without allowing them to think..."
Writes Isaac Chotiner in "Ross Douthat’s Theories of Persuasion/At a time of distrust and polarization, the conservative Times columnist seeks to bridge the worlds of the Christian right and the secular left" (The New Yorker).
"[Cornel West's] presence in the 2024 race gives voters an exceptional choice for truth and justice beyond the corrupt and corrosive duopoly."
"X, Elon Musk’s social media platform formerly known as Twitter, appears to be attempting to limit its users’ access to The New York Times."
September 11, 2023
"[E]ven if we spend another year between now and the election carefully analyzing the structure and shape of the madhouse we’re locked in, it’s still a madhouse."
Writes Paul Waldman, in "How not to have a psychic meltdown when you see new Trump-Biden poll numbers/As infuriating as it is to admit the electorate may choose another Trump term, the only answer may be to hold on to that truth" (MSNBC).
"Isaacson... writes at length and with compassion about the indignities heaped upon young Elon by schoolmates."
Writes Jill Lepore, in "How Elon Musk Went from Superhero to Supervillain/Walter Isaacson’s new biography depicts a man who wields more power than almost any other person on the planet but seems estranged from humanity itself" (The New Yorker).
"When, in the late sixties, the emergent radical-feminist movement began to advance a critique of heterosexuality, [Betty] Friedan found the focus on sexuality both crude and a bit naĂ¯ve."
"And I will continue, of course, to be a big part of NBC's political coverage, because, as Tom Brokaw said to me, he says, 'Look, some networks do some things well, but nobody does politics like NBC.'"
I'm watching Biden's press conference in Vietnam because I saw that Byron York said "He's clearly exhausted, mumbling, and rambling at times."
Is he "mumbling"? His voice is quiet and he speaks quickly and without crisply pronounced consonants… but he's not “mumbling” like a confused person.
September 10, 2023
"The pastel makeup and modest clothing that are the hallmark of 'good for marriage' style are based on Brilliant Girls, a 2021 drama..."
"But he was there, a firsthand witness, and it is rare for new testimony to emerge six decades after the fact."
"Days after saying that an influx of over 110,000 asylum seekers was destroying New York City, Mayor Eric Adams on Saturday directed every city agency..."
"The more uncertain you are about your sense of self, the more likely you are to join a group, which can give you guidance on 'what to think, how to feel and how to behave'...."
I forgot to notice that yesterday was the 4-year anniversary of my sunrise project.
Compare my extensive analysis of the project on my first year anniversary — here — with many photos and the identification of 10 different sunrise types.
This year, I'm observing the anniversary a day late, but let me show you some of what are to me the most beautiful sunrises of this past year:
"Across multiple polls, Biden seems to be losing support from minority voters.... This raises the possibility that there’s a social-issues undertow for Democrats...
Writes Ross Douthat, in "Why Is Joe Biden So Unpopular?" (NYT).
"At one point, Isaacson asks why Musk is so offended by anything he deems politically correct, and Musk, as usual..."
Writes Jennifer Szalai, in "Elon Musk Wants to Save Humanity. The Only Problem: People. Walter Isaacson’s biography of the billionaire entrepreneur depicts a mercurial 'man-child' with grandiose ambitions and an ego to match" (NYT).
"The strangest thing about this harrowing circumstance is that no mainstream Democrat is challenging Biden for the nomination."
Writes Jonathan Chait, in "Biden or Bust/Why isn’t a mainstream Democrat challenging the president?" (NY Magazine).
What's so "strange" and "harrowing" about party discipline? The incumbent President is running for a second term. It's completely normal that he'll be his party's nominee. Chait doesn't concede that there's anything wrong with Biden, so his agonizing looks silly.
"The demand for a different option is robust. What is mystifyingly absent is the supply."
No, it's not mystifying. It's exactly what you would expect.
Chait dismisses RFK Jr. and Marianne Williamson as "a pair of kooks." Yes, it's kooky to challenge your party's incumbent President. You have to attack him. Yet Chait asserts that a challenger — some Senator (Warnock?) or Governor (Whitmer?) — could run and "maybe wouldn’t have to question Biden’s accomplishments" (or differ much on his policy stances"). Chait invites them to limit their campaign to the fact that Biden is too old.
And it's supposed to be "strange" and "mystifying" that no one will undertake that doomed mission. Chait never even mentions that Kamala Harris is the Democrat officially waiting in the wings. How can any good Democrat elbow past her and say, no, me first?