Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Archive for January 2013

The Daily F Bomb, Wednesday 1/23

Benevolent greeting, my ineffably esteemed Effers!

Do you have a musical guilty pleasure? Do you have a movie that is a guilty pleasure? How about a food? Do you currently have a crush on any famous person? Who? Is there room in your life for edible glitter? What hobbies do you have?

Here are some Tweets from deepest Tweetistan:

What are you reading? Jan 23, 2013

For those who are new … we discuss books.  I list what I’m reading, and people comment with what they’re reading.  Sometimes, on Sundays, I post a special edition on a particular genre or topic.

If you like to trade books, try Bookmooch

I’ve written some book reviews on Yahoo Voices

Just finished

Nothing this week

Now reading

Cooler Smarter: Practical tips for low carbon living by the scientists at Union of Concerned Scientists, a great group. These folk make sense, concentrating on the changes you can make that have the biggest impact with the least effort.

Thinking, fast and slow by Daniel Kahneman.  Kahneman, most famous for his work with the late Amos Tversky, is one of the leading psychologists of the times. Here, he posits that our brains have two systems: A fast one and a slow one. Neither is better, but they are good at different things. This is a brilliant book: Full of insight and very well written, as well.

What hath God wrought? by Daniel Walker Howe. Subtitled “The transformation of America 1815-1848. I am reading this with the History group at GoodReads.  This is very well written, and does a good job especially with coverage of the treatment of Blacks and Native Americans.

The hard SF renaissance ed. by David G. Hartwell.  A large anthology of “hard” SF from the 90’s and 00’s. I think Hartwell takes SF a bit too seriously, but the stories are good.

On politics: A history of political thought from Herodotus to the present  by Alan Ryan. What the subtitle says – a history of political thought.  

Snakes can’t run by Ed Lin

A mystery/police procedural set in NYC’s Chinatown in the 1970s. “Snakes” is a slang term for illegal immigrants.

Far from the Tree: Parents, children and the search for identity  by Andrew Solomon.

The title comes from the phrase “the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree”. This book is about apples (children) who did fall far from the tree (parents). This book got amazing reviews and it grabbed me from the opening:

“There is no such thing as reproduction. When two people decide to have a baby, they engage in an act of production, and the widespread use of the word reproduction for this activity, with its implication that two people are but braiding themselves together, is at best a euphemism to comfort prospective parents before they get in over their heads”

I don’t agree with all that Solomon says, but this is a book to make you think about deep questions of humanity.

Rayburn: A Biography by D. B. Hardeman. A very admiring look at Sam Rayburn, former speaker of the House.

Just started

He, she and it  by Marge Percy. Really only a couple pages into it, but it’s near future dystopian SF set on Earth.  

Overnight Tuesday to Wednesday News

A_3gUP7CIAEnUaz

Partners in Health’s New Year’s Resolution

Here is your evening/overnight short news roundup from around the world.  I will start with checking the sources I did not use on Sunday.  Looking for about 5 stories.  

On Israel’s Election, from our own Volleyboy1

BLOGGING THE ISRAELI ELECTION (WITH UPDATES)

WAPO has a 2-hour old update

News

Not Kurds, terrorists are bombed, says Turkish PM

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has sought to distinguish between Kurdish people and militants of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), claiming that his army was only bombing “terrorists,” not ordinary Kurds.

“We have opened our hearts to our Kurdish brothers. We are sending bombs to terrorists. Our fight against the terror will continue today and tomorrow,” Erdoğan said in his address to his Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) parliamentary group on Jan. 22. “It is not true [that we are bombing Kurds].”

Erdoğan was responding to the Peace and Democracy Party’s (BDP) criticism after the Turkish Armed Forces started an operation against the PKK following the killing of a police officer in a gun attack by suspected members of the PKK on Jan. 16 in Mardin. Six PKK militants were killed in the southeastern province on Jan. 22.

The Falklands people decision in March should be the final word

In March, Falkland Islanders will vote in a referendum asking whether they want to retain their status as an overseas territory of the United Kingdom. It is expected that every single one of them will say yes.

If so, Argentina should respect their wishes. It should be for the Island’s 3100 residents to determine their political and sovereign status, no-one else.

The sabre-rattling in recent weeks over the Falklands has stirred memories of the bloody war fought over two months after Argentina invaded and occupied them in April 1982. More than 250 British servicemen, about 650 Argentines and three Islanders died before Britain regained control.

Source of editorial is New Zealand’s Dominion Post.  Mercopress’s main issue seems to be the Falklands/Maldives.  This editorial attracted my attention as I thought of so many other land disputes, even here in our times.  If they could only all be settled by a vote.  Further information on the coming vote is here.

Philippines takes China maritime dispute to UN tribunal

The Philippines plans to challenge China’s maritime claims before a United Nations-endorsed tribunal, a move that may raise tensions as the two nations vie for oil, gas and fish resources in contested waters.

“The Philippines has exhausted almost all political and diplomatic avenues for a peaceful negotiated settlement of its maritime dispute with China,” Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario told reporters in Manila Tuesday. “To this day, a solution is elusive. We hope the arbitral proceedings shall bring this dispute to a durable solution.”

The Philippines is challenging China’s “nine-dash” map of the sea, first published in 1947, that extends hundreds of miles south from China’s Hainan Island to the equatorial waters off the coast of Borneo. China claims “indisputable sovereignty” over more than 100 small islands, atolls and reefs that form the Paracel and Spratly Islands.

I follow China in general, and this island/resource issue, as closely as I can.  1/3 of the world’s population and more right there.  So many nations involved.  

World economic forum kicks off in Davos

Around 700 chief executives will be attending the annual meetings alongside some 40 prime ministers and heads of state. There will also be a fair amount of journalists.

Some participants have travelled thousands of miles and some of the businessmen and women have paid a healthy sum to attend.

“In the next 2-3 days I will have meetings with the chief executives and marketing directors of our 10 biggest customers […] In 24-48 hours I can have a string of meetings that otherwise would have taken 6 months “, says David Jones, the chief executive of advertising group Havas.

The World Economic Forum has its critics, and this year is no exception. The Davos event is labelled as elitist and as a place where powerful people go to carve up the world with little or no scrutiny.

Liveblog from France’s 24news.  

California death penalty: Will state follow Arizona, which has resumed executions after a long hiatus?

When Arizona prison officials injected condemned rapist and murderer Richard Stokley with a single, fatal drug dose last month, it marked the state’s sixth execution of the year in the nation’s second busiest death chamber.

Now that California voters in November narrowly preserved the death penalty, Arizona’s path could foreshadow the future for this state, where not a single one of the 729 death row inmates have marched to execution in seven years.

As in California, interminable legal tangles once shut down Arizona’s death penalty system as the state executed only one inmate, who volunteered to die, from 2001 to 2010. But Arizona emerged from numerous court battles that removed all of the legal roadblocks

The view a condemned inmate would have from a table inside the death chamber is shown during a tour of the lethal injection facility at San Quentin State Prison in San Quentin, Calif. (Associated Press) ( Eric Risberg )

that remain in California.

The result has been 11 executions since October 2010, nearly the number California has carried out since it restored the death penalty in 1978. Significantly, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, often the last word for death penalty appeals in the Western states, has not intervened.

Book Review

The 17 Equations That Changed The Course Of Humanity

Mathematician Ian Stewart’s recent book “In Pursuit of the Unknown: 17 Equations That Changed the World” takes a close look at some of the most important equations of all time.

A great example of the human impact of math is the financial crisis. Black Scholes, number 17 on this list, is a derivative pricing equation that played a role.

“It’s actually a fairly simple equation, mathematically speaking,” Professor Stewart told Business Insider. “What caused trouble was the complexity of the system the mathematics was intended to model.”

Annanuther Member Joins the Herd

…and here i are.  another of the kos refugees.  many of you are already here and know me.  i’m a retired ME (and just for the record, CSI is a TV show, not life in the ME’s offices), my ME status is a Ph.D. not an m.d and i don’t give medical advice to live people.  i may give an opinion if asked but i’ll always refer you to your own doctor.  what i may do, also, is, if i have had similar to your medical complaint, give you my experience, and still refer you to your own doc.  i can’t prescribe and i won’t.

i’m a panda lover.  i’ve been to china to see the pandas and experience the chinese culture. i adore fuzzy animals.  i admire reptiles, but i won’t approach one.  fish are cool, but, i prefer the marine mammals.  bears, pandas, polar, all kinds are my favorite animals.  i love the pootie diaries although i can’t have cats.  allergies to cat saliva, alas.  

UPDATE – Urgent Prayers/Healing Thoughts for GreenMountainBoy02

Commonmass has a new diary up at GOS; I’m on my phone so this will be brief.

GMB02 is on full life support with slim chance to pull through.  Family is there.  Tomorrow they talk about whether to take him off life support.  Thoughts and prayers to Bill and family.

Update from commonmass in his diary:

His family is coming out from Western Vermont and NY State and northwestern MA. He received the sacrament of Baptism this evening as well as the Anointing of the Sick.

I’d posted a comment in the open thread diary earlier, but in case people don’t see it, commonmass’s fiance, GreenMountainBoy02 (aka GMB02) at GOS is currently going through a health crisis and in ICU on a respirator.  I wasn’t going to diary this initially, but commonmass just posted that he’s on his way to the ICU because he’s been told GMB02 may die.  The Diary is here:

Update on Kossack GreenMountainBoy02’s Health Crisis

If you don’t know commonmass (Bill) or GMB02, they are the kindest, sweetest people, who just recently got engaged.  If you can ask for healing in whatever tradition/faith/etc. you are comfortable with, it would be appreciated I’m sure.

The Making Location

Diary name subject to change!

I just wanted to open up a spot for us to share our stuff – what we’re making.  

I know there are other crafts around here.

I’m not even picky about a name.  And with our “dinner-table conversation” I thought a weekly post would be fine.  

I want to be open and welcoming to all crafts, and activities in general.  And share tips, successes, problems, and resources.  

Meet Programmer Bob: one heck of a Pootie innovator

With the recent influx of pootie diaries, I thought I should introduce Programmer Bob who was on the news today.

A forensic image of Bob’s workstation revealed his true work habits and typical day:

9:00 a.m. — Get to work, surf Reddit, watch cat videos

11:30 a.m. — Lunch

1:00 p.m. — Ebay

2:00 p.m or so — Facebook and LinkedIn

4:30 p.m. — Send end-of-day e-mail update to management

5:00 p.m. — Go home

The Verizon investigation suggested Bob’s entrepreneurial outsourcing spirit stretched across several companies in his area — netting him several hundred thousand dollars a year as he paid out about $50,000 a year to his China-based ghost writers, according to hundreds of PDF invoices also discovered on his work computer.

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/01…

From Seneca Falls, to Selma and Stonewall: Guided by the ancestors

 photo AMEchurchObama_zps354f8936.jpg

President Barack Obama views a portrait of First Lady Michelle Obama before

a church service at Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C.,

on Inauguration Day, Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

From Seneca Falls, Selma and Stonewall: Guided by the ancestors

When I heard these words spoken by President Obama at his second inaugural

We the people declare today that the most evident of truth that all of us are created equal — is the star that guides us still; just as it guided our forebears through Seneca Falls and Selma and Stonewall

and the echo of those same words in the invocation delivered by Myrlie Evers-Williams

we celebrate the spirit of our ancestors, which has allowed us to move from a nation of unborn hopes and a history of disenfranchised votes, to today’s expression of a more perfect union…

we ask for your guidance toward the light of deliverance and that the vision of those who came before us and dreamed of this day, that we recognize that their visions still inspire us. They are a great cloud of witnesses unseen by the naked eye, but all around us, thankful that their living was not in vain.

I was moved.