so much drama

Sep. 15th, 2025 04:24 pm
mellowtigger: (Daria)
[personal profile] mellowtigger

There are far too many relevant topics for Moody Monday, and there is far too little time to actually delve into them.

Here's the abridged version of most of the important things in my brain during this past week.

Click here to read the 7 items...

  • Charlie Kirk's apparent political assassination:
    A whole lot of people are putting words into other people's mouths. Here are the things that Charlie Kirk said (free archive copy), that political leaders said, and that actual progressive commentators said. In that last video, skip to the 12-minute mark to hear what I hope is wise advice for how to responsibly prepare your mind to watch violent war footage, if you choose to do so. I haven't watched the snuff video. I have enough exposure to violence where I'm at, thanks.
  • The USA President's health and ego:
    So, Trump disappeared for a week, which is highly unusual, then returns with a droopy half-face (at least temporarily), looking exactly like he had some kind of stroke. Then during his speech against the "radical left", Trump publishes a video where his hands and fingers glitch visually. According to this review of it, that video was not AI generated, merely badly edited. Both the editing (at all) and the quality (poorly done) are bothersome concepts in this context. Separately, there's a detail that is nagging at my brain. According to this story, the accused killer was caught at 10pm Thursday night. But what was the very first mention to the public of this apprehension? I cannot find a solid answer. It seems (without solid proof) that news was deliberately withheld from the USA public until Trump could go on Fox News on Friday morning and claim he was told about it just "5 minutes before I walked in." Oh, pleasant coincidence? Only after his statement, from what I can find, did other press conferences happen that morning. I want to be wrong about this obscure detail of timing, because that level of national manipulation for Trump's personal benefit is just... unconscionable. Why was the USA kept ignorant overnight on what is obviously an issue of national importance... until Trump gets to play the role of important political strongman revealing such significant news in person to Fox & Friends? We got news about Luigi Mangione seemingly every hour for days. Please, prove me wrong on this issue.
  • The ongoing USA civil war:
    I've mentioned stochastic terrorism on this blog several times in recent years. I think we will not properly address violence in the USA until we get a national legal definition of stochastic terrorism, so it can be objectively identified and punished in court. It will need to clarify what is not protected by the 1st Amendment. Likewise, I've said before that we need clarified what is not protected by the 2nd Amendment. Towards a solution for that problem, I think more states need state defense forces which cannot be controlled by the federal government. (Florida also started one recently.) Why? I think that federal law should require that all citizens be active members of those state forces, or members of federal military units, before they're allowed military weapons. Not everyone (and literally their children too) should have them. Make actual military units (which any citizen can potentially join) responsible for the use of their weapons. I think that culpability would put a quick end to idiots taking weapons whenever they want and firing them whenever they want. Possession of any military weapon without a military unit's explicit orders would be a punishable offense. That still leaves handguns (and 3D-printed ones) out there for potential misuse, but we have to start somewhere. It will require new constitutional amendments to make those changes. We should've started that process after Columbine. Until adoption of these (and other) new amendments, so-called blue states could financially starve and delay fascist government by pursuing economic secession.
  • Ukraine:
    I agree with this vlogger who says that Russia is sending drones into NATO countries, not because Putin thinks NATO will react. Putin knows NATO will not react. Instead, Putin does it because triggering worries in those populations might convince them to hoard their defense supplies instead of sending them to Ukraine. That's actually a shrewd military plan. I hope the NATO countries don't succumb to it.
  • Climate change:
    We're supposed to be in the midst of a La Niña year, but temperatures didn't really cool off globally. In addition, we're learning that very unusual breaks are happening in air and water and species migration patterns. We've got 1 more year expected of this La Niña, then 2027 (or late 2026) should shift back to El Niño, when things start heating up again. The last El Niño set some bad global records, but we'll start next time from another high point.
  • Privacy:
    I've tried explaining before that the only privacy that matters is what happens inside your own brain. We keep getting better at decoding brainwaves. We need a guarantee of absolute, inviolable (under any imagined emergency circumstance) privacy within our own bodies, and it needs to be encoded directly into the national constitution as a new amendment. Urgently. I think maybe I'm prepared for technological telepathy, but I'm increasingly sure that the rest of humanity is not capable of resisting the allure of knowing what other people think... or enduring the consequence of actually knowing those thoughts.
  • UFOs:
    I still feel a bit of embarrassment (I think it is) at my mention of supposedly-trustworthy news 2 years ago about an archaeological find in Peru, which turned out to be false. So I've been more guarded than usual on any UFO news. There was new testimony at the U.S. Congress last week. Apparently-reputable people testified where there are very real legal consequences, so I'm trusting one particular story as accurate first-person information. Like this video (MSN.com) of an Air Force veteran describing what sounds very much like stealth technology. A practical invisibility screen that can be turned on and off at will, not just difficult-to-radar surfaces. There's a longer video here (YouTube) of the Congressional testimony with even more footage of another flying craft. That UFO takes a missile hit, survives, appears to start tumbling, yet it and shrapnel pieces near it keep flying on the same trajectory, not falling down at all. That is not aerodynamic propulsion. That is something new. Given how easily our tools (including AI tools) can generate false text, images, speech, and video, it's important to stay skeptical, especially if somebody's selling something. I don't know what's going on, but I'm certain that my government is lying to the public and to Congress, which is supposed to have regulatory oversight of the military forces of the USA.

Strange times. So much distracting drama.

theme song: Ballad of Paul and Sheila

Sep. 14th, 2025 07:42 pm
mellowtigger: (music)
[personal profile] mellowtigger

It has been nearly a quarter-century since progressive U.S. Senator Paul Wellstone died in a plane crash in northern Minnesota, but his influence still affects Minnesota politics today. I've even used his phrase "We all do better when we all do better" in conversation at work myself. Paul Wellstone originally used it in 1999 during a speech to the Sheet Metal Workers Union.

This song is very "situational" and not relevant for most situations, but it's a nice counterpoint to tomorrow's post for Moody Monday.

The lyrics are simple and short, about that married couple's death. It begins with these words.

October morning, little plane on the forest floor,
Up on the TV between a rerun and another war.
Here in a hotel, trying to make some sense of this.
Two thousand miles from my family in Minneapolis.

Hey Senator, I wanna say,
All the things you fought for did not die here today.
Hey Senator, I'm gonna do
All the things I can to live my life more like you lived.

So... that's the theme song for today.

chicken eyes

Sep. 11th, 2025 03:17 pm
mellowtigger: (Default)
[personal profile] mellowtigger

I'm watching more YouTube (free) lately, because I cancelled subscriptions to all of my major online channels. I realized that I wasn't finding enjoyable things to watch perpetually on them, beyond whatever titles enticed me originally to subscribe. So Disney and HBO/Max were gone. For months, I had been unable to stream Viki from my phone to my television, and I just wasn't watching the many Boy Love dramas on the webpage as a workaround, so Viki was gone. Which left YouTube, where I still am not a paying subscriber... yet.

This 7-minute video is chock full of interesting details about chickens. Specifically, about chicken eyes. Chickens have tetrachromatic vision (including ultraviolet), double cone photoreceptors (sensitive to movement and polarization), double fovea (areas of high visual acuity, one for close-up and one for distant vision), 300-degree field of view, and independently controlled eyeballs. Their big downside? Terrible low-light vision due to fewer rods than humans.

Here's a 7-minute YouTube video from a homesteader (and self-described conservative), talking about the science of chicken eyes. Science and observation is a good thing to see and to encourage, so I was happy to add my view and my Like to a video on a channel I wouldn't normally watch.

Chickens are much more interesting than I knew.

weather and yard

Sep. 5th, 2025 11:13 am
mellowtigger: (Default)
[personal profile] mellowtigger

It was 7C/45F outside when I woke up this morning. It seems unusual for it to be this cool so early in the fall season in Minneapolis. It was 17C/63F indoors downstairs, so I turned on the central heater for a bit to compensate. I mean, last year, I put the air conditioner back in my bedroom window in late September because I was tired of sweating from the heat. Instead, this year, I used my electric blanket for the last 2 nights.

On Monday, during the Labor Day holiday from work, I spent some time in the front yard doing much-needed work pulling unintended plants that had grown tall. I filled 2 big paper yard trash bags after stomping them for maximum compression. When I was just getting started, some kid (6 years old maybe?) on an electric-assisted kid bicycle started a brief conversation that went something like this:

kid: "Hey, mister?"
me: *looking up from pulling plants* "Yes?"
kid: "Can you get rid of these plants? *pointing at stuff leaning into the sidewalk and brushing against passersby*
me: "Yes, I'll be sure to get those." *getting back to the plants where I started by my front door*
kid: "And these too? *pointing on the other side of the sidewalk with plants leaning over the concrete*
me: *surveying the admitted mess* "Absolutely."

*laugh* I did eventually get to all of those plants that day, so the sidewalk is unimpeded again. I had to take a few breaks on the front porch between the digging and pulling. When 2 bags were full and my body was very tired, I gave up for the day. I still need a few more hours to finish the front yard. As I described it to a coworker online, "Now, at least it looks merely unkempt instead of abandoned."

I was intending to do that now during my "weekend", but it has been unusually cold and also wet. Bad combination. And my body... my back and legs have been sore all week from Monday's exertions.

Excuses, excuses for procrastination. I know.

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