Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Thanks NSA, FBI and CIA.

Some Muslims Somewhere Hating Us
Boko Haram, Taliban, Al Shebab, Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, Naqshbandi Army, Hamas, Muslim Brotherhood, Fatah and al Qaeda.
This list of 9 Islamic Terrorist groups is just from todays, July 16, 2014, newsfeed. There are numerous other Islamic Terrorist groups in the world and many non-Islamic groups as well. The world is overrun with Terrorists. So why do we hear so much about the Islamic ones? Well, when was the last time the Irish Republican Army blew up a pub? Or the Shining Path killed a tourist, or the FARC took on the Colombian army? It seems that the non-islamic groups are more or less quiet these days, while the Islamic organizations are going crazy.

Should we be worried here, safely ensconsed in American Values? You bet we should. Since 1972, there have been 71 attacks by Islamists on American soil with 3102 Americans killed (1). Yes, most of these were in the coordinated 9/11 attacks, but the rest were none-the-less dead. And there is no way to access the number of failed attempts. (Thank you NSA, FBI, CIA and others).
We are extremely fortunate to be living in a country where our enimies, and make no mistake, there are millions out there who hate us, have not yet been able to mount a sustained campaign of terror.
We seem to respond to the threats by arming ourselves to the teeth and blaming our own government for trying to oppress us. Get real you NRA types. The threat is not from our own government, who, by the way you elected, but from the millions of people who hate us.
And while you think about Islamic Terrorists, think about how many people were killed in the last few years by wacko shooters with legal guns. Assholes. 

Image: http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/09/15/article-2203291-1502B1D4000005DC-573_964x708.jpg

1. http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/pages/americanattacks.htm

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

One God or Three? Exactly the Same.

I am confused. Christians believe in “One God”? But this god is actually three in one: Father, Son and Holy Ghost. That sounds like three Gods to me. The problem happened when early Christians proclaimed Jesus to be the “Son of God” and that meant 2 gods. So they came up with a tortuous explanation of how the father and son were actually the same god, so when Jesus was killed, the father was really killed. And don’t even get started on the Holy Ghost or Holy Spirit. Nobody agrees on exactly what that is. But there is agreement that in the trinity, or triune god, each one isn’t the other, but each is the same God. Confused? Look at this diagram to clarify for you:

I am not trying to be a pissant or blasphemer.  I just don’t get it. Give me one God or a bunch of Gods. That I get. This I don’t.

Image: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H
oly_Spirit

Cortical Skipping or ," How The Hell Did You Think of That?"

Ok, so I made up the term to describe something that we all do all the time. Here is an example from this morning as I thought of things:
Old George – botany faculty- names-Joe Reidhart-mycologist-Couch-puffball-Calvatia-Calvarium?-
The question is how do you get to puffballs and skull from Old George, and the answer is above: cortical skipping.
I puzzled over the connection between the genus for the giant puffball and the name of the top of the skull, and what connection there might be. Bingo!!! Got it!!! Giant puffballs really look like bleached skulls when they are fresh, and thus were named after the Latin name for skull

Well, this is an example of what I call “cortical skipping”. The phenomenon where you can trace a current thought backwards to a seemingly impossible starting point, but the connections between jumps are logical. I am sure in the lingo of psychology or brain study this process has its own name, but what the hell? Thinking is a cortex function, and skipping from one thought to another is a basic human activity, so logically it should be called cortical skipping. See? You learned something new this morning. And, if you are really lucky, you will find a nice fresh puffball, slice same and sauté in butter. Yummmmy. 

Image: http://img1.photographersdirect.com/img/22823/wm/pd2933311.jpg

Monday, July 14, 2014

Trans* What? Gender is Gender, and that is the end of it. Not.

“...one’s self identified gender is necessarily more legitimate than the one that is rather naively assigned to them by others.”
-Julia Serano, Whipping Girl, (2009)



And so starts a great resource for information on transgender/transsexual people. This is truly a must peruse website. Why you ask? Well, because someone you know or will soon know is a transgender person. About 1.5% of the population on average. So, out of every 100 people you know or meet, more than one will be transgender. Could be you for all I know.
I heard a part of a program this afternoon on NPR about trans people, and wondered all the way through it what was bothering me. Not my identity. Not my acceptance, because you will be hard pressed to find anyone more accepting of everyone than me. No, I finally figured out it was my ignorance about this community. So I set out to learn a bit, and found a few good places to look. The Trans Awareness Project, http://www.transawareness.org/index.html, is a good place to start.The site has frank and accessible discussions on almost everything you will think to ask. Keep in mind that trans people have a ridiculously high suicide rate. A bit over 40% of trans try suicide some time, and many succeed. Why? The pressure of a society that is gender bound to think of only “boy” or “girl” and to think that anyone else is sick. Not so.
I have maintained for years, based on my biological background, that gender and gender identity is a sliding scale, with the absolutes of boy and girl at the ends and everyone else somewhere in between. I still think this is true, and hope the rest of the world will catch up with me sooner rather than later. And don’t think “sexual orientation”  and gender identity are related. They are not.

If you are at all curious about the trans community, visit the TAP website linked above, and begin the process of becoming educated. You, (and me too) are never to old to learn, and never to old to put aside old prejudices and enter the human race. Try it. You may like it.
 Image: The Trans Awareness Project website

George, a Possum and a Sweet ‘tater

Sorry I didn't get to know you better, George.

The year would have been around 1962 or 3. I was a botany student at the University of Miami and spent my time between sleeps either in the botany department, old WWII barracks, in the Everglades or fishing. In those days, the department, long since collapsed into the Zoology Dept., had an arboretum, greenhouses, ponds for aquatic plants and a caretaker for all of that and the surrounding grounds. His name was George. Just George. Or some professors called him "Old George". If he had a last name I never knew it, but probably saw it on his paycheck once when he showed it to me. Thirty five dollars a week. That’s 85.5 cents a hour. I was making $160 a month, or nominally a buck an hour. I wasn’t worth that much, and George was worth more. He lived in Kendall with his wife and other family members, I don’t know how many or who. The family had a wood stove that cooked all the meals, summer and winter, and also was the only heat for those cold winter mornings.
George was always good for a conversation while he pruned trees or raked leaves or cut grass or did other maintenance, and considered the fruit the trees produced, prodigiously usually, his by right. He didn’t mind sharing when a good crop of lemons or mangosteens came in, or when the various mangos were dropping. I liked to talk to him about all kinds of things and was one of the few people there who knew him at all. One day I told him I had a possum living in the walls of my house and needed to trap it, and asked him for help. He dug out an old Hav-a-Heart trap from the storeroom, showed me how to set it up  and bait it with peanut butter and asked only that I give him the  possum when, not if, I trapped it.
Well, trap it I did, that very night, and in the cold Miami morning delivered it to George. He lit up like a kid on Christmas when he saw it, saying only “it’s a big’un”. And it was. I asked if he was going to eat it and he said yes, but would have to clean it out and fatten it up for 2 or 3 weeks first. Curious, I asked how he was going to do that. “Feed it chicken” was the answer. I didn’t find out the source of the chicken.
Sometime later, on another cold morning, I was walking in the citrus section of the arboretum, and heard George, his deep and gravelly voice instantly recognizable, call me. I walked over to where he was piling leaves around a trunk, and he asked me if I had anything to eat that morning. I didn’t. He reached in his pocket, not a particularly clean one, and pulled out a big sweet potato, charred on the outside. He broke off a chunk and handed it to me and said something like “I cooked it in the stove this morning. It’s sweet and just right.”  I took a tentative bite and it was just right. Sweet, not soggy and a little salty from the ashes. Even the charred skin was good. I said “thanks George” and finished it then and there. I didn’t realize until after noon when I saw him eating his piece that he had shared his whole day’s food with me. No reason given, none required.
When I left Miami, he was about to “retire” and shortly after that the department was annexed by the zoology crew. I never knew what happened to “Old George”, but here is one man who still remembers him. Based on time elapsed and his age, I reckon that he died some time back. A harder working man would be hard to find. Quiet, even taciturn, but wise in the ways of what he knew. I wish that I had thought to talk to him of race and where that was going, but never did. Of course the Brown decision was already history, and the Civil Rights Act wasn’t around yet. I think that he would have been philosophical about race relations, and counseled patience. That’s what I think.

Image: https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSwO5pIelUK7Yjz-Taagh0CDOb67MGcx2GXa_TU7IP2grZsVJV9ow

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Wearable Technology and the Starving

You Think Poor Starving People Own These?

This morning during our walk I recollected several novels I read from earlier  days that all had to do with divided societies, the rich living in “cloud” cities, either orbiting or the tops of city buildings isolated from the poor masses below, or the rich living in special “domes” which exclude the masses or the rich living in separate walled off cities. Some moron’s idea of Utopia, if you are rich. Then I thought about a discussion from yesterday where some expert was explaining wearable technology. Sensors in shoes to measure all kinds of parameters. Clothing with built in technology to keep you “connected” at all times, and cameras built into buttons or fabric to record the daily events.
The thing that astonished me was the nonchalance the guy displayed when he said “in ten years we will all be wearing technology all the time.” Not me, but that is another essay.
No, the aspect that astonished me was the complete ignorance this guy seemingly had about the majority of the people of the world, and their plight. Does anybody really think that the Somalis, Sudanese, Bangladeshis, and the hundreds of millions of other deeply impoverished people will be wearing Bluetooth shoes in 10 years? They will be lucky to not starve to death in 6 months, never mind years.. I know. I know. The guy was really talking about the affluent rich of the world, not the masses, whose population keeps growing despite world conditions.
He was really talking about a Utopian future, and he honestly believes it is right around the corner. And it may be for him and a few million others. But I think anyone with a brain can see that for the struggling rest of the world, just plain shoes would be nice. And maybe some food once a day. And maybe some clean water once in a while. Wearable technology for everybody? Not bloody likely mate. Not bloody likely.
Just for fun, Google “wearable technology” and see how many images of poor people you see.

Image: http://www.zdnet.com/a-pulse-check-on-wearable-tech-think-beyond-the-wrist-already-7000027843/