About Hue White

Former BBS operator; software engineer; cat lackey.

Public Service Announcement

Since the Trump Administration is apparently deciding to abandon its moral commitment to public health by no longer reminding people midway through the ACA signup process to finish it (which apparently is crucial), I will link to Steve Benen’s report on it, and reiterate his advice:

Vox’s Sarah Kliff added, “For Obamacare to work, it needs a lot of young people to sign up. Young adults typically have lower health care costs, so they can help balance out the hefty medical bills of older enrollees…. With less outreach at the very end of the open enrollment period, former Obamacare officials expect they’ll have fewer sign-ups from young adults.”

For Trump World, this is, of course, the point. The White House doesn’t want the system to work, so the president’s team is taking deliberate steps to undermine the system – in order to then complain that it doesn’t work.

For the record, Americans can still sign up through Jan. 31. You might want to let people in your life know about the looming deadline – it’s a detail their Republican-run government is trying to keep under wraps.

Remind everyone you know. And don’t fall for this underhanded stratagem.

Later note: The GOP’s allies certainly hope to drown the ACA. Consider this report from Politico:

A House GOP-aligned outside group is rolling out a $2.6 million media blitz urging lawmakers to repeal and replace Obamacare — a move aimed at proving Republicans support as they craft a health care alternative.

American Action Network on Wednesday will unveil the new spending on TV, digital and print ads as well as mailers in 41 districts. That brings the group’s total Obamacare ad spending to just over $4 million in January alone, a huge investment they hope will preempt Democratic attacks for their efforts.

“The current healthcare system does not work and has hurt millions of Americans; it’s time for a healthcare system that works,” said Corry Bliss, AAN executive director, in a statement. “Americans should know that Congress has a plan for patient-centered health care and their member of Congress is a key voice in this fight.”

Sounds like a load of nonsense from here. They need to bring along some facts and figures.

Your Boss Is Immune

Forbes.com has an interesting tidbit on the Senator Warren’s baby, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau:

Judge Brett Kavanaugh of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals wrote a decision last year declaring the structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Agency unconstitutional because no one including the President had the power to fire its director (a structure CFPB supporters including Sen. Elizabeth Warren say protects it from political meddling).

“Because of their massive power and the absence of Presidential supervision and direction, independent agencies pose a significant threat to individual liberty and to the constitutional system of separation of powers and checks and balances,” wrote Kavanaugh, a George W. Bush appointee who also served as counsel in the Bush administration.

So do judges, oddly enough, but I suppose the difference is that the agency doesn’t function as a check on another governmental agency. In the referenced article, the actual modification:

In a decision reversing $109 million in fines the board ordered against mortgage lender PHH Corp., the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that CFPB Director Richard Cordray must be subject to firing by President Obama.

If the CFPB doesn’t appeal, or loses the appeal, then Trump can fire the director whenever a complainant gets Trump’s ear and whines a bit. I don’t expect much in the way of adult supervision.

It Sounds Like A Bad Movie Plot

This sounds like the beginning of a plot for a bad movie. From NewScientist (14 January 2017):

Source: wiseGEEK

Alysson Muotri at the University of California, San Diego, and his team created the mini-brains by exposing stem cells taken from the pulp of children’s milk teeth to cocktails of growth factors that help them mature.Eventually, they can develop as many as six layers of cerebral cortex – the outer surface of the brain. This region is much more sophisticated in humans than in other animals, and houses important circuitry governing our most complex thoughts and behaviours, including socialising with others.

It’s cool stuff, really – who would have thought that the pulp of milk teeth could be used to create parts of a cerebral cortex? And why?

To understand how brain development affects sociability, the team used donated cells from children with autism and Rett syndrome, both of which are associated with impaired communication skills. They also used cells from children with Williams syndrome, a condition characterised by a hyper-sociable nature. People with Williams syndrome can be unable to restrain themselves from talking to complete strangers.

The team found that mini-brains grown using stem cells from children with autism form fewer neural connections, while those from Williams syndrome children have an abnormally high number. When cells from the teeth of children with none of these conditions were used, the resulting mini-brains were somewhere in between these two extremes.

Which leads to questions of whether or not therapies developed to correct the number of neural connections to an “ideal” number is an ethical treatment. After all, what would determine an ideal number? That leads to questions about neuro-typical vs neuro-atypical desirability.

It connects, in my mind, to the azi of C. J. Cherryh’s Cyteen series, who were basically bred slaves – who didn’t mind being slaves. I found them a bit chilling, but then that was one of the points of the series – heavy specialization may be necessary to survive in space.

Will They Refuse Again?

On Lawfare Jack Goldsmith does not believe the military services nor the CIA will return to torture:

People forget that under the Bush administration, the DOD in 2003 successfully revolted against aggressive interrogation techniques that the DOJ has at the time ruled lawful, and that the CIA interrogation and black site program had basically ground to a halt after 2006 in light of the changes in the law forged by the Detainee Treatment Act and Hamdan.  They forget that the CIA refused, after the DTA but before Hamdan, to accept a DOJ interpretation of the DTA that would permit a return to waterboarding.  (See pages 119-120 of Power and Constraint.Hamdan made a return even more perilous.  Whatever ambiguity was left concerning the legality of waterboarding and other aggressive interrogation techniques was eliminated by the McCain-Feinstein Amendment to the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act, which, as Steve Vladeck notes, requires ICRC access to detainees and “limits the techniques that can be used against any detainee either in U.S. custody, under the effective control of the United States, or held in a facility owned, operated, or controlled by the United States, to those ‘authorized by and listed in the Army Field Manual 2–22.3.’”

These are some of the reasons why the Attorney General and Defense Secretary pledged not to return to waterboarding, and why the CIA Director did as well despite some weasel-words.

That was ten to fifteen years ago, so I might not be so sanguine. Still, it’s an interesting post for his emphasis on the nuances which I doubt Trump even knows exists. Here’s an example (which he takes from an earlier publication of his):

Presidential actions do not take place in a vacuum, but rather in a context where they are interpreted based on perceptions about the President’s intentions and trustworthiness.   The early Bush administration loudly and proudly proclaimed that it wanted to expand presidential power, and appeared to act on this proclamation in many legal opinions and contexts that scared all of the checking institutions above and led them to push back very hard against Bush in an unprecedented fashion.  … [Presidential actions] are not judged in a vacuum.  They are judged against a background of beliefs about (among other things) the president’s trustworthiness and commitment to the rule of law.  In its first term the Bush administration was (as I argued in The Terror Presidency) unprecedentedly indifferent to these factors, and the checking institutions bit back unprecedentedly hard.  Trump is already in a much worse position than was Bush on the trustworthiness score.

Trump’s pack of amateurs and second-raters may play well to his base – but for the professionals both inside and outside the national security apparatus it’s going to be something entirely different. If we start seeing wholesale firings, we’ll know the Trump Administration is unhappy with the responses they’re receiving. However, the judiciary is relatively immune to the Administration, so they may end up being a bulwark against the foolish activities.

Belated Movie Reviews

Message From Space (1978) has enthusiasm, chutzpah-filled teenagers, deus ex machina, and galactic bad guys. It doesn’t have any real plot, logic, motivations, special effects, or any real reason to get excited.

Except for that spaceship that crashes right at the end.

Whether or not it’s a rip off of Star Wars, don’t waste your time. Even as a head-cold movie it’s a horrid bit of trash.

Word of the Day

Heterostructure:

A heterojunction is the interface that occurs between two layers or regions of dissimilar crystalline semiconductors. These semiconducting materials have unequal band gaps as opposed to a homojunction. It is often advantageous to engineer the electronic energy bands in many solid-state device applications, including semiconductor lasers, solar cells and transistors (“heterotransistors“) to name a few. The combination of multiple heterojunctions together in a device is called a heterostructure, although the two terms are commonly used interchangeably. [Wikipedia]

Encountered in”Dawn of the 3Suns: Green technology firm takes over former Deer Lake Elementary building,” Joe Bowen, The Bemidji Pioneer:

One project, Bahr said, would use a “quantum dot Peltier Effect semiconductor heterostructure” to passively convert heat energy that might otherwise be wasted into electric energy.

“Suppose you had a bathtub that was coated with a Peltier Effect quantum dot thin film. While you’re sitting in there, you’ve filled up that bathtub with 40,000 BTUs of heat that came from your water heater,” Bahr said. “You’re just going to let it go down the drain and warm up the sewer, right? Maybe not.”

It’s A Win Either Way, Ctd

A reader is angry at me concerning voter fraud investigations:

You Are White arent you? You very seriously have no clue how illegitimate are their methods and what is really at stake, do you? Have you ever felt challenged as to your rights in your life? Legitimately?

Its an attack on voter registries intended to disenfranchise the brown people.

I’m an American independent. I ask my reader: Did you read point #2? Did you digest it? Do you realize how powerful this approach is to making YOUR point if no fraud is found? If no fraud is found, it makes YOUR position invincible. Right now, the vast majority of American citizens Just Don’t Know. But imagine – then they get the news that a major investigation has been conducted, and nothing beyond the current sparse GOP fraud is found. Now they know the GOP is blowing smoke.

And if there is fraud? That needs to be fixed.

It’s A Win Either Way

CNN reports that President Trump still believes there was massive fraud during the last election – and he wants it investigated:

President Donald Trump called on Wednesday for “a major investigation” into voter fraud, following through with baseless claims he has made since November’s election alleging millions of illegal votes during the general election without citing any evidence.

“I will be asking for a major investigation into VOTER FRAUD, including those registered to vote in two states, those who are illegal and … even, those registered to vote who are dead (and many for a long time). Depending on results, we will strengthen up voting procedures!” Trump wrote in two consecutive tweets.

[Bold mine.] Steve Benen and others are disbelieving:

It’s worth pausing to appreciate the fact that Trump can apparently be baited into doing almost anything. He’s pushed this ridiculous ideas about voter fraud for months and never even hinted about the need for an investigation. Yesterday, however, journalists effectively said, “If Trump were serious, he’d be demanding a probe,” leading the president to quickly start tweeting – complete with unnecessary capitalization and exclamation points – about his newfound interest in an investigation, an interest he apparently discovered after watching some TV news.

But here’s the thing – speaking as an independent, if the investigation is conducted properly, only good things can come out of it. Here are the scenarios:

  1. Rampant fraud is found. Great! I don’t care which way it leans, let’s clean it up. This improves our democracy.
  2. Fraud is not found. Great! Trump shuts up and the numerous attempts by the States to to impose tighter controls on voting, often found to be discriminatory by the courts, lose all basis for their continuance in legal fact. This improves our democracy.

The hard part is conducting the investigation properly. It will require an impartial authority – which, sadly, the FBI has lost – and a transparent process so that reasonable partisans (which excludes anyone who thinks Breitbart News has any consistent validity) may be satisfied that the investigation methods were appropriate to the problem. A suggestions box might even be provided in case the investigating authority misses a bet.

But if I were directing these sites that have a liberal lean, I’d tell them to just advocate for a thorough investigation and drop the denigrative adjectives. If the investigation finds nothing, then there’ll be a far stronger moral authority over Trump – and another argument to use against him if he is chooses to run for a second term.

Rising ACA Rates, Ctd

Readers find the Aetna report nauseating. One replies to my question about perjury:

I’m not sure that perjury charges would be effective. For better effect, I’d try for an anti-trust suit.

Perhaps a class action suit would make more sense. The rejection of their attempted merger with Humana might put a damper on an anti-trust suit. Another:

“The company [Aetna] said its overall profit leapt 38% in the final quarter of the year, as a key measure of spending on medical costs fell. The strong quarterly results were fueled largely by its government business, which includes Medicare and Medicaid.” http://www.wsj.com/articles/aetna-profit-rises-38-1454326988

In other words, they’re a bunch of greedy, whining bastards.

But from their viewpoint they’re just trying to maximize profit. That’s what they’re taught to do.

I wonder if this is what happens when the idol of free enterprise seeps out of the private sector into everything else.

Location, Location, Location

The Lancet has published research on a correlation between dementia and living near major roads. It’s an article only available to subscribers in full, but this is from the Findings section:

Between 2001, and 2012, we identified 243 611 incident cases of dementia, 31 577 cases of Parkinson’s disease, and 9247 cases of multiple sclerosis. The adjusted hazard ratio (HR) of incident dementia was 1·07 for people living less than 50 m from a major traffic road (95% CI 1·06–1·08), 1·04 (1·02–1·05) for 50–100 m, 1·02 (1·01–1·03) for 101–200 m, and 1·00 (0·99–1·01) for 201–300 m versus further than 300 m (p for trend=0·0349). The associations were robust to sensitivity analyses and seemed stronger among urban residents, especially those who lived in major cities (HR 1·12, 95% CI 1·10–1·14 for people living <50 m from a major traffic road), and who never moved (1·12, 1·10–1·14 for people living <50 m from a major traffic road). No association was found with Parkinson’s disease or multiple sclerosis.

Public Health Ontario gives the non-technical overview:

Led by PHO and ICES scientists, the study found that people who lived within 50 metres of high-traffic roads (like Ontario’s Hwy. 401) had a seven per cent higher likelihood of developing dementia compared to those who lived more than 300 metres away from busy roads. …

“Our study is the first in Canada to suggest that pollutants from heavy, day-to-day traffic are linked to dementia. We know from previous research that air pollutants can get into the blood stream and lead to inflammation, which is linked with cardiovascular disease and possibly other conditions such as diabetes. This study suggests air pollutants that can get into the brain via the blood stream can lead to neurological problems,” says Dr. Ray Copes, chief of environmental and occupational health at PHO and an author on the paper. …

The increase in the risk of developing dementia went down to four per cent if people lived 50-100 metres from major traffic, and to two per cent if they lived within 101-200 metres. At over 200 metres, there was no elevated risk of dementia.

And Lloyd Alter on Treehugger.com gets the Sardonic Humor of the Week award:

It’s amusing that this study comes from the Province of Ontario, where they spend billions widening highways into cities, where light rail proposals are fought tooth and nail because they will block lanes that could carry cars, where the Mayor of Toronto is spending a billion bucks to fix up a highway that saves a few thousand people a few minutes a day, and then everybody wonders why the costs of health care are getting so high.

We Could All Be Blotted Out In An Instance

Spaceweather.com reports on a recent solar event:

Source: NASA/Solar Dynamics Observatory

SOLAR PROMINENCE: A giant cloud of plasma is dancing over the sun’s western limb today. Shown here in a snapshot from NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory, the structure is more than 80,000 km tall and could swallow our planet more than 50 times with room to spare.

I really like that picture. It reminds me that all of our contretemps on this puny globe could be erased by the solar hiccup of a trivial little star on the edge of a mediocre galaxy.

Word of the Day

Barycenter:

The barycenter (or barycentre; from the Ancient Greek βαρύς heavy + κέντρον centre[1]) is the center of mass of two or more bodies that are orbiting each other, or the point around which they both orbit. It is an important concept in fields such as astronomy and astrophysics. The distance from a body’s center of mass to the barycenter can be calculated as a simple two-body problem. [Wikipedia]

Barycenter came up during a work lunchtime conversation concerning high blood pressure. Yeah, the participant had the grace to look embarrassed as he “crossed my medical neurons with my astrophysics neurons.”

But I get to learn a new word, so all is well.

Rising ACA Rates, Ctd

We now have more news on the Aetna withdrawal from the ACA, as a federal judge has made a ruling. BuzzFeed has the report:

America’s second-largest health insurance company stopped offering coverage to hundreds of thousands of people as part of a legal strategy to avoid government scrutiny of a planned merger, a federal judge said in a ruling today.

Aetna withdrew from health insurance exchanges in 17 counties in Florida, Georgia, and Missouri after the Department of Justice said competition in those markets would be harmed by the company’s $37 billion planned merger with rival Humana. The withdrawal was part of a wider move that saw Aetna pull coverage from almost 550 counties in 11 states.

The health insurance giant said it exited the exchanges purely for business reasons, having lost a total of $420 million due to plans sold through the marketplaces. But in a ruling blocking its merger with Humana today, DC District Court judge John Bates said it was also done as a legal maneuver. …

“Aetna was willing to offer to expand its participation in the exchanges if DOJ did not block the merger, or conversely, was willing to threaten to limit its participation in the exchanges if DOJ did,” Judge Bates said Monday.

I suppose the execs just think they’re playing hardball, but I wonder if perjury charges could appear. It’s almost as if the execs are just daring the justice system to discover the truth, with no penalties to them either way.

A Big Game Of Chicken

I was originally going to post this to this thread, concerning the massing of the herd of RINOs, but thinking about, it A Big Game of Chicken just seems better. WaPo reports on the hiring of Julia Hahn, a Breitbart writer, by the Trump Administration. Why is this interesting?

When House Speaker Paul D. Ryan’s redbrick Georgian revival house in Janesville, Wis., was surrounded last July by women whose children were murdered by undocumented immigrants, conservative writer Julia Hahn published a scathing report and a blurry snapshot of Ryan’s departing SUV.

The headline: “Paul Ryan flees grieving moms trying to show him photos of their children killed by his open borders agenda.”

Three months later, Hahn wrote a 2,800-word story alleging that Ryan (R-Wis.) was the ringmaster for a “months-long campaign to elect Hillary Clinton.” It was just one of a torrent of posts over the past year that cast Ryan as a “globalist” who is cozy with corporations and an enemy of Donald Trump-style populism.

As noted in the previously mentioned link, Speaker Ryan is easily one of the most conservative members of the House, and certainly the most conservative Speaker in its history, so trying to RINO-ize him out of power is a little ludicrous. Yet, a leader in that RINO effort is now in the Trump Administration.

Privately, a number of House Republicans told The Washington Post that Hahn’s involvement signaled Bannon’s plans to possibly put her to use against them, writing searing commentaries about elected Republican leaders to ram through Trump’s legislative priorities and agitate the party’s base if necessary.

In other words, this is a bullying move, and so long as the GOP base believes in Trump, she may be a big club to use on GOPers reluctant to follow Trump’s lead.

But Ryan may carry the doomsday weapon in this battle – he can begin the impeachment process, which would tar Trump with dishonor and even possibly boost him out, in favor of the more savory (to Ryan) Pence. We already have a report of Representative Jamie Raskin (D-MD), a professor of Constitutional law, readying articles of impeachment, with the cause being the conflicts of interest caused by failure to divest from Trump’s business interests – but Raskin may be wise to wait a bit until the House leadership is fully unhappy with Trump.

Of course, while the House initiates the process, it’s the Senate that makes the final decision, and they are, in general, not so quick to come to judgment, as seen in the Clinton impeachment debacle. However, if there are more Russian revelations, they may not be so hesitant.

So this may just be an old-fashioned game of chicken. Will Ryan meekly follow Trump’s lead? Will Trump rein in his foaming at the mouth hired gun?

Or will we be treated to the popcorn event of an impeachment?

In any event, I think we’re continuing to see the disintegration of the GOP as the purists and power-mongers swarm. It’s just like a train wreck.

I’ll Skip The Cheap Nominative Humor

The nominee for HHS Secretary, Rep Tom Price (R-GA), has turned out to have quite a few questionable ethical decisions in his wake. As Steve Benen on MaddowBlog notes:

The Wall Street Journal recently reported, for example, that Price “traded more than $300,000 in shares of health-related companies over the past four years while sponsoring and advocating legislation that potentially could affect those companies’ stocks.” Kaiser Health New added soon after that Price got “a sweetheart deal” on an investment opportunity from a foreign biotech firm. CNN then reported that the congressman bought stock in a medical company, introduced legislation that would benefit that company, and then received a campaign contribution from the company’s PAC.

And there’s more beyond that – go read Steve’s post. But while Steve is bemoaning the fact that this doesn’t seem to be derailing Price’s nomination like it should – and I agree – I prefer to make lemonade.

  1. This is exposing, to the people of Georgia, the quality of their Representative. They may not care, but if not, then we know that the people of Georgia do not demand high ethical standards from their Representatives. Does it matter? Well … consider what happened to Indiana following the passing of a regressive religion-oriented bill.
  2. If he’s confirmed, then he’s removed from Congress. Think about it. No longer can he do damage in that particular environment. Now, he may find ways to damage the nation while self-dealing in his new job, but that’s only theoretical; we know that as a powerful Representative he was misbehaving. One in the hand.
  3. And if he’s confirmed as HHS Secretary, then that should be a message to the American citizen concerning the ethical standards now embraced by the GOP. The only problem with this point? That information may not make it to the citizens. It must be properly advertised.

Consider this to be my part in getting the word out: Representative Tom Price of Georgia does not appear to have the ethical make-up to represent Georgia. Georgians, send him packing.

Neat Thought, But Are We All The Same?

In Gaza, autistic children are being taught the ancient Japanese art of Origami, as Tasneem Zayyan reports in AL Monitor:

Dardah al-Shaer, a psychology and sociology lecturer at Al-Aqsa University, underlined the importance origami can have to helping children with autism. He said, “Special schools must be established to invest in autistic kids’ mental capacities and release the stress inside by creating shapes from paper.”

He noted that there are difficulties that face some autistic children, including trouble with social interaction. He said, “Origami can help children with autism reduce aggressive behavior, which worsens when they sit alone at home without any interaction. Origami is a good way to show the hidden side of their character.”

Shaer indicated that practicing origami is a treatment and an art. Some children even use it to earn a living. He added, “All autistic children can practice origami, whether it is an innate or acquired skill through enrolling in active training centers that specialize in talent development.”

While it’s interesting to see how autistic children can excel at this art form, I’m a little concerned at the tone of lecturer Dardah al-Shaer. It’s always been my understanding that autistic people, when they have a talent, it’s not the same for all. For some, it’s various mathematics, others it’s music. This person seems to imply all autistics should be able to do origami. This sets up expectations, and when some autistic children prove inept, then what will be the consequences?

(Or is it bad translation?)

The Heat Of Her Gaze Melted The Clothes Right Off Me

Katherine Martinko at Treehugger.com displays a proper concern about liquifying shoes from Adidas:

Source: Adidas

Adidas has invented a running shoe that will decompose in the sink. Once you’ve worn it out (the company recommends two years of use), you can immerse the shoes in water, add a digestion enzyme called proteinase, and let it work for 36 hours. It will cause the protein-based yarn to break down, and you’ll be able to drain the liquefied shoes down the sink – everything except the foam sole, which will still require disposal. …

The Futurecraft Biofabric shoe is a very interesting idea, but I’d want to know more about the safety of the liquid-shoe form after it’s drained down the sink. Does the synthetic fabric actually melt completely, or does it break down into microscopic pieces that are small enough to drain away? What effect does that have in our water supply? Just because something ‘breaks down’, changes form, or disappears from view does not mean it goes away. Nor does facilitating disposal really mean ‘closed-loop production.’

I wonder about the long term stability of the material as well – if a pair were left alone for ten years, does it turn into something else? Is that form innocuous? This has implications not only for the environment, but for museums which may wish to display these shoes in the future. We saw just such a display at the museum we visited in Atlanta – that is, of various basketball shoes.

Control Of The Story

Benjamin Wittes of Lawfare gets a taste of the new Administration in his teeth:

Here’s what [White House spokesman Sean Spicer] said:

As you know, the President was at the Central Intelligence Agency today, and was greeted by a raucous overflowing crowd of some 400-plus CIA employees. There were over a thousand requests to attend, prompting the President to note that he would have to come back to greet the rest. The employees were ecstatic to see the Commander-in-Chief, and he delivered them a powerful and important message. He told them he has their back and they were grateful for that. They gave him a five-minute standing ovation at the end in a display of their patriotism and their enthusiasm for his presidency (emphasis added).

Let’s leave aside certain factual, uh, issues in Spicer’s claims—like the bald-faced lie that there was a five-minute standing ovation at the end of Trump’s speech. (As you can see from the video, the agency’s brass is clapping politely, and relatively briefly, and with butts firmly planted in chairs). I want to focus here on the bizarre decision, more characteristic of totalitarian dictators with cults of personality than of the White House press office, to describe the emotional state of government workers on meeting their fearless leader. I simply cannot remember a time when the White House declared that a group of civil servants were “ecstatic” to be graced by the presence of the president, were “grateful” for what he said, much less that they went through the ceremony of hosting him in a display of “enthusiasm for his presidency.”

The video link is here, which appears to be a Sean Spicer announcement – I didn’t actually see a video of the CIA meeting, which I may have simply missed in the longer report.

But here’s the thing: There are two sources of information here: Mr. Wittes, who reportedly has many years of experience as a lawyer in this area, working with NSA, CIA, etc.; and the Trump Administration.

Which signal has more power behind it? The White House is a bonfire the size of a city, while Lawfare is a blog with a very limited, specialized readership – a little match in the darkness. For those who follow politics, who’ve seen the factual analyses of Trump’s statements, who are aware of how Trump’s team also indulges in misstatements of fact, and the Trumpian blame of the intelligence agencies, such as the CIA, for the Iraq War, well, it’s easy enough to put Benjamin’s report together with everything else and shake our heads in dismay.

But, again, that’s a relatively small group. Most of us folks don’t have the time, the patience, the opportunity to seek out information such as Benjamin’s. Instead, if the Trump Administration version shows up on the news, hey, it becomes fact. It becomes fact for the couple who just finished a ten hour day of work and just wants to go bowling and drink their beer.

The Trump Administration is trying to build a story of success, partly to feed the ego of the President, partly to begin the re-election campaign (yep, it’s already started, as un-American as it can be) four years hence. And this is why the Trump Administration, as we see in that video, is absolutely furious with a free press that refuses to roll over and echo their words. The New York Times, WaPo, CNN are just some of the Big Media sources which have given up on their mistaken stance of utter opinionless neutrality and begun labeling lies told by politicians as, well, lies. Politicians of the right OR left persuasion. (For those who think Obama would have fared poorly under such treatment, I have little hard data, but I really rather doubt it.)

Given the sheer amount of information out there, I believe merely reporting on the utterances of politicians – or anyone else – has been a fool’s errand. Skeptics have been bemoaning the credence given by the press to anti-vaxxers and climate change denialists for years as claims of scientific controversy are, in their eyes, not true. For them, the opposition has abandoned science for ideological and political power reasons. And these can be hard topics to understand and realize there’s not much true controversy left, if any.

But when it comes to political lies it’s not so hard. Yes, Trump was for the Iraq War. It’s on tape – he was not prescient. Yes, all those jobs Trump claims to have saved, he had nothing to do with. You might argue that the Carrier claim works, dubious as it is; but the rest reflect the work of months or years on the part of the companies responsible, and Trump has had zero effect.

So, given our information-rich environment, it’s absolutely necessary for news outlets to label lies as lies – and be willing to admit fault when they screw that up. Without it, our over-worked citizens have little chance of really perceiving the truth of what’s happening.

And in a democracy where they vote on who’ll represent them, that’s a critical problem.

Red Nova

Something new for this non-astronomer: a red nova is predicted to occur in the next 4-5 years, as noted on the D-brief blog by Nathaniel Scharping:

Contact Binary System
Image: ESO/L. Calçada

It seems that the stars [making up KIC 9832227]’ rate of rotation, as measured by periodic dips in brightness, has been speeding up noticeably in the few years it has been observed. Based on models of contact binary star behavior, the two should meet in an incandescent bear hug in 2022, give or take a year or so. This kind of event, called a luminous red nova, has only been observed a few times, and for a few months should shine brightly in the heavens, even to the naked eye.

A contact binary is a binary system in which the atmospheres of the two stars are shared. This will be seen near Cygnus. I do not know my constellations, but perhaps I should learn.

A Little Difficult To Swallow

Last night my Arts Editor and I were watching the WCCO news, one of the local news stations, on their nightly broadcast, and one of the two co-anchors, Frank Vascellaro, covered yesterday’s little controversy with Trump’s advisor Conway concerning alternative facts. (Here’s CNN’s coverage – I haven’t found a clip of Frank.)

Frankie V – my hero!

And then, as they went to the next story, Frank started coughing. First into the live mic, and then, when they turned that one off, I could hear it echoing throughout the studio. His co-anchor covered for him for about 3 minutes, and when he did return, he looked a little glassy-eyed.

Seems to me the media is really finding it hard to swallow the Trump Administration so far.

I hope Frank continues to gag. An honest reaction to extremism is an important part of the news casting process.

Belated Movie Reviews

In The Cheaters (1945) is a weird collage of a movie, with characters ranging from interesting to repulsive. A family thought to be well-off is in trouble, but only the arrogant father knows about it; his wife is an insipid refugee from The Wizard of Oz (think of the munchkins), one daughter a narcissistic brat, the other desperate to impress the well-off family of her fiancee’, who in turn never has to comb his hair as the cardboard he’s constructed of has a permanent part; the son is a young predatory shark; and the ridiculously large staff marches about with the traditional clothespin on their collective noses.

Why? Oh, not just the usual. This is a family of appearances, and so even as the financial tide threatens to drag them out to sea, daughter #2 (the one with a fiancee’ to impress) decides they should take in a “charity case” for Christmas, calling it a tradition of the family. Who it might be is unimportant, only that he be listed in the paper and appear under the random finger of the daughter, and thus “Mr. M”, aka Mr. Marchand, a crippled former actor who must meet his fortunes with an upper lip stiffened with spirits, is taken, temporarily, into the family.

But the riptide is coming. A lifeline appears – Uncle Henry has died, and with $5 million to will to them – if his lawyer cannot find Florence Watson, a child actor whom old Uncle Henry admired and, briefly, corresponded with. A quick call from the arrogant father, an unscrupulous but wary barrister, and perhaps their future is secured – if Miss Watson does not appear to claim her fortune within a week, it’s all to the family’s account. But, like money-grubbers, they worry, and scheme….

And find Miss Watson. Through the charm of Mr. Marchand, who offers minor diversions, observations, and a mystery or two of his own, Miss Watson becomes a cousin of the family, welcomed for the Christmas season.

And it goes on, keeping news of her imminent good fortune from her. Mr. Marchand’s spirit hobby grows, the family finds dueling with Miss Watson to be a chore, and suddenly –

They’re in the country! The Ghost of Marley stalks the hills and valleys of the snowy, bucolic country side, and now we can all see where this is going. Not that it’s not admirable, but it feels a bit forced, if you know what I mean. Mr. Marchand continues his stint as the most interesting of the characters, and if his burden is nothing more than the rejection of directors, producers, and audiences, perhaps this is understandable.

In all, a movie that suffers from a cast mostly too large and too undefined, it has a certain charm, but is best watched when one can barely bestir oneself from the chair to fetch the eggnog. True, there’s a lesson here, and perhaps it benefits from a retelling, a reminder to those who chase material wealth with an avidity repulsive to more spiritual people (whatever that phrase may mean), but the journey is long and hard, the attention may waver, and if you have mail to sort through – do it while watching this.