Theater in the Round

For Twin Cities readers, my Arts Editor and I recently attended a production of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, an adaptation by Jeffery Hatcher, put on by the venerable Theater in the Round. This is an alternate tale, of a Dr. Jekyll not entirely without sin; of a Mr. Hyde, not entirely without love. The tale opens with the good Doctor’s disdain of one Dr. Sir Danvers Carew, who has not Jekyll’s medical skills, yet still teaches to packed houses.

Then comes the transition, and Mr. Hyde occupies the stage. As the play follows its permutations, sometimes Mr. Hyde is played by one actor, sometimes another; in one scene, four actors are simultaneously Mr. Hyde. Yet this multiplicity does not prevent Mr. Hyde from discovering a young woman who finds his violence, moodiness, and depression to be an antidote to her own deadly dull existence, and even as bodies begin to pile up, her fierce love remains on fire.

From time to time, the two sides of the coin occupy the stage at the same time, arguing. Jekyll knows Hyde has become dangerous, for he can force his way to the fore of their shared body, and let go only when it suits his purposes, while Jekyll can only fight, fiercely, for control of his body. Traps are set, and soon we come to our conclusion.

While we enjoyed our visit, we were not entirely happy with both the production and the script. With respect to the latter, while representing Mr. Hyde with a coterie of actors can give us access to his dark, grim mental state, it’s also apparent that each represents a particular faction of the dark, and there is no attempt to explore these facets of evil. Perhaps this would have been distracting, but I am still thinking of this as an opportunity lost.

With respect to the former, we occasionally lost track of the actors. We felt this was due to in part to dreary fake British accents that were not distinctive; indeed, despite physical differences, the actors tend to speak at an identical pace, with similar accents, and thus, beyond Dr. Jekyll, the men were rarely more than wallpaper that, briefly, has come to life. The ladies fare somewhat better, fortunately, but had little chance to put that to good use.

The stage, on the other hand, was nicely done, and the lighting was handled with a deft and imaginative hand. The script leads down some different paths, and as the two personalities vie for dominance, we appreciated the twists of two vigorous personalities wrestling with desire, despisement, hate and love, until one becomes the other in a fatal dénouement in which a sacrifice has collateral damage in a most unusual mode.

Despite our reservations, this is a play worth a look if you enjoy the Jekyll and Hyde trope.

Belated Movie Reviews

Godzilla vs. Monster Zero (1965, aka Invasion of Astro-Monster, and others) is a sequel to the previously reviewed (if I may be so foolhardy) Ghidorah, the Three-Headed Monster (1964), and is actually an improvement on the first. Planet X has suddenly appeared outside of the orbit of Jupiter, moderately dark and therefore not sighted before. A rocket is dispatched to investigate, and finds a humanoid population hiding from the monster Ghidorah, known to them as Monster Zero.

The astronauts are asked if the humanoids may borrow Godzilla and Rodan (monsters 1 & 2, respectively) in return for the formula of a super-medicine, and permission is given. Then the astronauts leap back into their spaceship to return home.

Dull as dirty water.

And as the ship lifts off, the leader of the humanoids … laughs evilly.

Ah… so there’s something to this story after all. In classic fashion, details emerge that had been obscured. An inventor in the traditional Japanese form of being disdained has his invention bought by a mysterious company, and then he himself is kidnapped; all the women on Planet X look alike; one of the astronaut’s girlfriend looks like the women of Planet X; and the ships of the humanoids are already at Earth, waiting to transport the monsters. Wait, isn’t that a plot hole?

So, Godzilla and Rodan go to Planet X, do a little butt-kicking, Godzilla dances a jig, and the medicine’s formula is delivered on a magnetic tape … which, when played, announces Earth is being annexed for colonial purposes, and if Earth does not cooperate then all three monsters, under humanoid control, will be loosed upon the Earthlings, who’ll be exterminated.

Hey, a plot!

So it’s still rubber suits and mediocre effects, and in all honesty interesting themes are scarce as hens’ teeth. Still, I was all set to either dump this, or at least fast-forward, until the evil laugh came. It was engaging, it promised mystery and deception – if not acting ability or even minimally acceptable dialog.

So …. if one January afternoon you find yourself staring numbly out at -20°, 30 mile winds, and heavy snowfall, and this is on the TV, you have two choices. Grab a shovel and start working on the driveway, or watch this.

It’ll all depend on your mood. And how many fingers you’ve lost to frostbite since the first of the year.

Historical Solar Storms

Ever wonder how badly we could be impacted by events on the Sun? EOS.org (Earth and Space Science News) looks back to 1941 in, “The Geomagnetic Blitz of September 1941“:

faq5

A close-up of an erupting prominence with Earth inset at the approximate scale of the image. Taken on July 1, 2002. Credits: ESA&NASA/SOHO

Magnetic activity recorded at the Cheltenham, Md., observatory abruptly increased at about 19:45 UT on 18 September [Fleming, 1943, p. 204]. Almost simultaneously, at 19:45 and 19:50 UT, the Pennsylvania Water and Power Company recorded uncontrolled voltage variations in transmission lines connecting generating plants on the Susquehanna River with Baltimore and Washington. At the moment when the auroral brilliance was greatest, system transformers vibrated and groaned as a result of geomagnetically induced currents [McNish,1941b].

In other words, a power grid on the edge of collapse. Radio becomes spotty, and the visual phenomenon have consequences for a convoy of war materiel. Their conclusion?

Zooming ahead to today, we are more dependent than ever on modern technology. For this reason, the plausible future occurrence of a space weather superstorm could have widespread impact—disrupting over-the-horizon radio communication, degrading the accuracy of global positioning systems, damaging satellite electronics and increasing their orbital drag, interfering with geophysical surveys, exposing airplane pilots and passengers to unhealthy radiation levels, and even interrupting electric power distribution for prolonged periods [e.g., Baker et al., 2008;Cannon et al., 2013].

(h/t Spaceweather.com)

Current Movie Reviews

Tickled (2016) is very much a story of today, bringing to light the perceptive difficulties in seeing realities often encountered by scientists – in a non-science venue. This is a documentary in which our host, New Zealand reporter David Farrier, is also, in a way, the subject. His object? He’s run across something called competitive endurance tickling, and, given both his employment and his temperament, he’s intrigued and begins to look into it.

He immediately meets with hostility from the purveyor, however, and not just legal – it includes personal insults based on David’s sexuality. And the attacks quickly escalate into relentlessness. Soon representatives of the company behind the effort travel to New Zealand and attempt to dissuade David and his partner from continuing the investigation, to no avail. The company itself is difficult to pin down, but appears to own dozens of oddly named Internet domains. Clearly, this mystery won’t be solved by a few online searches, so David and his cohorts fly to America.

And then things get really weird. I’ll not spoil the mystery for you.

But I will say I started to question everything, even the possibility that this entire documentary is a hoax. As each incident is presented, as each bit of evidence surfaces, my mind wondered, “Could this be planted? A frame-up? A misdirection?” And while scientists rarely wonder about human deceit, the good ones wonder about the veracity of what they’re studying.

In the end, the best conclusion to draw is that someone out there has an excessively twisted mind, whether it’s the putative subject, or someone framing him, or yet someone else. Psychopathy? It’s almost a certainty. This is a wicked, puzzling glimpse into a brain that doesn’t work like mine.

And how is it a documentary for today? Because of how the Internet enables the subject. While the recruitment for the participants in competitive endurance tickling could have been accomplished without the Internet, the effort involved would have been much greater. The other end of the activity, in which videos of competitions are published, would be virtually impossible without the Internet. I suppose a cable channel could be dedicated to them, but the cost would be beyond the resources of most people. Random distributions? To what end? But the Internet makes it trivial to accomplish whatever end is being pursued.

As the credits rolled, the lights came on, and my Arts Editor and I began discussing it, the only other person in our row began to complain. She felt this was a poorly done work of fiction.

But no, it’s not. This is a documentary.

You’ve got to be kidding! No one’s that weird!

There are weirder people out there, I’m sure, but not many.

Strongly recommended.

Postscript: Now I’ve read the Wikipedia page. If you’ve not seen the movie, first see it before following this link. Knowing what’s coming will dull the edge of this knife.

Does Your House Have One?

I love to read archaeology magazines because they report on a vast range of human beliefs and behaviors, keeping in mind that . Science fiction, which I loved growing up, is limited by the imagination of the writers; but for those who dig the dusty ground, the limits have more to do with interpreting the evidence in a rigorous, yet open-minded way.

So here’s a new one for me, from the article, “A Tale of Two Cities“, American Archaeology (fall 2016, p. 33, and partially available online). The article concerns discoveries made in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, at a location known as Cerro de la Virgen. Any mistakes below are most likely mine, as I manually transcribed these two paragraphs:

[Arthur] Joyce [of the University of Colorado-Boulder] and [Sarah] Barber [of the University of Central Florida] believe these [buried offering vessels] are examples of ritual caching to give the buildings a soul as well as to “feed” them through their years of use. One of Barber’s very first Rio Verde Valley excavation finds suggested this kind of ritual feeding: in Yugüe, she uncovered a cooking jar which had been filled with mussels and broken pottery, placed in a pit with dirt piled up to the jar’s neck, and then set on fire.

“Who were they feeding?” she says. “They were clearly leaving these things as offerings and not feeding themselves. The only interpretation is that this is food being left for the place. That matches with the literature saying that buildings and temples have souls and needs, and that you feed them to building a relationship.”

With regard to her reference to literature, the article notes that, post-Conquest, natives explained that buildings had souls, and this was recorded by the Spaniards.

The idea that humans can instill a soul into a building is fascinating. In this particular case, the ritual is to bury your dead in the floor of the building you wish to “ensoul.” So I wonder: Are they creating the soul themselves? Or is this a soul that happens to be floating by? The answer would certainly fill in the culture psychology, I should think, not to mention their cosmological beliefs.

Word of the Day

autosacrifice:

Autosacrifice, also called bloodletting, is the ritualized practice of drawing blood from oneself. It is commonly seen or represented through iconography as performed by ruling elites in highly ritualized ceremonies, but it was easily practiced in mundane sociocultural contexts (i.e., non-elites could perform autosacrifice). The act was typically performed with obsidian prismatic blades or stingray spines, and blood was drawn from piercing or cutting the tongue, earlobes, and/or genitals (among other locations). Another form of autosacrifice was conducted by pulling a rope with attached thorns through the tongue or earlobes. The blood produced was then collected on paper held in a bowl.

From Mesoamerica – Autosacrifice.

So it’s not what I had expected. Seen in American Archaeology:

Carved stone slabs from a building on Monte Albán’s Main Plaza show people performing autosacrifice and invoking their ancestors.

Caption to a photograph in “A Tale of Two Cities“, American Archaeology (fall 2016, p. 33, and partially available online).

Contingencies

Does your job depend on the Internet? Does your day extensively involve the Internet? Bruce Schneier, long an Internet security expert, discloses a disturbing trend using Lawfare:

sr-71-1

SR-71
Source: The Aviationist

Over the past year or two, someone has been probing the defenses of the companies that run critical pieces of the Internet. These probes take the form of precisely calibrated attacks designed to determine exactly how well these companies can defend themselves, and what would be required to take them down. We don’t know who is doing this, but it feels like a large a large nation state. …

It reminds me of the U.S.’s Cold War program of flying high-altitude planes over the Soviet Union to force their air-defense systems to turn on, to map their capabilities.

Thoughts go many different ways from here.

What would happen if the Internet went down for an extended period? Or, roughly equivalent, became unstable and undependable? A number of companies would be in deep trouble, although the larger corporations, such as Amazon and Alibaba, might have contingency plans in place. It’s a little difficult to imagine the content of such plans, beyond laying everyone off.

Who does not hurt themselves by introducing instability into the Internet? No doubt autocratic countries have less to fear, as control of the population may outweigh the virtues of the Internet.

And how about those defensive strategies? Bruce suggests the sites are being forced to show their entire arsenal. I wonder if there’s an attempt to vary the response over time, making analysis more difficult. I’m not a security expert, so I’m just guessing, but it seems to me the more variability you can show, the less certain an attacker can be of a specific approach working.

Finally, this may be the symptom of a contingency plan for the attacker. Understanding the vulnerabilities of potential enemies is the responsibility of the armed forces of any country. In fact, spying on friends is not unknown – although rarely appreciated. So it’s certainly possible this is merely a preparation for a Plan B or C.

It could even be American. Improbable, implausible – but not impossible.

A Long Awaited Upgrade

A friend posted this to Facebook. It’s a blog post by Jason Scott on ASCII, and, having been an inadvertent part of the free software and (mostly) open source movement from the mid 1980s through the 1990s, it stirs memories and emotions I don’t often dip into.

prodos

Screen capture of Jason’s blog entry

In September of 2016, a talented programmer released his own cooked update to a major company’s legacy operating system, purely because it needed to be done. A raft of new features, wrap-in programs, and bugfixes were included in this release, which I stress was done as a hobby project.


For me, this is the expulsion of commercial interests from the arena of computer programming. Programmers come in a variety of temperaments. For some, it’s just a job that brings home the dough, a simple enough concept that’s applied to coal mining, retail sales, and darn near any human activity that has occurred.

For many mathematicians, programming is just another variety of mathematics, albeit a rather dubious and painful exercise in intellectual activity. The advent of functional programming is a step towards a cleaner version of programming for many mathematicians, I suspect, as it’s based, in part, on the theory of mathematical functions.

Some programmers consider programming to be Art, the construction of a program as an expression of their aesthetic sensibilities. Since a program is the expression of someone’s inner conception of a solution to a problem which can be solved through computation, this is not as outré as it might sound.

Some programmers are engineers, working to solve problems in (something resembling) a rigorous manner. I tend to fit a little bit into this category, a bit into the Art category (especially when working on a difficult problem, the creative side of me can come to the fore as I strive to create a solution that not only works for the current problem, but can be applied to similar problems), and just a trifle in the mathematicians’ frame of mind – given my druthers, I’d be working in a functional programming environment.

And, finally, a few programmers work from the community viewpoint. These comprise some of the open source software movement (some just want to do “sexy” programming, as I call it, which these days, besides Linux, will probably include some Big Data programming, those folks doing the cool astronomical probe visual rendering, and a few other areas), and apparently the “legacy software” folks. I knew there was a little activity out there, because a few years back I had reason to work on my old open source work in an MS-DOS environment, and not having the compilers anymore, I went out looking for them and found them on the Embarcadero web site under “antique software.” Judging from Jason’s post, this programmer (John Brooks) may be motivated by community programming – or he may be more of an Art programmer.

But for a good 15 years my free time was spent being a community programmer – I maintained a bulletin board package written by Cynbe ru Taren, used by an unknown number of people over a 20 year period (I didn’t do much work on it the last 5 years, as the Web took over). I had the pleasure of providing free support to many appreciative users, while learning the craft by working in a highly constrained environment. I’ve since moved on to other hobbies, and this blog is a bit of a move back to the old BBS habits – a chance to discuss what’s on my mind and interact with others, although without the feeling of doing something entirely new, as it felt back then.

But seeing this release of ProDos does bring back the memories. Memories of writing code purely to enable people to do something they found useful, whether it was to extend the mail capability, or to connect bulletin boards over the phone lines in a network, without regard to marketing plans, managers who want a schedule without realizing that this or that has never been attempted before, back when there were hobbyist groups, people who sensed computers had a lot of potential to do good in the world – not today, where we curse the instabilities and eccentricities, worry about “malware” and clicking on “bad links”, wonder how we could have ever designed this mess so that there can even be a “bad link” as we mean it today.

Breathe.

And leave it at that.

Race 2016: Hillary Watch, Ctd

A reader writes concerning Hillary’s tactic:

I hope she’s that crafty, because to judge by the number of minutes MPR spends blabbing about, quoting and playing clips from Trump in the morning, Trump’s going to win. The amount of free press he’s getting is, well, huge.

During the primaries, Trump seemed to know precisely how to dance on the knife-edge of ridiculousness – he must have received about as much free press as the other sixteen GOP candidates put together. Now that he’s the nominee, anything he says is newsworthy, so he gets more free press. Sadly, the press hasn’t figured out that puerile assholes don’t deserve coverage – or they figured that if they didn’t cover him, they’d be accused of bias.

And I do continue to worry that apparently a large percentage of my fellow citizens can be taken in by this consummate con-man. The idea that we need to “shakeup” things in D.C. may be true, but it would be more effective to eject the current majority in both branches of the legislature, who is responsible for the logjam and frankly amateurish behavior that we’ve witnessed over the last six years, than to put a man who doesn’t even understand the world-wide consequences of using nuclear weapons in a position where he can shoot them off whenever a fellow world leader mildly annoys him.

Experts should not be judged by how much their recommendations upset you or how much they agree with your preconceptions. Economist Art Laffer is a vivid example. He is the creator and advocate of the Laffer Curve, the idea that tax cuts will pay for themselves. Sounds wonderful to a conservative tired of paying taxes and seeing it sometimes used to fund odd proposals, doesn’t it?

But it never worked out. As Steve Benen puts it,

Perhaps the first sign that Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback (R) was pursuing a misguided economic policy was when he chose a high-profile advisor: Art Laffer. The far-right economist, best known for his ridiculous “Laffer Curve” that says tax cuts can pay for themselves, guided the Republican governor’s agenda.

The “experiment” failed spectacularly: the Kansas plan fell short on every possible metric, from growth to job creation to revenue. The state’s finances are in shambles, leading to Kansas’ bond rating getting downgraded, and then downgraded again.

Steve’s article is from 2014; Kansas has actually become much worse since. It may be the worst State in the Union these days. Adherence to an ideology that never worked, because, damn, it sounds good!

Back to my point, experts should be judged on results. This isn’t a revolutionary thought; it, in fact, is right at the heart of the concept of the United States as a meritocracy, where the measure of the person is in their results, not in their big talk (like Trump), nor their birthright (which is why we don’t elect a new King every time the old one dies). This is really a very conservative idea that can be shared by everyone on the political spectrum that is not engaged in a search for power, but for the betterment of society. When Representative Ryan disdained experts, he was, inadvertently, betraying this very conservative principle at the heart of the nation. He may not pay for that betrayal immediately. It may take a few terms for his approach to implode, damaging the Nation in some awful manner. And then he’ll deny it.

It’s what politicians of all stripes do.

But it clarifies the question at hand: Donald Trump has no accomplishments in the public sector. None. I won’t even bother to explain how his accomplishments in the private sector are tainted, I’ll simply note they have little to no applicability. Hillary Clinton? Elected service; service as a government lawyer; service as a Cabinet level Secretary. Accomplishments AND mistakes. Mistakes she acknowledges and learns from.

And Trump? After years of being a salient member of “birther” chorus, just this week he agreed that President Obama was, indeed, born in the United States. Via NBC News, here’s how Trump admits to a mistake:

In acknowledging that the president was born in the U.S., Trump, however, falsely claimed that his rival, Hillary Clinton, was the original source of the theory.

“Hillary Clinton and her campaign of 2008 started the birther controversy. I finished it, I finished it,” Trump said. “You know what I mean.”

Holograms and Industry

Lloyd Alter on Treehugger.com is an architect and excited about the use of holograms in elevator maintenance:

hololens

Source: Microsoft

Essentially, you look through the goggles and see the object, can walk around it, zoom in and out, rotate and if it was built to do so, explode it into its components. As an architect, I can say right now that this is going to revolutionize the design, construction and maintenance of buildings, perhaps as dramatically as CAD and BIM have.

I believe this because elevators are a big, complex and expensive part of buildings, and thyssenkrupp Elevator is revolutionizing the way they work on them right now. However the technologies that they are demonstrating have broad implications for everyone in the building and many other businesses.

Elevators carry a billion people a day around the world, and are complex mixes of thousands of mechanical and electronic components. When they break down it’s a big deal, whether you are waiting for it or stuck in it. Lives depend on it. Maintenance is critical, both scheduled and emergency; thyssenkrupp alone has 24,000 technicians running around in trucks doing service. Given the different brands of elevators and the 150 years they have been in buildings, there must be millions of different configurations and parts. No wonder it always seems that it takes forever to fix them.

24,000 technicians. Sometimes you don’t think about the infrastructure requirements of just one company.

Current Movie Reviews

Still in the early scenes of Florence Foster Jenkins (2016) my Arts Editor gasped, “Ack! I have a stitch in my side,” before she resumed gasping with laughter, cringing and covering her ears.

This shows the successful machination of the classic plot device: contrast. The story of a real woman who yearned to sing opera through the 1930s and ’40s, Florence (Meryl Streep) has money, a devoted husband, a distinguished voice teacher, contacts with powerful musical personalities, and now needs an accompanist in order to sing what she needs to sing. A suitably eccentric and timid young man is recruited, and it is only now we discover the fly in the ointment, around which all seems to revolve.

The woman has no talent and no skill, and worse yet, she doesn’t realize it.

And so, for a time, we hoot with laughter at someone who thinks she’s more than she is, much like the buxom blonde who literally must crawl out of the music hall, laughing so hard at Florence’s unconscious ineptitude that she cannot stand: a low-class foil for Florence and her up-scale associates. But, as with many good plots, not all is as it seems. A story that merely jeers at this would-be coloratura soprano would be uninteresting and unworthy of our notice.

Instead, darker facts emerge: Florence’s hidden, deadly illness, which she has endured for fifty years and which endangers her life with each performance; a vocal coach who, perhaps, encourages her too much; a husband who has not the courage to tell her she’s not really suited to do what she wishes. Each performance, planned or impromptu, as awful as it may be, now gains a serious facet. Florence morphs from a comic figure to an Everyman, someone carrying woes & dreams, demons and angels, for whom the everyday burden of just living must, from time to time, be transcended by a dream. She is, as it were, a member of the audience, to be hugged and held, adored and comforted, and all that returned; sharing that commonality of ours, before returning to her dream, the stage, and the music which wreathes her spirit.

Now we come to her apex performance: playing the legendary Carnegie Hall.  Her stage fright, even with its comic facet, excites our sympathy as well as our humor.  Her shrill and off-key opening number plays to a truly raucous crowd, and trembles to a halt as the audience jeers.  And then a figure, buxom and blonde, shows her true colors, leading the audience in a resounding encouragement of our heroine’s performance. But there’s a fly in the ointment…

I’m reminded of an oft-repeated aphorism, that it’s the journey, not the destination, which matters (mention this not to the poor airline traveler!); here, the essence is not the achievement, but the striving; not the glory of grand recognition, but the love of the music which is truly important. In this light, the machinations of the husband, the carefully chosen words of the vocal coach, are not ill-considered deceit to be regretted or condemned, but the tools of men attempting to compound the love of a woman for something they, too, love – art.


Meryl Streep is, as usual, spot-on, revealing a woman who wants to sing, who’ll give it her all – but in the midst of some broken-backed attempt conveys her inner bewilderment at the difficulty of the musical paths she must tread. Hugh Grant plays her husband, Sinclair, and he’s up to the task – a man daft in his love, willing to cater to her every delusion in order to ignore the metaphorical ugliness inflicted on her.  Her accompanist, Cosmé McMoon, is more than capably performed by Simon Helberg, a man, eccentric already, who may be overwhelmed by greater eccentricities.

This is a movie with a pacing from another era. We’re given plenty of time to consider the undercurrents and questions, and if the dialog is not as clever as in some movies, in a movie about music, this may be appropriate.

Strongly recommended.

(This review written with many contributions from my Arts Editor.)

Real Shrimp, Jumbo Shrimp, Fake Shrimp

Katherine Martinko on Treehugger.com talks about the latest use for … algae:

One interesting biotech company called New Wave Foods hopes to address all these problems [environmental degradation, shocking labor practices] in one fell swoop. It has pioneered a technique for making fake, plant-based shrimp out of algae. The algae turns the shrimp red and is a powerful antioxidant. The srimp are shaped like regular shrimp, and even have the rubbery texture and faintly fishy taste of real shrimp. They are vegan, kosher, have zero cholesterol, and are safe to eat for people with shellfish allergies.

Using the useless to replace the overworked is always an interesting approach, although our uselessness can be another organism’s critical requirement, which can circle around to bite us on the ass.

Bears Ears

In American Archaeology (fall 2016, first few paragraphs online) Julian Smith writes about the Bears Ears Controversy in an eponymous article, covering in detail a proposal for President Obama to declare part of southeastern Utah a National Monument:

San Juan County covers almost 8,000 square miles of Utah’s southeast corner. It is the largest and the poorest county in the state, and about half of its 15,000 residents are Navajo and Ute Indians. People have occupied its striking landscape of mountains, mesas, and river canyons for thousands of years. The Bears Ears region may have more archaeological sites than any other county in the United States, but many have not been documented and are effectively unprotected. A proposal to set aside a large part of the county as a national monument has set off a lively debate over how the federal government should go about protecting cultural resources on public lands in the West.

Utah’s quarter of the Four Corners region, where it joins Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado, centers on a distinctive pair of 9,000-foot buttes called the Bears Ears. Visible for miles, they overlook Natural Bridges National Monument and Cedar Mesa, a broad plateau sliced by sandstone canyons and bounded by the Colorado and San Juan rivers.

Since this is an archaeology magazine, the bulk of the article covers what has been found and may still be found in the area, the enormous damage caused by looters and general recreation activities, as well as the campaign itself. There are several players here, starting with the archaeologists, whose value system is built around the knowledge they hope to extract from the artifacts left behind by ancient peoples. That’s their motivation.

Then there are the Indian Nations, who are also advocating for National Monument status. The Protect Bears Ears Coalition, consisting of the Ute, Zuni, Hopi, and Navajo Nation, collects and dispenses information, from Indian to archaeological to  “outdoor industry” support of the National Monument drive.

The UTL’s resolution is the most recent demonstration of overwhelmingly unified support for Bears Ears National Monument among sovereign tribal nations, grassroots Native Americans, and Utah citizens. The UTL resolution joins independent declarations of support from 25 Tribes throughout the Four Corners states and a joint resolution from the National Congress of American Indians with membership of nearly 300 Tribes. The Utah Tribal Leaders association has now formally joined the call for President Barack Obama to exercise his power under the 1906 Antiquities Act to protect Bears Ears National Monument.

As the traditional lands containing artifacts and religious significance, their motivation should be clear. The Grand Canyon Trust’s Advocate Magazine covers it from the inside:

Malcolm Lehi remembers the stories his father told him about the Bears Ears Buttes and the deep cultural ties of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe to the mountainous knolls, canyons, forests, water and wildlife of the Manti-La Sal National Forest and surrounding public lands.

It’s where Lehi, a lawmaker and member of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribal Council, harvests chokecherries,knowledge passed down by his father, who taught Lehi where to find them. It’s mid-July and the berries are about the size of a quarter.

The Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance is also behind the national monument.

On the other side? Legislators and others who don’t like the idea of the Federal government sucking up more land. The Salt Lake Tribune covers the opposition, which started with an alternative named the Public Lands Initiative:

The Public Lands Initiative (PLI), sponsored by [Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah] and Rep. Rob Bishop, who heads the Natural Resources Committee, would preserve 4.6 million acres of federal land as conservation areas, open more than 1.1 million acres for recreation and mineral development, consolidate more than 300,000 acres of state lands and expand Arches National Park by nearly 20,000 acres.

The proposal, which has earned a strong rebuke from environmental groups and opposition from federal agencies, is aimed at stopping President Barack Obama from using his unilateral power to name a national monument to protect some 1.8 million acres of federal land as some tribal leaders and conservationists have requested.

The Democrats’ objection?

Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., and the top Democrat on the committee, praised the concept of the PLI, bringing groups together to negotiate public land policy, but said the resulting legislation “tilts the scale dramatically” in favor of development and motorized-vehicle access.

So the nominal objections stem from restrictions on private sector activities, although not all of the private sector is against the national monument.

This is not a polite dispute. Quoting from the print-only portion of Julian’s article (so any typos are mine, not Julian’s),

Utah Diné Bikéyah has collected over 1,100 postcards from Native Americans who live nearby advocating for the proposal; this despite  someone having distributed flyers with misleading information at gas stations and post offices. One was a fake letter from Sally Jewell, the Secretary of the Interior, saying that four million acres of the Navajo reservation will revert to the federal government if the monument is created. Another flyer stated that Jewell and President Obama would attend a party in July celebrating the national monument designation, but Utah Navajos were not invited.

Sneaky and underhanded. Then there’s a different approach that Julian notes without comment:

There haven’t been any local polls, but opinions are definitely mixed among San  Juan County residents, says Phil Lyman, the chairman of the San Juan County Commission and an outspoken critic of the proposal. The national monument is one of the most divisive issues to hit the community in a long time, he says. “I don’t want to see the these decisions made in Washington D.C. It’s treating people like subjects, not citizens. If you’re worried about human impacts, why would you designate it a national monument?”

This is upsetting in two ways. First, Mr. Lyman  speaking only for the non-Indians in the county, since the Indians are clearly negatively impacted every time their cultural heritage is destroyed by looters or other activities.

Second, his use of the term ‘subjects’ is a code word designed to rouse the reflexively anti-government elements. It’s not a form of honest rhetoric, it’s a way to call on a group who is unwilling to evaluate a proposal on its own merits, instead simply saying No! because it has the federal government attached to it. It demonizes all the federal government’s proposals, and any groups associated with them as well – and the Indians do not need any more demonization at this juncture. Finally, it can lead to violence from the fringe elements, which should – but won’t – be placed at Mr. Lyman’s feet if it occurs.

So to my eyes, the opposition motivations may putatively be commercial, but underneath is an anti-government, anti-Indian stream.

The Sierra Club has a petition drive going.

Light Pollution Maps

screenshot-from-2016-09-15-23-41-16

Source: Light Pollution Map

 

 

Curious about light pollution distribution? Here’s a link for an interactive map. Here’s an FAQ. It handles multiple datasets and even user input data, but I’ve not been able to find much other information on it.


screenshot-from-2016-09-16-08-47-24

Source: You Can See The Milky Way

Here’s another one. This one features an alternative map and a satellite view. And I don’t have an explanation for some of the funky state names.


This Scientific American video covers light pollution’s effects in 60 seconds. It points out something I had not thought about: light pollution can effect nocturnal animals, so light pollution is an ecological problem and therefore elevated from mere annoyance for astronomers to another serious problem to be dealt with on a national level.

It would be interesting, at the next Minnesota governor’s race debate, to bring a snapshot of one of these maps centered on the Twin Cities and ask them how they intend to remove that blot of light from the map? I wonder if we’d just get blank looks, or if they’d question the need.

Race 2016: Hillary Watch, Ctd

Murfster35 on The Daily Kos doesn’t believe Hillary Clinton made a mistake – s/he believes she’s just employing a carefully calculated whistle of her own:

Hillary has been playing this game with the press for more than 25 years, she’s a pro. The Orange Julius steals an entire news cycle or more with each outrageous statement. She’s turning the tables on Trump, but with an almost surgical purpose. If she had said “a few” or “some” of Trumps supporters were “deplorable”, it would have caused a minor tremor, but not overtake the cycle. In saying “½ of his supporters” I have no doubt that she was referring to the 61% who think that Obama is a secret Muslim-Marxist-Kenyan here to destroy the country. The “50%” was the hook to grab the attention of the press. Look how quickly and professionally the campaign walked back only the “50%’ portion, I’m betting that they had that written by the time she made the original statement. …

This is clearly aimed at one particular demographic. And it’s a big one, one that no Republican has ever lost since polling started tracking it, college educated white voters. As we speak, Trump is tied with Clinton with white college educated males, and he’s getting his ass kicked by a whopping 23% with white college educated women. And guess what? In a recent WaPo poll, 60% of college educated whites think that Trump is biased against women and minorities. Kudos to the WaPo for not poisoning the well on this poll! They very carefully used the word “biased”, as opposed to the more inflammatory “racist” or “bigoted” that could have skewed the honest results.

The next week or two of polls will tell the tale.

What to do with Snowden

The Snowden leak of NSA documents concerning mass surveillance has certainly been one of the great earthquakes of the last 20 years. Now, on Lawfare, Timothy Edgar is advocating that Snowden be pardoned – because he caused so much damage:

Edward Snowden’s actions caused great damage to national security.  They should not have been necessary to achieve the sensible reforms of the past four years.  That they were represents a failure of leadership by the intelligence community and the national security teams of the previous two administrations. …

There is an inherent tension between the values of a free society and mass surveillance.  For Snowden and his supporters, the answer is easy.  End mass surveillance—which is to say, most of what the NSA does.  Those of us who believe that the NSA’s far-flung operations are essential to national security and global stability have the harder task of keeping mass surveillance under control.

If Snowden deserves our thanks for both this round of surveillance reform and the next, it is only because the laws and institutions we created to control surveillance had become so obsolete. Intelligence agencies should not need the shock of massively damaging leak to abandon programs that are not working and refine and improve those that are.  Disclosing details of classified programs should not be the most effective way to force change.

But apparently they were.

Recalling that Richard Nixon was preemptively pardoned by President Ford, I suppose Snowden could be pardoned for the charges that are currently lodged against him.

Water, Water, Water: Iran, Ctd

For those who worry about Iranian nuclear issues, they might want to look at the water situation, which appears to be dreadful. Alireza Ramezani in AL Monitor digs in on the capital city of Tehran.

Tehran’s population has ballooned so immensely in the past decade that Energy Minister Hamid Chitchian has warned of an impending failure to supply clean and safe drinking water to residents should the capital’s population — currently hovering at 12 million — continue to rise, Hamshahri newspaper reported on Aug. 22. “The water-security problem is very serious in Tehran and needs to be addressed immediately,” Chitchian said.

Some signs are emerging. A rising number of Tehran residents have been experiencing a drop in water pressure, according to leading economic newspaper Donya-e Eqtesad. People living on the third floor or higher have had to installpowerful water pumps to suck up more water from the urban pipelines, the paper noted. The wave of pump installations has further lowered water pressure, worsening the situation for citizens without pumps.

The use of pumps is now so widespread that water experts advise residents to also set up small water tanks on their roofs to draw from, to help minimize the pumps’ impact on water pressure. Water pressure has dropped in recent weeks by 30% in some districts, Donya-e Eqtesad reported.

Alireza references this article by Andrew Follett on The Daily Caller News Foundation, which reports:

Iran’s vice minister of energy for water announced Wendesday that several of the country’s major cities will have a water crisis this summer and that little could be done to prevent it. The minister pointed out that Iran’s per-capita water consumption is nearly twice the global average. The crisis has been largely caused by improper use of groundwater resources, a rapidly growing population, and decades of mismanagement by the government.

I’m somewhat non-plussed by the use of a comparison to a world average, and would be much happier if they had reported average Tehran water usage in terms of percentage of recommended consumption of water for good health for all purposes. If the consumption is substantially above the recommendation then consumption can be reduced without imperiling the health and welfare of the people involved – assuming consumption reduction is spread equally across all inhabitants.

Alireza reports on sources of water:

Tehran’s water is mainly supplied by five dams — Taleghan, Karaj, Mamlo, Latian and Lar — and 480 deep wells located across the city. As no further dams can be built around Tehran, the energy minister has warned that more water will have to be extracted from the wells if the situation gets worse — a move that could cause health problems for Tehran residents, as more intense extraction activities increase exposure to pollutants.

I wonder how climate change will affect water production in that area of the world. Just for fun, here’s a population graph of Iran:

iran-population

Clinton Foundation, Ctd

Mark Sumner on The Daily Kos is really angry at the Associated Press regarding the Clinton Foundation scandal … or, in his eyes, the faux-scandal:

The truth is that the Associated Press examined the data and found, quite simply, that donors to the Clinton Foundation made up a very small percentage of visitors to Hillary Clinton’s office as secretary of state. Though they worked for an extended period to obtain records, dug through disorganized information to create searchable data, and spent days picking through the resulting information, in the end they found … nothing. They found no preferential treatment. No unethical contact. Not a hint of services rendered. Nothing. There was no story there.

It had to be frustrating, especially for Braun and Sullivan, who had been at the center of the endless-attention-generating email server story. So the Associated Press decided that “no story,” was not the story they would tell.

They chose to eliminate more than 1,700 meetings from the data, and to pretend that a tiny group of 85 meetings held with contributors to the Clinton Foundation constituted some sort of “majority” of “discretionary” meetings, even if that took treating as discretionary meetings with people who had met with previous secretary of states, people who were involved in projects funded by the State Department, and people heading up groups directly working to provide aid to refugees. In no universe were these meetings “discretionary” except that generated for the purpose of making a story.

It’s a lovely rant.

No Surgery For You, Sir?

Elizabeth Lunday’s “Extra Toes Conferred Extra Status” (American Archaeology, fall 2016, print only) teaches me a little something about social prestige:

“Six-toed individuals [in Chaco Canyon] seem to have been treated well, but not as gods,” [University of New Mexico archaeologist] Crown says. The team recently published a paper in the journal American Antiquity.

The Maya revered individuals with extra digits, treating them as gods. Crown and her colleagues wondred if the Chacoans did the same. … High status could account for the high rate of polydactyly among the population. “If you have a trait people value, that can lead to greater reproductive success and the trait may appear more often,” says Crown.

So we’d ignore or remove an extra toe. The Mayans and Chacoans would revere them. Sort of like winning the lottery, but not really.

When You Come Visiting, Try Not To Breathe

Melissa Breyer on Treehugger.com discovers an analysis of household dust:

While the possibility of noxious dust bunnies comes as little surprise – it’s a topic we’ve written about before – this new study is the first comprehensive meta-analysis of toxic chemicals found in house dust. It reveals that the average American is likely exposed to an icky chaos of chemicals that come from consumer products and building materials – chemicals that have been linked to numerous health effects including cancer, hormone disruption, and reproductive problems.

The new data comes from a multi-institute team of researchers, hailing from Milken Institute School of Public Health, Silent Spring Institute, Natural Resources Defense Council, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, and Occupational and Environmental Medicine Program.

“Our study is the first comprehensive analysis of consumer product chemicals found in household dust,” says lead author Ami Zota, ScD, MS, assistant professor of environmental and occupational health at Milken Institute SPH. “The findings suggest that people, and especially children, are exposed on a daily basis to multiple chemicals in dust that are linked to serious health problems.”

Melissa then gives ameliorative pointers. But will studies like these lead to a cloud of legal action? It probably should.