Monday, August 30, 2021

Review: Artifact Space

Artifact SpaceArtifact Space by Miles Cameron
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is a first-rate piece of MilSF/Space Opera. A young cadet in a public orphanage gets a hacker to forge her graduation credentials so that she can join the crew of a Greatship; a massive, interstellar trade/combat ship that circles the region of space where humans have spread.

Our young cadet has problems both small and large. Her small problems include the above forgery and also where the head of the orphanage is trying to blackmail her. Then she also needs to develop as a pilot of the small trade/fighter transports that service the Greatships. And learn all the basics of being an officer. And learning about galactic trade, repelling boarders, shooting guns and other little necessities.

The large problems include uncovering a network of spies and saboteurs that are trying to take out the Greatship Athens. Uncovering the mysterious enemy who is blowing up the Greatships. Helping to find a way to communicate with the alien "starfish" whose xenoglas makes the great galactic circle of trade viable.

The book is a non-stop joyride that would make Robert Heinlein proud. I literally could not put this down; the hallmark of excellent storytelling. The best book of 2021 that I've read thus far.

Miles Cameron hits another home run!

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A small gripe. Most won't notice it.

The political system is somewhat odd. There is a wealthy upper class that is funded by their companies and trade. A person can buy into this upper class and obtain the right to vote and other benefits. The characters claim that their system is "democratic-socialism" and that it is someway superior to our current political/economic environment that the characters describe as the Chaos times.

But in reality, their system isn't too much different from our own. There is a thriving free-market trade in goods and services. The "socialism" is limited to health care and basic income allowances. The companies are regulated and taxed to the point where they cannot/will not perform basic research. Essentially, their world exists because of the "Chaos times" where freer markets allowed greater innovation.

The polity is in turn deluded about their level of "socialism" and blind to the effect of excessive regulation and taxes. At one point one of the characters points out that she didn't think her ancestors would have understood their version of "socialism".

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Hugo Awards - 2021 - Short Stories

 I've been read other books lately and had not intended to return to the Hugo nominees.  But as I had them downloaded anyway....

1 - “Metal Like Blood in the Dark”, T. Kingfisher (Uncanny Magazine, September/October 2020) - a great little story about the loss of innocence for a pair AI driven robots.  Or at least one of them

2 - “A Guide for Working Breeds”, Vina Jie-Min Prasad (Made to Order: Robots and Revolution, ed. Jonathan Strahan (Solaris)) - An interesting twist on AI/robots as contract labor.  You never really see where the humans intersect with the AI/robots, but it's there all along.

3 - No Award

4 - “The Mermaid Astronaut”, Yoon Ha Lee (Beneath Ceaseless Skies, February 2020) - a somewhat interesting space travel story with merfolk added on the side.  Good, but not above the bar on my ballot.

5 - “Open House on Haunted Hill”, John Wiswell (Diabolical Plots – 2020, ed. David Steffen) - a pedestrian haunted house story.  Nice, but not really notable.

6 - “Badass Moms in the Zombie Apocalypse”, Rae Carson (Uncanny Magazine, January/February 2020) - Surviving the zombie apocalypse without men.  But they still want babies.  Almost half of which will end up being men.  Illogical setting/world building.

7 - Little Free Library, Naomi Kritzer (Tor.com) - a twee little story using a plot device that has been done too many times already.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

Interesting News 8/26/2021

 Yes, I'm still interested in these weekly collections of interesting items.  Yes, I went a few weeks without publishing one.  And yet you are back for more!

Brad Torgersen has a great essay regarding Covid, vaccines, mandates, masks, etc.  I generally agree.  The technology behind the vaccines is sound.  Almost everyone should get one.  A bit of commonsense about masks, handwashing, etc. will go a long way.  The folks pushing mandates are really very scary.  It's almost as if they've been waiting for an excuse to send rough men to hold people down and do "things" to them.

They found 300 recall election ballots in the car of a thug.  But sure...the election system is safe and sound.  One is foolish to wonder about election security breaches associated with using a mail-in system.

This is old news, but so is the theory of gravity and the knowledge that water is wet.  Children do far better living in a home with both their mom and dad present.  Single-parent households are a self-reinforcing spiral into poverty.  Solutions aren't easy, but you will never find a solution if you are not first willing to accurately identify the problem.

In another victory for Trump administration policies, the NY Times has an extensive piece on the billing/pricing of medical procedures and how providers and insurers are colluding to make pricing models as opaque as possible to improve their respective profits.  Red State has the news with links to the NY Times.

A final item comes in a National Review piece about a recent US Supreme Court decision that confirms Joe Biden's prediction that the court would strike down the CDC's moratorium on the eviction of renters.  At the center of the piece is the observation that the leftist faction of the court wants the administrative branch to pretty much be able to do whatever it wants with the thinnest of legislative justifications.  I would add that the American left wants the entire government to be able to do whatever it wants without any Constitutional justification.


Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Review: Always Coming Home

Always Coming HomeAlways Coming Home by Ursula K. Le Guin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This is a 3-star, DNF review.

The setting for the book is the American west coast after intelligent computers have surpassed humanity. The AI are barely present as a potential source of information via computer terminals.

Humanity has devolved back into tribes that seem heavily influenced by North American First Nations peoples. Many of the circumstances in the story evoke those cultural and religious traditions.

The circumstances that cause most of the dominant American culture to disappear never become clear.

I picked up this book because some fellow genre fans recommended it. While I didn't think it was bad, it just didn't hold my attention - hence the DNF. There were characters that might have been interesting but just weren't.

The presence of serious consideration of First Nations religious beliefs was odd. There wasn't anything to suggest that those beliefs were anything more important than beliefs.

Also odd was the potential for consulting the AI computers for information and solutions to human problems was not more widely utilized. Instead, the entire culture had devolved back into near subsistance survival. The cultural avoidance of seeking improvement and progress was inhuman. Every human culture seeks some sort of improvement.

I put it down about 60% of the way through and just couldn't justify picking it back up.

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Review: Storm Between the Stars: Book 1 in the Fall of the Censor

Storm Between the Stars: Book 1 in the Fall of the CensorStorm Between the Stars: Book 1 in the Fall of the Censor by Karl K. Gallagher
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This is a 2-star DNF review. The only reason it gets 2-stars is because the English spelling/grammar editing is quite good.

Made it 15% into the book and found that I really didn't care about any of the characters. They were cardboard cut-outs that were moving around on the author's whim.

And the digital equivalent of the Dorothy Parker treatment ensued.

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Sunday, August 22, 2021

Dann's Ultimate Styx Playlist

While listening to all of Styx's studio albums, it seemed like a good idea to generate an ultimate playlist.  They have released (thus far) (17) studio albums.  

My playlist covers some of the hits as well as some of the more obscure pieces from their earlier years.  And of course, this is just my list of great Styx music.  Others will focus on other songs according to their whims and tastes.

There are 51 songs on my Ultimate Styx Playlist.  There was only one album that doesn't have a song on this playlist; Cyclorama.  All of the other albums had at least one or two interesting songs.

I was reluctant to include too many songs from their early albums.  I love those albums from their time with Wooden Nickel Records.  But the tunes tend to run towards the "generic 70s rock band" style. 

In terms of percentages, the albums I love the most have the highest percentage of songs on the list.  For example, the album Crystal Ball only has seven tracks; three of which made the playlist.  That is almost half of that album!  By comparison, Edge of the Century has ten tracks; only two of which made the list.

This is listed in order of when the albums were released.  It is a time capsule of sorts.  I've added the playlist to Spotify and YouTube (coming soon).  You are welcome!

  • Movement for the Common Man
  • Best Thing
  • Lady
  • Father O.S.A.
  • I'm Gonna Make You Feel It
  • The Grove of Eglantine
  • Jonas Psalter
  • Christopher, Mr. Christopher
  • Man of Miracles
  • Light Up
  • Lorelei
  • Suite Madame Blue
  • Mademoiselle
  • Crystal Ball
  • Claire de lune / Ballerina
  • Grand Illusion
  • Fooling Yourself (The Angry Young Man)
  • Come Sail Away
  • Miss America
  • Man in the Wilderness
  • Castle Walls
  • Sing For The Day
  • Blue Collar Man (Long Nights)
  • Renegade
  • Babe
  • Borrowed Time 
  • Nothing Ever Goes As Planned
  • She Cares
  • Snowblind
  • Don't Let It End
  • Just Get Through This Night
  • Haven't We Been Here Before?
  • Show Me The Way
  • Love At First Sight
  • I Will Be Your Witness
  • Brave New World
  • Heavy Water
  • Waiting For Our Time
  • I Can See For Miles
  • Locomotive Breath
  • Gone Gone Gone
  • Hundred Million Miles From Home
  • Locomotive
  • Radio Silence
  • Time May Bend
  • Red Storm
  • Reveries
  • Hold Back The Darkness
  • Save Us From Ourselves
  • Long Live The King
  • Dear John
  • Crystal Ball (with the 3rd verse)

Friday, August 20, 2021

Styx Studio Albums - Ranked

I am a huge Styx fan.  My best friend from high school and I poured over Styx albums.  We knew the hits.  We knew the other stuff.  We were discussing the relative strength of their more recent albums recently which prompted me to think about how I would prioritize the studio albums in their career thus far.

Courtesy of Spotify, I've listened to their entire discography a couple of times.  But I had not really spent any time thinking about how I would rank their albums.

This list is based on the albums as complete works.  Having a favorite song or two on an album doesn't make it a good one.  What makes a great Styx album?  Good lyrics that tell an engaging story.  Good music with a unique hook.  Strong lead vocals.  Good harmonization.  And an interesting use of their instruments.  These have historically been the hallmark of a band that rose out of a mass of "generic rock bands" to become one of the great rock bands of the 20th and 21st centuries.

Styx is the only group in history to issue four consecutive Platinum-selling albums.  Given the fractured nature of modern music distribution, I doubt that any other group will ever come close to that feat.  I have marked those albums with an asterisk *.

At the outset, I want to say that I enjoy all of these albums.  I either currently own or have previously owned most of their studio albums.  Spotify has altered my album purchasing habits.  You have to go pretty deep into this list to find an album that I wouldn't recommend to a non-Styx fan.

There are several places where I was splitting hairs by putting one album ahead of another.  Ask me again next year and I would probably have a completely different list.  In truth, I am a Styx fan because I have enjoyed almost every album in their discography.  Most of the time it came down to "which of these two would I rather hear today?"  How do you pick between two gems?

Will any of the albums fall below the "don't bother buying" point?  Let's find out.

The Grand Illusion (1977)* The Grand Illusion is the first of four consecutive triple-platinum-rated albums.  It does represent a shift from their prior work.  The keyboards and guitars all have a cleaner sound when compared with the early albums.  The album features three and a half hit songs with the rest being solid, well-constructed pieces.  While being a great album, it really isn't a huge improvement from Crystal Ball.  Had the music world been paying attention, then The Grand Illusion would have been the second of five consecutive triple-platinum-rated albums.

Crystal Ball (1976)  Crystal Ball was the first Styx album that I considered to be great.  The only thing it needs is the elusive third verse for the titular song Crystal Ball.  The songs present a range of instrumental and vocal musical styles.  The storytelling was great.  The evolving formula for what makes a great Styx album was crystalizing (pun intended).  Some multipart harmonies.  A growling song with JY singing the lead.  A song or two each for Dennis and Tommy to sing vocals.  Lots of power ballad elements.  The rougher sound of their early albums was left behind like the slag leftover from creating steel; necessary to the process but not particularly useful in the future.

The Mission (2017)  Good mix of musical styles telling a unified story.  Several memorable songs with great hooks.  Doesn't really stick the landing with the last song.  With the heavy thematic element of a trip to Mars serving as the focus for this album, I thought this should have been a good nominee for the 2018 Best Related Works Hugo Award.  This album takes me back to albums like Crystal Ball and The Grand Illusion.  It also recalls some of the sounds of the best parts of their first three albums.  Great three-part harmonies.  Unique melodies.  Interesting use of their instruments.  The Mission was a success!

Paradise Theatre (1981)*  My first bit of heresy.  Paradise Theater is arguably their most successful album.  The only album to hit the #1 spot on the charts.  The only album with five singles to hit the charts.  The album is a complete thematic piece.  But when I pressed myself for how often I would reach for this album, it just wasn't as good at the albums listed above.

Equinox (1975)   Equinox marks the next significant step in the development of the Styx style after the first four albums.  Leading off with the powerful Light Up and Lorelei and concluding with Suite Madame Blue, the album is filled with good music and noticeably lacks any of the quirky pieces that were a part of the prior albums.

Crash of the Crown (2021)  This was a bit of a confounding album for me.  On the one hand, the musicality of the songs was very good.  The lyrics were good if a little bit nuanced.  If there was a central narrative message to the album, it was obscured in their attempt to leave that message indistinct.  Were they making an album about Donald Trump?  About Covid or some other pandemic?  Was this more about the general disjointed nature of our culture?  The result leaned a bit too close to being generic to be certain.  I suspect this album will continue to grow on me.

Pieces of Eight (1978)*   My second bit of heresy.  While the songs on this album are definitely Styx material, the subject matter is kind of a mess.  There isn't much of a theme in an album with a boxing song (Great White Hope) and a song alluding to fantasy fiction (Lords of the Ring).  The second half of the album is where most of the good music resides with Blue Collar Man (Long Nights), Renegade, and potentially Queen of Spades and the title track Pieces of Eight.  The album concludes with the return of the oddity track named Aku-Aku.

Brave New World (1999)  This album witnessed the return of Tommy Shaw to the fold.  It also marks the last album with Dennis DeYoung.  The tracklisting illustrates how the group had already begun to split with Shaw and James Young collaborating on one set of tracts and DeYoung working on this own, separate songs.  DeYoung's tracks still sound more like modern Broadway show tunes.  This album is still a collection of very good music.

Cornerstone (1979)*  And here's another bit of heresy.  While none of the songs on Cornerstone are bad, very few of them (Babe aside) stand out in the Styx catalog.  Some of them (e.g. Why Me, Never Say Never) seem to be more filler than anything else.  Good filler, but filler nonetheless.  Dennis DeYoung is recognized by some as the originator of the power ballad.  This album seems to be an effort to make every song some flavor of power ballad.  The result is a collection of not very memorable but pleasant songs.

Kilroy Was Here (1983)  This is the album the famously presaged the break-up of the semi-original Styx lineup.  Dennis DeYoung was enamored with more theatrical writing.  The rest of the band, more prominently James Young and Tommy Shaw, wanted to stay closer to their rock roots.  While the band continued for many years, this was the album where the cracks in their relationship first formed.  Mr. Roboto was the much-maligned lead single for the album.  It was on the radio all of the time.  Sometimes oversaturation of a song can hurt an album's reputation.  Nonetheless, the album has a number of solid songs including Don't Let It End, Just Get Through This Night, and Haven't We Been Here Before.  By the end of the album, it felt a bit more like the soundtrack of something like Oklahoma! or The Music Man.  It was good rock and roll, but it had a touch too many theatrical flourishes.  The ending song, Don't Let It End (reprise), felt a bit more like an old vaudeville number and less of a rock song.

Styx II (1973)  This album marks a slow progression in the development of the band's songwriting and musical style.  It still retains the musical feel of an early 70s album by a generic band of that time with the additional storytelling style that is the hallmark of Styx albums down the ages.

Man of Miracles (1974)  While the album lacks any of the unusual pieces that marked the first three albums, it also doesn't contain any notable songs.  The music is solid and worth a listen.

Styx (1972)   Their debut album is still quite listenable.  "Movement For The Common Man" covers a broad range of musical styles in a single extended track with an interview of a taxicab driver to break things up a bit.  Kind of odd.  While the songs seem to have a sound similar to many other early 1970s bands, you can hear the basic skills that would later take Styx to the top of the charts.  The sounds of the guitars and keyboards are a little fuzzy.  Some of that may be an early 1970s aesthetic and some of it may be the studios at Wooden Nickel Records.

The Serpent Is Rising (1973)   This album was a personal favorite from the time that I discovered it in the 1980s.  So it pains me to say that this album was a modest step backward from their first two albums.  There are elements of progress in their musicality as indicated by The Grove of Eglantine and the first part of As Bad As This.  But there are also quirky elements (the last half of As Bad As This, Krakatoa e.g.) that simply don't fit in on a rock album.  I still want to hear their version of the Halleluja Chorus on the radio one time.

Big Bang Theory (2005)  This collection of covers is somewhat interesting.  The band displays their usual musical and vocal talents and manages to present a couple of interesting performances.  As these are covers rather than new songs, they aren't really all that new/interesting.  It's worth a listen...once.

Cyclorama (2003)  This is a curious album.  It contains some generic 80s rock band music.  It has some pieces that sound like a later-era rock band; think Fountains of Wayne.  It has a quirky snippet with guest vocals by Billy Bob Thorton.  And it has a few pieces that are solidly Styx.  Good but not necessarily memorable music.

Edge of the Century (1990)  Tommy Shaw was in Damn Yankees and unavailable for this album.  Glenn Burtnick replaced Tommy on this album.  It shows.  The musical styles range from mildly 80s electronica to blues to something of a generic 50s vibe.  There is plenty of camp as well.  The addition of a harmonica shifts the sound away from this historical Styx sound.  Aside from a couple of songs like Show Me The Way and Love At First Sight, there isn't really much memorable to this album.  At the end of the day, I am unlikely to listen to this album again.

Circling From Above (2025)  They guys put out a new album this year.  I've listened to is a couple of times.  It just isn't "Styx".  It's heavy on keyboards and synthesizers.  It has a very new-agey tone to the music that would be right at home in Sedona, AZ.  If you do not like rock and roll and do like new-age music, then this might be for you!

There really isn't a binary "listen/don't listen" line to this list.  The Styx discography breaks down into three eras.  The early era obviously begins with the Wooden Nickel Records (Styx, Styx II, TheSerpent is Rising) and concludes with Equinox as the transition album.  The middle section includes their 70s and 80s era albums.  The late section is strung out from the 90s until today.

Each era had notable songs.  Any true Styx fan should at least be familiar with the albums that make up their discography.

I wouldn't recommend Edge of the Century, Cyclorama, or The Big Bang Theory to anyone that isn't a hardcore Styx fan.  There just isn't enough there to be memorable.  Adding in Circling From Above, there's a fourth album that really isn't worth your time.

Otherwise, I think the list is pretty self-evident.  The albums at the top of the list are worth having in heavy rotation in your music queue.  The further down the list, the less frequently I would listen to those albums.

How would you rank Styx's discography?

1/7/2026 - Edit to add Circling From Above

Monday, August 16, 2021

The Echoes of American Military Policies

Pundits are currently rushing to their keyboards to write pieces pointing out how America's departure from Afghanistan is eerily similar to our departure from Vietnam in the 1970s.  In their many breathless words, they will not be wrong.  There are many similarities between our exit from these two conflicts.

Of great importance will be the many veterans left to deal with the emotional impact of leaving pieces of themselves on the battlefield in a cause that was ultimately abandoned because their fellow citizens failed to muster sufficient support.  They lost friends on the battlefield.  They lost friends to suicide on the other battlefield of emotions that follow when they came home.  They lost pieces of themselves overseas and now our nation has said that this wasn't a worthwhile endeavor.

This is not necessarily a partisan issue.  Or at least it shouldn't be regardless of the many people that will try to make it one.  President GW Bush famously shifted focus to Iraq and away from Afghanistan.  President Obama's anti-colonial mindset largely precluded him from mounting a truly effective strategy at ending the Taliban/al-Qaida presence in the region.  To be honest, both men did far more good in Afghanistan than their detractors will ever give them credit.

President Trump campaigned in part on supporting the military but also on getting us out of the Middle East.  It is an odd combination when one considers that the military and the veterans of a conflict genuinely want to win.  In any case, Mr. Trump began voicing a policy preference for leaving Afghanistan regardless of the conditions on the ground.

President Biden is completing the arc.  Our Afghani allies have been abandoned.  The Taliban has already begun the process of restoring their cultural diktats on a populace that really wanted to live more freely than was possible before our invasion of their country.  Members of the Afghani military are being murdered.  Our translators and their families are being slaughtered.  Young girls are being forcibly taken as brides by Taliban fighters.

Most of those breathless columns will seek to shame America for daring to wade into yet another military conflict.  They will point out how we have wasted blood and treasure in another pointless military escapade.

They will be wrong.

In Marine boot camp, many years ago, we were taught some very (very) basic hand-to-hand fighting techniques.  One of those was called the "pillow of death".  Essentially, one arm crossed in front of someone's throat and was locked in place by the other hand.  In combat, you were then supposed to throw them to the ground so that the combination of your shoulder pressing on the back of their head and your forearm across the front of their neck would cause the neck to break.  In training, you put a knee in the middle of their back so that you could practice the handhold without risking your partner's life.

A few years later I found myself taking another Marine home.  He was drunk.  I didn't know it at the time, but he was an unreasonable drunk.  One might even say a mean drunk.

He had not told his wife where he was going that evening.  It was a celebration for a friend that had been accepted for promotion to warrant officer.  She was pissed when we got to his home.  She also lacked the wisdom to know that harping at a drunkard was the least productive way of dealing with the situation.

Arguing led to shouting.  Several times in a row I talked him down and had him pointed towards bed.  Several times in a row, she started in on him again.

Eventually, he took a swing at her.  He found himself with my knee in his back and my forearm across his neck whispering in his ear that he really needed to calm down and just go to bed.

He calmed down.  We talked for a while.  I thought he had his mind right.  So even though his wife wanted me to stay, we walked to the door and I foolishly left.  The bolt clicked home and he screamed his wife's name.

Fortunately, she had gotten the kids out while he and I were talking at the door.

This is not a memory that I'd like to keep, but I suspect it will be with me for some time to come.  I ultimately failed that night.

The point is that in that moment of time, he had precisely two desires.  The first was to be out of sight of witnesses.  The second was to really hurt his wife.  

Those twin desires are also present in much larger groups.

For close to two decades, the American military supported the people of Southeast Asia who did not want to live under the subjugation of a socialist/communist government.  They might not have wanted to be an Asian mirror of Western Europe or the United States.  They also didn't want the poverty, oppression, and murder that were the inevitable result of collectivist governments.

For that brief span, the American military were the shield; they held back the tide.  And while a victorious peace was never realized, what those people had was better than submission to the communists.

I have friends that were in Vietnam for Tet.  They will vociferously point out that we were winning when they left.  And the truth is that we were.  Vietnamese military and civilian leaders confirmed decades later that they lacked the capability to win a military conflict against the United States.  They simply held on until our anti-war movement could persuade our politicians to abandon Southeast Asia.

When we left, those innocent civilians were left alone at the hands of a group that had two great desires.  The first was to be left alone with their pending victims.  The second was to commit great harm upon people whose only crime was daring to disagree with their socialist/communist abusers.

Roughly 600,000 to 800,000 Vietnamese were murdered by the communists after we left Vietnam.  Roughly 2,000,000 Cambodians were murdered by that nation's communists.

We are about to witness the same thing in Afghanistan.  The Taliban will return to stoning people before soccer matches for various offenses.  Women will be forced to cover themselves from head to toe.  They will be denied basic education.  They will be raped.

And I believe it likely that Al-Qaida will rebuild their training camps and indoctrination centers.  Terrorism will have another safe haven.

Staying in Afghanistan would have been bloody, painful, and expensive.  It would never have become something akin to a modern Western democratic state.  But an Afghani government supported by the west was better than the alternative.

In leaving, we offer the Islamists their deepest desire.  They are left alone with their victims.  They are free to brutalize them, rape them, and murder them with impunity.

Such brutality was the norm before we arrived.  It will become the norm again because we have left.

Anyone that advocated leaving should spend the next several years watching what happens in Afghanistan.  The bitter harvest that is about to occur is the direct result of their policy preferences.

Thursday, August 12, 2021

Responding Just In Time - Or Just Not At All

I have a habit...one might call it a penchant...for responding in various forums in a manner that has been falsely described as necro-ing and ghosting.

Essentially, if I read something a few days (and sometimes longer) after something is posted, and if I see something worth putting in my two cents, then my response will neccesarily appear a few days (and sometimes longer) after the item was initially being bandied about.  The inappropriate allegation is that I am necro-ing the topic in that I am creating interest in something long after it is "dead".

Alternatively, I might be in the middle of a conversation and decide not to respond to my interlocutors' rejoinders.  The cool kids call this "ghosting".

I offer the following for the few that complain about such things.

- It's usually a good idea to let ideas rest for a moment before responding.  There are times where giving myself some additional time to think about something either leads to a better response or sometimes see that all that needs to be said has been said.

- When responding to a conversation, there are times when it becomes clear that the discussion is going south pretty quickly.  It is headed into an area where name-calling is the least of the bad outcomes.  When I see the trainwreck coming, I try to step away from the tracks.

- There are people that are not worth engaging with for various reasons.  Sometimes they clearly aren't open to anything that might modify their perspective.  Sometimes their Overton window is broken.  There are other reasons.  It generally takes quite a few interactions before I decided not to respond to an individual.  And I generally will try again with the same individual on another topic at some point down the road.  It takes a lot of effort on their part for me to plonk someone.

- I have other tasks to accomplish in my life.  I work 40+ hours a week at a job.  I enjoy the company of my beloved bride.  And our kids.  And our grandchildren.  I make quilts.  I read quite a bit.  I help care for my elderly family members.  Life is full and life is good (mostly).

- Sometimes life isn't good.  I had to spend a couple hours helping a family member clear some downed trees that had fallen on their house recently.  I also spent a couple hours retrieving someone that had literally lost their way while driving home.  Getting old sucks.

At the end of the day, I comment and correspond when I have the interest, something useful to add, an interesting interlocutor, and the time.  In this, I have deep sympathy for George R.R. Martin.  Unless someone is paying my bills, they have no right to demand that I respond on their schedule.  Even then, I still have a choice and my interlocutor's desires are not determinative of that decision.  It is, at the very least, rude of someone to behave otherwise.

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Rules For Life - Mr. Marvez Edition

Monique Marvez is a comedian.  For a time she had a weekend show on KFI out of Los Angeles that was distributed on the iHeart radio/streaming network.  I picked up the show as a podcast and was routinely impressed by her ability to switch between humor and commentary at a moment's notice and never really undermine her topic.

In fact, I think it made her perspective more persuasive.

She had a number of "rules for life" that she repeated quite frequently.  I started making a list.  And then her show left KFI and went out into podcast-land where the tone and presentation all changed.  

I still listen from time to time, but the radio show was really a better format for her.

Her abbreviated "rules for life" are:
  1. You don't have to tell the fat kid that they are fat.  They know.
  2. When the village idiot gives you their best ball of string, you take it and you say "thank you".
  3. If you are the intellectual superior in any relationship, it is your obligation to see that it goes well.
And then there are the supplementals:
  • Retail is detail.  
  • You are always selling something, even if it's only yourself.
Sound advice.

An Offer Of Violence

The coarsening of our culture continues apace.  That includes within the SF/F genre.  

A little while back there were legitimate questions raised about a conservative-leaning author making a thinly (very thinly it turned out) veiled reference to tossing communists out of helicopters.  It raised a stink.

Seriously, I think we should do the media next. Put the fear of Americans into them.

Saint Augusto bless us.

Anyone has helicopters?

To be clear, it should raise a stink.  I had initially pushed back a bit in part because I was unfamiliar with the reference to Pinochet's army tossing communists out of helicopters.  I remain steadfastly opposed to patent threats of violence.

Parenthetically, I'm also opposed to the tactic of miscategorizing dissenting speech as "violence".

The latest example of casually threatening speech come courtesy of Steve Davidson.  Mr. Davidson is an editor of the Amazing Stories Anthology series and is significantly involved* with the company that owns the trademark to "Amazing Stories".

Via his Facebook page, Mr. Davidson offered the following bit of authoritarianism.

sorry, but I have to say it, even if I get banned because of it:

Yesterday, member's of the Idiots Party - also known as Republicans" conducted a mass march protest through the Capitol to register their displeasure with the new mask mandate.

That action, by "elected leaders" makes me start to believe that that "Eugenics" thing Hitler was promoting might not be an entirely bad idea...maybe its even a good idea that's been tainted by bad history.

Hardly anyone would object to isolating someone with, say, smallpox, and apparently, a fair number of people in this country are infected with mental smallpox.  We ought to have the means to protect ourselves from them - and the sooner we get rid of them and stop them from indiscriminately breeding all over the place, the better off we'll be.

Yeah, sure, some innocents will get sweapt up in the purge, some will not actualy deserve that fate but, you know what they say about making omelets - cracking a few eggs is mandatory.

Eugenics, exposure on a hillside (presuming we've not exterminated the local wolf population), putting them on an ice floe, summary execution - these are all becoming more and more reasonable solutions, the deeper down this rabbit hole we go.

A veil that thin on a model would move the photographs from a fashion magazine into Playboy territory pretty quickly.  Opining that Hitler might have had a good idea is never a good look.  Or at least, it shouldn't be.  

Comments wandered into approval of using flamethrowers and other bits of nastiness.

Given the modern cultural penchant for black-holing gross behavior, I offer the screenshots, below.  









Unabashedly offering violence to people due to differences of political opinion ought to be something that earns widespread concern and rebuke.

Make no mistake.  This is about a difference of political opinion.  Should the state be authorized to send rough, armed men to your door, hold you down, and inject something into your body; in particular an experimental vaccine?  I think not.

Mr. Davidson's commentary reflects a mindset that is inappropriate for governing a free people.  At the very least, someone ought to offer him tea.

Paraphrasing Mrs. Hoyt, one hundred million eggs and still no omelet.

For some perspective, I have taken the Pfizer vaccine.  The net risk made it a no-brainer for me.  I respect that other people have different risk levels that may cause them to make a different decision.  I also made cloth masks for myself, my family, and several healthcare companies early on in the pandemic.  I now have N95 masks for those rare occasions where such a thing is warranted.  I am much less inclined to go to a cloth mask as our knowledge about the efficacy of them has been evolving; regrettably downward.

And no.  I don't trust the CDC nor the FDA further than I can throw them.

A modest postscript.  Mr. Davidson bought a 30-day restriction from Facebook for the post documented above.  I found the post above well after he became aware of that restriction.  At some point in the last 24 hours, he has either deleted that post or restricted access to something less than "general public".  If he decided to delete it, then he has made the world a slightly better place.

*I looked.  I couldn't find a clear definition of the relationship.  So...vague on purpose!

Sunday, July 25, 2021

Review: American on Purpose: The Improbable Adventures of an Unlikely Patriot

American on Purpose: The Improbable Adventures of an Unlikely PatriotAmerican on Purpose: The Improbable Adventures of an Unlikely Patriot by Craig Ferguson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Craig Ferguson was once the host of The Late Late Show that aired after David Letterman. He was in the running for The Late Show when David retired. Craig didn't get the job and the country is a poorer place for it.

Craig is a funny guy. I was a big fan of his show. And while YouTube will show you tons of "Craig with the ladies" segments, his monologues were really the thing that attracted me to his show. Sure, he told jokes. But he would also take the time to express a serious message from time to time. Mostly that he had learned some things the hard way and wished that people wouldn't make those same mistakes.

He loves America - warts and all.

I thought this would be a "funny" book. Lots of jokes or stories exaggerated for the laughs. While I'm sure there were a few exaggerations here and there, it wasn't for laughs. While I smiled a bit here and there, it quickly became obvious that this was more about how Craig's life lived on the edge of the guardrail and perhaps even a step or two on the wrong side of it.

Rather than being about comedy, this is a book of inspiration. If he can make it through his minefield of a life then so can you. So can I.

Welcome to America, Craig. Patriots are always welcome.

View all my reviews

Book Review - The Lost War

The Lost War (Eidyn #1)The Lost War by Justin Lee Anderson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This book was the winner of the Self Published Fantasy Blog Off for 2020-2021. I always read the winner of that contest and have never been disappointed.

This book was engrossing. I read far too late into the evenings.

I'm giving it 4 stars because for the first 75% of the book, it was a pretty traditional fantasy book. A hero that is saving his country. Everyone is on edge from a recently concluded war.

Go here. Do the thing. Go there. Encounter bad stuff on the way. Get there. Discover something new. Break the king's orders. Go other places. Get the thing. Face the evil villain.

And then the book changes. The hero finds that they weren't really fighting for the right side. And the book really takes off from there.

Not getting more specific because this book is worth every penny you will pay. A very satisfying read.

View all my reviews

Monday, July 12, 2021

2021 Hugo Awards - Best Graphic Novel

Once & Future vol. 1: The King Is Undead, written by Kieron Gillen, Illustrated by Dan Mora, colored by Tamra Bonvillain, lettered by Ed Dukeshire (BOOM! Studios) - An innovative twist on the Arthurian legends in all their guises.  Great art.  Thoroughly engaging storyline.

Monstress, vol. 5: Warchild, Author: Marjorie Liu, Artist: Sana Takeda (Image Comics) - Liu and Takeda continue their series in style.  There were very few moments where I felt that I was missing something important from the volumes that I had not read.

Ghost-Spider vol. 1: Dog Days Are Over, Author: Seanan McGuire, Artist: Takeshi Miyazawa and Rosi Kämpe (Marvel) - Classic Marvel art style. Good story.  Not exactly groundbreaking work, but still very enjoyable.

DIE, Volume 2: Split the Party, written by Kieron Gillen and Stephanie Hans, letters by Clayton Cowles (Image Comics) - Further adventures of people that end up playing D&D for real.  Several mini-plots.  A derivative plot culdesac involving Charlotte Bronte and her siblings.  Good art.  Decent story.  Too much of the plot is dependent on knowledge of the past volume.

No Award 

Parable of the Sower: A Graphic Novel Adaptation, written by Octavia Butler, adapted by Damian Duffy, illustrated by John Jennings (Harry N. Abrams) - Marginal art.  I don't think the original work by Ms. Butler translates as well into the graphic novel format.  At least in this case there was a lot of telling and not as much showing.  I dropped out about a third of the way through due to the style of the graphic novel, but am now inspired to read the original book.

Invisible Kingdom, vol 2: Edge of Everything, Author: G. Willow Wilson, Artist: Christian Ward (Dark Horse Comics) - Unremarkable art.  Unmemorable story.  Not worthy of consideration for this award.

Sunday, July 4, 2021

Interesting News - 6/28/2021

Robocalls by scammers probably will never end.  But we can hope that they will be reduced for a bit at the end of June 2021.  At that point, all telecommunications providers will be required to utilize Stir/Shaken technology to confirm the identity of callers.  The scammers will undoubtedly find another vector, but a respite from scam callers would be most welcome.

The news of Donald Rumsfeld's death will be old-ish by the time this posts.  My initial reaction was that we will see some pretty ghoulish behavior from some of the more prominent leftist folks in the wake of his death.  Maybe I'll get lucky and be completely wrong on that count.  I'd like to be wrong.  But history is on my side.



Monday, June 28, 2021

Hugo Awards - Novelette 2021

I am motivated to read this year's novelette nominees primarily based on the first story listed below.  It was originally published as "I Sexually Identify As An Attack Helicopter".  The author was then subject to all manner of abuse and harassment until they asked Clarkesworld [to withdraw the story].

I thought at the time that the story was marvelous.  The text of the story was great.  One need not delve into the subtext to enjoy the story.

But...if you wanted to reflect on that subtext, gender in general and transgender specifically, then there was a lot to chew on.  Most importantly, the author didn't kick the reader out of the story for wanting to think about it further.  The best method for attracting converts is to leave the door open.

  1. “Helicopter Story”, Isabel Fall (Clarkesworld, January 2020) - well...see above.  This is a top-notch story.
  2. “The Inaccessibility of Heaven”, Aliette de Bodard (Uncanny Magazine, July/August 2020) - The story tells of fallen angels that rebelled against Heaven/God who are forced to live among common humans.  It isn't clear if this is our Earth, but it is close enough.  The rebellion lives on while they are on earth.  Humans are subject to angelic "effects".  The angels long to return to their home in heaven.  I thought it was a well-crafted tale.
  3. “Two Truths and a Lie”, Sarah Pinsker (Tor.com) - This story is about a young woman who slowly discovers that she and most of her childhood friends were subjected to a sort of mystical storyteller whose stories about the children seem to come true.  It is a bit of a think piece on the impact of our words on one another and especially on our children that slowly resolves into a horror ending.  Pretty good stuff.
  4. “Burn, or the Episodic Life of Sam Wells as a Super”, A.T. Greenblatt (Uncanny Magazine, May/June 2020) - The world of this story includes people with supernatural abilities.  Unfortunately, the normal humans don't like the supers...at least until the supers can step in and save the normal humans.  The ending wasn't the greatest as our protagonist, Sam Wells natch, discovers that he doesn't want to use his powers.  He just wants to be an accountant that helps the "front line" supers do their thing.  We discover at the end that Sam is immune to fire.  His clothes, not so much.  I think a better ending would have involved Sam being adopted by firefighters as he can wander into fires to rescue people without the fear of being burned alive.
  5. No Award
  6. “Monster”, Naomi Kritzer (Clarkesworld, January 2020) - A young scientist goes to China in search of her high school friend that just so happens to be a ubiquitous super-brilliant villain that has murdered many people to develop a serum that makes him super strong and quick.  She ends up killing the villain and destroying all evidence of his discovery to prevent it from falling into the government's hands.  This was not a bad story.  It just didn't measure up to what I think Hugo-worthy work should be.
Not mentioned -

“The Pill”, Meg Elison (from Big Girl (PM Press))

It seems like this story might be in conversation with Cliff and the Calories by Robert A Heinlein.  In Heinlein's tale, our protagonist is committed to a diet to keep her in a super svelte condition because she thinks that is what her boyfriend wants.  Spoiler, he prefers her with a little more meat on her bones as being too skinny makes her look unhealthy.

In The Pill, our protagonist is obese in a world that is discovered a pill that causes everyone to be a healthy weight.  The downside is that one in ten people who take the pill die.  Our heroine eschews the pill and ends up being a sort of live porn star who is steadily being encouraged to go from obese to morbidly obese.

The story has several significant flaws.

  • It portrays the US FDA as rapidly and cavalierly approving the drug even though the 1:10 death rate is well documented from the trials.  The FDA never approves a drug quickly.  And FDA officials are terrified of approving a drug that kills one out of 100,000 much less one out of every ten people.
    • As an aside, it should be pointed out that America's problem with obesity is primarily the result of poor government policies originating with the food pyramid of the 1970s that advocated an increase in starches and carbohydrates.
  • Obesity is not healthy.  The NIH estimates that obesity reduces a person's lifespan by an average of 14 years.  There are real-world consequences for being obese that include heart issues and diabetes. Our various public and private means of funding health care are strained by obesity.
    • As an additional aside, consider the implications of a treatment that kills one in ten that then improves the health of the other nine such that they regain 14 years of healthy, productive living?  While we lose a person 30-40 years early, we gain over 120 cumulative years in the other nine.  I wouldn't accept a 1:10 death rate in a pharmaceutical treatment, this particular cold equation suggests that our society would be better off even with that disastrous sort of drug.
  • The story briefly entertains and then immediately discards, the idea of changing one's diet and increasing one's physical activity as a means of losing weight.  Instead, the story validates and excuses poor eating habits.
  • The story describes those that take the pill as having a single body style.  There isn't any more diversity of appearance as everyone has the same chiseled features.  That is utter nonsense.  If you look back at older photos before American prosperity gave rise to the American obesity epidemic you will see a wide range of appearances that were all very healthy.  The author is offering a false choice to the reader.
Unlike Heinlein's tale that supports a healthy lifestyle, this story endorses a decidedly unhealthy lifestyle.

Being honest here, I have struggled with my weight.  In my prime in the Corps, I was 190 lbs.  After the service, I gradually increased my weight to 255 lbs.  After I got serious about my health, I was able to go back down to 195 lbs. - they were good-looking pounds, but I still had more to lose.  Various factors over the last few years have caused me to go back up to 225 lbs.  I want to go back down.  Losing weight is hard.

But it isn't impossible for the vast majority of obese people if they are willing to learn some simple rules about eating and commit to a very modest amount of exercise.  This story does harm to the obese by offering succor to their desire to be seen as "normal".  Rewarding this story with being a finalist for a Hugo is unconscionable.

Sunday, June 27, 2021

Interesting News - 6/21/2021

If my opinion isn't persuasive, then please listen to these American parents talk about how the methods being used to present CRT in their local schools are racist.  There are elements of CRT that are useful.  We certainly need to teach a broader review of American history.  There are other elements that are, without question, racist.

As I already knew, the key to addressing the California wildfires is forest management.  California has denied foresters the authority and funding to do their job properly.  Californians have paid the price for their government's malfeasance.  Hopefully, this policy change for the better is the start of a trend.

The new Miss Michigan is Vivian Zhong - currently a medical student studying pediatric cancers.  Congratulations Vivian!

The IRS has denied non-profit status to a Christian educational organization on the basis that biblical teachings are exclusively Republican.  I'm OK with that decision as long as they use the same rationale for de-certifying left-wing groups such as Move On who exist to educate voters in a manner that exclusively supports Democrats.

FTR, I'm sorry to hear that the Bidens lost Champ.  Also FTR, I've not seen anyone in my media stream mocking the Bidens over their loss.  That won't stop leftists from claiming otherwise.

David Chipman is Mr. Biden's nominee to head the ATF.  He said he wants to ban "assault weapons".  But he cannot define with any degree of specificity what constitutes an "assault weapon".  Unsurprisingly.  If it can't be defined, then it can be enforced on a whim.  George Orwell has had a few words to say about government based on the whims of a few.

Requiring positive identification for voters to be eligible to vote is popular among Americans across the board.  All races.  All party affiliations.  All income levels.  Based on Byron York's breakdown of the polling results, the people that are most opposed to requiring voter ID are white, rich, college-educated Democrats.  Not terribly surprising as they seem to have the least in common with average Americans.

The same building.  The same sort of activity.  Two very different outcomes.  Justice is certainly not blind in Washington D.C.  Protesters that stormed the Senate chambers in the Capitol building over Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court were given the option of being arrested.  Those protesters that stormed the same building on January 6, 2021 were not.  I have issues with the motivations of both groups, but that isn't the point.  The point is that the government is apparently electing to enforce laws based on whether the viewpoint of the perpetrators is pleasing or offensive to the government agents doing the enforcement.  Selective enforcement of our laws undermines our system of justice and threatens the basis of our great republic.

An American Senator is a member of a racist club.  He will not be called to account for that membership.  He is a Democrat.  The Democrats routinely get a pass from our leftist-dominated media on their bigotry.

More good news from the world of medicine.  Another treatment for AIDS is on the horizon.  As the blogfather says "faster, please!"

A final item about Joe Bolanos.  He attended Mr. Trump's rally on January 6th, but left the ellipse for a hotel rather than walking to the Capitol Building.  He was not there when the protesters broke into the Capitol.  He never entered the building.  Yet his home was raided, he was taken into custody in front of news cameras, and his property seized in the raid has yet to be returned.  I you ever wonder why folks are skeptical of the FBI and DoJ, here is a prime example that justifies that skepticism.




Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Juneteenth

Considering the kerfuffle over the Juneteenth celebrations last weekend, I thought I'd put in my $0.02.

The day is a fitting celebration for the end of slavery.  Every American should celebrate that occasion regardless of race.  It is a piece of American history and our national heritage.

However, it should not be a holiday that is marked by a paid day off for federal government employees.  That isn't a comment about the holiday's importance or relevance.  It is a comment about how federal employees get ten paid holidays; several of which are not holidays for most private employers.  That should not be increased to eleven.  Nor am I interested in displacing a currently established federal holiday.

Our nation celebrates a great many holidays (both secular and religious) without giving federal employees the day off.  We can and should celebrate this one as well.

Frankendann Rises

 As suggested a couple weeks ago, typing remains a bit difficult.  It is getting better.

The short version is that we were hosting a couple of dogs; one of whom decided that climbing a four-foot chain-link fence was an appropriate activity.  I disagreed and hauled her butt back off of the fence before she could leap into the neighbor's yard.

One of the ligaments or tendons in my left wrist thought that such an action was unwise.  I won the battle with the dog, but the wrist won the war.

I had reconstructive surgery a few weeks back.



So my summer will be consumed with a series of casts, braces, and exercises developed by the horned-one for his amusement.  I hope to get the pin removed in a couple of weeks.  The doc has assured me that the removal is very easy.  I'll feel a bit like Frankenstein in the meantime.

And here's the cause of all the trouble.  She's gone home now.  She's a very nice puppy...except for a few minutes last winter when she became just a bit too focused on climbing fences.



Monday, June 21, 2021

A Quilting Family

I recently learned that I am not the first person in my family to take up quilting.  My grandmother, Isabel Cramer (Maybee) Stark, made quilts.  Two of them to be precise.

Grandma Stark sewed a lot.  She made curtains for lots of family members when they bought new homes.  She made clothes for my mom[1] until mom started school.  Grandma Stark also made clothes for her cousin, Charlotte Ann.

I used to spend a week or two each summer with my Grandma and Grandpa.  They took me to see Star Wars; my pick, not theirs.  One summer I discovered her embroidery floss.  She let me make my own patches for my denim jacket.  It was remarkably fun doing something from scratch.

I did 4H one year to learn about embroidery.  Fast-forward a few decades and I have completed roughly 30 quilts.

One of my aunts revealed that Grandma had also quilted.  Her first quilt is on display in my aunt and uncle's home and it will eventually find its way to one of my cousins.

The pattern is known as Mariner's Compass.  I've only completed one quilt using that pattern and I'm unlikely to return to it as it is very time/labor-intensive.  Lots of custom cutting for the pieces.  I had the benefit of some modern triangles to help with cutting each of the various pieces.  Making the same pieces using a ruler and custom measurements would be much harder.

Isabel Stark - Bicentennial Project - Click to embiggen

Parenthetically, that headboard and side table were in the room that was my aunt's for many years.  It was good to see those magnificent pieces of carpentry again.

My aunt sent along the following that has been lightly edited for privacy purposes.

Mom made the quilt in 1976 and deemed it her Bicentennial Project.

She used a large white cotton sheet and appliquéd the stars onto the sheet. Looking it over and holding it up to the light, I can see two machined seams putting the backing together. It was a bedspread, and there is no batting inside.

It looks to me like she probably machine stitched the edges to the backing and then folded the edging over onto the front white sheet, and that is hand-stitched.

I remember her saying that a traditional quilt should be done by hand. All of the stars and the appliqué are done by hand as is the quilting. 

Of course….I have no idea when the long arm machines started to be produced.

Mom only made one other quilt. It was after she finished this one. The second quilt was commissioned by a friend for her mother and the commission went to the church. It was not a formal pattern and was made of many fabrics in a diagonal across the piece. The friend, a professional pottery artist, said at the time that Mom’s sense of color and design was phenomenal in that she never had any formal training.

Compass - Click to embiggen

As described, Grandma created the compasses from pieces and then sewed them onto a flat sheet.  This is a process known as applique.

Compass center detail - Click to embiggen
 
The center medallions were also added via applique.

Compass detail - Click to embiggen

Here is a detail from one of the compass sections.  

Accent strips - click to embiggen

The additional accents are just strips that are gradually shifted to cross over one another.  They also do a weaving pattern over the medallions located between the compasses.

Back and binding - click to embiggen

Grandma Stark had a great sense of style and color.  I hope that my quilts continue that tradition.  Unfortunately, the Compass I made for my dad hasn't survived very well.  The colors on the Michigan State fabric ran.


[1]My mom would victimize my brother and me by making our clothes while we were young.  There are photos.  There are photos!  I cast very few aspersions towards my Grandma, but setting this example for my mom is one thing we all could have lived without.

Sunday, June 20, 2021

Interesting News - 6/14/2021

The bottom line for me is that the crowd would not have been in DC on January 6th were it not for the lies about the vote and lies about then-Vice President Pence's ability to alter the counting of the electoral votes.  The larger...and one might correctly point out mostly peaceful...crowd provided cover for those elements that wanted to engage in violence in an attempt to stop the just process of counting the electoral votes.  If President Trump and his allies had been telling the truth, then the crowd of protesters would have been much smaller and would not have been able to provide that sort of cover for those bent on mayhem.  That being said, I do think it is useful to understand how they got into the Capitol building.  I think it was largely incompetence on the part of Capitol hill police, but who knows.

This sort of thing drives me a bit nuts.  If we were talking about one of Donald Trump's progeny, the left and the media...but I repeat myself...would be consumed in near apoplectic rage declaiming the entire enterprise as thinly veiled corruption.  But it is Joe Biden's son, so our media "betters" cannot be bothered.

The latest in the saga of the real Lady A; vocalist Anita White.  The woke crowd continues their pattern of using their position of privilege to abuse minorities in the cause of appearing moral.

The Babylon Bee has won against The New York Times.  Great news for those in favor of free speech and fact.

Is the tide turning against Cancel Culture?  Probably not...yet.  But I trust that people like Kevin Hart and Charles Barkley will help lead the way out of that wilderness.

According to climate change theory, an increase in global temperatures should cause an increase in extreme weather. May is the month with the most tornados.  Yet not only was May 2021 pretty quiet, but almost all of the low tornado months on record have also come in the last 20 years.  Maybe...follow me on this...the dominant theories are subject to a significant level of uncertainty that should cause us to be reasonably cautious about accepting the climate models used to express those theories.

Continuing with the climate change trend, one theory is that humanity is the driving factor in the increasing level of CO2 in the atmosphere.  The Wuhan/Covid pandemic of 2020 caused a significant reduction in global travel as well as local travel.  Yet the trend of increasing CO2 in the atmosphere has not altered one iota.  Maybe human activities aren't quite as influential as some folks suggest.

Recently, the socialist news agency Propublica presented a report on the taxes paid by a couple of the wealthiest Americans.  They attempted to calculate an effective tax rate.  Unsurprisingly, they utterly failed.  The tax rate is based on one's income, not on one's total wealth.

Here are (one - two) a couple of good articles on race and racial issues in America from Quillette.  Read the whole thing.

An attorney with the ACLU claims that liberals are leaving First Amendment free speech behind.  I disagree with his assessment that these are liberals.  Being a liberal requires being open-minded and tolerant.  The people the attorney is referencing are either leftists or potential future American Chekas.  They neither understand nor desire to be open-minded or tolerant of anything that disagrees with their theology ideology.

One last item for the week is a look back at how the feds were interested in Hunter Biden's fiscal issues back in 2016.  Hunter neglected to pay his taxes - I mean a LOT of unpaid taxes.  Something that would invite the full-court press from the IRS if it were a normal citizen.  But Hunter has connections.  Naturally, the left and the media...but I repeat myself...are disinterested in this wealthy American that can't be bothered to pay his fair share.  Nor are they interested in the appearance of impropriety surrounding his finances.



Friday, June 18, 2021

2021 Hugo Awards - Best Novel

Typing is still a bit hard these days, so this will be brief.  My final ballot for the Best Novel Hugo Award for 2021 will be as follows.  I think.

  1. Black Sun, Rebecca Roanhorse (Gallery / Saga Press / Solaris)
  2. Piranesi, Susanna Clarke (Bloomsbury)
  3. Harrow The Ninth, Tamsyn Muir (Tor.com)
  4. Network Effect, Martha Wells (Tor.com)
  5. No Award
  6. The Relentless Moon, Mary Robinette Kowal (Tor Books / Solaris)
  7. [blank]
Unmentioned
  • The City We Became, N.K. Jemisin (Orbit)
Black Sun was a fantastic read.  It was infused with several mythologies from the pre-Columbian Americas.  The book also contained some elements of the grimdark sub-genre; a personal preference.  I was ignoring everyone so I could read more.  Ms. Roanhorse is a tremendous talent.  This book is a showcase for that talent.  Just read it.

Piranesi was also a great read.  It contained reality-bending elements that were reminiscent of Philip K. Dick.  A worthy nominee, but not quite as good as Black Sun.
An aside before we continue.  I have previously suggested that the pool of Hugo Award nominators appears to have a limited range of authors/topics/publishers that they will consider as suitable for their nominations.  I periodically encounter a modestly provicial attitude that this limited range of experience is suitable because "it's the Hugos".

The result of that attitude is that successive novels in a series end up being nominated even though prior entries nominated in prior years were not selected for the award.  My general experience is that the quality of successive entries in a series frequently declines as the series progresses.  That is partially the result of successive entries either relying on the reader being familiar with prior entries to fully engage with the current entry and/or the author creating a cliffhanger ending to encourage the reading of the next installment.  This award is for the "Best Novel".  A novel should be a complete piece of work.

I am considering the option of a personal rule that puts any novel from a series below No Award unless all of the prior entries have won for the years that they were nominated.  At the very least, I think the bar should be higher for a subsequent entry to win a Best Novel Hugo if the prior entry/entries did not also win the award.  Other people will make other choices.

Harrow the Ninth is the second in a series from Tamsyn Muir.  The first entry, Gideon the Ninth, was fantastic.  I had it in second place behind Middlegame on my ballot last year.  Harrow the Ninth was a fun and engaging book.  While it included most of the same characters as the prior entry, their relationships were substantially different.  One need not have read the first installment to enjoy this book.  Unfortunately, the book ends on a cliffhanger, so this isn't a complete story.  The entire book bends reality in so many ways.  The ending was a completely unexpected twist.  I will read the third installment eventually, but probably not when it comes out as I suspect that it will be heavily nominated for the Hugo Best Novel category.  If this were 2022, then I'd probably put it below No Award based on the principle discussed above.  I think this series would make a great Best Series nominee.

Network Effect is the latest entry in the Murderbot series from Martha Wells.  I read the entire series in one sitting last year.  It is a great series.  The series is nominated for the Best Series award and I have voted for it for that award.  However, there are a couple of reasons why Network Effect doesn't belong at the top of the Best Novel ballot.  First, as described above, the reader really needs exposure to the prior entries in the series to get the full effect of the novel.  The novel does not stand on its own.  As a separate plot flaw, our protagonist, Murderbot, still isn't wearing armor despite several entries in the series where a little armor would have been very helpful.  While Murderbot is continuing to develop in other areas, they simply haven't learned that part of their old existence, the wearing of armor, might continue to be useful from time to time in their new existence.  Again, if this were 2022, then I'd probably put this below No Award despite finding it to be a very enjoyable book.

No Award - this should be self-explanatory.

The Relentless Moon is the third entry in the Lady Astronauts series by Mary Robinette Kowal.  It continues the tradition of heavy-handed virtue signaling.  The reader is to take but one message from the book and no enjoyment of the book is to be permitted unless that message is received and accepted as gospel truth.  Also, the story involves a level of trust in the competence of the United Nations that has never been justified in the entire history of that clubhouse for national chief executives.  I noped out of this one early.

I am not mentioning The City We Became at all on my ballot.  The book began with a reference to the demonstrably false narrative that modern police in the US kill black men willy nilly without repercussions.  The facts do not support that narrative.  The facts do support a long-overdue national conversation about how police interact with all of our citizens.  The facts do support changing police culture so that Americans that are black are treated with the same level of trust and respect as all other Americans receive.  But no rational reading of the current statistics regarding people killed by the police justifies the narrative that the police are routinely killing American black citizens.  Shortly thereafter, the author included a signal that she doesn't care for white people to read her book.  I accepted her racist language on its face value and promptly gave it the Dorothy Parker treatment.  I rarely regret purchasing a Hugo Best Novel nominated work.  This is one such exception.

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Interesting News - 6/7/2021

 Another weekly roundup.  Enjoy!

Funny how things worked out; A Dry Bones comic.  Not haha funny.  The other funny.



Sunday, June 6, 2021

Interesting News 5/31/2021

The continuing hatred for Tim Tebow mystifies me as well.  He has done nothing to deserve it.

Requiring positive identification isn't a controversial process in Europe.  It should not be controversial in the United States either.

Democrat Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton may not have gotten the memo from the DNC.  But gender is not supposed to matter according to some.  Common sense and human history suggest that it does.

Old but still relevant.  Evergreen, one might say.  Why the Hammer and Sickle Should Be Treated Like the Swastika

Early on, people labeled concerns about the Covid/Wuhan virus originating from a laboratory located in China as xenophobic and fundamentally flawed.  Their allegations of xenophobia were wrong when they were made.  We may never have 100% proof of it coming from a lab thanks to the secretive CCP government.  But we should never have allowed the media and their leftist political allies to prevent the reasoned discussion of the lab origin theory.  It's looking more and more like there was some sort of lab accident and the American people were partially funding certain activities at the lab.

An interesting profile of Sen. Tim Scott (R)-SC.  I'm not sure if he will run for the Presidency, but I think he would make a good one.  Scott-Sasse 2024?  Or the other way around.  Either option works for me.

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Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Typery Foreshortened

 My typed work will be a bit brief over the coming months.  I am recovering from having the link between my scaphoid and lunate reconstructed.  Typing with only one hand encourages brevity but does little for clarity.

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Interesting News - 5/24/2021

This is the second installment of our Interesting News series.  Enjoy!

Sinfest 5/22/2021 - Tatsuya nails it in one!

Excessive TV rots the brain and the body.  TV time may be a proxy for just being sedentary.  In either case, go for a walk, do something that requires actual thought and action to maintain your health.

Matt (or Mat - I'm not sure) is someone that I have been following (on and off) for several years.  It turns out that he has an affinity for numbers (hence his handle "Polimath") and a talent for data formatting and presentation.  He has had a productive year analyzing Covid numbers.  In his latest from Substack, he challenges people to not believe stories that are too good to be true.  In this case, the media narrative that the D or R behind a state governor's name is not a useful proxy for evaluating Covid related public policies.