My wife and I were shopping at Winco yesterday, and one guy became quite belligerent about refusing to wear a mask. "You can't make me!" Regardless of the county ordinance, Winco can require anyone entering the store to abide by their rules or leave. Not leaving means trespassing and police arrest.
Conservative. Idaho. Software engineer. Historian. Trying to prevent Idiocracy from becoming a documentary.
Email complaints/requests about copyright infringement to clayton @ claytoncramer.com. Reminder: the last copyright troll that bothered me went bankrupt.
"And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose." -- Rom. 8:28Thursday, December 31, 2020
Someone Needs to Explain the Concept of Private Property to This Guy
Something to Pass by Your Friends Who Voted for Biden to Get Their Student Loans Forgiven
President-elect Joe Biden recently said that he is “unlikely” to cancel student loans through executive order.
Speaking to a group of columnists last week, Biden reportedly said “it’s arguable that the president may have the executive power to forgive up to $50,000 in student debt.”
“Well, I think that’s pretty questionable. I’m unsure of that. I’d be unlikely to do that,” Biden said.
Karen Tumulty, a columnist for The Washington Post, wrote on Biden’s comments for a recent op-ed.
“Biden has said he would forgive $10,000 in student debt for all borrowers, and the rest of the debt for those who attended public colleges or historically Black colleges and universities and earn less than $125,000 a year,” CNBC reported in November.
Unlike Trump, politicians regard campaign promises as being what Christina Rossetti called "pie crust promises": easily made, easily broken.
A Red Flag Law Should Have Caught This Guy, But They Don't Care About Crazies With Bombs
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — Federal investigators are looking into evidence the Antioch man who detonated a bomb in downtown Nashville Christmas morning had spent time hunting for alien life forms in a nearby state park and was interested in “lizard people,” according to law enforcement sources.
The sources told ABC News that Anthony Quinn Warner, 63, may have been motivated, at least in part, by “paranoia over 5G technology,” but that they also found writings that contained ramblings about assorted conspiracy theories, including the idea of shape-shifting reptilian creatures that appear in human form and attempt world domination.
Federal agencies are working to figure out if the beliefs somehow contributed to Warner detonating a bomb inside of an RV parked near Second Avenue North and Commerce Street around 6:30 a.m. Friday, killing himself, injuring three others and damaging more than 40 buildings.
Do ya think there might be a connection? Do they shape-shift into Democrats?
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Another Nerddom Special
Making Toilet Paper Moonshine. He uses an enzyme called cellulase that breaks cellulose into sugars. The rest of the process is obvious. Priceless comments:
Tuesday, December 29, 2020
Interesting Film
Too Weird to Believe
12/28/20 College Fix reports on a threat to sue University of Rhode Island if they do not discriminate based on race:
“Some Black, White and Latino students shall join in another class action lawsuit if the next URI President is not an African-American with an ancestry to slavery,” read the list of demands put out by the Diversity Think Tank at the University of Rhode Island.
The complete list of demands spans 46 different points of contention over nearly 15,000 words.
“And, if anyone reading this asks why the next president of URI must be an African-American but has never questioned why URI has had 128-years of white presidents then you must be a racist,” it states....
“Current recruitment firm for senior leadership must change immediately. Current recruiting firm is using the same racist procedures and embedded discriminatory practices that have produced the same all-White leadership at URI for 128 years,” read the opening of this particular demand.
“All current search committees that have produced the same URI senior leaders for 128 years without a single African-American, Latino, Native American or African-American with an ancestry to slavery must be disbanded with immediate effect.”
If racism is a factor, I would look at the small number of black Ph.D.s over the last 128 years, before assuming racism in search process.
“Even Prof. Louis Fosu, experienced what he characterizes as the refined asphyxiation of Black intellect at URI, after he was informed by the Criminal Justice Department Chair in 2018 that there was nothing he could teach in URI’s all-white Criminal Justice Department,” the grievance states. “The entire URI Criminal Justice department is the epitome of institutional and structural racism at URI and needs a complete overhaul and critical restructuring of curriculum, staff and hiring practices.”
If I applied to teach in my college's Criminal Justice Department, I am quite sure that I would get no classes to teach: my MA is in the wrong field.
Other demands and from the activists include tenure for all Latino and black professors and more scholarships for racial minorities.
Automatic tenure based on race. Why do I think of the National Socialist Aryanization of German universities? Amazingly, the University is telling them where to put their proposal.
Monday, December 28, 2020
Asymptomatic Infection
Household Transmission of SARS-CoV-2A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Infections are primarily within household. No surprise. Infections by "asymptomatic index cases (0.7%; 95% CI, 0%-4.9%)" Yes statistically indistinguishable from 0. Don't expect to read this anywhere that has a an audience.
More Evidence of Death Inflation
Washington's Freedom Foundation has been asking the Washington State Department of Health to clarify how their COVID-19 death counts are calculated. The question:
3. What is the source of death counts reported on the DOH COVID-19 dashboard?
The answer:
Deaths are reported initially through EDRS. These deaths are linked to positive COVID cases in WDRS through name and date of birth. Any individual who has a positive COVID-19 test and subsequentlydies is counted on the dashboards.
This is consistent with the experiences of coroners in other states seeing gunshot and traffic accident deaths reported as COVID-19 deaths because they tested positive at some point in time.
This does not make it a hoax, but at least 13% of Washington State's COVID-19 deaths seem not to be COVID-19 deaths. This inflation of the numbers makes a lot of people invoke falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus, even if they do not know Latin.
A Math Problem
For
I want a formula that computes distance from chord to circle for any arbitrary point along chord. I have been beating myself up all morning with what little algebra and trig remains trying to figure this out. Sagitta is easy for the center of the chord, but what about at other points?
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
Slovakia
Mass testing for Covid brought down the infection rate in Slovakia by about 60% in one week, say UK researchers – but in combination with tough quarantine rules and other measures that are not being implemented in Liverpool or elsewhere in the UK.
Slovakia guaranteed high take-up of the rapid tests by requiring employers not to allow people to work without a certificate to prove they had tested negative. Anybody who got a positive result had to go into quarantine with their family, but their full salary was paid for the 10 days of isolation.
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Bipod
Looking for bipods for a QD swivel rifle and AR-15 pattern rifle (no Picatinny rail). Amazon has both Harris and Magpul bipods (I assume American made). I suspect the Magpul is pretty decent quality. I know Harris bipods are just awesome, but a bit more expensive. Curiously cheap what appears to be a copy of the Harris is CVLife, which I am sure must be ChiCom made, but made of carbon fiber, so really light.
Magpul, Harris, UTG (all USA made): experience?
Monday, December 21, 2020
Interesting Article About COVID-19 Misinformation
Have Any of You Received the COVID19 Vaccine Yet?
Sanity in Britain
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Interesting Article About 2004 Election Fraud Claims
I Am Sure You Are Aware of the National Socialist Film Comparing Jews to Teeming Rats
This is going to end with trains to re-education camps and a lot of gunfire.
Always Fun Reading Supreme Court Decisions
Shapiro v. Thompson (1969) struck down State laws that imposed a residency requirement to collect welfare based on the "right to travel interstate" and the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause:
We have no occasion to ascribe the source of this right to travel interstate to a particular constitutional provision. It suffices that, as MR. JUSTICE STEWART said for the Court in United States v. Guest, 383 U. S. 745, 757-758 (1966):
"The constitutional right to travel from one State to another . . . occupies a position fundamental to the concept of our Federal Union. It is a right that has been firmly established and repeatedly recognized.
". . . [T]he right finds no explicit mention in the Constitution. The reason, it has been suggested, is that a right so elementary was conceived from the beginning to be a necessary concomitant of the stronger Union the Constitution created. In any event, freedom to travel throughout the United States has long been recognized as a basic right under the Constitution."
Yes, to quote Indiana Jones, "I'm making it up as I go along." But at least it was funny in that context.
People That Aren't Wearing Masks
They are obviously listening to experts from earlier this year. 3/2/20 Business Insider:
- US Surgeon General Jerome Adams said Monday, March 2 that wearing
face masks could actually increase a person's risk of contracting
COVID-19, echoing remarks he made on Saturday that called for people to
"stop buying masks."
- In a similar stance, Vice President Mike Pence, the head of the US coronavirus task force, said on Saturday, February 29 that the "average American" does not need to "go out and buy" a mask to protect themselves from coronavirus.
- Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, says he doesn't regret advising Americans against wearing masks early on in the COVID-19 pandemic.
- In an interview with CBS News anchor Norah O'Donnell published in InStyle, Fauci defended his credibility and decision-making in response to recent attempts from the White House to undermine and sideline him.
- "I don't regret anything I said then because in the context of the time in which I said it, it was correct. We were told in our task force meetings that we have a serious problem with the lack of PPEs," he said.
The reason was to reserve the supply for front line health care workers:
Saturday, December 19, 2020
But a Lot of Those Are White, So It Does Not Matter
The number of U.S. drug overdose deaths reached a record high as the coronavirus pandemic held the country in its grip last spring, new government data shows.
For the 12 months ending in May, more than 81,000 people died from an overdose. That is the highest number ever recorded during a 12-month period, scientists from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said....
"We are at a dangerous crossroads in the pandemic with so many people in economic distress, many of whom are isolated with substance abuse disorder, depression and anxiety -- and compounded with job losses and lack of economic support," Glatter noted. "We must do more to support such individuals who are at high risk for overdose."
From what I know of their culture (some of it through my late brother-in-law), if they have jobs at all, they are in the service sector, so as far as our masters are concerned, they don't matter.
Proving Once Again That Orwell Was Right
College Fix shows a list of words and phrases that IT at the University of Michigan are not to use, supplied by the Words Matter Task Force. Some are silly, but I can understand why wokesters are concerned: whitelist, blacklist (how will I ever teach 20th century American history?), "black-and-white thinking," "crack the whip." "Brown bag" is now "lunch and learn" but that's not even a valid replacement. These wokesters do not know enough to realize that a "brown bag lunch" is not only not Hispanic, but implies nothing about learning. But "picnic"? What have I missed on this? Do people of color and constantly changing self-identity not picnic?
The Ammunition Shortage
American Rifleman about the severe ammunition shortage:
Consider this a public service announcement of sorts regarding the current ammunition scarcity. I’ve spoken to the top three manufacturers, and if you were/are having difficulty finding ammunition, it’s not because they aren't trying to keep up with demand.
Each one of them reports that they have produced record amounts of ammunition this year. I include Hornady now within that big three, at least until the Remington facility in Arkansas is back up to speed. Just so you know, the Remington plant was perhaps the third or fourth largest ammunition plant in the United States. But more on that in just a moment.
Demand actually was on the upswing before the year 2020 even began. Then the dumpster fire that is 2020 wrought havoc on both gun and ammunition availability. This is a pure demand-driven issue. The government guys who may or may not be in black helicopters are not interested in small rifle primers or .22 Long Rifle. Good luck finding either on the shelf.
I have been through several of these stockpiling binges. It has always been a question of what fails first: floor joists, or credit card limits? The good news is that when the civil war starts, we will not run out of ammo.
Friday, December 18, 2020
More Evidence That GOPe Needs Nuking
Startling Demographic Discovery
I am preparing the equal protection section of my 14th Amendment class. I have long known that the average black Americans is younger than white Americans. This Pew Research analysis of Census Bureau data is pretty startling:
There were more 27-year-olds in the United States than people of any other age in 2018. But for white Americans, the most common age was 58, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of Census Bureau data.
In the histogram above, which shows the total number of Americans of each age last year, non-Hispanic whites tend to skew toward the older end of the spectrum (more to the right), while racial and ethnic minority groups – who include everyone except single-race non-Hispanic whites – skew younger (more to the left).
The most common age was 11 for Hispanics, 27 for blacks and 29 for Asians as of last July, the latest estimates available. Americans of two or more races were by far the youngest racial or ethnic group in the Census Bureau data, with a most common age of just 3 years old. Among all racial and ethnic minorities, the most common age was 27.
It's Bad, But This is More Evidence of Inflated Numbers
GRAND COUNTY, Colo. (CBS4) – The Grand County coroner is calling attention to the way the state health department is classifying some deaths. The coroner, Brenda Bock, says two of their five deaths related to COVID-19 were people who died of gunshot wounds.
Bock says because they tested positive for COVID-19 within the past 30 days, they were classified as “deaths among cases.”
Vitamin D and Sunlight
American Journal of Infection Control
Highlights
- •
A significant correlation was found between latitude and COVID-19 fatalities.
- •
Countries closer to the equator have lower COVID-19 fatality rates than those that are further from the equator.
- •
UV radiation from sunlight increases with proximity to the equator.
- •
Insufficient sunlight on skin exposure contributes to vitamin D deficiency.
- •
Reported vitamin D deficiency in COVID-19 fatalities may be UV related.
An additional interesting item arguing for more Vitamin D and sunlight:
Lower risks for cancer have been found in countries with higher levels of sunlight exposure.11, 12, 13
One study compared cancers in sunny countries with lower latitudes with
less sunny countries with higher latitudes and concluded “that vitamin D
production in the skin decreased the risk of several solid cancers
(especially stomach, colorectal, liver and gallbladder, pancreas, lung,
female breast, prostate, bladder and kidney cancers).”13
Significantly lower rates of prostate cancer was found in men whose
birth place and longest place of residence was in southern states of the
United States, leading the authors to conclude that “residential
sunlight exposure reduces the risk of prostate cancer.”14
Deaths from prostate cancer in America were compared with sunlight UVB
exposure and the results were highly significant r = −0.0001), meaning
that men who received more sunlight were less likely to die from
prostate cancer.12
The high mortality rate for African-Americans from COVID-19 is therefore unsurprising. From Journal of Nutrition:
Vitamin D insufficiency is more prevalent among African Americans
(blacks) than other Americans and, in North America, most young, healthy
blacks do not achieve optimal 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D]
concentrations at any time of year. This is primarily due to the fact
that pigmentation reduces vitamin D production in the skin. Also, from
about puberty and onward, median vitamin D intakes of American blacks
are below recommended intakes in every age group, with or without the
inclusion of vitamin D from supplements.
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Why Do People Believe These Bizarre Conspiracy Theories About COVID-19?
It is all a hoax. There are tracking devices in the vaccine. All the witnesses to voter fraud are perjuring themselves.
Gee, could four years of wild conspiracy theories (Russian collusion with Trump to steal the 2016 election sourced from the Clinton campaign; the short-lived Ukraine scandal; Kavanaugh was a rapist and all those men from back then were liars; the women with whom he had worked who gave him glowing testimonials: all liars).
A whole movement that spent the last 50 years whining that the FBI was a political hit squad going after antiwar activists and the Black Panthers for political reasons (and they did), that the NSA was tapping phones for improper reasons, and the CIA was a bunch of torturers overturning democratic governments (and they did, including the one closest to home). Now all these organizations can be trusted?
Please: Democrats, consider what you made respectable thinking.
Monday, December 14, 2020
Devastating Forensic Analysis of Voting Machine Fraud
Sunday, December 13, 2020
Worth Reading
- I’m not sure we know what we’re doing. (Please don’t misinterpret this sentence. The science and public health principles around disease transmission interruption – no gathering, mask wearing, social distancing, etc. – are clear. I’m referring to how to get you, the community, to change your behavior). I look at surrounding counties who have been much more restrictive than I have been, and wonder what it’s bought them. Now, some of them, are in a worse spot than we are. Does an unbalanced approach on restrictions make things worse? Maybe, maybe not. But I think there is a more likely explanation. When I look at the trend data, the Bay Area seems to mostly move as a region, and it seems to me to be pretty independent of individual Health Officers’ actions.
- The SAH order will make it more difficult for schools to open
or to stay open. It is a very hard needle to thread to message
that everyone must stay at home by strict order, but it’s ok for
kids to go to school. I continue to strongly believe our schools
need to be open. The adverse effects for some of our kids will
likely last for generations. Schools have procedures to open
safely even during a surge as evidenced by data. My earlier
stated positions from June remain the same.
Surely a hard, enforced, SAH order will certainly drive down transmission rates. But what we have before us is a symbolic gesture, it appears to be style over substance, without any hint of enforcement, and I simply don’t believe it will do much good. I think people should stay at home, avoid all non-essential activities, wear masks, and not gather with anyone outside their households. I’ve been saying this for about 10 months now. If you didn’t listen to my (and many others) entreaties before, I don’t think you’ll likely change your behavior based on a new order. I appreciate that some of you think I (or the government) have magical abilities to change everyone’s behavior, but I assure you, I (we) do not. Being in the purple tier, the State has already put significant restrictions on businesses and the public space in San Mateo County. I am aware of no data that some of the business activities on which even greater restrictions are being put into place with this new order are the major drivers of transmission. In fact, I think these greater restrictions are likely to drive more activity indoors, a much riskier endeavor. While I don’t have scientific evidence to support this, I also believe these greater restrictions will result in more job loss, more hunger, more despair and desperation (the structure of our economy is, for the most part, if you don’t work, you don’t eat or have a roof over your head), and more death from causes other than COVID. And I wonder, are these premature deaths any less worrisome than COVID deaths?...
Someone With a Threading Attachment For Your Lathe?
I need to cut an external thread to screw into what appears to be an M40x0.5 thread. My Bushnell scope seems like it would accept such a thread. The ID seems to be 40.64mm, and I can measure 5mm of thread with about ten turns. Yes, I am trying to get a 5" long sunshade and not having much luck finding one off the shelf.
14th Amendment Deniers
I was searching for ratification date and I was surprised to see a lot of websites devoted to proving it was not ratified. I am not going to link to them. Many say President Johnson did not sign it. Amendments go directly from Congress to the States.
How is Your Church Handling COVID?
Saturday, December 12, 2020
Hoarding in Times of Crisis
It had been months since the state sent any personal protective equipment.
The residents of Dorothy Schlimme’s long-term care homes, many of whom are frail, as well as staff, have been wearing blue disposable face masks she bought from Costco.
She would’ve liked some of Washington’s huge stockpile of N95 masks, which filter 95% of airborne particles, but hardly any of them made it to providers. By mid-November the stockpile had grown to more than 30 million N95s.
This week, however, 150 of the state’s N95 masks arrived for her three Auburn homes, free of charge.
“All the help we can get from the state government is welcome,” Schlimme said. “We’re basically opening our hands.”
Washington officials have been distributing millions of N95 masks over the past month to prisons, long-term care providers, county emergency managers and others. The change comes after pleas from advocates and a November Seattle Times report that spotlighted the state’s extensive surplus.
Washington State has a bit more than seven million people. How many did they expect to need?
The Supreme Court Rejected Texas' Appeal
It is going to be an ugly four years as journalists concerned about government wrongdoing go to sleep so that Biden's wealthy cronies resume exporting jobs to China and increasing the economic power of the next likely military enemy of the U.S. I wish the Republican majorities in Pennsylvania, Arizona, Georgia, and Michigan had pursued efforts to prevent vote fraud, but the Never Trumpers remain in positions of power. I wonder how much economic destruction Biden will cause before working Democrats realize what a mistake they made.
Thursday, December 10, 2020
Interesting Article About Labor Unions and Race
I was reading decisions concerning the use of the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause and affirmative action for my spring semester 14th Amendment class. (This will be online; if really interested, there may be time to apply to College of Western Idaho and enroll.) Richmond v. JA Croson Co.(1989) involved an attempt to ameliorate past wrongs:
On April 11, 1983, the Richmond City Council adopted the Minority Business Utilization Plan (the Plan). The Plan required prime contractors to whom the city awarded construction contracts to subcontract at least 30% of the dollar amount of the contract to one or more Minority Business Enterprises (MBE's). Ordinance No. 83-69-59, codified in Richmond, Va., City Code, § 12-156(a) (1985). The 30% set-aside 478*478 did not apply to city contracts awarded to minority-owned prime contractors.
Adding to the problem, there was no clear evidence that the disparity in minority owned construction contractors in the Richmond area was because of past discrimination. Curiously, there is some evidence that this shortage might have been the result of governmental action:
The Davis-Bacon Act, passed by Congress in 1931, requires private contractors to pay "prevailing wages" to employees on all federally funded construction projects over $2000. Most often, the "prevailing wage" corresponds directly to the union wage. This is especially true in urban areas, where union membership tends to be higher.
The Davis-Bacon Act covers a significant portion of the projects undertaken by the construction industry. Approximately 20 percent of all construction projects in the U.S. are covered by the Act, affecting more than 25 percent of all construction workers in the nation at any given time.
The Act was passed with the specific intent of preventing non-unionized black and immigrant laborers from competing with unionized white workers for scarce jobs during the Depression. This invidious law continues to have devastating discriminatory effects, as minorities tend to be vastly underrepresented in highly unionized skilled trades, and over-represented in the pool of unskilled workers who would benefit,if the prevailing wage laws were abolished.
The advantage given to union labor certainly contributed to reduced opportunities for black workers. This 1959 Commentary article details how labor union discrimination played a part in the battle for equal rights in the 1950s:
The removal of the sanction of law from racial segregation has sharply posed the issue of the Negro’s status in virtually every area of American life. As much as the public schools, religious organizations, and business firms, the labor movement is on trial today. For labor’s democratic ideals are in serious conflict with a tradition of racial discrimination in the unions that is currently very much alive.
To some degree, union discrimination simply reflects the racial and religious prejudices among union members—prejudices that many unionists share with other prejudiced persons. Thus recently in the North, groups of white workers participated in violence against Negroes at Trumbull Park in Chicago and at Levittown, Pennsylvania. And in the South, workers have given considerable support to the White Citizens Councils and other groups seeking to perpetuate segregated institutions....
The Negro had established his first beachheads in industry during World War I, but most AFL unions still practiced a rigorous exclusionist policy throughout the 1920’s. In some instances still, Negroes were able to enter industry only when employers hired them as strikebreakers.2 In other industries, predominantly those employing mass production methods, the Negro was able to gain a modest foothold because the craft-proud AFL would not organize them. But the limited gains of the Negroes in the 20’s were destroyed during the Depression, largely because the AFL had not extended union protection to the Negro in the earlier period. As late as 1933, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, with 35,000 members, had almost half the total number of Negro members in the AFL.
Now the Davis-Bacon Act impacted workers, not contractors. But what is the usual path to being a construction contractor? I suspect most contractors at some point swung a hammer, laid bricks, or poured concrete.
Texas v. Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan, and Wisconsin
It is here. It seems pretty devastating. If the Court does not hear this, we will certainly find out which justices have embarrassing pictures in
the Epstein archive.
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
It Sounds Like Biden is Serious About Unifying Americans, But Not How He Thinks
Joe Biden plans to move quickly against guns, adding the issue to his list of first executive orders, according to his top policy aide.
Stef Feldman, the national policy director of Biden's presidential campaign, included the Democrat’s gun plan in a list of initial executive actions set to be unleashed after Inauguration Day....
While he calls his plan one aimed at ending “gun violence,” most of Biden’s ideas amount to limiting what people can buy or have. For example, he wants to end the sale of AR-15-style firearms (the most popular in the nation), regulate those that people already have, and limit the size of magazines those guns use.
Almost half the voters already think Beijing Biden cheated and now he wants to end sales and limit magazine size? President Biden, you and what army? There are at least 20 million AK and AR pattern rifles in America, and vast numbers of Americans with handguns that came with 17 round magazines. Any attempts at confiscation will result in at least .1% of those 20 million surrendering their guns one bullet at a time. All of us know at least one fellow gun owner who is going to go over the top on this. Most will likely die under the combined force of a federal LEO SWAT team, but if even 10% of that .1% of 20 million end up killing a federal LEO, 20,000 LEOs will not go home, and many of the others will start to think HARD about the legality of their orders and whether their pensions are worth leaving widows and orphans.
In response to a few well-publicized raids, federal buildings will become free fire zones. Five riflemen (all working independently) with .308 and bigger will easily shut down a federal building from 500 meters away. I suspect any federal employees not already Zooming to work will stop showing up to work. I can hardly wait for Biden to explain why Trump sending federal LEOs into Portland was tyranny, but calling out the Army is not.
Friends of a Friend Have Already Received COVID-19 Vaccine As Part of Trials
Both reported headaches and muscle aches for a day or two but nothing that could not be managed with Tylenol. The sooner most people are vaccinated, the sooner the Demofascists will just expose themselves as the authoritarian thugs they are, and the sooner we can get the economy back to work. I have reservations for a European cruise next spring. Let's not stop that from happening.
Glad to See This Tracking Device in Vaccine Crazy is Not Just America
First up, a conspiracy theory about vaccines that has spanned the globe.
It claims that the coronavirus pandemic is a cover for a plan to implant trackable microchips and that the Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is behind it....
The head of the Russian Communist party this week said that so-called "globalists" supported "a covert mass chip implantation which they may in time resort to under the pretext of a mandatory vaccination against coronavirus".
He didn't mention Mr Gates by name but in the US, Roger Stone, a former adviser to Donald Trump, said Bill Gates and others were using the virus for "microchipping people so we can tell 'whether you've been tested'."
A new YouGov poll of 1,640 people suggests that 28% of Americans believe that Bill Gates wants to use vaccines to implant microchips in people - with the figure rising to 44% among Republicans.
Rumours took hold in March when Mr Gates said in an interview that eventually "we will have some digital certificates" which would be used to show who'd recovered, been tested and ultimately who received a vaccine. He made no mention of microchips.
That response led to one widely shared article, under the headline: "Bill Gates will use microchip implants to fight coronavirus".
The article makes reference to a study, funded by The Gates Foundation, into a technology that could store someone's vaccine records in a special ink administered at the same time as an injection.
However, the technology is not a microchip and is more like an invisible tattoo. It has not been rolled out yet, would not allow people to be tracked and personal information would not be entered into a database, says Ana Jaklenec, a scientist involved in the study....
Conspiracy theories about Bill Gates have reached the Italian Parliament, where an independent MP called for Bill Gates to be referred to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.
If you’re worried about location tracking, look no further than your cellphone. Phones are bona fide tracking devices; people use their GPS functions all the time to find their friends or map their routes. There are serious, worrisome privacy violations that can come from companies collecting and sharing your GPS data, yet we willingly give up that information daily. As Slate’s politics editor Tom Scocca puts it: “Bill Gates doesn’t have to implant a tracker in you because Steve Jobs got you to buy one yourself.”
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Texas Does Everything Big
Malwarebytes
Wednesday, December 2, 2020
Annoying Driver Problem
My wife's laptop has suffered intermittent WiFi disconnects ever since we moved. She hates to "bother me" with problems until she gets RIP roaring mad. While trying to figure out the problem, I noticed the Broadcom AC drivers were out of date. Since we use ac band with the new router, I think I found it. To be sure I wrote a batch file that pings google.com, verifies that the ERRORLEVEL is 0 and loops. If ERRORLEVEL is >0 (meaning the WiFi is now disconnected) it stops with a Fail message. I will run it all night.
The intermittent disconnect is gone and the highest data rate is now reporting 60MB/sec. instead of the promised 50.
Why Californians Are Coming Here
Sing Along with the Bee Gees: "Tragedy"
Paranoia Runs Deep, Into Your Life It Will Creep
What Language is This Spam?
I am sure it isn't a Nigerian prince!
Bol by som rád, keby ste mi umožnili prostredníctvom tohto média požiadať o vašu spoluprácu a zabezpečiť si príležitosť investovať s vami vo vašej krajine.
Progressivism Through the Ages
I was preparing my 14th Amendment class for the spring semester and I was looking for a reputable source concerning Sweden's mandatory sterilization laws (1934-74). I found this 8/29/1997 Washington Post article:
The victims were young and mostly female, judged to be rebellious or promiscuous, of low intelligence or perhaps of mixed blood. One was a young woman whose priest believed she had not learned her confirmation lessons well enough, another who couldn't read a blackboard because she did not have eyeglasses and was deemed to be retarded.
In the eyes of Swedish authorities, they were misfits in a forward-looking nation, and for that they paid a terrible price: sterilization at the hands of the state, often against their will. From 1934 to 1974, 62,000 Swedes were sterilized as part of a national program grounded in the science of racial biology and carried out by officials who believed they were helping to build a progressive, enlightened welfare state.
Like Sweden and many other European countries, Denmark began its sterilization program in the grip of enthusiasm for eugenics, the belief in improving the human race by controlling breeding.
The theory was founded by Sir Francis Galton of Britain in the 1880s. It acquired popularity in the early half of the 20th century, when many nations, including the United States, sterilized people declared insane.
``In Denmark, eugenics was considered an obvious solution to huge social problems,″ Koch said.
The forced sterilization program in Denmark mainly was directed at people who were mentally handicapped, Koch said.
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Concept: Hokey. Result: Entertaining
It was a free sci-fi movie on YouTube, so I started it while on the treadmill. The Enterprise task force is sunk off North Korea. Someone has mastered stealth technology for a surface ship and a directed EMP. They are using it to attack U.S. and South Korean targets. Who are the obvious bad guys?
Pretty much all of our supposedly EMP-hardened electronics on which our modern armed forces rely no longer works, including our fly-by-wire aircraft.
Fortunately, the USS Iowa is on a world farewell cruise, headed to a final berth as a museum. Curators are busy returning it to World War II technology. EMP? What's that?
So why is it sci-fi? Someone is trying to start World War III to take over the smoldering ashes. Really great fun, and nice use of file footage and it appears some video games okay simulation of an Iowa-class battleship.
Interesting TV
My wife and I were watching a history series: The Story of Europe. The narrator reached France just before things became ugly. A small number of people at the top living ostentatiously luxurious lives, looting the starving peasants, while convinced of their right to do so. Both of us immediately recognized the parallels. A small number of billionaires and decamillionaires and hectamillionaires living large, while the Deplorables often are just getting by, many of whom in their despair are destroying themselves with meth and alcohol. This increasingly blatant election theft may be setting us up for something as bloody and ugly as the French Revolution, especially if Biden and Beto try to attempt a gun grab as a step to greater tyranny.
Then we watched a marvelously done BBC production of Les Miserables (there is no singing, except the Marseilles). It captures the desperation of post-Napoleonic French peasantry. The 1830 Revolutionaries are portrayed as a mix of idealistic college boys, oppressed peasants and workers, and common criminals.
You are doubtless aware of the famous Delacroix painting commemorating it:
5. Much of armed resistance are likely to be older people with only a few years left, for whom death in battle for a great cause may seem pretty good compared to the evils that old age (70s, 80s, and 90s) visit upon us. An interesting quirk of the Constitutional definition of treason:
The Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason, but no attainder of treason shall work corruption of blood, or forfeiture except during the life of the person attainted.
As I understand that, even if you are convicted of treason, or declared a traitor posthumously, your estate can still be inherited.
Monday, November 30, 2020
Articles of Faith
Has Anyone Totalled All Votes Cast For U.S. Senators in 2020
Sunday, November 29, 2020
Never Was Big on Christmas Trees...
Why Gun Control is SO IMPORTANT!
11/29/2020 Philadelphia Inquirer:
The Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office cannot account for more than 200 guns that are supposed to be in its custody, some of them part of the office’s arsenal and others confiscated from people subject to protection-from-abuse orders, according to an investigative report released Wednesday by the City Controller’s Office.
The investigation found serious problems in the Sheriff’s Office with recordkeeping, a lack of policies and procedures for managing guns, and haphazard storage of guns in boxes, barrels, cabinets, and in piles on the floor of the office’s armory, City Controller Rebecca Rhynhart said during a news conference in Center City....
The complaint also included details of an alleged burglary that the tipster said occurred in February 2019 at a local gun shop and involved three of the Sheriff’s Office guns, she added.The probe began in November 2019 after the Controller’s Office received a confidential complaint and supporting documentation alleging that 15 long guns — rifles and shotguns — had been missing from the Sheriff’s Office gun inventory since 2016, Rhynhart said.
Why do I doubt these guns were sold by the sheriff's department?
Investigators uncovered numerous deficiencies in the office’s overall handling and storage of weapons that included the commingling of service firearms and confiscated firearms, and the storage of some weapons that were still loaded, the report said.
Remember, only police officers with their extensive training and high degree of responsibility are competent to possess firearms!
Interesting Take on the Motivations for Women's Suffrage
From Dawn Tangan Teele, Forging the Franchise: The Political Origins of the Women's Vote (2020), p. 97:
Uncertain Provenance But Certainly True
“Gaslighting – The term originates in the systematic psychological manipulation of a victim by her husband in Patrick Hamilton’s 1938 stage play “Gas Light,” and the film adaptations released in 1940 and 1944. In the story, the husband attempts to convince his wife and others that she is insane by manipulating small elements of their environment and insisting that she is mistaken, remembering things incorrectly, or delusional when she points out these changes.
Saturday, November 28, 2020
Information Too Dangerous to Share
From a Johns Hopkins University study so widely linked that they took it down (fortunately the Wayback Machine has it!)
From mid-March to mid-September, U.S. total deaths have reached 1.7 million, of which 200,000, or 12% of total deaths, are COVID-19-related. Instead of looking directly at COVID-19 deaths, Briand focused on total deaths per age group and per cause of death in the U.S. and used this information to shed light on the effects of COVID-19.
She explained that the significance of COVID-19 on U.S. deaths can be fully understood only through comparison to the number of total deaths in the United States.
After retrieving data on the CDC website, Briand compiled a graph representing percentages of total deaths per age category from early February to early September, which includes the period from before COVID-19 was detected in the U.S. to after infection rates soared.
This comes as a shock to many people. How is it that the data lie so far from our perception?
To answer that question, Briand shifted her focus to the deaths per causes ranging from 2014 to 2020. There is a sudden increase in deaths in 2020 due to COVID-19. This is no surprise because COVID-19 emerged in the U.S. in early 2020, and thus COVID-19-related deaths increased drastically afterward.
Analysis of deaths per cause in 2018 revealed that the pattern of seasonal increase in the total number of deaths is a result of the rise in deaths by all causes, with the top three being heart disease, respiratory diseases, influenza and pneumonia.
“This is true every year. Every year in the U.S. when we observe the seasonal ups and downs, we have an increase of deaths due to all causes,” Briand pointed out.
When Briand looked at the 2020 data during that seasonal period, COVID-19-related deaths exceeded deaths from heart diseases. This was highly unusual since heart disease has always prevailed as the leading cause of deaths. However, when taking a closer look at the death numbers, she noted something strange. As Briand compared the number of deaths per cause during that period in 2020 to 2018, she noticed that instead of the expected drastic increase across all causes, there was a significant decrease in deaths due to heart disease. Even more surprising, as seen in the graph below, this sudden decline in deaths is observed for all other causes.
I tried to pull the mortality data from CDC, but I cannot find anything newer than 1Q2020. Did Briand have non-public access? This CDC report on excess mortality from COVID-19 would mean Briand's claims are all wrong.
However, Briand's claims fit this 8/17/20 Colorado Sun article:
When the new coronavirus first swept through Colorado earlier this year, baffling doctors with its myriad of symptoms and methods of spread, Dr. Brian Stauffer, the head of cardiology at Denver Health, soon began to notice a different kind of pandemic mystery.
People, it seemed, had stopped having heart attacks.
At Denver Health and other large hospitals across the metro area, the number of people showing up with cardiac emergencies dropped significantly as the state imposed increasingly strict measures encouraging people to stay at home to slow the virus’ spread. And this was not unique to Colorado — hospitals across the country and in Europe documented the same phenomenon. Had stay-at-home orders somehow also slowed heart attacks or were people in need of medical help simply not seeking it for fear of COVID-19?
A new study from Stauffer and several Denver Health colleagues offers the first clue to the answer in Colorado. Looking at data on ambulance calls in Denver, they found that, while overall calls for service went down during the stay-at-home period, the number of people dying from cardiac arrests at home shot up.
Friday, November 27, 2020
The Time Has Come to Replace Our Laptops With Faster Ones
The two Lenovos have performed well, but I know my x140e was a bargain priced for students model, and uses an USB ac WiFi--less than ideal when I am on the road. Something blindingly fast would be nice. Ditto for my wife's slightly newer Lenovo. I really like my x140e's very compact size, but an internal CD-ROM would be nice (reduce the mating ball of cables on my desk.
My wife's never goes on the road. Hers could be a desktop. I am not sure if the Lenovo dock will work with non-Lenovo laptops or not. It is just a USB corrector to let me hook up three monitors, and a few USB devices. (You do not want to see the collection of devices on the USB bridge that plugs into it.)
I have resisted doing this because the prospect of reinstalling dozens of applications was too frightening. Fortunately there are several apps that do both data and application transfers.
Suggestions? Apple: no. Linux I like, but I have yet to see a release that will not drive my wife mad; none have reached Windows ease of use yet. I also want easy sharing of Word files with my students. I guess I need to experiment to see if LibreOffice will do this well. Write works well enough. Calc and Base are the other big concerns. Base cannot import Access data base. Calc imports Excel just fine.
Oh yes. At least 1TB of disk space, ideally SSD.
Quadcore is obvious. What numbers should I look for besides more RAM to get maximum speed?
It appears that a gaming laptop with the Ryzen 4800H processor is the hot tip. These all seem to be 15.6" displays. My current laptop is a 14" screen and is just perfect for the road. But I can see why gamers don't want a dinky screen. (Why anyone considers gaming on a computer a useful activity eludes me.)
Is the Intel i7-8665U a pretty fast CPU compared to the Rhyzen 4800H? Is there a performance chart? I do not want a laptop 10% faster. Here's the table. AMD's Rhyzen 9 500X looks like the winner.
Thursday, November 26, 2020
Kraken Unleashed
Amazing Video About the Late Permian Mass Extinction
It not only expanded my knowledge of basaltic flood eruptions, but also pointed out how vulcanism can cause global warming, and the runaway process of releasing CO2 from the ocean as well as methane hydrates from the ocean floors. Methane by itself is a strong greenhouse gas, but also oxidizes to CO2.
Happy Thanksgiving
My wife and I are doing this alone. Our daughter is hosting a Danish exchange student who is attending face-to-face high school, and our son's fiance teaches face-to-face kindergarten, where older staff are coming down with WuFlu.
Court Victory
Buckeye Firearms Found., Inc. v. Cincinnati, 2020-Ohio-5422:
The issue presented in this appeal is whether the city of Cincinnati exceeded its home-rule authority by enacting a municipal ordinance banning the possession and transfer of firearm “trigger activators.” Because the ordinance conflicts with a state law governing an individual’s rights to ownership and possession of firearms, we determine that the municipal ordinance is an invalid exercise of home-rule authority. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
My experience with trigger cranks is that make the most sense for bipod mounted weapons where you have hope of holding the weapon to ground, stable enough to do more than scare the enemy.
Something For Which to Be Thankful
A friend in the Bay Area tells me he and his wife shared COVID-19 recently. It was not as bad as flu. They are much younger than my wife and me.
Wednesday, November 25, 2020
More Evidence Our ELITES Are Not Well Educated
The University of Maryland School of Public Policy is apparently about to require faculty members to add a statement to their syllabus;...
Land Acknowledgement
We acknowledge that we are gathered on the stolen land of the Piscataway Conoy people and were founded upon the erasures and exploitation of many non-European peoples. You can find more information about the Piscataway Conoy Tribe at http://www.piscatawayconoytribe.com. For more information about the University of Maryland's project for a richer understanding of generations of racialized trauma rooted in the institution visit https://go.umd.edu/SNW.
This land was ultimately stolen from mammoths and smilodons, who mysteriously disappeared shortly thereafter.