tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/122: Of Wind and Wolves — J M Elliott
"... in this country, tombs are the only permanent thing we build. Only the dead have ceased their wandering -- their bodies have, at least." [loc. 2343]

The setting is Scythia -- here spelt Skythia -- in the fifth century BC. Araiti's father has betrothed her to the ageing king of the Skythians, Ariapeithes, in order to forge a lasting peace between their tribes. Araiti, fostered by her mother's Amazon tribe, has earnt her status among her father's people, the Bastarnai: she's a formidable horsewoman and has been trained in the arts of war. The Skythians recognise her for what she is, androktones -- man-killer -- and decree that she may not marry the king until she has killed an enemy in battle and taken his scalp.Read more... )

tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/121: The Song of Achilles — Madeleine Miller
Achilles returns to the tent, where my body waits. He is red and red and rust-red, up to his elbows, his knees, his neck, as if he has swum in the vast dark chambers of a heart, and emerged, just now, still dripping. [p. 325]

This is the story of Achilles and Patroclus, and of the war.Read more... )

Well, today I saw a groundhog

Aug. 9th, 2025 01:08 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
And then tonight as I took out the trash I saw where it's evidently been burrowing, a big hole directly under the retaining wall to our yard.

Now what?

I think I just saw a groundhog

Aug. 8th, 2025 06:00 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Crossing the street right in front of my house!

I didn't see his shadow, so I have no idea if the current [insert whatever] will be long or short.

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Read more... )

Betrayed by Labi Siffre

Aug. 7th, 2025 09:44 pm
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[personal profile] conuly
Betrayed

To despise your government
To distrust your government
To be unable to respect your government
To know the leader of your country has contempt
for the people of your country
To be angered
not because it’s “Not in my name”
but because it IS in my name

A Tale of One City (sort of)

Aug. 4th, 2025 01:29 pm
[personal profile] blogcutter
On a good day, Ottawa-Gatineau functions like a single cohesive city and we residents can move around freely as we go about our day-to-day life. But. A river runs through it, serving as a division that is at once topographical, political, linguistic and socio-cultural.

You don't argue with a river at the best of times, let alone when all of the above-mentioned factors are also in play. And when a major international event comes to our National Capital Region, that spreads a whole new layer of navigational complexity over top of the mix. So it was this weekend with the Ironman Triathlon.

We live on the Ottawa side, in the province of Ontario. Our daughter's family lives on the Gatineau side, au Québec. We were asked to cat-sit and chicken-sit while they were out of town. Nearly all of the bridges between Ottawa and Gatineau were closed to vehicle traffic at least on the Sunday. And there wasn't even public transit in the downtown core for much of the day.

So we planned ahead, made the best of the inevitable glitches and lived to tell the tale.

Saturday was the easier day. We were able to take the car, picking up 2 days' worth of lunch supplies en route. After hanging out with the cat and the chickens for most of the morning, we ate our lunch and headed over to the Museum of History to look at the Retro exhibition on popular music of the 1960s, 70s and 80s. pent a couple of hours there, still didn't watch all the videos or listen to all the songs or do everything we could have done just with that one exhibition. It was fascinating and exhausting and nostalgia-inducing.

Then we went back to the house to do the suppertime routines with the animals and pack up some of our things to go home.

We knew that on Sunday, only one of the bridges - the Macdonald-Cartier - was going to be open. But I learned from Gatineau's transit site (STO) that they would be running a shuttle from Ottawa's Pimisi LRT station across the Chaudiere Bridge which was to end at Station Montcalm in Gatineau, a short walk from where we needed to go. OC Transpo, by the way, was singularly uninformative about all of that. Nowhere did I see that shuttle mentioned on their pages, where they just urged people to keep checking their Alerts Page, which of course wouldn't load despite repeated attempts, presumably because there was too much e-traffic on it! Still, age has its privileges and seniors ride for free all day Wednesdays and Sundays.

So Sunday morning we took our regular bus/LRT ride as far as Pimisi Station, where lo and behold there was a free shuttle ready to take a group of us across the bridge. At a couple of points we had to stop where police were directing traffic and it was actually kind of cool seeing some of the Ironman cyclists doing their thing.

Unfortunately the STO Navette did not go as far as Montcalm station, however, despite what was advertised on their site. But the drivers were all pretty friendly and helpful, making sure we got on the right connecting bus to get us the short distance to our destination. We faced something similar later in the day on our way back, walking to Montcalm Station and getting on a regular STO bus which took us to Place du Centre where shuttles were departing for Pimisi Station.

So on Sunday we mostly hung out at our daughter's place. I sat sometimes outside watching the chickens, sometimes inside playing with the cat, reading my book or the Saturday newspaper, doing puzzles, this and that.

Today is a holiday Monday in Ontario but not in Quebec. I've been at home pretending it's a Sunday, doing all the things I'd normally do on a Sunday. Really feeling I need my day of rest!

I wonder if they'll ever change the Ironman name? I mean, there were plenty of women (Iron Maidens?) competing too; also plenty of male cheerleaders on the sidelines!
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[personal profile] conuly
First we've got Bride of Chaotica!, in which Kate Mulgrew enthusiastically chews the scenery. Mmm! Part of a balanced breakfast!

Also, she's pretty judgey about Tom's extracurriculars. E remarked that her daily coinflip must've landed on "Mom", and I can't say she's wrong.

It's a fun breather episode so long as you forget the fact that dozens of photonic aliens died before anybody on Voyager even realized they were at war. Whoops! Also, they spend almost the entire episode mere inches away from a shipwide epidemic of some sort of gross gastrointestinal illness, but nobody seems to care about that either, it's all played for laughs.

Then this episode I completely forgot where Tuvok and Tom are crash-landed on a time displaced planet for several months or a year with a woman who is deeply crushing on Tuvok. Tom, for whatever weird reason of his own, is adamant that the correct course of action is for Tuvok to get in touch with his emotions and just go to bang city with this woman. E and I agreed that the actually correct and logical course of action was for Tuvok to give Tom that punch in the face that he is just begging for, but for some reason Tuvok refrained. Seriously, I have no idea what bug flew up Tom's butt this episode, but he was so fucking obnoxious for no reason at all. Maybe, Tom, you should get in touch with your emotions before you start lecturing the Vulcan about his. I genuinely have no idea what his deal was or was supposed to be.

On a very different note, I don't know if anybody can make it to London who cares, but Camlann is doing a live prequel episode in September. If you know a bit more about Arthuriana than I do you probably would like the audiodrama a lot. Or even if you only know as much as I do or a little less. The music is amazing.

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Read more... )

Yesterday ended in a headache

Aug. 4th, 2025 09:10 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
Lowkey enough that I felt bad complaining about it, but bad enough that I couldn't focus and had to go to bed early, and then I slept through half of today as well and only woke when I got hungry enough.

So, yeah.

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Read more... )
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/120: The Raven Scholar — Antonia Hodgson
"How do bears keep cool?"
Neema perked up. "They employ a variety of strategies," she began, but he was already lumbering off on all fours. "I was being rhetorical," he called over his shoulder...
So Neema created a new list – Six Ways Bears Keep Cool – and told it to the walls, because she had to tell someone. [loc. 3438]

The first time I started reading this novel, I stopped halfway through the first chapter. Yana, a young woman of noble blood, her family fallen from grace due to treachery and deception, is summoned by the Emperor. Gosh, I thought: another Chosen One. I thought I could predict at least some of her story, and it didn't interest me.

Reader, I was wrong -- and happily so.Read more... )

siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
I finally got around to pursuing a replacement of what we in the Bostoniensis Household refer to as the Lorem Ipsum card, which was itself a fiasco.

(Recap: PayPal, an organization full of people who are not as smart as they think they are and blessed with perhaps the deepest marketing reach in the US into the small business market for financial services, decided to offer to its business customers the greatest credit card deal of their lifetimes, unlimited 2% cash back on all purchases, and the market responded with all the decorous restraint of a river full of pirhana given a whole cow. Apparently we collectively took PayPal for all they were worth – I heard of small tech companies running their cloud services bills to the tune of five figures a month across on the card – until sometime in Sept 2024, when the grown-ups at PayPal discovered they were hemorrhaging money, and very abruptly shut the party down and exit the business credit card market all together. The hard inquiry on my credit report lasted longer than the actual card did. At the time, it was pretty upsetting, but now it's just hilarious.)

A couple weeks ago I decided to apply for an American Express Blue Business Cash card, which has no fees and has a cash back offer. I have to say, absolutely all the customer service agents – five now – I've spoken to have been exemplary. Yeah, alas, that's foreshadowing.

Unfortunately their IT services are demented. First there was the fact they sent me a notification saying my application had been, and I quote, "DENIED", with a link to find out why, and when I followed the link, I discovered my application hadn't been denied: it said that they couldn't run a credit check on me because my credit reports were locked (true), so I need to go unlock the specified credit report and let them know so they could continue processing my application. So I called in and did it in real time with an agent on the line and was approved on the spot. Fabulous. "Okay, you will be getting your card at your home address in three to five business days." "Uh, it's a business card, could you send it to my business address?" "Oh, no, it won't let me send your initial card to any other than your home address." "*sigh* Very well."

My new Amex card arived at my home on like the 30th or 31st, while I had my nose to the grindstone writing. Friday the 1st, I opened the envelope to find my new card, and then to activate it at the website.

I couldn't get it off the paper.

Or rather: in attempting to get the card off the paper, I wound up with a layer of glue and paper stuck on the back of the card, such that I could not read any but the first five digits of the card number, and the CVV was completely covered. It was like the paper was superglued on. It was annealed.

So I called Amex, and discovered that you can't get through the phone tree to a a customer service agent about an extant account unless you can prove you're the owner of the account with, yes, the CVV. Which I can't read. Because there's a half thickness of paper glued across it.

Also, you can't set up an account on their website without the full card number, which I also couldn't read, because there was a half thickness of paper glued across it.

So I called the number for applying for a card in the first place, and threw myself on the mercy of the sales agent, explaining why I was calling them instead of regular customer service: I can't get to customer service without knowing the CVV, and the problem I need help with is that I can't read the CVV. "I know I shouldn't be laughing," he said, "But this is kind of hilarious." He kindly set up a three-way call with customer service so I didn't wind up wandering unattended in a phone tree maze, and once I was talking to the nice people who could replace my card, he ducked out.

The customer service agent and I then discovered that Amex doesn't let you replace a card, for some reason, until an account is 10 days old. My account was, as of that moment, nine days old. She gave me a direct number to business card services in the hopes I could avoid the phone tree of doom; the agent also gave me some pointers about pressing zero to get through it, which trick I had tried on the other phone tree and it hadn't worked.

Saturday I was busy sleeping. Today, I called the phone number I had been given for business card services, and despite the phone tree trying to authenticate with the CVV, I managed to confuse the robot enough it finally found me a human. I got to explain all over again about the disfigured card, and they transferred me again to card replacement, who put the order right in.

I observed to the agent that the issue with the glue and the card might have something to do with them sending it to my home, where I have a black mailbox on a south-facing side of the building, and we had been having a heatwave, and maybe they would like to send my replacement card to my business address, where the mailboxes are indoors in air conditioned comfort? She agreed that would be a much better plan.

So now I await my new Amex. It's a 2% cash back on purchases offer, but only up to the first $50k of purchases, so companies can't use their AWS bill to bleed them dry, so maybe it will stick around a little longer than PayPal's Lorem Ipsum card.

Speaking of credit card offers possibly too good to last, for any of you sad you missed out on getting your own bite of the cow:

I recently discovered that AAA – yeah, the American Automotive Association, the roadside assistance people – has a really great credit card offer. (This may be region specific – I'm in their "Northeast" region.) Their Daily Advantage Visa Signature card has 5% cash back on groceries, no annual fee. Only the first $10k of grocery purchases per year, and then 1% thereafter – which is good, actually: it has a chance of sticking around. But that does mean up to $500/year in cash back on grocery purchases. Given what's happening to the price of food and paper goods, having a permanent 5% discount on groceries is freaking fantastic. It also has a bunch of other features (3% cash back on gasoline or electric car charging stations, e.g.) and 1% cash back on everything else (no limit).

The interest rate is usurious, so under no circumstances do you ever want to carry a balance on it. But if you are the sort of person who can reliably always pay off their balance every month on time: permanent 5% off groceries!

And, no, apparently you do not need to be a AAA member to get the card. (Though we are.)

We got one and I just finished reading the fine print. Seems reasonable. We don't know that our grocery delivery service will be recognized by the card company (it's Comenity Capital Bank under the hood) as a grocery store, but the service is run by a grocery store, and the charges have appeared on the previous card under the name of the grocery store, so here's hoping. We'll know later this week – our next grocery order is for Wednesday, and the charge typically shows up a day or two after that.

Also, we've never had a card with Comenity, so we don't really know how their IT and customer service are. The web interface for account management is very nice. We'll report back as we know more.

I'm not generally in the practice of recommending credit cards, and I can't wholly recommend this one, having not really exercised it yet to discover its landmines. But what's going on here in the Bostoniensis household is that we're cashing in on our good credit scores to take advantage of financial offers that pinch our pennies for us, as a form of hardening our household financially against inflation and other future economic vicissitudes. This has generally meant getting credit with better terms (either lower rates or higher rewards), and opening High-Yield Savings Accounts for our nest egg and my estimated tax payments as a self-employed person.

Given that eating food is a pretty universal custom and groceries are getting scary-expensive, I thought I would mention for anyone who wants to do likewise, and is in a position to do so.

The shooting was on Monday

Aug. 3rd, 2025 06:36 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
How're you gonna send your "thoughts-and-prayers" email on Friday? At this point, silence would've been better. (I have no idea how I got on the mayor's email list.)

Speaking of the shooting, my aunt texted me to check in. She, uh, she called me by the name I tried out for like five minutes in middle school. I have no idea how she remembered that. I barely remember that. But at least she didn't ask after Mommy's health this time.

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Read more... )

Queen Demon review

Aug. 2nd, 2025 10:59 am
marthawells: (Witch King)
[personal profile] marthawells
Woke up to a fantastic review of Queen Demon in the August Locus. Here's an excerpt:


This is a fantastic novel, set in a fascinating world with truly compelling characters. It is shot through with grief, with the reverberations of destruction and the aftermaths of trauma: While the past timeline gives us emotional focus on the characters’ griefs, immediate traumas, and desperate choices, the present makes plain the extent of the Hierarchs’ destruction of the rest of the world, the scars in the landscape, in societies, in the vanishing of entire cultures. New societies have built themselves out of the ruins, in the shadow of what was lost and in its absences. While we see it particularly from Kai’s perspective, understanding his losses and his wounds, his scars and his griefs, and what healing has been possible for him between the past and the present, it’s not unique to Kai, either. Loss with all its jagged edges looms over this fragile recovery. These scars wear not only upon the main characters but upon their allies and opponents, too: Trauma, both personal and generational, is a strongly motivating factor and a weight that influences most of the personal relationships and many of the political interactions that we see.
-- Liz Bourke, Locus August 2025


Queen Demon is the sequel to Witch King, and it will be out in ebook, hardcover, and audiobook (narrated by Eric Mok, on October 7

Story! A Shaky Bridge

Aug. 1st, 2025 09:38 pm
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[personal profile] sonia
A Shaky Bridge by Marissa Lingen, [personal profile] mrissa. New medical technology, plus capitalism. We all know what could go wrong, and maybe we know some ways it could be made right again.

Tariffs again

Aug. 1st, 2025 07:58 pm
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[personal profile] hudebnik
Politicians have been imposing import tariffs for many centuries, for a number of different reasons.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, a theory called "mercantilism" held that the most successful country was the one with the most gold and silver within its borders. Selling stuff to foreigners gives you gold and silver; buying stuff from foreigners costs you gold and silver; so obviously you should sell as much as possible and buy as little as possible across national borders. And one obvious way to do this is to charge a high tariff on anything made abroad that anybody tries to bring into your country.

Mercantilism is (or should have been) obvious nonsense. Possessing gold and silver doesn't improve your life much, unless you trade them for things that actually improve your life like food, clothes, entertainment, etc. -- and as soon as you do so, according to the theory, you've made yourself poorer.

In the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries, there was a different reason to impose import tariffs: to support the survival and growth of a particular domestic industry. This happened for two main sub-reasons: either a politician has lots of supporters in that industry, and wants to ensure the workers have jobs and the bosses make profits, or an industry is seen as "national security critical", and the government wants to make sure there's adequate domestic production capacity that won't suddenly disappear in an international conflict. (I've been told that even earlier, the Protestant Reformation retained Catholic fish-days in order to keep British fishing fleets in business, thus ensuring a supply of trained sailors and shipwrights who could also serve the navy.) In either case, it gives an advantage to domestic producers in a particular industry compared with their foreign competitors, at the expense of domestic consumers. But it typically takes years for an entrepreneur to buy land, build a factory, hire workers, and start doing business in a new location. As a result, no entrepreneur will undertake such a project without confidence that the tariff will be in place for many years. Which is one reason that the Constitution grants taxing power only to Congress, through the time-consuming process of making and amending laws. Any tariff imposed unilaterally by a President, particularly if it changes every few weeks, cannot possibly have much effect on where industry happens.

In his first term, Trump imposed a bunch of import tariffs, US farmers lost a bunch of foreign markets, and he paid them off with more money than the tariffs brought in, blowing up the budget deficit (even before Covid). In his second term, he's taken it much farther, and it's never been clear why, or what he wants to achieve. As mentioned above, it can't be to encourage companies to set up more production in the US, because that would require long-term predictability, e.g. if the tariffs were enacted into law with bipartisan support.

One possible reason is that he believes in mercantilism, 250 years after Adam Smith eviscerated it in An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. He measures his own worth by how much money he has, so it comes naturally to him to do the same for the United States. Selling abroad is "winning", buying abroad is "losing", even buying something that can't be made domestically at all. If the goal is to prevent gold and silver (or rather dollars) from leaving the US, imposing 50% tariff rates on Lesotho and Myanmar and similar poor countries makes perfect sense: they still can't afford to buy anything from us, but at least we can stop buying anything from them.

One of his stated reasons is revenue to the Federal government, and it really does have that effect. Of course, the vast majority of the revenue comes from domestic consumers, so it's really just a way of raising taxes without admitting he's doing so (because Republicans don't do that, y'know). This too doesn't make much difference unless the tariffs are in place for a substantial time.

But given what else we know about Trump's psychology, I think the most likely explanation is "tariffs cause pain to other countries, and thus allow me to extort them in exchange for removing the pain." For this approach, long-term predictability isn't necessary; indeed, chaos and unpredictability are part of the negotiating strategy. This is what he's done with law firms and Universities and media companies: threaten them with something painful (for which he has no legal authority or evidence, but he could still cause a lot of pain in the interim before a court overrules him), then demand obeisance and apologies and White House oversight and protection money in exchange for not applying the pain... yet. The "antisemitism" and "DEI" excuses, the oversight to prevent "anti-conservative bias", even the protection money are secondary to the fundamental goal of putting other powerful institutions into a submissive posture.

In surprisingly many domestic cases, it's working. The heads of major corporations, law firms, and Universities have kowtowed to Trump and literally paid him protection money in hopes that (a) he'll turn his attention to somebody else for now, and ideally (b) he'll come to consider them "on his side" and never threaten them again. (a) is likely, but "for now" may mean only a matter of months. (b) is less likely: even the most vociferous of Trump supporters never know when they'll be thrown under a bus.

It's working less well with other countries. A few countries have reached written trade deals in the past six months, not by cutting their own tariffs on US goods (which were mostly very low already, a result of the US-led free-trade consensus of the past seventy years), but by promising other things, such as investment in US-based companies, which requires that they have dollars to invest, which requires that we run a trade deficit with them! Once a "deal" is vaguely agreed-upon, Trump unilaterally changes the numbers in his own favor and announces the deal as completed, then changes the numbers yet again; you can't negotiate with somebody like that. Some other countries have "come to the table" to negotiate, but it's hard to negotiate when neither side knows what the US wants other than submissiveness, so what's been achieved so far are mostly agreements to continue negotiating. Many countries have had popular nationalistic backlashes against the US: it's become almost impossible to buy or sell US-made consumer products in Canada. And every country that the US antagonizes, China immediately approaches with offers of help and cooperation.
tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
[personal profile] tamaranth
2025/119: The Secret World of Denisovans — Silvana Condemi, François Savatier (translated by Holly James)
While Neanderthals found themselves confined to a small, freezing territory during glacial maximums, Denisovans continued to thrive across an immense continent that had expanded due to decreasing sea levels, and still had enough exchanges with their northern relatives to maintain their genetic diversity. [loc. 1844]

Subtitled 'The Epic Story of the Ancient Cousins to Sapiens and Neanderthals', this is an accessible overview of current paleoanthropology as it relates to the Denisovans -- a human species who went extinct around 25,000 years ago, but whose DNA persists in Asian and Oceanic populations. Condemi is a paleoanthropologist, Savatier is a journalist: between them they have produced a very readable text, with boxed sections for the more technical or theoretical aspects of the story.

And it is a story: from the 2010 identification of the new species from DNA in a single finger-bone found in a remote Siberian cave, to ongoing debate about whether the Denisovans were indeed a separate species Read more... )

siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1879923.html


Americans, if you are not already onboard with the Epstein files scandal, I suggest you get onboard. Non-Americans, feel free to pitch in.

For about nine years now, our side – meaning everyone who thinks fascism is bad and has been voting accordingly – has been ardently wishing any of Trump's excesses would be regarded as a scandal that would take down his presidency, and been bewildered why that wasn't happening. Well, it is finally, finally happening, so get out of the bus and come push.

But before you do, there's some things you should know.



1.

Over on Pod Save America (2025 July 25, "EXPLOSIVE REVELATION in Trump’s Epstein Files Scandal") Dan Pfeifer had some things to say about how our side responds to the Epstein files which I think are incredibly important for us to all hear:
[3:15] [Jon Favreau:] Dan, how does this explosive revelation – that we all saw coming – change the nature of this almost 3-week old scandal?

[Dan Pfeiffer:] I would hope that this changes how everyone, ourselves included, talks and thinks about this scandal.

Because we've had a lot of fun about with this. We're going to have fun about it on this podcast, I hope. It is... There's something amusing about it.

But I feel like everyone has been treating this kind of from a perspective of...bemusement? Like, "Ah, look at these conspiracy pushing grifters who've been hoisted on their own petard!" right? Where the real crime here is hypocrisy and deception. Right? That they they say they released the Epstein files but they didn't do it. Trump's breaking a campaign promise, ha! Take that! The dog that caught the car, and all of that.

But I think we do really have to to take a step back, and I know this is going to sound like hyperbole, and I know it will, but I truly believe it: that this scandal, now with this revelation, this scandal, now, should be treated like Iran-Contra, Watergate, other major political scandals.

Because what we have here is the president of the United States, the attorney general, the intelligence community, the FBI director, and the Republican Congress, all part of a conspiracy to cover up information about the President of the United States' relationship with America's most notorious child sex trafficker.

[Jon Favreau, profoundly missing Pfeiffer's point:] And lying about it, right?

[Dan Pfeiffer:] And he lied– he lied to the American people.  Whether– either by direct order or by implicit request, the intelligence community! We have intelligence professionals, like, the most– what's theoretically supposed to be the most, one of the most apolitical parts of the government, concocting a bullshit report we're going to talk about to try to distract people from the political fallout of this. You have the Republican Congress shutting down and going home, for a month because they are so afraid to vote on a measure that could shed light – once again – on the President of the United States' relationship with America's most notorious child sex trafficker.

Like this really is a giant deal. Like, we need to know what is that hearsay Trump's worried about, in the files? What is in there? What do we not know about Trump's relationship? Like, what, what other steps have been taken to try to cover this up? Have there been efforts to alter or destroy the records? Right? What what other government officials have hid it? Who else has been lied to? Like, this is a big deal and it should be treated as a big deal, in my view.

[...]

[...] this is one of the clues that [5:44] you and I took as evidence that Trump knew his name, or at least suspected his name, was in the Epstein files, was he kept saying, "How are we going to know they're real? Maybe Comey and Biden and whoever else doctored them?" To put his name in there, right?

[...]

I mean the, the chain of events here is they were planning to release the files; they were on Pam Bondi's desk; they released that first tranche that had his name in it, that did not– that at that point they did not say We're not going to release more, because after that went out Pam Bondie said These are on my desk for review; she reviewed them, found something that she thought would be quite embarrassing to the president, and they changed their plan. And they've continued to believe that the massive amount of political fallout they've been getting now for almost 3 weeks is preferable to whatever they believe is in the files.
And:
[Jon Favreau:] How do you think Dems should [17:09] handle this issue over the next few months?

[Dan Pfeiffer:] I think our goal should be to keep the issue in the news as much as possible without putting too much spin on the ball. Right? I've seen other testing which shows that the most effective online posts are not Democrats talking about it. It is clips of Republicans or people who previously supported Trump – you know, podcasters, influencers – criticizing Trump for this. That's the most effective medium.

When we think about how we, like, if we are messaging– if you're an elected official and you're thinking about how to use your platforms, that's one way to do it. If we're thinking about it in the context of how all of us are messengers, and people in our lives, and you're sharing things in your group chat, the better thing to share is the clip of Andrew Schultz talking about this on Flagrant, than it is, you know, some Democrat ranting about this on MSNBC.  Or Pod Save America, or anywhere else, right? It's like the... Think about someone who is– who's motivations are not automatically questioned even in an issue on this one where they're, they're quite sincere.
Commentary follows, below.

Please try not to forget... [4,570 words] )

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Oh thank goodness, it's storming

Aug. 2nd, 2025 10:15 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
This should drop the temperature to something livable.

E and I watched three more Voyager episodes.

First, we watched the one where Tom Paris gets put in solitary for 30 days due to an environmental crime of conscience. Janeway flipped her morning coin and landed on "martinet / asshole", I guess. Tom tries pointing out that a month of solitary is cruel and unusual punishment, but nobody, least of all the writers, takes it seriously.

I take it seriously. This is literally torture. The worst thing that happens to Tom is he's bored and has a few nightmares about his astonishingly abusive father. (I thought the man was astonishingly abusive. I'll bet the writers thought he was just ordinary bad.) What happens to real people includes but is not limited to hallucinations, obsessive thoughts, a heightened risk of suicide, and lasting psychosis.

Anyway, the episode was surprisingly still topical, 30-ish years after the fact. The one moderately amusing part of this episode is where Tom tells the turbolift to bring him to the brig because nobody wanted to pay the security guard extras to speak. Great episode, but, to reiterate, solitary confinement is literally torture.

The next episode was Counterpoint, in which a fascist thug thinks he has culture, but actually he does not. They never do. Voyager is smuggling telepathic refugees. The fascists have some inane argument about how you can't trust telepaths and they're a real and present threat to society, but it's a weaksauce argument and nobody buys it. Outside the ship children are getting smuggled around in crates and incarcerated in concentration camps everywhere you look. This is another surprisingly, and dismayingly, topical episode.

At the end, Janeway is sad that the thug betrayed them instead of defecting for real, but that's because she thinks he's hot. I think she could've just kidnapped him. It worked with Seven, after all. (To be honest, there's a long list of one-episode characters that I think Janeway should've outright kidnapped. And also Seska and her baby.)

One of those refugee children shows up again on Prodigy as a Starfleet security guard and... honestly, I have so many questions about the way they apparently jaunt back and forth to the Delta Quadrant on a whim nowadays. Is this something they explain in Picard? Because I'm not watching Picard, not now that I've heard they kill off Icheb.

And today was a Robert Picardo Showcase Episode wherein the Doctor has a psychological crisis after finding out his memory was modified to make him forget his previous psychological crisis, when he chose to save his friend Harry over some random extra. It's a good episode. Don't ask me what Voyager planned to do if he never overcame his trauma and they had to go the rest of the trip with no doctor, though.

*****************


Read more... )

PSA

Jul. 31st, 2025 08:13 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
What even is this fucking bullshit

Go leave a public comment, though I don't even know what to say. "This is garbage and you know it, and you're bad and should feel bad", maybe.

Katabasis, by R. F. Kuang

Jul. 31st, 2025 10:26 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


Katabasis releases at the end of August. I read an advance copy.

I have to conclude that R. F. Kuang's fiction is just not to my taste. This is the first book of hers that I even managed to finish, having previously given up on both Babel (anvillicious, with anvillicious footnotes) and The Poppy War (boring) quite early on. However, a lot of my customers love her books, so I will buy and sell multiple copies of this one.

The structure and concept of Katabasis is quite appealing. Alice Law is at magic college, obsessively determined to succeed. When exploitative working conditions lead to her making a mistake that gorily kills her mentor Professor Grimes, Alice still needs his recommendation... so she goes to Hell to fetch him back! She's followed by another student, Peter, who is a perfect genius who she doesn't realize is in love with her. Their journey through Hell takes up almost all of the book, interspersed by flashbacks to college.

Lots of people will undoubtedly love this book. I found it thuddingly obvious and lacking in charm. The humor was mildly amusing at best. The magic is boring and highly technical. Alice is frustratingly oblivious, self-centered, and monomaniacal - which is clearly a deliberate character choice, but I did not enjoy reading about her. Hell was boring - how do you make Hell boring?!

Spoilery reveal about Peter: Read more... )

The entire book, I felt like I was sitting there twiddling my fingers waiting for Alice to figure out that it's not okay for college to be exploitative and abusive, that it was bad for Professor Grimes to have sexually assaulted her, that Peter loved her, and that success isn't everything. Though at least it didn't have anvillicious footnotes [1] like Babel!

[1] Legally and morally, Professor Grimes sexually assaulted Alice. It is common for survivors of sexual assault to not recognize it as such at the time, especially when the assault involves an abuse of power. [2]

[2] It is an abuse of power for a professor to make any sexual overture to a student, even a seemingly consensual [3] one.

[3] Due to the power differential, no sexual relations between a professor and a student can ever be truly consensual.

I will continue to stock Kuang's books but this is probably the last time I will attempt to actually read one.

I do love the cover.

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