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Pope Francis Prays At Istanbul's Blue Mosque. Conservative Xtians Reveal True Colors

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Alan: Don't miss the YouTube"viewer comments" posted below. 

However conservative Catholics and Christian fundamentalists construe their role in "Christendom,""at ground zero" their views are a cesspool swirl of hatred, contempt and condemnation, a toxic stew that cannot be squared with the moral teaching spoken by Yeshua himself. 

The "born again!" belief in Salvation -- and the correlative way that Catholic traditionalists "play church" -- are often used to exempt formulary practitioners from any obligation to behave in accordance with Jesus' actual teaching.  

"Love Your Enemies. Do Good To Those Who Hate You," Luke 6: 27-42

"Do You Know What You're Doing To Me?"
Jesus of Nazareth
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/12/do-you-know-what-youre-doing-to-me.html

Yeshua Excoriates Fellow Pharisees: "The Woe Passages"

"Any Religion That Needs Fear To Thrive Is Bad Religion"

"Bad Religion: A Compendium"

I was walking across a bridge one day, and I saw a man standing on the edge, about to jump off. So I ran over and said "Stop! Don't do it!""Why shouldn't I?" he said. "Well, there's so much to live for!""Like what?""Well... are you religious?" He said yes. I said, "Me too! Are you Christian or Buddhist?""Christian.""Me too! Are you Catholic or Protestant ? "Protestant.""Me too! Are you Episcopalian or Baptist?""Baptist""Wow! Me too! Are you Baptist Church of God or Baptist Church of the Lord?""Baptist Church of God!""Me too! Are you original Baptist Church of God, or are you reformed Baptist Church of God?""Reformed Baptist Church of God!""Me too! Are you Reformed Baptist Church of God, reformation of 1879, or Reformed Baptist Church of God, reformation of 1915?" He said, "Reformed Baptist Church of God, reformation of 1915!" I said, "Die, heretic scum", and pushed him off.  
Emo Philips

"The Essence Of Religious Fanaticism: Christian And Islamic"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/07/the-essence-of-religious-fanaticism.html


Pope Francis prays at the Blue Mosque in Istanbul


Published on Nov 29, 2014
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(-ONLY VIDEO-) Pope Francis prayed for a few minutes at the Blue Mosque, just as Benedict XVI did back in 2006.

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    Bill Cosby Happily Married 51 Years To Wife Camille: Update And Summary

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    Happily married: Cosby has been with his wife Camille for the last 51 years
    Happily married: Cosby has been with his wife Camille for the last 51 years

    Bill Cosby: Hero To White Supremacists

    Bill Cosby offers to reimburse tickets for his New York stand up show after University of Massachusetts, Netflix and NBC all cut ties with 77-year-old comedian


    • Bill Cosby is scheduled to perform twice on Dec 6 in Tarrytown, NY
    • His team will refund tickets ranging in price from $49 to $125

    • Comes after 17 women accused 77-year-old of raping and drugging them

    • Other theaters, NBC, Netflix and UMass have cut ties with Cosby

    Bill Cosby's management has offered refunds for tickets to his New York show next week.

    It comes in the wake of allegations that the revered comedian has drugged and sexually abused at least 16 women.
    The 77-year-old still plans to perform his two scheduled shows at the Tarrytown Music Hall in Tarrytown, upstate New York.

    But despite initially claiming the venue could not afford to refund tickets, a spokesman for Cosby has now revealed reimbursements will be possible.

    Scroll down for video 
    Refunds available: Bill Cosby's team has confirmed they will refund tickets to his New York show next week
    Refunds available: Bill Cosby's team has confirmed they will refund tickets to his New York show next week

    'Mr. Cosby's management is now allowing for refunds for any patron's (sic) that do not wish to attend the show. Please let me know if I may cancel and refund your order,' the Music Hall box office told ticket holders in an email on Friday, according to Gothamist.

    A number of other theaters have cancelled Cosby's listing, leaving him with 30 shows until spring 2015.

    Netflix and NBC have pulled the entertainer's projects, and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst has cut ties with their star alumnus by asking him to step down as an honorary co-chairman of their $300 million fundraising campaign.

    Cosby received a master's degree and a doctorate in education from the university. 

    He and his wife donated several hundred thousand dollars to the university, with reports suggesting the figure to be about $500,000.

    Dropped: The University of Massachusetts Amherst has confirmed it cut ties with 1976 graduate Bill Cosby in the wake of his ever-growing sex scandal
    Dropped: The University of Massachusetts Amherst has confirmed it cut ties with 1976 graduate Bill Cosby in the wake of his ever-growing sex scandal
    Flashback: Cosby shakes hands with University of Massachusetts Chancellor Randolph W. Bromery (left) after receiving his Doctor of Education degree in 1977
    Flashback: Cosby shakes hands with University of Massachusetts Chancellor Randolph W. Bromery (left) after receiving his Doctor of Education degree in 1977

    Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley sent a letter to the university urging it to cut ties with Cosby.
    Coakley says while Cosby hadn't been criminally charged his association sends the wrong message when the state is focused on the prevention of campus sexual assault.

    'Although Mr. Cosby has not been criminally charged nor convicted for these actions ... I believe the volume and disturbing nature of these allegations has reached a point where Mr Cosby should no longer have a formal role at UMass, nor be involved in its fundraising efforts, unless or until Mr Cosby is able to satisfactorily respond to these allegations,' Coakley wrote. 

    Cosby's lawyer has called the allegations 'unsubstantiated' and 'discredited'.

    On Wednesday it was revealed that Cosby  testified under oath in 2005 that he gave the National Enquirer an exclusive interview about looming sexual-assault accusations by a Canadian woman against him in exchange for the tabloid spiking a second accuser's story.

    Excerpts of Cosby's deposition from a civil lawsuit filed by Andrea Constand quote Cosby as saying he feared the public would believe her sexual-assault accusations if the Enquirer published similar claims by Beth Ferrier. 

    Both women accused Cosby of drugging and molesting them.

    'Did you ever think that if Beth Ferrier's story was printed in the National Enquirer, that that would make the public believe that maybe Andrea was also telling the truth?' Cosby was asked. 

    'Exactly,' Cosby replied, according to court motions initially filed under seal and made available from archived federal court records.

    Cosby, in the deposition, said he had a contract with the Enquirer.

    'I would give them an exclusive story, my words,' Cosby said in the Sept. 29, 2005, deposition. In return, 'they would not print the story of — print Beth's story.'

    Role model no more: Flanked by Boston College President Reverend J. Donald Monan (right) and UMass President William M. Bulger, actor Bill Cosby reacts to the graduates at Boston College commencement exercises in 2011. UMass cut all ties with Cosby this week
    Role model no more: Flanked by Boston College President Reverend J. Donald Monan (right) and UMass President William M. Bulger, actor Bill Cosby reacts to the graduates at Boston College commencement exercises in 2011. UMass cut all ties with Cosby this week

    The release of the documents comes after Cosby this month was shown on an Associated Press video trying to persuade the news cooperative not to use his response when asked this month about sexual-abuse allegations.
    'I would appreciate if it was scuttled,' Cosby said in a videotaped exchange with the AP on Nov. 6.

    Cosby said in 2005 he had been given a draft of Ferrier's interview with the Enquirer and was told she had passed its lie-detector test. He said he also was given an advance look at his exclusive, titled 'My Story,' which warned that he would defend against anyone trying to 'exploit' him.

    Constand later sued Cosby and the Enquirer, alleging defamation. The claims were consolidated with her sexual-assault lawsuit against Cosby and were settled.

    A representative for American Media, Inc., which owns the National Enquirer, said in an emailed statement Wednesday that the Enquirer was 'unflinching' in its coverage of the allegations against Cosby.

    'We continue to remain aggressive in our reporting today and stand by the integrity of our coverage of this story which we have taken the lead on for more than a decade,' the representative said.

    Cosby had said at his deposition that Constand and her mother asked only for an apology in early phone calls about the issue in January 2005, and he said they received one.

    'Andrea's mother said, 'That's all I wanted, Bill,'' Cosby testified.

    Constand's lawyers argued in their defamation suit: 'Requesting only an apology is not the action of an extortionist or someone who wants to 'exploit' a celebrity.'

    They said that Cosby later called back and offered to pay for Constand's 'education.'

    Constand had met Cosby through her job with the women's basketball team at Temple University in Philadelphia, and she said he sexually assaulted her at his nearby home in 2004. 


    She quit the job and moved home that year, and she first filed a report with Ontario police on Jan. 13, 2005, and filed a federal civil suit that March. 

    After prosecutors near Philadelphia decided not to file criminal charges, several other women came forward to support Constand's claims, including Ferrier.

    Ferrier has gone public about what she called her brief affair with Cosby when she was a model in 1984. 

    She said that he once drugged her coffee during an encounter in Denver and that she woke up hours later in the backseat of her car with her clothes disheveled. 

    The Enquirer in 2005 withheld her story and instead published Cosby's account, in which he said, 'Sometimes you try to help people and it backfires on you and then they try to take advantage of you.'

    In the legal deposition, taken at a Philadelphia hotel, Constand's lawyer asked Cosby if he tried in the Enquirer article 'to make the public believe that Andrea was not telling the truth?'

    'Yes,' Cosby replied.

    Constand's civil lawsuit grew to include nine women willing to testify about allegations of sexual assaults involving Cosby. Some came forward after a suburban Philadelphia prosecutor declined to file criminal charges over Constand's police complaint.

    A comedian this year referenced the accusations anew in a performance, prompting some of the suit's Jane Doe witnesses to reveal their names and other women to raise new accusations.

    Cosby has refused to discuss allegations raised in recent weeks by numerous women. 

    THE WOMEN WHO SAY THEY WERE ATTACKED BY COSBY

    Andrea Constand - A Temple University employee, she claimed in 2006 that Cosby drugged and sexually assaulted her in his Philadelphia-area mansion two years earlier. Cosby eventually settled this suit out of court as the prosecution said they had 13 Jane Does who would testify Cosby did the same to them in the past.

    Barbara Bowman - Bowman told MailOnline that Cosby raped and drugged her back in 1985 when she was a 17-year-old aspiring actress. Bowman was one of the 13 Jane Does in the 2006 trial against Cosby.

    Joan Tarshis - Tarshis claimed that she was just 19-years-old when Cosby drugged and raped her twice in Hollywood back in 1969 while she was working as a writer for him.

    Janice Dickinson - The supermodel  (pictured right) said in an interview that Cosby asked her to come to Lake Tahoe and talk about a television role in 1982, but ended up drugging and raping her.

    Tamara Green - Green, who first came forward in 2005 told MailOnline that she was an aspiring actress in the 1970s when Cosby gave her pills and pretended to care for her while she had the flu, but instead sexually assaulted her.

    Therese Serignese - Also one of the 13 Jane Does, she says she was 19 when Cosby drugged and raped her in Las Vegas after one of his shows.

    Louisa Moritz - She accused Cosby of sexual assault, saying he once forced her into oral sex, backstage at The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson in 1971, and implied he would further her career if she went through with it.

    Linda Joy Traitz - She said earlier this week that she was just 19 when Cosby drove her out to a beach and tried to get her to take pills to relax, before becoming 'sexually aggressive'. Traitz, of Hallandale Beach, Florida, has been charged in the past with trafficking pills. Cosby's attorney, Marty Singer, is trying to use Traitz's past to discredit her claims against his client.

    Beth Ferrier - Beth Ferrier claims she had relationship with Cosby in the mid-1980s. She claims that she awoke in her car with her clothes in disarray and not remembering what had happened. Ferrier has claimed that he drugged her coffee.

    Carla Ferrigno - The wife of Incredible Hulk star Lou Ferrigno, claims Cosby tried to sexually assault her during a gathering at his house in 1967. What's more, Cosby allegedly tried to use a friend to help court Ferrigno, and allegedly made his move on the former Playboy Bunny just moments after his own wife, Camille, left the room.

    Angela Leslie - The former model-actress claims that Cosby forced her to masturbate him in his Vegas hotel suite after giving her a strong drink in 1992.

    Renita Chainey Hill - The 47-year-old mother-of-three who met Cosby when she was offered a role on Picture Pages in Pittsburgh claimed he would fly her to different cities around the United States and drug her during a four-year relationship.

    Kristina Ruehli - A New Hampshire grandmother-of-eight, now 71, claims Cosby invited her back to his house for 'party'. She arrived and no one was there. Ruehli alleges that he drugged two bourbons he poured her and she came to when he was on top of her, shirtless. 

    Victoria Valentino - The former Playboy playmate claims Cosby drugged her and a friend, tried to rape her friend then violated her instead in a Hollywood apartment after dinner.

    Jewel Allison - The former model accused Cosby of drugging her wine and making her feel his genitals before kissing her during a dinner at his home in the late Eighties.

    Michelle Hurd: The 47-year-old actress, best known for her roles on Law & Order: SVU and Gossip Girl, revealed she was a stand-in on the set of The Cosby Show when Cosby started acting inappropriately around her. In a Facebook post this weekend, she described being touched in ways she did not like and being asked to eat lunch with him in his dressing room. Then, things became too much for Hurd. 'I dodged the ultimate bullet with him when he asked me to come to his house, take a shower so we could blow dry my hair and see what it looked like straightened,' she says. 'At that point my own red flags went off and I told him, "No, I’ll just come to work tomorrow with my hair straightened'''.

    Joyce Emmons: The former comedy club manager claims she woke up naked next to a friend of Bill Cosby after the comedian gave her a sedative when she complained of a migraine. Joyce Emmons told TMZ that the comedian slipped her Quaalude when she was in his Las Vegas hotel suite in the 1970s. She claims Cosby drugged her but has not accused him of sexual assault.

    Lachele Covington: The 20-year-old actress, who’d been an extra on the TV show Cosby, filed a police report in March 2000 against the star, accusing him of making an unwelcome sexual advance. According to The New York Post, after dinner and drinks at his home, he massaged her then 'guided her hand towards his sweatpants'. Cosby denied the claim and no charges were filed. 

    "Wanderers: Short Video of Our Future in Space," Slate Magazine

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    Sunset on Mars
    Sunset on Mars, based on images taken by the Spirit rover..

    Wanderers

    Seriously, stop whatever you’re doing and WATCH THIS VIDEO. And yes, you very much want to make it full screen:
    Holy. WOW.
    This is one of the most wondrous and moving paeans to space exploration I have ever seen. The words of Sagan are magnificent, of course. And the effects arestunning, photo-realistic and very compelling.
    But take a moment and let this sink in: Nearly every location depicted in this video is real. These aren’t just fanciful places made up in the head of a special effect artist; those are worlds in our solar system that actually exist. And many were based on images taken through telescopes, or probes that have physically visited these distant locales.
    Sunset on Mars. The weird ridge wrapped around Saturn’s moon Iapetus. The ice fields of Jupiter’s moon Europa. Even those cliff divers? Yup: that’s Uranus’s moon Miranda, with the highest cliffs known in the solar system.
    Every time the scene changed in the video, my jaw dropped a little further and my brain soared to a new height. Nothing in there is impossible; no faster than light travel, no wormholes. Even the space elevator shown towering over Mars and the huge cylindrical rotating colony in space (did you notice the Red Sea in it?) are problems in engineering, not physics. We can build them.
    And each is a dream of mine, a thing I see when I close my eyes. Cruising throughthe geysers of Enceladus, skimming over Jupiter’s clouds, floating in Saturn’s rings (and note the scale of the rings in the video; the chunks of ice and the height of the rings are correct).
    Right now, we can only see these adventures, these possible futures, when we dream. I choked up several times watching the video, seeing these visions laid out.
    But it was that last shot, the close-up of the woman watching the airship exploring the clouds over Saturn; that was what pierced home.
    For now, we send our robots, our machines into space. We learn a lot that way, and there is no end to what we can discover. But this is a human endeavor, a human adventure, and there will come a time when the views of those worlds you see in this video will no longer be science fiction.
    To some of us, someday, those worlds will be home. 





    wanderers_woman
    Photo by Erik Wernquist, from the video.
    Update (Nov. 30, 2014 at 00:20 UTC): Erik Wernquist has more information about the film on his website, and a gallery of stills as well. My friend Mika McKinnon has an excellent writeup of the film over at io9; go read it as well.
    Tip of the spacesuit visor to Alex Parker.
    Phil Plait writes Slate’s Bad Astronomy blog and is an astronomer, public speaker, science evangelizer, and author of Death From the Skies!  

    Herman Melville: "I Am Tormented With An Everlasting Itch"

    The Founding Fathers Would Have Hated The Tea Party

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    As offspring of The Enlightenment - and Deist in their religious orientation - The Founding Fathers studied science, read the Greek philosophers (and as many other great thinkers as they could get their hands on) and considered Paris the epicenter of Western civilization.

    "Deism And Founding Fathers Links"

    Since miracles did not accord with science, Jefferson - a hero to small-government, self-reliant, individualist conservatives - published a version of the New Testament which excised every miraculous occurrence.

    "The Founding Of America: Christianity As The Message, Not The Medium"

    "The Tea Party Is The American Taliban"
    Newsroom
    http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-newsroom-tea-party-is-americas.html

    ***

    Alan: Not only would The Founding Fathers have hated The Tea Party, the Republican Old Guard will soon hate The Tea Party as the GOP's worsening civil war becomes existentially non-viable.



    The Question Is Not Whether Darren Wilson Behaved Legally. He Did. The Question...

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    Watch this video

    Protests spread coast to coast

    STORY HIGHLIGHTS
    • Raul Reyes: Grand jury decided not to indict Officer Darren Wilson; prosecutor key in this
    • He says Robert McCulloch compromised grand jury from start, should have recused himself
    • His giving grand jury voluminous evidence made it seem he was acting to protect Wilson
    • Reyes: Decision an affront to the fundamental American value we are all are equal under law















    Video: http://edition.cnn.com/2014/11/24/opinion/reyes-ferguson-grand-jury/?hpt=hp_c2

    Alan: The Question is not whether Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson behaved legally. The Question is whether The Law is wrong. 

    "Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right



    Ferguson Message: Justice System Unfair To Minorities

    By Raul A. Reyes
    November 27, 2014
    Editor's note: Raul A. Reyes is an attorney and member of the USA Today Board of Contributors. Follow him on Twitter @RaulAReyes
    (CNN) -- A little over two days. That's how long the grand jury deliberated before deciding not to bring an indictment against Darren Wilson, the police officer who shot and killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri on August 9. St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCulloch announced the grand jury had heard more than 70 hours of testimony from 60 witnesses before reaching its decision, which he said was supported by physical evidence.
    Sadly, the grand jury's failure to return an indictment of Wilson was not surprising. But don't blame the grand jury; blame McCulloch. He oversaw the proceedings and bears responsibility for their outcome.
    Raul A. Reyes
    Raul A. Reyes
    McCulloch compromised the Ferguson grand jury proceedings from the start. He resisted calls to recuse himself, saying, "I have absolutely no intention of walking away from duties and the responsibilities entrusted in me by the people of this community." However, the community would have been better served if he had stepped aside.
    Photos: Unrest in FergusonPhotos: Unrest in Ferguson
    McCulloch's father was a police officer killed in a shootoutwith an African-American suspect. His brother, uncle and cousin served with the St. Louis Police Department, and his mother worked there for 20 years as a clerk.Newsweek noted McCulloch's "long history of siding with the police." For the sake of impartiality, McCulloch should have let a special prosecutor take over the case.
    The grand jury only needed to find "probable cause" to charge Wilson. That's one of the lowest legal standards in our justice system, below "beyond a reasonable doubt" (required for a criminal conviction) and "preponderance of the evidence" (the standard in a civil trial). The fact that McCulloch did not get an indictment for a killing that shocked the nation raises questions about whether he really wanted an indictment.
    "We will be presenting absolutely everything to this grand jury," McCulloch said in August. Yet in grand jury proceedings, the prosecutor typically shows the minimal amount of evidence necessary to establish that a trial is merited. By dumping so much evidence on the grand jury, McCulloch may have overwhelmed them and led them to the wrong conclusion. In the process, he's opened himself to charges that he was acting to protect Wilson.
    Consider McCulloch's time frame for the grand jury, which The New York Times described as "prolonged and exhaustive." Grand juries routinely return criminal indictments in a matter of days. But the Ferguson proceedings dragged on for months, putting a burden on the jurors to recall everything and then decide wisely. Another red flag was that this lengthy process was riddled with leaks, all of which supported Wilson's account of the events.
    Worse, McCulloch declined to recommend charges to the grand jury. Prosecutors normally walk a jury through the charges they are seeking, breaking them down and explaining why they are deserved. McCulloch instead left the Ferguson grand jury to sort through terms such as "voluntary manslaughter" and "involuntary manslaughter in the second degree" on their own -- making it more likely that they would not seek an indictment.
    Jackson: Civil rights have been violated
    Breaking down the Ferguson decision
    Smoke bombs fired on Ferguson crowds
    In fact, McCulloch could have brought charges directly against Wilson, circumventing the grand jury. He chose not to do so, which is a troubling indicator of his interest in aggressively prosecuting this case.
    Sure, there are conflicting accounts of what transpired between Wilson and Michael Brown. Was Wilson in fear for his life, as he told investigators, when he and Brown struggled for his gun? Did Brown have his hands up when he was fatally shot? We will never know, because there will be no trial. That's a tragedy for the Brown family and an affront to the fundamental American value that we all are equal under the law.
    The grand jury's decision has implications far beyond Ferguson. Gallup polling has found that African-Americans have less confidence in the criminal justice system than white Americans, while a W.W. Kellogg Foundation report found that 68% of Latinos report being worried about police brutality. Wilson walking free will likely reinforce the views among communities of color that our justice system is unfair. And when significant segments of our population lose faith in our justice system, our democracy is weakened.

    The Ferguson decision reflects poorly on prosecutor McCulloch. His flawed grand jury proceedings ensured that justice was not served for Michael Brown.

    G.O.P Aide Regrets Attack On Obama Daughters For Overshadowing Insults To Parents

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    WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Republican congressional aide Elizabeth Lauten said on Sunday morning that she “deeply regretted” her attack on Sasha and Malia Obama because it “completely overshadowed the vicious insults I hurled at their parents.”

    Appearing on Fox News, Lauten said, “If I had to do it over again, I’d leave the girls out of it so that the horrible things I said about their parents would have had a chance to shine through. I’m kicking myself about that.”
    Saying that she had “learned my lesson” from the incident, she added, “I put a lot of work into crafting malicious insults about Barack and Michelle Obama, and those insults have largely been ignored. That’s the real tragedy here.”
    Visibly emotional, Lauten said that having her attacks on the First Couple be overlooked “has been a source of great personal suffering for me,” but added, “I refuse to call myself a victim.”
    “If what I’ve gone through helps others to do a better job of vilifying the President and the First Lady, it will all have been worth it,” she said.

    Capitalist Pigs And Avarice - The Pathognomic "Deadly Sin" Of Our Age

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    Dear Fred,

    Thanks for your email.

    Here's how I view the contributions made by the three American corporations you mention and how Apple is categorically different from Boeing and Walmart.

    Boeing "gives" me no value. 

    Indeed, as a foundational player in The Military Industrial Complex, Boeing picks my pocket (and compromises my conscience) every April 15th.

    Please note that the "moral compromise" claimed by Hobby Lobby is trivial in comparison to the federal government's forced collusion with The Military Industrial Complex. Sticks and stones vs. nuclear weapons.

    "Why We Fight," A Documentary Film About The Military Industrial Complex
    Starring Dwight Eisenhower

    WalMart "gives" me a couple bucks'"savings" each month, savings made possible by failing to provide full-time workers sufficient recompense to live fully-dignified lives.

    Notably, Wal-Mart employees' routine eligibility for "social services" is tantamount to The Walton Family picking my pocket every April 15th.


    On the other hand, Apple pays its employees better than most American corporations, simultaneously "giving" me thousands of dollars a year relative to what it once cost to accomplish publishing, recording and business functions crucial to my household economics.
    Apple also facilitates highly desirable "vocational,""creative" and "work-a-day" achievements which, previously, I would not have attempted due to prohibitive expense.

    Consider...

    I just produced a music album -- my first -- with Teomazehualli, a choral group comprised of four Mexican friends.

    Although I paid an Apple-based sound engineer a thousand dollars for his services, this production would have cost 10 to 30 times as much prior to 1990 - way more than I could afford.
    http://teomazehualli.homestead.com/HomePage.html

    On the heels of this very satisfying creative venture, I already I envision four other recording projects and am confident I will undertake at least one of them... which will lead to another... and another.

    In this sense, Apple not only creates jobs but jobs that are vital parts of peoples' lives, not just building blocks of the wage-slavery system.

    Although "dollar amount" is a critical part of any "bottom line,""enhancement-of-creativity" also has a dollar value if only by making it less necessary to buy compensatory pleasures to fill the void created by "not having a life."

    "The merely rich are not rich enough to rule the modern market. The things that change modern history, the big national and international loans, the big educational and philanthropic foundations, the purchase of numberless newspapers, the big prices paid for peerages, the big expenses often incurred in elections - these are getting too big for everybody except the misers; the men with the largest of earthly fortunes and the smallest of earthly aims. There are two other odd and rather important things to be said about them. The first is this: that with this aristocracy we do not have the chance of a lucky variety in types which belongs to larger and looser aristocracies. The moderately rich include all kinds of people even good people. Even priests are sometimes saints; and even soldiers are sometimes heroes. Some doctors have really grown wealthy by curing their patients and not by flattering them; some brewers have been known to sell beer. But among the Very Rich you will never find a really generous man, even by accident. They may give their money away, but they will never give themselves away; they are egoistic, secretive, dry as old bones. To be smart enough to get all that money you must be dull enough to want it."   
    G. K. Chesterton  

    That said, I am heartily in favor of fleecing the rich, whose "free market profits" are an insult to any moral understanding of The Common Good

    "Pope Francis Links"

    Absent a kinder phrase to epitomize the filthy rich, these capitalist pigs have surrendered their souls to avarice, the pathognomonic "Deadly Sin" of our age.

    Conservatives fail to see the corrosive influence of greed since their obsession with "Lust" blinds them to free-market Capitalism as the prime mover -- and chief accelerant -- of all the Deadly Sins, including lust.

    "We get what our advertisement promote" and unbridled capitalism is a non-stop meta-level advertisement for greed, gluttony, envy, lust, sloth, and -- by way of The Military-Industrial Complex -- pride and wrath.  http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/09/the-seven-deadly-sins-sadness-sorrow.html

    Bill Maher: The 85 Richest People Own More Than The Bottom Half Of Humankind


    "The Pitchforks Are Coming For Us Billionaires"

    "The Is Why They Hate You And Want You To Die"
    The Reformed Broker

    "Plutocracy Triumphant"
    Cartoon Compendium

    "Taibbi: The $9 Billion Whistle Blower At JPMorgan-Chase. Financial Thuggery At The Top"



    Pax tecum

    Alan

    On Sun, Nov 30, 2014 at 1:56 PM, Fred Owens <froghospital911@gmail.com> wrote:
    Apple is the world's biggest corporation, but has only 85,000 employees.
    Wal-Mart, not quite as big, has 1.4 million employees.

    Wal-Mart has crummy jobs and Apple has no jobs. This is not good.
    Lefties despise Wal-Mart but love Apple. Please explain that.

    Boeing builds very good airplanes with 170,000 workers who mostly get pretty good wages....... this is an old-style corporation, and I think you need a company this big, with this many workers, to build a modern jet airplane.
    --
    Fred Owens
    cell: 360-739-0214

    My gardening blog is  Fred Owens
    My writing blog is Frog Hospital

    send mail to:

    Fred Owens
    35 West Main St Suite B #391
    Ventura CA 93001



    Expect The Decline In Energy Prices To COntinue For A Long, Long Time

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    Nothing makes more sense.

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    Solar panels, fracking and other new technologies will not only increase the supply of energy, but also allow the world to use it more efficiently. Energy companies, meanwhile, have been planning on steadily increasing energy costs for years. The Financial Times.



    Anne Lamott On Grief, Grace And Gratitude

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    "Grief, when it comes, is nothing like we expect it to be," Joan Didion wrote in hermagnificent meditation on the subject. But oftentimes, grief doesn't exactly come – not with the single-mindedness and unity of action the word implies. Rather, it creeps up – through the backdoor of the psyche, slowly, in quiet baby steps, until it blindsides the heart with a giant's stomp. And yet it is possible to find between the floorboards a soft light that awakens those parts of us that go half-asleep through the autopilot of life.
    That's precisely what Anne Lamott – one of the most intensely original writers of our time – explores in Small Victories: Spotting Improbable Moments of Grace (public library | IndieBound), the same magnificent volume of reflections on grief, gratitude, and forgiveness that gave us Lamott on the uncomfortable art of letting yourself be seen.
    From the very preface, titled "Victory Lap," Lamott stops the stride:
    The worst possible thing you can do when you’re down in the dumps, tweaking, vaporous with victimized self-righteousness, or bored, is to take a walk with dying friends. They will ruin everything for you.
    First of all, friends like this may not even think of themselves as dying, although they clearly are, according to recent scans and gentle doctors’ reports. But no, they see themselves as fully alive. They are living and doing as much as they can, as well as they can, for as long as they can.
    They ruin your multitasking high, the bath of agitation, rumination, and judgment you wallow in, without the decency to come out and just say anything. They bust you by being grateful for the day, while you are obsessed with how thin your lashes have become and how wide your bottom.
    She recounts one spring-morning hike in the Muir Woods with her friend Barbara, who was being slowly snatched from life by Lou Gehrig's disease – "you could see the shape of her animal, and bones and branches and humanity"– and Barbara's girlfriend of thirty years, Susie. Lamott writes:
    When you are on the knife’s edge – when nobody knows exactly what is going to happen next, only that it will be worse – you take in today. So here we were, at the trailhead, for a cold day’s walk.
    Dead Huon pine, 10,500 years old, from Rachel Sussman's The Oldest Living Things in the World

    In the trees, "so huge that they shut you up" and with a way of silently speaking volumes about time and mortality, Lamott finds strange assurance:
    The trees looked congregational. As we walked beneath the looming green world, pushing out its burls and sprouts, I felt a moment’s panic at the thought of Barbara’s impending death, and maybe also my own. We are all going to die! That’s just so awful. I didn’t agree to this. How do we live in the face of this? Left foot, right foot, push the walker forward.
    Noting the groups of foreign tourists on the trail, she echoes Lucinda Williams – "you do not know what wars are going on down there, where the spirit meets the bone" – and writes:
    Who knows what tragedies these happy tourists left behind at home? Into every life crap will fall. Most of us do as well as possible, and some of it works okay, and we try to release that which doesn’t and which is never going to. ... Making so much of it work is the grace of it; and not being able to make it work is double grace. Grace squared. Their somehow grounded buoyancy is infectious, so much better than detached martyrdom, which is disgusting.
    In a sentiment reminiscent of Virginia Woolf's assertion that "a self that goes on changing is a self that goes on living," Lamott considers how people like her friend Barbara – people on the precipice of death and yet very much alive – find the grace of making-it-work:
    They are willing to redefine themselves, and life, and okayness. Redefinition is a nightmare – we think we’ve arrived, in our nice Pottery Barn boxes, and that this or that is true. Then something happens that totally sucks, and we are in a new box, and it is like changing into clothes that don’t fit, that we hate. Yet the essence remains. Essence is malleable, fluid. Everything we lose is Buddhist truth – one more thing that you don’t have to grab with your death grip, and protect from theft or decay. It’s gone. We can mourn it, but we don’t have to get down in the grave with it.
    In one of the book's final essays, titled "Dear Old Friend," Lamott revisits the subject – of redefinition, of okayness, of grace in the face of death:
    We turn toward love like sunflowers, and then the human parts kick in. This seems to me the only real problem, the human parts – the body, for instance, and the mind. Also, the knowledge that every person you’ve ever loved will die, many badly, and too young, doesn’t really help things. My friend Marianne once said that Jesus has everything we have, but He doesn’t have all the other stuff, too. And the other stuff leaves you shaking your sunflower head, your whole life through.
    She recalls bearing witness to her friend Sue's experience – a friend younger than she but "already wise, cheeky, gentle, blonde, jaundiced, emaciated, full of life, and dying of cancer." Shortly after Sue received her final fatal diagnosis, Lamott recounts the New Year's Day phone call in which Sue gave her the news:
    I just listened for a long time; she went from crushed to defiant.
    “I have what everyone wants,” she said. “But no one would be willing to pay.”
    “What do you have?”
    “The two most important things. I got forced into loving myself. And I’m not afraid of dying anymore.”
    With her signature blend of piercing wisdom administered via piercing wit, Lamott writes:
    This business of having been issued a body is deeply confusing... Bodies are so messy and disappointing. Every time I see the bumper sticker that says “We think we’re humans having spiritual experiences, but we’re really spirits having human experiences,” I (a) think it’s true and (b) want to ram the car.
    Small Victories is monumental in its entirety, a trove of gently whispered truths that jolt you into awakeness. Couple it with Lamott on why perfectionism kills creativity and how to stop keeping ourselves small by people-pleasing.


    The Best Science Books of 2014

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    On the heels of the year's most intelligent and imaginative children's bookscome the most stimulating science books published this annum. (Step into the nonfictional time machine by revisiting the selections for 2013,2012, and 2011.)
    1. THE ACCIDENTAL UNIVERSE
    "If we ever reach the point where we think we thoroughly understand who we are and where we came from," Carl Sagan wrote in histimeless meditation on science and religion,"we will have failed." It's a sentiment that dismisses in one fell Saganesque swoop both the blind dogmatism of religion and the vain certitude of science – a sentiment articulated by some of history's greatest minds, fromEinstein to Ada Lovelace to Isaac Asimov, all the way back Galileo. Yet centuries after Galileo and decades after Sagan, humanity remains profoundly uneasy about reconciling these conflicting frameworks for understanding the universe and our place in it.
    That unanswerable question of where we came from is precisely what physicist Alan Lightman – one of the finest essayists writing today and the very first person to receive dual appointments in science and the humanities at MIT – explores from various angles in The Accidental Universe: The World You Thought You Knew (public library |IndieBound).
    At the intersection of science and philosophy, the essays in the book explore the possible existence of multiple universes, multiple space-time continuums, more than three dimensions. Lightman writes:
    Science does not reveal the meaning of our existence, but it does draw back some of the veils.
    [...]
    Theoretical physics is the deepest and purest branch of science. It is the outpost of science closest to philosophy, and religion.
    In one of the most beautiful essays in the book, titled "The Spiritual Universe," Lightman explores that intersection of perspectives in making sense of life:
    I completely endorse the central doctrine of science. And I do not believe in the existence of a Being who lives beyond matter and energy, even if that Being refrains from entering the fray of the physical world. However, I certainly agree with [scientists who argue] that science is not the only avenue for arriving at knowledge, that there are interesting and vital questions beyond the reach of test tubes and equations. Obviously, vast territories of the arts concern inner experiences that cannot be analyzed by science. The humanities, such as history and philosophy, raise questions that do not have definite or unanimously accepted answers.
    [...]
    There are things we take on faith, without physical proof and even sometimes without any methodology for proof. We cannot clearly show why the ending of a particular novel haunts us. We cannot prove under what conditions we would sacrifice our own life in order to save the life of our child. We cannot prove whether it is right or wrong to steal in order to feed our family, or even agree on a definition of “right” and “wrong.” We cannot prove the meaning of our life, or whether life has any meaning at all. For these questions, we can gather evidence and debate, but in the end we cannot arrive at any system of analysis akin to the way in which a physicist decides how many seconds it will take a one-foot-long pendulum to make a complete swing. The previous questions are questions of aesthetics, morality, philosophy. These are questions for the arts and the humanities. These are also questions aligned with some of the intangible concerns of traditional religion.
    [...]
    Faith, in its broadest sense, is about far more than belief in the existence of God or the disregard of scientific evidence. Faith is the willingness to give ourselves over, at times, to things we do not fully understand. Faith is the belief in things larger than ourselves. Faith is the ability to honor stillness at some moments and at others to ride the passion and exuberance that is the artistic impulse, the flight of the imagination, the full engagement with this strange and shimmering world.
    2. THE HUMAN AGE
    In the most memorable scene from the cinematic adaptation of Carl Sagan's novelContact, Jodi Foster's character – modeled after real-life astronomer and alien hunter Jill Tarter – beholds the uncontainable wonder of the cosmos, which she has been tasked with conveying to humanity, and gasps: "They should've sent a poet!"
    To tell humanity its own story is a task no less herculean, and at last we have a poet – Sagan's favorite poet, no less – to marry science and wonder. Science storyteller and historian Diane Ackerman, of course, isn't only a poet – though Sagan did send her spectacular scientifically accurate verses for the planets to Timothy Leary in prison. For the past four decades, she has been bridging science and the humanities in extraordinary explorations of everything from the science of the senses to the natural history of love to the slender threads of hope. In The Human Age: The World Shaped By Us (public library |IndieBound), Ackerman traces how we got to where we are – a perpetually forward-leaning species living in a remarkable era full of technological wonders most of which didn't exist a mere two centuries ago – when "only moments before, in geological time, we were speechless shadows on the savanna."
    With bewitchingly lyrical language, Ackerman paints the backdrop of our explosive evolution and its yin-yang of achievement and annihilation:
    Humans have always been hopped-up, restless, busy bodies. During the past 11,700 years, a mere blink of time since the glaciers retreated at the end of the last ice age, we invented the pearls of Agriculture, Writing, and Science. We traveled in all directions, followed the long hands of rivers, crossed snow kingdoms, scaled dizzying clefts and gorges, trekked to remote islands and the poles, plunged to ocean depths haunted by fish lit like luminarias and jellies with golden eyes. Under a worship of stars, we trimmed fires and strung lanterns all across the darkness. We framed Oz-like cities, voyaged off our home planet, and golfed on the moon. We dreamt up a wizardry of industrial and medical marvels. We may not have shuffled the continents, but we’ve erased and redrawn their outlines with cities, agriculture, and climate change. We’ve blocked and rerouted rivers, depositing thick sediments of new land. We’ve leveled forests, scraped and paved the earth. We’ve subdued 75 percent of the land surface – preserving some pockets as “wilderness,” denaturing vast tracts for our businesses and homes, and homogenizing a third of the world’s ice-free land through farming. We’ve lopped off the tops of mountains to dig craters and quarries for mining. It’s as if aliens appeared with megamallets and laser chisels and started resculpting every continent to better suit them. We’ve turned the landscape into another form of architecture; we’ve made the planet our sandbox.
    But Ackerman is a techno-utopian at heart. Noting that we've altered our relationship with the natural world "radically, irreversibly, but by no means all for the bad," she adds:
    Our relationship with nature is evolving, rapidly but incrementally, and at times so subtly that we don’t perceive the sonic booms, literally or metaphorically. As we’re redefining our perception of the world surrounding us, and the world inside of us, we’re revising our fundamental ideas about exactly what it means to be human, and also what we deem “natural."
    3. THE BOOK OF TREES
    Why is it that when we behold the oldest living trees in the world, primeval awe runs down our spine? We are entwined with trees in an elemental embrace, both biological and symbolic, depending on them for the very air we breathe as well as for our deepest metaphors, millennia in the making. They permeate our mythology and our understanding of evolution. They enchant our greatest poets and rivet our greatest scientists. Even our language reflects that relationship – it's an idea that has taken "root" in nearly every "branch" of knowledge.
    How and why this came to be is what designer and information visualization scholar Manuel Lima explores in The Book of Trees: Visualizing Branches of Knowledge (public library | IndieBound) – a magnificent 800-year history of the tree diagram, from Descartes to data visualization, medieval manuscripts to modern information design, and the follow-up to Lima's excellent Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns of Information.
    'Genealogical distribution of the arts and sciences' by Chrétien Frederic Guillaume Roth from Encyclopédie (1780)
    'Tree of virtues' by Lambert of Saint-Omer, ca. 1250
    'Plan of Organization of New York and Erie Railroad' by Daniel Craig McCallum (1855)
    Lima writes in the introduction:
    In a time when more than half of the world's population live in cities, surrounded on a daily basis by asphalt, cement, iron, and glass, it's hard to conceive of a time when trees were of immense and tangible significance to our existence. But for thousands and thousands of years, trees have provided us with not only shelter, protection, and food, but also seemingly limitless resources for medicine, fire, energy, weaponry, tool building, and construction. It's only normal that human beings, observing their intricate branching schemas and the seasonal withering and revival of their foliage, would see trees as powerful images of growth, decay, and resurrection. In fact, trees have had such an immense significance to humans that there's hardly any culture that hasn't invested them with lofty symbolism and, in many cases, with celestial and religious power. The veneration of trees, known as dendrolatry, is tied to ideas of fertility, immortality, and rebirth and often is expressed by the axis mundi(world axis), world tree, or arbor vitae (tree of life). These motifs, common in mythology and folklore from around the globe, have held cultural and religious significance for social groups throughout history – and indeed still do.
    [...]
    The omnipresence of these symbols reveals an inherently human connection and fascination with trees that traverse time and space and go well beyond religious devotion. This fascination has seized philosophers, scientists, and artists, who were drawn equally by the tree's inscrutabilities and its raw, forthright, and resilient beauty. Trees have a remarkably evocative and expressive quality that makes them conducive to all types of depiction. They are easily drawn by children and beginning painters, but they also have been the main subjects of renowned artists throughout the ages.
    Dive deeper here.
    4. THE MEANING OF HUMAN EXISTENCE
    Just as the fracturing of our inner wholenessruptures the soul, a similar fissure rips society asunder and has been for centuries – that between science and the humanities. The former explores how we became human and the latter what it means to be human – a difference at once subtle and monumental, polarizing enough to hinder the answering of both questions. That's what legendary naturalist, sociobiologist, and Pulitzer-winning writer E.O. Wilson explores with great eloquence and intellectual elegance in The Meaning of Human Existence (public library | IndieBound).
    Three decades after Carl Sagan asserted that "if we ever reach the point where we think we thoroughly understand who we are and where we came from, we will have failed," Wilson – a longtime proponent of bridging the artificial divide between science and the humanities – counters that "we’ve learned enough about the Universe and ourselves to ask these questions in an answerable, testable form."
    And that elusive answer, he argues, has to do with precisely that notion ofmeaning:
    In ordinary usage the word “meaning” implies intention, intention implies design, and design implies a designer. Any entity, any process, or definition of any word itself is put into play as a result of an intended consequence in the mind of the designer. This is the heart of the philosophical worldview of organized religions, and in particular their creation stories. Humanity, it assumes, exists for a purpose. Individuals have a purpose in being on Earth. Both humanity and individuals have meaning.
    There is a second, broader way the word “meaning” is used and a very different worldview implied. It is that the accidents of history, not the intentions of a designer, are the source of meaning. There is no advance design, but instead overlapping networks of physical cause and effect. The unfolding of history is obedient only to the general laws of the Universe. Each event is random yet alters the probability of later events. During organic evolution, for example, the origin of one adaptation by natural selection makes the origin of certain other adaptations more likely. This concept of meaning, insofar as it illuminates humanity and the rest of life, is the worldview of science.
    Whether in the cosmos or in the human condition, the second, more inclusive meaning exists in the evolution of present-day reality amid countless other possible realities.
    The idea that we are a cosmic accident is far from new and, to the unexamined existential reflex, far from comforting. And yet, Wilson suggests, there is something enormously gladdening about the notion that out of all possible scenarios, out of the myriad other combinations that would have resulted in not-us, we emerged and made life meaningful. He illustrates this sense of "meaning" with the particular evolutionary miracle of the human brain, the expansion of which was among the most rapid bursts of complex tissue evolution in the known history of the universe:
    A spider spinning its web intends, whether conscious of the outcome or not, to catch a fly. That is the meaning of the web. The human brain evolved under the same regimen as the spider’s web. Every decision made by a human being has meaning in the first, intentional sense. But the capacity to decide, and how and why the capacity came into being, and the consequences that followed, are the broader, science-based meaning of human existence.
    Premier among the consequences is the capacity to imagine possible futures, and to plan and choose among them. How wisely we use this uniquely human ability depends on the accuracy of our self-understanding. The question of greatest relevant interest is how and why we are the way we are and, from that, the meaning of our many competing visions of the future.
    Perched on the precipice of an era when the very question of what it means to be human is continually challenged, we stand to gain that much more from the fruitful cross-pollination of science and the humanities in planting the seeds for the best such possible futures. Like an Emerson of our technoscientific era, Wilson champions the ennobling self-reliance embedded in this proposition:
    Humanity ... arose entirely on its own through an accumulated series of events during evolution. We are not predestined to reach any goal, nor are we answerable to any power but our own. Only wisdom based on self-understanding, not piety, will save us.
    Dive deeper here.
    9. NEUROCOMIC
    Scientists are only just beginning to understand how the brain works – from what transpires in it while we sleep to how to optimize its memoryto what love does to it to how music affects it – and the rest of us fall somewhere on the spectrum between fascinated and confused when it comes to the intricate inner workings of our master-controller.
    From British indie press Nobrow – who also brought us Freud's graphic biography and Blexbolex's magnificent No Man's Land – comes Neurocomic (public library |IndieBound), a graphic novel about how the brain works. This remarkable collaboration between neuroscientist Dr. Hana Roš and neuroscience-PhD-turned-illustrator Dr. Matteo Farinella, with support from the Wellcome Trust, explains the inner workings of the brain in delightful and illuminating black-and-white illustrations, covering everything from perception and hallucinations to memory and emotional recall to consciousness and the difference between the mind and the brain.
    We take a stroll through a forest of neurons, then learn about neuroplasticity. ("This is the great power of the brain, it's plastic!" they tell us in one of the most heartening and reassuring parts. "Once you learn something it is not set in stone, it's continuously shaped by experience.") We meet Pavlov and his famous studies of memory in 1897 Russia. We visit the haunting memory caves and the convoluted castles of deception.
    See more here.
    10. WHAT IF?
    For years, NASA-roboticist-turned-comic-creator Randall Munroe has been delighting the world with his popular xkcdwebcomic, often answering readers' questions about various aspects of how the world works with equal parts visual wit and scientific rigor. The best of these, as well as a number of never-before-answered ones, are now collected in What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions (public library | IndieBound) – questions like what would happen if a submarine was hit by lightning to what it would actually take to eradicate the common cold to the physics of trying to hit a baseball pitched at the speed of light.
    Munroe writes in the introduction:
    I’ve been using math to try to answer weird questions for as long as I can remember. When I was five years old, my mother had a conversation with me that she wrote down and saved in a photo album. When she heard I was writing this book, she found the transcript and sent it to me. Here it is, reproduced verbatim from her 25-year-old sheet of paper:
    Randall: Are there more soft things or hard things in our house?
    Julie: I don’t know.
    Randall: How about in the world?
    Julie: I don’t know.
    Randall: Well, each house has three or four pillows, right?
    Julie: Right.
    Randall: And each house has about 15 magnets, right?
    Julie: I guess.
    Randall: So 15 plus 3 or 4, let’s say 4, is 19, right?
    Julie: Right.
    Randall: So there are probably about 3 billion soft things, and . . . 5 billion hard things. Well, which one wins?
    Julie: I guess hard things.
    To this day I have no idea where I got “3 billion” and “5 billion” from. Clearly, I didn’t really get how numbers worked.
    My math has gotten a little better over the years, but my reason for doing math is the same as it was when I was five: I want to answer questions.
    They say there are no stupid questions. That’s obviously wrong; I think my question about hard and soft things, for example, is pretty stupid. But it turns out that trying to thoroughly answer a stupid question can take you to some pretty interesting places.
    Dive deeper with Munroe exploration of the math of finding your soul mate.
    14. DATACLYSM
    In Dataclysm: Who We Are (When We Think No One's Looking) (public library |IndieBound), writer, musician, and entrepreneur Christian Rudder takes a remarkable look at how person-to-person interaction from just about every major online data source of our time reveal human truths "deeper and more varied than anything held by any other private individual," and how the tension "between the continuity of the human condition and the fracture of the database" actually sheds light on some of humanity's most immutable mysteries.
    Rudder is the co-founder of the dating siteOKCupid and the data scientist behind its now-legendary trend analyses, but he is also – as it becomes immediately clear from his elegant writing and wildly cross-disciplinary references – a lover of literature, philosophy, anthropology, and all the other humanities that make us human and that, importantly in this case, enhance and ennoble the hard data with dimensional insight into the richness of the human experience. Rudder writes:
    I don’t come here with more hype or reportage on the data phenomenon. I come with the thing itself: the data, phenomenon stripped away. I come with a large store of the actual information that’s being collected, which luck, work, wheedling, and more luck have put me in the unique position to possess and analyze.
    For the reflexively skeptical, Rudder offers assurance by way of his own self-professed "luddite sympathies":
    I’ve never been on an online date in my life and neither have any of the other founders, and if it’s not for you, believe me, I get that. Tech evangelism is one of my least favorite things, and I’m not here to trade my blinking digital beads for anyone’s precious island. I still subscribe to magazines. I get the Times on the weekend. Tweeting embarrasses me. I can’t convince you to use, respect, or “believe in” the Internet or social media any more than you already do—or don’t. By all means, keep right on thinking what you’ve been thinking about the online universe. But if there’s one thing I sincerely hope this book might get you to reconsider, it’s what you think about yourself. Because that’s what this book is really about. OkCupid is just how I arrived at the story.
    Dive deeper with the data on what it really means to be extraordinary.


    In Praise Of Melancholy And How It Enriches Our Capacity For Creativity

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    The Movie, "Melancholia"
    Final Scene

    Alan: The existential meaninglessness of "Melancholia's" first half was very difficult to watch 
    but the second half left a lasting impression.

    In Praise of Melancholy and How It Enriches Our Capacity for Creativity

    "One feels as if one were lying bound hand and foot at the bottom of a deep dark well, utterly helpless,” Van Gogh wrote in one of his many letters expounding his mental anguish. And yet the very melancholy that afflicted him was also the impetus for the creative restlessness that sparked his legendary art. In his diary, the Danish philosopher and poet Søren Kierkegaard – one of the most influential thinkers of the past millennium – wrote that he often "felt bliss in melancholy and sadness" and thought he was "used by the hand of a higher Power through [his] melancholy." Nietzsche, too, believed that a certain amount of suffering is essential to the soul.
    And yet the modern happiness industrial complex seems bent on eradicating this dark, uncomfortable, but creatively vitalizing state – something Eric G. Wilson explores with great subtlety and wisdom inAgainst Happiness: In Praise of Melancholy (public library | IndieBound).
    With an eye toward the marketable ticker of bad news on which our commercial news media feed, Wilson writes:
    Our minds run over a daunting litany of global problems. We hope with our listing to find a meaning, a clue to our unease.
    [...]
    I can now add another threat, perhaps as dangerous as the most apocalyptic of concerns. We are possibly not far away from eradicating a major cultural force, a serious inspiration to invention, the muse behind much art and poetry and music. We are wantonly hankering to rid the world of numerous ideas and visions, multitudinous innovations and meditations. We are right at this moment annihilating melancholia.
    Considering what lies behind our desire to eradicate sadness from our lives, Wilson admonishes that our obsession with happiness – something he considers a decidedly American export – "could well lead to a sudden extinction of the creative impulse."
    To be clear, I myself am deeply opposed to the Tortured Genius myth of creativity. But I am also of the firm conviction that access to the full spectrum of human experience and the whole psychoemotional range of our inner lives – high and low, light and darkness – is what makes us complete individuals and enables us to create rich, dimensional, meaningful work.
    It is important, then, not to mistake Wilson's point for romanticizing melancholy and glorifying malaise for its own sake – rather, he cautions against the artificial and rather oppressive distortion of our inner lives as we forcibly excise sadness and inflate happiness. He writes:
    I for one am afraid that our American culture’s overemphasis on happiness at the expense of sadness might be dangerous, a wanton forgetting of an essential part of a full life. I further am wary in the face of this possibility: to desire only happiness in a world undoubtedly tragic is to become inauthentic, to settle for unrealistic abstractions that ignore concrete situations. I am finally fearful over our society’s efforts to expunge melancholia from the system. Without the agitations of the soul, would all of our magnificently yearning towers topple? Would our heart-torn symphonies cease?
    He is especially careful to delineate between the creatively productive state of melancholy and the soul-wrecking pathology of clinical depression:
    There is a fine line between what I’m calling melancholia and what society calls depression. In my mind, what separates the two is degree of activity. Both forms are more or less chronic sadness that leads to ongoing unease with how things are – persistent feelings that the world as it is is not quite right, that it is a place of suffering, stupidity, and evil. Depression (as I see it, at least) causes apathy in the face of this unease, lethargy approaching total paralysis, an inability to feel much of anything one way or another. In contrast, melancholia (in my eyes) generates a deep feeling in regard to this same anxiety, a turbulence of heart that results in an active questioning of the status quo, a perpetual longing to create new ways of being and seeing.
    Our culture seems to confuse these two and thus treat melancholia as an aberrant state, a vile threat to our pervasive notions of happiness – happiness as immediate gratification, happiness as superficial comfort, happiness as static contentment.
    In the remainder of Against Happiness: In Praise of Melancholy, Wilson goes on to explore how we can avoid falling in the trap of such shallow and superficial "happiness," reap the spiritual benefits of darker emotions, and learn to be ennobled and creatively empowered rather than consumed by them.
    Complement it with Oliver Burkeman's The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can’t Stand Positive Thinking and a look at the link between creativity and mental anguish, then see this excellent animated history of melancholy from my friends at TED Ed:


    "Lost In Translation: An Illustrated Catalog Of Beautiful, Untranslatable Words"

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    Lost in Translation: An Illustrated Catalog of Beautiful Untranslatable Words from Around the World

    by 
    The euphoria experienced as you begin to fall in love, the pile of books bought but unread, the coffee “threefill,” and other lyrical linguistic delights.
    “Words belong to each other,” Virginia Woolf said in the only surviving recording of her voice, a magnificent meditation on the beauty of language. But what happens when words are kept apart by too much unbridgeable otherness? “Barring downright deceivers, mild imbeciles and impotent poets, there exist, roughly speaking, three types of translators,” Vladimir Nabokov opened his strongly worded opinion on translation. Indeed, this immeasurably complex yet vastly underappreciated art of multilingual gymnastics, which helps words belong to each other and can reveal volumes about the human condition, is often best illuminated through the negative space around it — those foreign words so rich and layered in meaning that the English language, despite its own unusual vocabulary, renders them practically untranslatable.
    Such beautifully elusive words is what writer and illustrator Ella Frances Sanders, a self-described “intentional” global nomad, explores in Lost in Translation: An Illustrated Compendium of Untranslatable Words from Around the World (public library | IndieBound), published shortly before Sanders turned twenty-one.
    Norwegian, noun
    Japanese, noun
    From the Japanese for leaving a book unread after buying it to the Swedish for the road-like reflection of the moon over the ocean to the Italian for being moved to tears by a story to the Welsh for a sarcastic smile, the words Sanders illustrates dance along the entire spectrum of human experience, gently reminding us that language is what made us human.
    Arabic, noun
    Norwegian, noun
    Japanese, noun
    In addition to the charming illustrations and sheer linguistic delight, the project is also a subtle antidote to our age of rapid communication that flattens nuanced emotional expression into textual shorthand and tyrannical clichés. These words, instead, represent not only curiosities of the global lexicon but also a rich array of sentiments, emotions, moods, and cultural priorities from a diverse range of heritage.
    Yiddish, noun
    Hindi, noun
    These words invariably prompt you to wonder, for instance, whether a culture lacking a word for the sunlight that filters through the leaves of the trees is also one lacking the ennobling capacity for such quality of presence, for the attentive and appreciative stillness this very act requires. Our words bespeak our priorities.
    Japanese, noun
    Sanders writes in the introduction:
    The words in this book may be answers to questions you didn’t know to ask, and perhaps some you did. They might pinpoint emotions and experiences that seemed elusive or indescribable, or they may cause you to remember a person you’d forgotten. If you take something away from this book … let it be the realization or affirmation that you are human, that you are fundamentally, intrinsically bound to every single person on the planet with language and feelings.
    Swedish, verb
    Portuguese, noun
    Tagalog, noun
    Italian, verb
    Yiddish, noun
    Swedish, noun
    Illustrations courtesy of Ella Frances Sanders

    "Male Answer Syndrome," Jane Campbell, Utne Reader

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    And this...
    is my final answer

    ***

    Male Answer Syndrome
    Jane Campbell
    Utne Reader, Jan/Feb 1992

    "In the animal kingdom, males exhibit what is known as "display
    behavior" in order to attract females and to ward off rival
    males. They thrust out their chests, ruffle their plumage, and
    generally try to appear more impressive than they really are. On
    nature shows, this is comic. It appears comic, too, when it shows
    up among humans: the guy in the Camaro with all the gold chains,
    say, or Vanilla Ice's haircut. Lately however, it has been
    discovered that display behavior is much more common among humans
    than had been previously believed.

    Have you ever wondered why:
    * Men who have never been west of Kentucky can tell you
    about the mentality of the Japanese?
    * Men who can't pay their credit card bills have a plan
    for dealing with the national debt?
    * Men who aren't on speaking terms with their families
    know how to achieve peace in the Middle East?
    * Men who flunked high school Physics can explain whta
    went wrong at NASA?
    * Men who haven't had a date in six months know what
    women really want?

    Try an experiment: Ask my friend Jeff, who spends his
    weekend fixing up his Harley, and watching female mud-wrestling,
    how he thinks political autonomy will affect the economies of the
    Baltic States.

    His brow will furrow; he will purse his lips
    thoughtfully. "It's interesting that you mention that...", he
    will begin, and then he will come up with something -- probably
    nothing remotely feasible, but something.

    This behavior--the chronic answering of questions regardless of
    actual knowledge--is known as Male Answer Syndrome. The
    Compulsion to answer varies from person to person, but few men
    are happy saying "I don't know". They prefer "That's not what's
    important here".

    They try not to get bogged down by petty considerations such as
    "Do I know anything about this subject?" or "Is what I have to
    say interesting?" They take a broad view of questions, treating
    them less as requests for specific pieces of information than as
    invitations to expand on some theories, air a few prejudices, and
    tell a couple of jokes. Some men seem to regard life as a talk
    show on which they are the star guest.If you ask, "What is the
    capital of Venezuela?" they hear, "So tell us a bit about your
    early years, Bob".

    Sometimes this expansiveness is appealing. If you ask a
    woman "Wy does Mary Hart wear those sweaters?" she will shrug
    helplessly, acknowledging taht some things are simply unknowable.
    A man, on the other hand, will come up with a few theories (she
    is related to the designer? color-blind?). Men have the courage
    and inventiveness to try to explain the inexplicable.

    But Male Answer Syndrome (MAS) is by no means harmless,
    as my friend Pauline discovered at the age of 8. She had found
    that eating icecream made her teeth hurt and asked her father if
    Eskimos had the same problem. "No", he said. "They have rubber
    teeth". Pauline repeated this information in a geography lesson
    and found herself the laughing stock of the class. That was how
    she learned that a man, even if he is your own father, would
    rather make up an answer than admit to his own ignorance.

    Later in life women run into the same problem: Men can
    speak with such conviction that women may be fooled into thinking
    that they actually know what they are talking about.

    A woman who finds herself in the midst of an impassioned
    argument about glasnost may suffer from an eerie sense of
    displacement. Has a weird time-space warp landed her in the
    Kremlin? No, she's in the mailroom with Dave and Bob, who she
    knows for a fact read only the sports pages.

    My friend Jeff (he of the Harley) is full of expertise on
    subjects as diverse as global warming and Elvis' current
    whereabouts. In reality however, he is an expert at only one
    thing: making a little knowledge go a very long way. For him
    answering is a game, and not knowing what he is talking about
    just adds to the thrill.

    Expressing skepticism can be highly inflammatory. Even
    mild-mannered Abe Lincoln types may react to "Are you sure about
    that?" as a vicious slur on their manhood and find themselves
    backing up a ludicrous assertion with spurious facts.

    Many women actively encourage male answering behavior.
    There is in the female a correlative condition known as the Say
    What? Complex. Women who behind closed doors expound eloquently on
    particle physics may be found, in male company, gaping at the
    news that the earth is round.

    MAS tends to be mild unt
    il puberty; boys begin to speak
    with authority on matters of foreign policy at the same time that
    they start to grow facial hair. And there is a growing consensus
    among scientists as to how MAS developed: Since killing woolly
    mammoths and attacking enemies with rocks are now frowned upon,
    and since shirts open to the navel are not appropriate in every
    social occasion, men prove their masculinity by concocting
    elaborate theories about football.

    Growing awareness of MAS has led some to call for a
    moratorium on all male-female conversation. This is alarmist. But
    care should be taken. Womwn must remind themselves that if a man
    tells them something particularly interesting, there is a good
    chance that is particularly untrue.



    America's Obsession With Speed... And Its Impact On World Understanding


    The American Oil Boom Won't Last Long At $65 Per Barrel

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    U.S. shale oil production
    Photograph by Gregory Bull/AP Photo
    U.S. shale oil production

    The American Oil Boom Won't Last Long at 

    $65 Per Barrel

    So maybe OPEC does still matter. After deciding to keep its production levelsunchanged at 30 million barrels a day and triggering Friday’s nearly 10 percent selloff, the cartel proved it can still cause huge swings in oil prices‐even if it’s in the opposite direction that most of its members wanted to see.
    Iran, Iraq, Libya, and Venezuela were all hoping for a cut of at least 1 million barrels to keep prices from going lower. Citibank (C) analysts estimate that the world is producing about 700,000 barrels a day more than total demand requires. With international oil prices below $70 for the first time since 2010, most OPEC member countries will have trouble keeping their budget deficits in check. According to an estimate by Goldman Sachs (GS) last month, only Kuwait, the UAE, and Qatar are safe below $70.
    OPEC’s idea is to try to knock out U.S. shale producers by driving prices lower than they can afford. That way Saudi Arabia, the cartel’s biggest exporter, can keep its market share in the U.S. But the damage to its fellow oil exporters could be severe. In Russia, for example, the ruble is plummeting. Iraq is already having trouble fighting ISIS, and lower oil prices won’t help. Libya is in chaos. Venezuela’s economy, already on life support, depends on oil for 95 percent of its export revenue. Iran’s oil minister on Friday told Bloomberg News that he has doubts the strategy will even work: “There’s no fact or figure to say that shale production will definitely decrease,” he said.
    U.S. production probably will decrease, even if it takes a while. At $65 a barrel, it’s unlikely the U.S. can keep up its record-setting pace of expanding oil production. U.S. oil has jumped from about 5 million barrels a day in 2008 to more than 9 million million. Even before OPEC’s decision, forecasters were calling for a slowdown. Last May, for instance, the Energy Information Agency forecast that total U.S. production would peak just shy of 10 million barrels per day before 2020.
    U.S. crude production forecast to peak in 2019EIAU.S. crude production forecast to peak in 2019
    The question is: How soon will prices start eating into that growth? It might actually take most of next year. Money is already invested in wells that are producing right now; it’s future wells that are at risk as oil companies slash investment for the next few years. “Don’t hold your breath for a production response, since there will be a six-month lag between a drop in rigs and a slowdown in production,” writes Manuj Nikhanj, head of energy research at Investment Technology Group.
    That will have a major impact in the next few years, especially since U.S. shale accounts for about 20 percent of all crude oil investment in the world. For the next several months, though, the U.S. will likely keep flooding the market with crude, which should continue to make it cheaper. There’s already talk of prices hitting $40.
    On average, the Bakken formation in North Dakota and Montana has a higher cost than some of the other big shale plays in Texas, such as the Eagle Ford and Permian. The Bakken’s biggest operator, Continental Resources (CLR), run by billionaire Harold Hamm, holds about 1.2 million acres of land in the region. That’s well above the next largest leaseholder, Exxon Mobil (XOM), which holds 845,000 acres, according to data from Bloomberg Intelligence.
    Top leaseholders in the BakkenBloomberg IntelligenceTop leaseholders in the Bakken
    The Bakken has been one of the primary engines of growth for the U.S. Since 2007, oil production there has risen from less than 200,000 barrels a day to more than 1 million. The boom happened so fast, pipeline companies didn’t have time to build enough lines to the fields. The result has been a bonanza for railroad companies, which have quickly filled the gap. For the past two years, most of the oil that has left North Dakota has done so on a train.
    Bakken crude productionEIABakken crude production
    For Bloomberg Businessweek’s Year Ahead issue, Hamm boasted that Continental could operate at $50 a barrel. Now the world will probably get to find out if that’s true.
    Philips_190
    Philips is an associate editor for Bloomberg Businessweek in Washington. Follow him on Twitter@matthewaphilips.


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    More Evidence That Texas Gov. Rick Perry Executed An Innocent Man. "Oops!"


    Will Texas Execute a Mentally Ill Man?

    Scott Panetti's imminent execution highlights deep, systemic flaws in the death penalty.
    Scott Panetti is scheduled for execution in Texas on December 3, 2014. His attorneys found out when they read it in the newspaper. Although the execution date has been set two weeks earlier, the state provided his attorneys with no notice. This shortcoming was only the latest in a long series of disturbing events surrounding Panetti’s trial, conviction, and death sentence.
    Panetti has suffered from schizophrenia and other mental illness for over thirty years. He first exhibited signs of a psychotic disorder as a teenager. Beginning in 1978, he was hospitalized for mental illness on fifteen separate occasions. He developed a delusion that he was engaged in spiritual warfare with Satan. He tried to exorcize his home by burying furniture in the backyard because, he claimed, the devil was in it. He was involuntarily committed after swinging a sword at his wife and daughter and threatening to kill them.
    In 1992, Panetti went off his medication, shaved his head, and dressed in camouflage fatigues. He went to his in-laws house and murdered his mother and father-in-law in front of his wife and daughter.
    The subsequent trial and sentencing bordered on the unbelievable. Panetti was allowed to represent himself during both the guilt and penalty phases of the proceedings. He wore a cowboy costume and a purple bandana to court. He attempted to subpoena John F. Kennedy, the Pope, and Jesus Christ, among 200 others. His statements were rambling and incoherent. He fell asleep during trial. While describing the shooting, he assumed the personality of a character he called “Sarge” and narrated the events in the third person. He pointed an imaginary rifle at jurors, visibly frightening them. His stand-by attorney called the trial a “judicial farce.”
    Unsurprisingly, a jury convicted Panetti of murder. After calling only one witness—his stand-by counsel—at the penalty phase of his trial, the jury sentenced Panetti to death after only one day of deliberation.
    As with many individuals on death row, a long series of appeals followed, focusing on Panetti’s mental illness. In October, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Panetti’s petition for review, and Texas courts have thus far declined to grant a stay of execution to allow time for an assessment of his competency for execution. Panetti has not received a competency evaluation in nearly seven years.
    No one could dispute that Panetti’s actions were atrocious beyond words. The death of two innocent people is an unspeakable tragedy. But the execution of a man grievously afflicted by mental illness for three decades would in no way compensate for the murder of his in-laws.
    The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 1986 case called Ford v. Wainwright, prohibited the execution of people who are so out of touch with reality that they do not know right from wrong and cannot understand their punishment or the purpose of it. Panetti’s attorneys argue that this holding applies to him. His severe mental illness causes him to believe that Satan, working through the state of Texas, is seeking to execute him for preaching the Gospel—and, therefore, he cannot possess a rational understanding of the link between his crime and his punishment. To most people, Panetti’s lengthy history of mental illness and his bizarre behavior strongly suggest that Ford should prevent his execution. Yet in practice, Ford’s guarantee is often compromised when courts refuse to order mental health evaluations in a timely fashion, as Panetti’s seven years without a competency evaluation illustrate all too clearly.
    His imminent execution reveals just one of many reasons the death penalty in its current form is profoundly flawed. Across the country, the death penalty is administered in a wildly arbitrary way among offenders who have committed similar crimes. For example, one of us found in recent research that while the death penalty was an option in approximately 92 percent of all first-degree murders during one decade in Colorado, it was sought by the prosecution in only three percent of those killings and obtained in only 0.6 percent of cases. And Colorado is hardly unique. Justice administered so unevenly is no justice at all.
    Likewise, the recent botched executions of Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma and Joseph Wood in Arizona show that the methods of execution are both cruel and unusual. Executioners lack basic training, shortages of drugs previously used in executions have led states to experiment with different lethal injection cocktails, and courts have prevented attorneys for those sentenced to die from accessing information about the detailsof an upcoming execution.
    Massive procedural irregularities compound these problems. A recent series by the Marshall Project exposed how death row inmates often lose their cases simply because they miss filing deadlines, often as the result of their attorneys’ incompetence. Such attorneys include a recently-disbarred lawyer who dressed as Thomas Jefferson at his own disbarment proceeding. In many instances, they forfeit strong claims of factual innocence, juror misconduct, or compromised trial proceedings. Other systemic issues, ranging from a perennial shortage of public defenders to racial bias in death sentences, continue to plague capital proceedings.
    Many scholars and experts believe that these and other problems with the death penalty render it constitutionally infirm. But many who do not oppose the death penalty altogether still oppose Panetti’s execution. A broad and diverse coalitionhas urged Governor Rick Perry to commute Panetti’s death sentence to life in prison, including the American Psychiatric Association, former Texas Governor Mark White, more than fifty evangelical leaders from around Texas and the United States, the American Bar Association, ten Texas state legislators, former U.S. Representative Ron Paul, and the European Union.
    But on Tuesday, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals denied Panetti’s emergency request for stay of execution in a splintered 5-4 decision. A dissent by Judge Elsa Alcala wrote, “[T]his Court, at best, deprives appellant of a fair opportunity to litigate his claims, thereby violating the constitutionally required procedural protections recognized in Ford. At words, this Court’s decision will result in the irreversible and constitutionally impermissible execution of a mentally incompetent person.”
    After the Court’s decision, Perry may indeed be Panetti’s best hope for clemency. The question, then, is whether Perry will recognize that executing someone who understands neither his crime nor the punishment for it makes a mockery of justice.
    PRESENTED BY

    "What the Media Gets Wrong About Israel," Former AP Reporter, Matti Friedman

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    A Reuters truck drives through a bombed refugee camp in Gaza. 


    What the Media Gets Wrong About Israel

    The news tells us less about Israel than about the people writing the news, a former AP reporter says.
    During the Gaza war this summer, it became clear that one of the most important aspects of the media-saturated conflict between Jews and Arabs is also the least covered: the press itself. The Western press has become less an observer of this conflict than an actor in it, a role with consequences for the millions of people trying to comprehend current events, including policymakers who depend on journalistic accounts to understand a region where they consistently seek, and fail, to productively intervene.
    An essay I wrote for Tablet on this topic in the aftermath of the war sparked intense interest. In the article, based on my experiences between 2006 and 2011 as a reporter and editor in the Jerusalem bureau of the Associated Press, one of the world’s largest news organizations, I pointed out the existence of a problem and discussed it in broad terms. Using staffing numbers, I illustrated the disproportionate media attention devoted to this conflict relative to other stories, and gave examples of editorial decisions that appeared to be driven by ideological considerations rather than journalistic ones. I suggested that the cumulative effect has been to create a grossly oversimplified story—a kind of modern morality play in which the Jews of Israel are displayed more than any other people on earth as examples of moral failure. This is a thought pattern with deep roots in Western civilization.
    But how precisely does this thought pattern manifest itself in the day-to-day functioning, or malfunctioning, of the press corps? To answer this question, I want to explore the way Western press coverage is shaped by unique circumstances here in Israel and also by flaws affecting the media beyond the confines of this conflict. In doing so, I will draw on my own experiences and those of colleagues. These are obviously limited and yet, I believe, representative.
    A rally in support of Islamic Jihad at Al-Quds University in East Jerusalem, in November 2013 (Courtesy of Matti Friedman)
    I’ll begin with a simple illustration. The above photograph is of a student rally held last November at Al-Quds University, a mainstream Palestinian institution in East Jerusalem. The rally, in support of the armed fundamentalist group Islamic Jihad, featured actors playing dead Israeli soldiers and a row of masked men whose stiff-armed salute was returned by some of the hundreds of students in attendance. Similar rallies have been held periodically at the school.
    I am not using this photograph to make the case that Palestinians are Nazis. Palestinians are not Nazis. They are, like Israelis, human beings dealing with a difficult present and past in ways that are occasionally ugly. I cite it now for a different reason.
    Such an event at an institution like Al-Quds University, headed at the time by a well-known moderate professor, and with ties to sister institutions in America, indicates something about the winds now blowing in Palestinian society and across the Arab world. The rally is interesting for the visual connection it makes between radical Islam here and elsewhere in the region; a picture like this could help explain why many perfectly rational Israelis fear withdrawing their military from East Jerusalem or the West Bank, even if they loathe the occupation and wish to live in peace with their Palestinian neighbors. The images from the demonstration were, as photo editors like to say, “strong.” The rally had, in other words, all the necessary elements of a powerful news story.
    The event took place a short drive from the homes and offices of the hundreds of international journalists who are based in Jerusalem. Journalists were aware of it: The sizable Jerusalem bureau of the Associated Press, for example, which can produce several stories on an average day, was in possession of photos of the event, including the one above, a day later. (The photographs were taken by someone I know who was on campus that day, and I sent them to the bureau myself.) Jerusalem editors decided that the images, and the rally, were not newsworthy, and the demonstration was only mentioned by the AP weeks later when the organization’s Boston bureau reported that Brandeis University had cut ties with Al-Quds over the incident. On the day that the AP decided to ignore the rally, November 6, 2013, the same bureau published a report about a pledge from the U.S. State Department to provide a minor funding increase for the Palestinian Authority; that was newsworthy. This is standard. To offer another illustration, the construction of 100 apartments in a Jewish settlement is always news; the smuggling of 100 rockets into Gaza by Hamas is, with rare exceptions, not news at all.
    I mention these instances to demonstrate the kind of decisions made regularly in the bureaus of the foreign press covering Israel and the Palestinian territories, and to show the way in which the pipeline of information from this place is not just rusty and leaking, which is the usual state of affairs in the media, but intentionally plugged.
    There are banal explanations for problems with coverage—reporters are in a hurry, editors are overloaded and distracted. These are realities, and can explain small errors and mishaps like ill-conceivedheadlines, which is why such details don’t typically strike me as important or worth much analysis. Some say inflations and omissions are the inevitable results of an honest attempt to cover events in a challenging and occasionally dangerous reporting environment, which is what I initially believed myself. A few years on the job changed my mind. Such excuses can’t explain why the same inflations and omissions recur again and again, why they are common to so many news outlets, and why the simple “Israel story” of the international media is so foreign to people aware of the historical and regional context of events in this place. The explanation lies elsewhere.
    * * *
    To make sense of most international journalism from Israel, it is important first to understand that the news tells us far less about Israel than about the people writing the news. Journalistic decisions are made by people who exist in a particular social milieu, one which, like most social groups, involves a certain uniformity of attitude, behavior, and even dress (the fashion these days, for those interested, is less vests with unnecessary pockets than shirts with unnecessary buttons). These people know each other, meet regularly, exchange information, and closely watch one another’s work. This helps explain why a reader looking at articles written by the half-dozen biggest news providers in the region on a particular day will find that though the pieces are composed and edited by completely different people and organizations, they tend to tell the same story.
    The best insight into one of the key phenomena at play here comes not from a local reporter but from the journalist and author Philip Gourevitch. In Rwanda and elsewhere in Africa, Gourevitch wrote in 2010, he was struck by the ethical gray zone of ties between reporters and NGOs. “Too often the press represents humanitarians with unquestioning admiration,” he observed in The New Yorker. “Why not seek to keep them honest? Why should our coverage of them look so much like their own self-representation in fund-raising appeals? Why should we (as many photojournalists and print reporters do) work for humanitarian agencies between journalism jobs, helping them with their official reports and institutional appeals, in a way that we would never consider doing for corporations, political parties, or government agencies?”
    This confusion is very much present in Israel and the Palestinian territories, where foreign activists are a notable feature of the landscape, and where international NGOs and numerous arms of the United Nations are among the most powerful players, wielding billions of dollars and employing many thousands of foreign and local employees. Their SUVs dominate sections of East Jerusalem and their expense accounts keep Ramallah afloat. They provide reporters with social circles, romantic partners, and alternative employment—a fact that is more important to reporters now than it has ever been, given the disintegration of many newspapers and the shoestring nature of their Internet successors.
    In my time in the press corps, I learned that our relationship with these groups was not journalistic. My colleagues and I did not, that is, seek to analyze or criticize them. For many foreign journalists, these were not targets but sources and friends—fellow members, in a sense, of an informal alliance. This alliance consists of activists and international staffers from the UN and the NGOs; the Western diplomatic corps, particularly in East Jerusalem; and foreign reporters. (There is also a local component, consisting of a small number of Israeli human-rights activists who are themselves largely funded by European governments, and Palestinian staffers from the Palestinian Authority, the NGOs, and the UN.) Mingling occurs at places like the lovely Oriental courtyard of the American Colony hotel in East Jerusalem, or at parties held at the British Consulate’s rooftop pool. The dominant characteristic of nearly all of these people is their transience. They arrive from somewhere, spend a while living in a peculiar subculture of expatriates, and then move on.
    In these circles, in my experience, a distaste for Israel has come to be something between an acceptable prejudice and a prerequisite for entry. I don’t mean a critical approach to Israeli policies or to the ham-fisted government currently in charge in this country, but a belief that to some extent the Jews of Israel are a symbol of the world’s ills, particularly those connected to nationalism, militarism, colonialism, and racism—an idea quickly becoming one of the central elements of the “progressive” Western zeitgeist, spreading from the European left to American college campuses and intellectuals, including journalists. In this social group, this sentiment is translated into editorial decisions made by individual reporters and editors covering Israel, and this, in turn, gives such thinking the means of mass self-replication. 
    * * *
    Anyone who has traveled abroad understands that arriving in a new country is daunting, and it is far more so when you are expected to show immediate expertise. I experienced this myself in 2008, when the AP sent me to cover the Russian invasion of Georgia and I found myself 24 hours later riding in a convoy of Russian military vehicles. I had to admit that not only did I not know Georgian, Russian, or any of the relevant history, but I did not know which way was north, and generally had no business being there. For a reporter in a situation like the one I just described, the solution is to stay close to more knowledgeable colleagues and hew to the common wisdom.
    Many freshly arrived reporters in Israel, similarly adrift in a new country, undergo a rapid socialization in the circles I mentioned. This provides them not only with sources and friendships but with a ready-made framework for their reporting—the tools to distill and warp complex events into a simple narrative in which there is a bad guy who doesn’t want peace and a good guy who does. This is the “Israel story,” and it has the advantage of being an easy story to report. Everyone here answers their cell phone, and everyone knows what to say. You can put your kids in good schools and dine at good restaurants. It’s fine if you’re gay. Your chances of being beheaded on YouTube are slim. Nearly all of the information you need—that is, in most cases, information critical of Israel—is not only easily accessible but has already been reported for you by Israeli journalists or compiled by NGOs. You can claim to be speaking truth to power, having selected the only “power” in the area that poses no threat to your safety.
    Many foreign journalists have come to see themselves as part of this world of international organizations, and specifically as the media arm of this world. They have decided not just to describe and explain, which is hard enough, and important enough, but to “help.” And that’s where reporters get into trouble, because “helping” is always a murky, subjective, and political enterprise, made more difficult if you are unfamiliar with the relevant languages and history.
    Confusion over the role of the press explains one of the strangest aspects of coverage here—namely, that while international organizations are among the most powerful actors in the Israel story, they are almost never reported on. Are they bloated, ineffective, or corrupt? Are they helping, or hurting? We don’t know, because these groups are to be quoted, not covered. Journalists cross from places like the BBC to organizations like Oxfam and back. The current spokesman at the UN agency for Palestinian refugees in Gaza, for example, is a former BBC man. A Palestinian woman who participated in protests against Israel and tweeted furiously about Israel a few years ago served at the same time as a spokesperson for a UN office, and was close friends with a few reporters I know. And so forth.
    A Palestinian protester escapes tear gas fired by Israeli security forces during a demonstration in a West Bank near Ramallah. (Darren Whiteside/Reuters)
    International organizations in the Palestinian territories have largely assumed a role of advocacy on behalf of the Palestinians and against Israel, and much of the press has allowed this political role to supplant its journalistic function. This dynamic explains the thinking behind editorial choices that are otherwise difficult to grasp, like the example I gave in my first essay about the suppression by the AP’s Jerusalem bureau of a report about an Israeli peace offer to the Palestinians in 2008, or the decision to ignore the rally at Al-Quds University, or the idea that Hamas’s development of extensive armament works in Gaza in recent years was not worth serious coverage despite objectively being one of the most important storylines demanding reporters’ attention.
    As usual, Orwell got there first. Here is his description from 1946 of writers of communist and “fellow-traveler” journalism: “The argument that to tell the truth would be ‘inopportune’ or would ‘play into the hands of’ somebody or other is felt to be unanswerable, and few people are bothered by the prospect that the lies which they condone will get out of the newspapers and into the history books.” The stories I mentioned would be “inopportune” for the Palestinians, and would “play into the hands” of the Israelis. And so, in the judgment of the press corps, they generally aren’t news.
    In the aftermath of the three-week Gaza war of 2008-2009, not yet quite understanding the way things work, I spent a week or so writing a story about NGOs like Human Rights Watch, whose work on Israel had just been subject to an unusual public lashing in The New York Times by its own founder, Robert Bernstein. (The Middle East, he wrote, “is populated by authoritarian regimes with appalling human rights records. Yet in recent years Human Rights Watch has written far more condemnations of Israel for violations of international law than of any other country in the region.”) My article was gentle, all things considered, beginning like this:
    JERUSALEM (AP) _ The prickly relationship between Israel and its critics in human rights organizations has escalated into an unprecedented war of words as the fallout from Israel’s Gaza offensive persists ten months after the fighting ended.
    Editors killed the story.
    Around this time, a Jerusalem-based group called NGO Monitor was battling the international organizations condemning Israel after the Gaza conflict, and though the group was very much a pro-Israel outfit and by no means an objective observer, it could have offered some partisan counterpoint in our articles to charges by NGOs that Israel had committed “war crimes.” But the bureau’s explicit orders to reporters were to never quote the group or its director, an American-raised professor named Gerald Steinberg.* In my time as an AP writer moving through the local conflict, with its myriad lunatics, bigots, and killers, the only person I ever saw subjected to an interview ban was this professor.
    When the UN released its controversial Goldstone report on the Gaza fighting, we at the bureau trumpeted its findings in dozens of articles, though there was discussion even at the time of the report’s failure to prove its central charge: that Israel had killed civilians on purpose. (The director of Israel’s premier human-rights group, B’Tselem, who was critical of the Israeli operation, told me at the time that this claim was “a reach given the facts,” an evaluation that was eventually seconded by the report’s author. “If I had known then what I know now, the Goldstone Report would have been a different document,” Richard Goldstone wrote in The Washington Post in April 2011.) We understood that our job was not to look critically at the UN report, or any such document, but to publicize it.
    Decisions like these are hard to fathom if you believe the foreign press corps’ role is to explain a complicated story to people far away. But they make sense if you understand that journalists covering Israel and the Palestinian territories often don’t see their role that way. The radio and print journalist Mark Lavie, who has reported from the region since 1972, was a colleague of mine at the AP, where he was an editor in the Jerusalem bureau and then in Cairo until his retirement last year. (It was Lavie who first learned of the Israeli peace offer of late 2008, and was ordered by his superiors to ignore the story.) An Indiana-born Israeli of moderate politics, he had a long run in journalism that included several wars and the first Palestinian intifada, and found little reason to complain about the functioning of the media.
    But things changed in earnest in 2000, with the collapse of peace efforts and the outbreak of the Second Intifada. Israel accepted President Bill Clinton’s peace framework that fall and the Palestinians rejected it, as Clinton made clear. Nevertheless, Lavie recently told me, the bureau’s editorial line was still that the conflict was Israel’s fault, and the Palestinians and the Arab world were blameless. By the end of Lavie’s career, he was editing Israel copy on the AP’s Middle East regional desk in Cairo, trying to restore balance and context to stories he thought had little connection to reality. In his words, he had gone from seeing himself as a proud member of the international press corps to “the Jew-boy with his finger in the dike.” He wrote a book, Broken Spring, about his front-row view of the Middle East’s descent into chaos, and retired disillusioned and angry.
    I have tended to see the specific failings that we both encountered at the AP as symptoms of a general thought pattern in the press, but Lavie takes a more forceful position, viewing the influential American news organization as one of the primary authors of this thought pattern. (In a statement, AP spokesman Paul Colford dismissed my criticism as “distortions, half-truths and inaccuracies,” and denied that AP coverage is biased against Israel.) This is not just because many thousands of media outlets use AP material directly, but also because when journalists arrive in their offices in the morning, the first thing many of them do is check the AP wire (or, these days, scroll through it in their Twitter feed). The AP is like Ringo Starr, thumping away at the back of the stage: there might be flashier performers in front, and you might not always notice him, but when Ringo’s off, everyone’s off.
    Lavie believes that in the last years of his career, the AP’s Israel operation drifted from its traditional role of careful explanation toward a kind of political activism that both contributed to and fed off growing hostility to Israel worldwide. “The AP is extremely important, and when the AP turned, it turned a lot of the world with it,” Lavie said. “That’s when it became harder for any professional journalist to work here, Jewish or not. I reject the idea that my dissatisfaction had to do with being Jewish or Israeli. It had to do with being a journalist.”
    * * *
    In describing the realities of combat in the Second World War, the American critic Paul Fussell wrote, the press was censored and censored itself to such an extent that “for almost six years a large slice of actuality—perhaps one-quarter to one-half of it—was declared off-limits, and the sanitized and euphemized remainder was presented as the whole.” During the same war, American journalists (chiefly from Henry Luce’s magazines) were engaged in what Fussell called the “Great China Hoax”—years of skewed reporting designed to portray the venal regime of Chiang Kai-shek as an admirable Western ally against Japan. Chiang was featured six times on the cover of Time, and his government’s corruption and dysfunction were carefully ignored. One Marine stationed in China was so disillusioned by the chasm between what he saw and what he read that upon his discharge, he said, “I switched to Newsweek.”
    Journalistic hallucinations, in other words, have a precedent. They tend to occur, as in the case of the Great China Hoax, when reporters are not granted the freedom to write what they see but are rather expected to maintain a “story” that follows predictable lines. For the international press, the uglier characteristics of Palestinian politics and society are mostly untouchable because they would disrupt the Israel story, which is a story of Jewish moral failure.
    Most consumers of the Israel story don’t understand how the story is manufactured. But Hamas does. Since assuming power in Gaza in 2007, the Islamic Resistance Movement has come to understand that many reporters are committed to a narrative wherein Israelis are oppressors and Palestinians passive victims with reasonable goals, and are uninterested in contradictory information. Recognizing this, certain Hamas spokesmen have taken to confiding to Western journalists, including some I know personally, that the group is in fact a secretly pragmatic outfit with bellicose rhetoric, and journalists—eager to believe the confession, and sometimes unwilling to credit locals with the smarts necessary to deceive them—have taken it as a scoop instead of as spin.
    During my time at the AP, we helped Hamas get this point across with a school of reporting that might be classified as “Surprising Signs of Moderation” (a direct precursor to the “Muslim Brotherhood Is Actually Liberal” school that enjoyed a brief vogue in Egypt). In one of my favorite stories, “More Tolerant Hamas” (December 11, 2011), reporters quoted a Hamas spokesman informing readers that the movement’s policy was that “we are not going to dictate anything to anyone,” and another Hamas leader saying the movement had “learned it needs to be more tolerant of others.” Around the same time, I was informed by the bureau’s senior editors that our Palestinian reporter in Gaza couldn’t possibly provide critical coverage of Hamas because doing so would put him in danger.
    Hamas is aided in its manipulation of the media by the old reportorial belief, a kind of reflex, according to which reporters shouldn’t mention the existence of reporters. In a conflict like ours, this ends up requiring considerable exertions: So many photographers cover protests in Israel and the Palestinian territories, for example, that one of the challenges for anyone taking pictures is keeping colleagues out of the frame. That the other photographers are as important to the story as Palestinian protesters or Israeli soldiers—this does not seem to be considered.
    A Hamas fighter inside an underground tunnel in Gaza in August 2014, during a tour for Reuters journalists (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)
    In Gaza, this goes from being a curious detail of press psychology to a major deficiency. Hamas’s strategy is to provoke a response from Israel by attacking from behind the cover of Palestinian civilians, thus drawing Israeli strikes that kill those civilians, and then to have the casualties filmed by one of the world’s largest press contingents, with the understanding that the resulting outrage abroad will blunt Israel’s response. This is a ruthless strategy, and an effective one. It is predicated on the cooperation of journalists. One of the reasons it works is because of the reflex I mentioned. If you report that Hamas has a strategy based on co-opting the media, this raises several difficult questions, like, What exactly is the relationship between the media and Hamas? And has this relationship corrupted the media? It is easier just to leave the other photographers out of the frame and let the picture tell the story: Here are dead people, and Israel killed them.
    In previous rounds of Gaza fighting, Hamas learned that international coverage from the territory could be molded to its needs, a lesson it would implement in this summer’s war. Most of the press work in Gaza is done by local fixers, translators, and reporters, people who would understandably not dare cross Hamas, making it only rarely necessary for the group to threaten a Westerner. The organization’s armed forces could be made to disappear. The press could be trusted to play its role in the Hamas script, instead of reporting that there was such a script. Hamas strategy did not exist, according to Hamas—or, as reporters would say, was “not the story.” There was no Hamas charter blaming Jews for centuries of perfidy, or calling for their murder; this was not the story. The rockets falling on Israeli cities were quite harmless; they were not the story either.
    Hamas understood that journalists would not only accept as fact the Hamas-reported civilian death toll—relayed through the UN or through something called the “Gaza Health Ministry,” an office controlled by Hamas—but would make those numbers the center of coverage. Hamas understood that reporters could be intimidated when necessary and that they would not report the intimidation; Western news organizations tend to see no ethical imperative to inform readers of the restrictions shaping their coverage in repressive states or other dangerous areas. In the war’s aftermath, the NGO-UN-media alliance could be depended upon to unleash the organs of the international community on Israel, and to leave the jihadist group alone.
    When Hamas’s leaders surveyed their assets before this summer’s round of fighting, they knew that among those assets was the international press. The AP staff in Gaza City would witness a rocket launch right beside their office, endangering reporters and other civilians nearby—and the AP wouldn’t report it, not even in AP articles about Israeli claims that Hamas was launching rockets from residential areas. (This happened.) Hamas fighters would burst into the AP’s Gaza bureau and threaten the staff—and the AP wouldn’t report it. (This also happened.) Cameramen waiting outside Shifa Hospital in Gaza City would film the arrival of civilian casualties and then, at a signal from an official, turn off their cameras when wounded and dead fighters came in, helping Hamas maintain the illusion that only civilians were dying. (This too happened; the information comes from multiple sources with firsthand knowledge of these incidents.)
    Colford, the AP spokesman, confirmed that armed militants entered the AP’s Gaza office in the early days of the war to complain about a photo showing the location of a rocket launch, though he said that Hamas claimed that the men “did not represent the group.” The AP “does not report many interactions with militias, armies, thugs or governments,” he wrote. “These incidents are part of the challenge of getting out the news—and not themselves news.”
    This summer, with Yazidis, Christians, and Kurds falling back before the forces of radical Islam not far away from here, this ideology’s local franchise launched its latest war against the last thriving minority in the Middle East. The Western press corps showed up en masse to cover it. This conflict included rocket barrages across Israel and was deliberately fought from behind Palestinian civilians, many of whom died as a result. Dulled by years of the “Israel story” and inured to its routine omissions, confused about the role they are meant to play, and co-opted by Hamas, reporters described this war as an Israeli onslaught against innocent people. By doing so, this group of intelligent and generally well-meaning professionals ceased to be reliable observers and became instead an amplifier for the propaganda of one of the most intolerant and aggressive forces on earth. And that, as they say, is the story.

    * This article originally stated that NGO Monitor President Gerald Steinberg was American-born. He was born in the U.K. and raised in the U.S. We regret the error.



    Tom Toles Cartoon: The Last Two Humans Debate Climate Change

    Oil Prices Reach Five Year Low: Implications

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    The American Oil Boom Won't Last Long At $65.00 A Barrel

    Alan: If the production of U.S. oil has a "$65.00 floor," it is likely that solar energy (whose price will  continue to decline forever) will put an end to newer oil extraction technologies when the cost of solar energy per BTU dips below the "BTU cost" of oil.

    The price for Brent crude had recovered by Tuesday. Prices have fallen more than a quarter this year, and they reached their lowest level since October 2009 on Monday before recovering to near $73 a barrel. Reuters.

    Lower oil prices change everything. Forecasts for cheap oil next year are already having profound effects:
    -- Stock prices for major oil producers have also fallen.

    -- The slide in prices weakens Russia and Iran, exacerbating the effects of Western sanctions.

    -- Fracking will continue in the United States, but at a slower pace.

    -- Federal Reserve officials say the slide in oil prices will help U.S. consumers, who are saving $630 million a day on gasoline in total.

    Steve Mufson in The Washington Post.


    What's driving the decline in prices? There are a few reasons.

    -- First, OPEC is now deeply divided over how much oil to produce. The member states voted Thursday not to stabilize prices by cutting production.

    -- And production in the United States is booming.

    -- Internationally, a weak global economy is burning less fuel.

    Chris Mooney in The Washington Post.

    EL-ERIAN: The decline in prices will help the poor and working class, but carries risks. For one, investment in new, clean technologies will be hampered by low energy prices. Bloomberg.
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