Page 13 of 14

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Wed Nov 18, 2020 1:49 pm
by DoomYoshi
Agar Art submissions:
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set ... 4114475200

This is my favorite:
(picture too big)
The Microbes Olympics

This agar art was made from 91 dishes, with logos of each Olympics games and a slogan captured by stereo microscope. The art is meant for future celebration of the Olympics to be hosted. Compared to ordinary drawn agar art, this art is a challenge in new method of agar art as our art is more like a spray art. Each logos was drafted by placing 3D-printed-mask on agar and Escherichia coli, which gained different color fluorescence protein, were sprayed on 3.5mm culture dishes. This unique method could illustrate in high through-put and simple way that even children could create agar arts to show their creativities. Unfortunately, Covid-19 wiped away the festive mood from Tokyo. This colorful microbes art would illuminate our promised sports festival.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Tue Nov 24, 2020 12:14 pm
by DoomYoshi

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Tue Nov 24, 2020 1:05 pm
by jonesthecurl
When you drink absinthe, your bottom burps sound like a motorcycle.
Because Absinthe makes the fart go Honda.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Tue Nov 24, 2020 5:28 pm
by DoomYoshi
jonesthecurl wrote:When you drink absinthe, your bottom burps sound like a motorcycle.
Because Absinthe makes the fart go Honda.


I don't get it. Is this a pun?

In other news, bring back the ban on usury and the short work week:
https://spectator.us/light-ages-surpris ... l-science/

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Wed Nov 25, 2020 5:15 pm
by DoomYoshi
Want to be a frog but don't want to move to France? Now is your chance:
https://go.rallyup.com/ribbit

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Sat Nov 28, 2020 6:08 pm
by DoomYoshi
An interesting theory:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/12/can-history-predict-future/616993/

The year 2020 has been kind to Turchin, for many of the same reasons it has been hell for the rest of us. Cities on fire, elected leaders endorsing violence, homicides surging—­­to a normal American, these are apocalyptic signs. To Turchin, they indicate that his models, which incorporate thousands of years of data about human history, are working. (“Not all of human history,” he corrected me once. “Just the last 10,000 years.”) He has been warning for a decade that a few key social and political trends portend an “age of discord,” civil unrest and carnage worse than most Americans have experienced. In 2010, he predicted that the unrest would get serious around 2020, and that it wouldn’t let up until those social and political trends reversed. Havoc at the level of the late 1960s and early ’70s is the best-case scenario; all-out civil war is the worst.

The fundamental problems, he says, are a dark triad of social maladies: a bloated elite class, with too few elite jobs to go around; declining living standards among the general population; and a government that can’t cover its financial positions. His models, which track these factors in other societies across history, are too complicated to explain in a nontechnical publication. But they’ve succeeded in impressing writers for nontechnical publications, and have won him comparisons to other authors of “megahistories,” such as Jared Diamond and Yuval Noah Harari. The New York Times columnist Ross Douthat had once found Turchin’s historical model­ing unpersuasive, but 2020 made him a believer: “At this point,” Douthat recently admitted on a podcast, “I feel like you have to pay a little more attention to him.”

---------------------

In the United States, Turchin told me, you can see more and more aspirants fighting for a single job at, say, a prestigious law firm, or in an influential government sinecure, or (here it got personal) at a national magazine. Perhaps seeing the holes in my T-shirt, Turchin noted that a person can be part of an ideological elite rather than an economic one. (He doesn’t view himself as a member of either. A professor reaches at most a few hundred students, he told me. “You reach hundreds of thousands.”) Elite jobs do not multiply as fast as elites do. There are still only 100 Senate seats, but more people than ever have enough money or degrees to think they should be running the country. “You have a situation now where there are many more elites fighting for the same position, and some portion of them will convert to counter-elites,” Turchin said.

Donald Trump, for example, may appear elite (rich father, Wharton degree, gilded commodes), but Trumpism is a counter-elite movement. His government is packed with credentialed nobodies who were shut out of previous administrations, sometimes for good reasons and sometimes because the Groton-­Yale establishment simply didn’t have any vacancies. Trump’s former adviser and chief strategist Steve Bannon, Turchin said, is a “paradigmatic example” of a counter-elite. He grew up working-class, went to Harvard Business School, and got rich as an investment banker and by owning a small stake in the syndication rights to Seinfeld. None of that translated to political power until he allied himself with the common people. “He was a counter-elite who used Trump to break through, to put the white working males back in charge,” Turchin said.

Elite overproduction creates counter-elites, and counter-elites look for allies among the commoners. If commoners’ living standards slip—not relative to the elites, but relative to what they had before—they accept the overtures of the counter-elites and start oiling the axles of their tumbrels. Commoners’ lives grow worse, and the few who try to pull themselves onto the elite lifeboat are pushed back into the water by those already aboard. The final trigger of impending collapse, Turchin says, tends to be state insolvency. At some point rising in­security becomes expensive. The elites have to pacify unhappy citizens with handouts and freebies—and when these run out, they have to police dissent and oppress people. Eventually the state exhausts all short-term solutions, and what was heretofore a coherent civilization disintegrates.

------------------------

Historians of religion have long pondered the relationship between the rise of complex civilization and the belief in gods—especially “moralizing gods,” the kind who scold you for sinning. Last year, Turchin and a dozen co-authors mined the database (“records from 414 societies that span the past 10,000 years from 30 regions around the world, using 51 measures of social complexity and 4 measures of supernatural enforcement of morality”) to answer the question conclusively. They found that complex societies are more likely to have moralizing gods, but the gods tend to start their scolding after the societies get complex, not before. As the database expands, it will attempt to remove more questions from the realm of humanistic speculation and sock them away in a drawer marked answered.

One of Turchin’s most unwelcome conclusions is that complex societies arise through war. The effect of war is to reward communities that organize themselves to fight and survive, and it tends to wipe out ones that are simple and small-scale. “No one wants to accept that we live in the societies we do”—rich, complex ones with universities and museums and philosophy and art—“because of an ugly thing like war,” he said. But the data are clear: Darwinian processes select for complex socie­ties because they kill off simpler ones. The notion that democracy finds its strength in its essential goodness and moral improvement over its rival systems is likewise fanciful. Instead, democratic societies flourish because they have a memory of being nearly obliterated by an external enemy. They avoided extinction only through collective action, and the memory of that collective action makes democratic politics easier to conduct in the present, Turchin said. “There is a very close correlation between adopting democratic institutions and having to fight a war for survival.”

Also unwelcome: the conclusion that civil unrest might soon be upon us, and might reach the point of shattering the country. In 2012, Turchin published an analysis of political violence in the United States, again starting with a database. He classified 1,590 incidents—riots, lynchings, any political event that killed at least one person—from 1780 to 2010. Some periods were placid and others bloody, with peaks of brutality in 1870, 1920, and 1970, a 50-year cycle. Turchin excludes the ultimate violent incident, the Civil War, as a “sui generis event.” The exclusion may seem suspicious, but to a statistician, “trimming outliers” is standard practice. Historians and journalists, by contrast, tend to focus on outliers—­because they are interesting—and sometimes miss grander trends.

------------------------

Turchin’s prescriptions are, as a whole, vague and unclassifiable. Some sound like ideas that might have come from Senator Elizabeth Warren—tax the elites until there are fewer of them—while others, such as a call to reduce immigration to keep wages high for American workers, resemble Trumpian protectionism. Other policies are simply heretical. He opposes credential-­oriented higher education, for example, which he says is a way of mass-producing elites without also mass-­producing elite jobs for them to occupy. Architects of such policies, he told me, are “creating surplus elites, and some become counter-elites.” A smarter approach would be to keep the elite numbers small, and the real wages of the general population on a constant rise.

---------------------

He places himself in a Russian tradition prone to thinking sweeping, Tolstoyan thoughts about the path of history. By comparison, American historians mostly look like micro-historians. Few would dare to write a history of the United States, let alone one of human civilization. Turchin’s approach is also Russian, or post-Soviet, in its rejection of the Marxist theory of historical progress that had been the official ideology of the Soviet state. When the U.S.S.R. collapsed, so too did the requirement that historical writing acknowledge international communism as the condition toward which the arc of history was bending. Turchin dropped ideology altogether, he says: Rather than bending toward progress, the arc in his view bends all the way back on itself, in a never-­ending loop of boom and bust. This puts him at odds with American historians, many of whom harbor an unspoken faith that liberal democracy is the end state of all history.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Sat Nov 28, 2020 8:09 pm
by Dukasaur


I read this article, but I don't draw the same conclusion as the interviewer. My logic is this:
Also unwelcome: the conclusion that civil unrest might soon be upon us, and might reach the point of shattering the country. In 2012, Turchin published an analysis of political violence in the United States, again starting with a database. He classified 1,590 incidents—riots, lynchings, any political event that killed at least one person—from 1780 to 2010. Some periods were placid and others bloody, with peaks of brutality in 1870, 1920, and 1970, a 50-year cycle. Turchin excludes the ultimate violent incident, the Civil War, as a “sui generis event.” The exclusion may seem suspicious, but to a statistician, “trimming outliers” is standard practice. Historians and journalists, by contrast, tend to focus on outliers—­because they are interesting—and sometimes miss grander trends.

If this is a 50-year cycle, and 2020 is the next peak after 1970, then that means we're almost past it. Far from heading into a worsened period of civil unrest, we might be through it and already looking at the post-modal slope. 2021 might be calmer than 2020.

Other than that quibble, I did find the theory very interesting.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Fri Dec 04, 2020 9:16 pm
by DoomYoshi
https://thecritic.co.uk/has-publishing-gone-woke/

I have no idea what this could even mean.

He is an icon of hate speech and transphobia and the fact that he’s an icon of white supremacy, regardless of the content of his book, I’m not proud to work for a company that publishes him”


While all these words make sense alone, they don't make any sense in context. So, I am left in a state of cognitive dissonance that is painful. So much for gay pride. This is like gay un-pride.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Tue Dec 08, 2020 7:36 am
by DoomYoshi

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Thu Dec 10, 2020 8:14 am
by DoomYoshi
No bad sex this year:
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/ ... gs-in-2020

Enjoy this best of compilation instead:
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-ente ... 64331.html

It should be obvious because of the title but NSFW!!!!

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Wed Dec 23, 2020 7:39 pm
by DoomYoshi
So I was looking to see if I could find any movies on the Rogers Pass or the Wellington avalanches.

Came across this video:
https://www.mountainlifemedia.ca/2020/1 ... -ski-film/

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Wed Dec 30, 2020 11:41 am
by DoomYoshi
https://scroll.in/latest/982623/love-ji ... onversions

We should go a bit further and prohibit marriage for Muslim men, except to other Muslim men.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Mon Jan 11, 2021 6:08 am
by DoomYoshi
Time for your morning musing. It's a bit longer, so I am providing some excerpts:

https://www.plough.com/en/topics/life/p ... more-child

In his 2013 book, What to Expect When No One's Expecting, Jonathan V. Last described “car seat economics” – the expense and burden of car seats for ever-older kids, the penalties imposed on parents who flout the requirements – as an example of the countless “tiny evolutions” that make large families rarer. Obviously car seats aren’t as big a deal as the cost of college or childcare, or the cultural expectations around high-intensive parenting. But it’s still a miniature case study, Last suggested, in how our society’s rules and regulations conspire against an extra kid.

Seven years later, two economists set out to prove him right. In a paper entitled “Car Seats as Contraception,” they argued that car-seat requirements delay and deter the arrival of third children, especially, because normal backseats won’t hold three car seats, so you basically can’t have a third young kid in America unless you upgrade to a minivan. The requirements save lives – fifty-seven child fatalities were prevented in 2017, the authors estimate. But they prevent far more children from coming into existence in the first place: there were eight thousand fewer births because of car-seat requirements in 2017, according to their calculations, and 145,000 fewer births since 1980.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Which is a bit crazy, when you stop to think about it. Whether a society is reproducing itself isn’t an eccentric question; it’s a fundamental one. The birthrate isn’t just an indicator of some nebulous national greatness; it’s entangled with any social or economic challenge that you care to name.

As social scientists have lately begun “discovering,” a low-birthrate society will enjoy lower economic growth; it will become less entrepreneurial, more resistant to innovation, with sclerosis in public and private institutions. It will even become more unequal, as great fortunes are divided between ­ever smaller sets of heirs.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Meet Allie, One of the Growing Number of People Not Having Kids because of Climate Change,” runs a recent NPR headline. Miley Cyrus recently declared her intention to refrain from procreating until somebody fixed the climate crisis: “I refuse to hand that down to my child.”

I’m not sure I believe her, though. I know there are some people who are sincerely child-free because they fear the ecological impact of overpopulation. This strikes me as a deeply mistaken approach to the climate crisis – above all, because any long-term solution will require exactly the kind of human ingenuity that a stagnant gerontocracy will tend to smother. But I can concede that it has some coherence, some altruistic pull.

Those I doubt are the people claiming that they’re refraining from having children for the kid’s sake, in a reversal of the argument for a moral obligation to have kids. Humankind has existed this long because people have borne children under radically difficult circumstances, amid famine, war, and misery on a scale we can’t imagine. Nothing in the potential life awaiting Miley Cyrus’s hypothetical daughter promises hardship remotely comparable to those ancestral burdens. And even if you think climate change will be truly apocalyptic, it’s no more threatening than the prospect of nuclear annihilation, which did nothing to prevent the last great Western baby boom.

No: In most cases, invoking climate anxieties seems more like an excuse, a gesture to ideological fashion, than a compelling ­explanation of low fertility. There has to be a deeper cause.

So let’s name three. First, romantic failure – not just in breakdowns like divorce, but in the alienation of the sexes from one another, the decline of the preliminary steps that lead to children, including not just marriage but sexual intercourse itself. Some combination of wider forces, the postindustrial economy and the sexual revolution and the identity-deforming aspects of the internet, are pushing the sexes ever more apart.

Second, prosperity, in two ways. One, because a rich society offers more everyday pleasures that are hard to cast aside in the way that parenthood requires. (Nothing gave me more sympathy for the childless voluptuaries of a decadent Europe than the first six months of caring for our firstborn.) Two, because prosperity creates new competitive hierarchies, new standards for the “good life,” that status-conscious people respond to by delaying parenthood and having fewer kids.

Finally, secularization – because even if it’s possible to come up with a utilitarian case for having kids, the older admonitions of Genesis appear to have the more powerful effect. The mass exceptions to low birthrates are almost always found among the devout, and the big fertility drop-offs in the United States correlate clearly with dips in religious identification.


Unfortunately, Douthat doesn't deal with the biggest problem of overpopulation: that the wrong people are overpopulating and that leads to necessary immigration for economic growth of the nation. This immigration further shatters the sense of community and leads to less charity, less support for the public good.

And then of course the third possibility: that economic growth is bad from all senses and we should stop both immigration and population growth and seek to shrink the economies of the G20. Perhaps shrink is too small a world. Collapse might be better.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Mon Jan 11, 2021 6:14 am
by HitRed
the wrong people are overpopulating?

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Tue Jan 12, 2021 7:15 am
by DoomYoshi
HitRed wrote:the wrong people are overpopulating?


The non-Americans. That means there must always be an influx of immigrants from outside the country just to maintain the status quo economically speaking.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Fri Feb 12, 2021 1:51 pm
by DoomYoshi
What diversity looks like in Canada:
https://twitter.com/CDS_Canada_CEMD/sta ... 1349438464
Image

Is it time to stop letting the LGBT agenda and the legitimate racists define diversity?

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Fri Mar 12, 2021 5:30 pm
by DoomYoshi
So 20 years ago, Chinese science was like "Made in China" toys. It was garbage and not usually accepted as mainstream, even if it was published in peer-reviewed journals. They spent the last 20 years trying to clean up their act (there's still a long way to go but that is true for a lot of science, not just Chinese). However, the stigma has kind of stuck around.

That led to this impassioned plea to not keep stigmatizing Chinese science:
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00458-5
Here is a sample from that piece:
Publicly doubting the integrity of any science conducted under an authoritarian regime or assuming that a Chinese scientist is a spy are counterproductive. In addition to embracing scientific collaborations, researchers can show support by sharing concerns over politicization, and by empathizing with how Chinese scientists can be caught between government censorship and Sinophobic bias.


Now, fast forward a few weeks and China has decided that they are going to be completely self-reliant. In other words, non-Chinese science will no longer be considered science.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00638-3
Scientific and technological self-reliance takes centre stage in China’s latest five-year plan.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Fri Mar 19, 2021 2:31 pm
by DoomYoshi
Now somebody is blaming the United States:
https://www.vice.com/en/article/xgzbqq/ ... g-chen-mit

I have a feeling there's going to be an article in a few weeks blaming China.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2021 3:16 pm
by DoomYoshi
Right on cue, here is the report:
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00733-5

It's stunning to think that people around the world spend 40 hours a week doing nothing but deception.

This also reminds me of the recent SolarWinds hack. Even though 30 000 companies were hacked, each one was individually hacked by people who spend all day and night trying to destroy our way of life.
More about SolarWinds: https://www.idginsiderpro.com/article/3 ... arbor.html

This is why I am sure that people are fundamentally evil.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2021 3:36 pm
by 2dimes
I know you and I are.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Sun Mar 28, 2021 5:32 am
by DoomYoshi
2dimes wrote:I know you and I are.


You're right. I did fail to vote for Trump 2020.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Sun Mar 28, 2021 6:16 am
by 2dimes
While true, I meant at a more basic level such as being likely to commit adultery in our hearts.

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Mon Mar 29, 2021 7:50 am
by DoomYoshi
A Chinese diplomat in Brazil launches accusations against Trudeau on twitter:
"Boy, your greatest achievement is to have ruined the friendly relations between China and Canada, and have turned Canada into a running dog of the US. Spendthrift!!!"

That's a real zinger!

https://twitter.com/CGChinaLiYang/statu ... 2461081604

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Mon Mar 29, 2021 7:52 am
by Dukasaur
DoomYoshi wrote:A Chinese diplomat in Brazil launches accusations against Trudeau on twitter:
"Boy, your greatest achievement is to have ruined the friendly relations between China and Canada, and have turned Canada into a running dog of the US. Spendthrift!!!"

That's a real zinger!

https://twitter.com/CGChinaLiYang/statu ... 2461081604



=D>

Re: The DoomYoshi Musings thread

PostPosted: Sat May 15, 2021 8:27 am
by DoomYoshi
Is it time to drop the word 'nature' from our vocabulary?

https://e360.yale.edu/features/species- ... eb-of-life

I would argue yes when it refers to a far-away concept separate from human. However, when it comes to talking about human nature or animal nature the concept still makes sense. Somehow the word got distorted as if only animals are living according to their nature and humans have distorted their nature. It is true that human life is marred by sin, but we still have human nature.

That article links to another article which describes the single-most important thing that I wish people would understand (very few do):
https://theconversation.com/what-is-a-s ... ery-119200

Species does not have a universally accepted definition (and probably never will due to the arbitrary nature of any cladistics cut-off).

However, to conclude that we should stop thinking in terms of species is not really helpful either.