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Showing posts from November, 2023

Celebrities accused of sexual assault

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  Cuba Gooding Jr. Axl Rose. Jamie Foxx. Sean "Diddie" Combs. Those are the well-known men accused of sexual assault just this past week. THIRTY celebrities have been accused since Harvey Weinstein. Only 50% of reported sexual assaults see an arrest. Of those, 80% are prosecuted. But of those, only 60% are convicted. For a total of 24% of reported sexual assaults resulting in a conviction. And that includes a lot of poor men; I bet the rich men's conviction rate is only about 12%. (And I should note that no one should be considered guilty, unless convicted, BUT there seems to be a very high victim reliability rate among sexual assault complaints.) What gets me about these wildly popular men is that they have enough star power to attract consensual partners. So we know they have a truly evil core from which they want to destroy people. And they were beloved celebrities. Think about that.

Trying Times

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  On Trying Times: This is iteration #2 of a drystack stone wall (no mortar), around our compost pile. I hate it, and I hope you do, too. So, down it comes, and I'll try an iteration #3, which should reflect some additional learning since #2, after even more hours spent poring over obscure British websites. Mind you, it takes at least a few minutes to find one rock and test it up to seven ways before either accepting it or rejecting it, for a spot. So the failures add up to a great deal of time. Drystack walls are best built by stonemasons who have years of experience. The problem with rough rocks is that there are very few ways they can fit together into a pile which looks both finished and stable. There is no user guide telling you how to assemble the wall. You must invent a way, over and over, knowing there might be no way that works. This would be a great sermon topic: How often do we try and fail, and then learn more about how to "try better," and then try again, b

66 trips around the sun:

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  66 trips around the sun, and here's my advice (spoiler alert: It's obvious, stupid, and contradictory): - Be passionate and active in worthy causes, but step back and don't let them consume you with fear or hatred; - Stay busy and set achievable goals, but honor the need for downtime; - Live by an opportunistic, humanitarian moral code, but be willing to make exceptions and try to see strengths in the positions of others opposed to you; - Love family and friends, and spend more time listening to them than talking to them, but give them plenty of space and feel "OK" if they reject your ideas. - Make it a fun avocation to try to figure out all the ways modern US society is concealing how it protects big business and enriches the wealthy, at the expense of ordinary individuals. - To make the world better, think globally but act locally. Remember how small the Earth is. Do everything you can to grow more, healthier earthworms ;)

Oh, this is nice: Shell Oil feigning support for renewable energy while worsening climate change:

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  This article is interesting:  Oh, this is very nice: Shell Oil is paying its shareholders $23B in a special dividend, while cutting its staff 25% in the group that's working to move the company into low-carbon business. Nice. The only way to fight this, on a personal level, is to work very hard to use less oil and natural gas. Fly less! Drive a hybrid or all-electric car! Replace gas stoves and furnaces and water heaters with electric. Look for ways to use less plastic. You know, if any company has a spare $23B that they don't know what to do with, it might be nice if they paid more in taxes, or donated to nonprofits that feed, house, and educate people. Our governments don't take care of the destitute, so maybe the big corporations should.