Monday, March 16, 2020

COVID-19 and the world's gone mad.

First, let me start by saying that I'm an introvert: a retired, barely ever leaves the house despite being healthy, introvert that prefers pets and painting and tearing into a house destroying project over shopping, partying, or even family time.

Right after the Social Security check arrives, I go get some groceries every month.  This month, signs apologizing for no hand sanitizer (I  never buy that, I have a sink and soap and water--after 40 years as an RN, I realize that it's sometimes convenient but not a necessity) and almost no toilet paper, low on facial tissue also.

Peoples carts were overflowing.

I live in a state that rarely gets snow; you can count on a huge grocery store emptying after every prediction of snow.

The store and shoppers looked like that.

So, I contact someone I used to work with.  The state has had four positive tests for COVID-19.  No fatalities.
The Coronavirus group is known for the SARS outbreak and the MERS outbreak.
The current COVID-19 outbreak has killed more than 6 thousand worldwide, and 41 in the United states.  It first came to attention in China in December of 2019.  We in the USA didn't start testing for it until March of 2020.  A fourth of a year has passed.  I'm not going to comment on what is going on in the middle east, in China, or in Italy or Spain.  But here in the USA, where we dismantled the pandemic team put together for Ebola because the current president doesn't like the previous president and dismantles everything he did, we spent our 4 months of prep. time (was it prep time?  Just because we didn't test anyone or diagnose anyone, doesn't mean it wasn't here.) denying science(as usual), screaming about the virus being either a hoax or fake news or a democrat created biological warfare release (gotta love conspiracy theoriests) or hoax.  We refused the WHO tests, and waited for tests that needed to be created---by the inlaws family of the president.  Then we argued about how much to charge and since we didn't have that many, who could get tested.

Reality check time.

Between 1900 and 1904, one city in the USA--San Francisco, lost 113 people to the Bubonic plague.  (yes, the black death, the scourge of medieval Europe.)  One city, when every city was much smaller than it is today.
Between 1910 and 1912, China lost over 40,000 people to the same black plague disease.
In 1918, 50 to 100 million people died of the Spanish flu, (influenza A H1N1); that was about one twentieth to one fifth of the world population. That means, if you knew 5 people, one of them died. or 5-20 out of 100 people.  It wasn't absolutely fair, sometimes whole families died, sometimes whole towns missed it.
Between 1957 and 1958, 2 million people worldwide died of asian flu (influenza A H2N2).
Between 1968 and 1969, the Hong Kong flu killed about a million worldwide (influenza A H3N2)
Between 1920 and now, HIV/AIDS has killed over 32 million people world wide. That is an average of 320 thousand a year, (and yes, it has existed that long, but was mostly in Africa until the 1970's and the virus not identified until the 1980s)
In 2009, an H1N1 flu pandemic killed between 151 thousand and 575 thousand people world wide. (if you don't test anyone and have no hospitals, and no public health department, does it make a sound?)
In the last 10 years, Cholera has killed almost 10 thousand people on the little island of Hispaniola. In that same same time, measles has killed over 4500 people in the Democratic Republic of the Congo--out of a population of 80 million.
In 2012, 862 people dieds of MERS--a corona Virus.
Between 2013 and 2016, more than 11 thousand people died of Ebola.
In 2015, over 2,000 people in India died of the Indian Swine Flu (another influenza A H1N1)
From 2018 to now, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, more than 2,000 have died of Ebola and 5,000 of the Measles.
From 2019 to now, the COVID-19 virus has killed over 6,000 people worldwide--in about 4 months, over 40 of those in USA. (The US population is over 300 million)
Death by war worldwide in 2016 was over 100 thousand.
Suicide deaths the same year in the USA was over 45,000.
In 2017, there were over 39 thousand gun deaths, over 60 thousand drug overdose deaths, and over 45 thousand motor vehicle deaths in the USA.

We ignored the Corona Virus pandemic for 4 months and have lost >40 people.
We could have prevented that.   We laughed about it being no worse than the flu (note how often the Influenza A virus has created a deadly pandemic)
I think the panic is as much about a feeling that our government is not stable as it is about a virus.

I have no explanation for why all those highly preventable suicides, MVA's, and gun deaths are not causing any concern.

I guess that is not going to be fixed with hand sanitizer and toilet paper and a staycation.

Now, turn on the sink, wash your hands with a good load of soap until you have sung the entire happy birthday song at a regular speed, rinse off, grab a paper towel to turn off the water, and dry off your hand with a different paper towel. At home use a nice clean guest towel. And stop touching everybody and every thing.

Be Well and Be Calm.

addendum:  a week later, 49 people with the virus in this state and 1 death.  The groceru stores are now crowded all day long, toilet paper and hand sanitizer is gone; so are eggs.  Whole families came in to do the shopping.  Walmart, a block from the store I went to, is packed.  I am going to have to try the grocery pick up.  The store I went to at 1100 am on a friday is usually empty.

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

"The Richest Country in the World"

You can hardly go a day in the United States without someone commenting on how rich this nation is;  it is usually "the richest in the world".  We Americans might be prone to hyperbole, but there is some data to support that claim.

There is a lot of data that also calls BS.

From an economics standpoint, a nation's wealth is represented by their Gross domestic product (GDP)  which is "stream of goods and services that the nation creates".

http://statisticstimes.com/economy/countries-by-projected-gdp.php

So, in order of GDP (nominal for 2018)with Population rank and an equalizer number from GDP divided by population for a per capita GDP if you will.  Apples to Apples and all that) with HDI and IAHDI so that actual people conditions are included.
#1.  USA           Population #3          PCGDP   0.06202764 (#1)   HDI (#13)  IAHDI (#24)
#2.  China         Population #1          PCGDP    0.00992387 (#9)  HDI (#86)  IAHDI (#62)
#3.  Japan          Population #11        PCGDP    0.04073203 (#6)  HDI (#19)  IAHDI  (#2)
#4.  Germany    Population #19        PCGDP    0.05108812 (#2)  HDI (#5)    IAHDI  (#7)
#5.  UK             Population #21        PCGDP    0.04385199 (#5)  HDI (#14)  IAHDI  (#17)
#6.  France        Population #22        PCGDP    0.04467111 (#4)  HDI (#24)  IAHDI  (#22)
#7.  India           Population #2          PCGDP    0.00208091 (#10)HDI (NA)  IAHDI  (#101)
#8.  Italy            Population #24        PCGDP    0.03684545 (#7) HDI (#28)   IAHDI  (#31)
#9.  Brazil          Population #5          PCGDP   0.01007058  (#8) HDI (#79)   IAHDI  (#78)
#10.Canada        Population #38        PCGDP   0.04824359 (#3)  HDI (#12)   IAHDI  (#12)
(The smallest GDP is Syria with zero, Tuvalu, Nauru, Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Palau, Micronesia, Tonga, Sao Tome and Principi, and Dominica. I couldn't find most of them on a map without some really big labels)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_total_wealth

Now, if there is more to life than just how much we produce for sale, let us include some other parameters for comparison.  All that apparent wealth should provide a better standard of living.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Human_Development_Index

The Human Development Index (HDI) is a composite statistic of life expectancy, education, and income per capita indicators. A country scores higher HDI when the life expectancy at birth is longer, the education period is longer, and the income per capita is higher.

IN order of highest HDI: (parenthesis is their IAHDI)
#1  Norway                    (#3)        
#2 Switzerland              (#4)
#3 Australia                   (#7)
#4 Ireland                      (#11)
#5 Germany                  (#7)
#6 Iceland                     (#1)
#7 Hong Kong               (#21)
 and Sweden                 (#6)
#9 Singapore                 (#19)
#10 Netherlands            (#10)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_inequality-adjusted_HDI

But since the United States is currently suffering from a high level of inequality (and "currently" probably means "always".)  there is an inequality adjusted HDI.  So that those 4 to 6 individuals/families that own more wealth than the other 90% of us in the USA are not falsely elevated in the numbers while living in poverty and homeless situations.

So, if someone wants to brag, maybe it should be Japan or Germany for being both productive and having a high standard of living for everyone.
Or maybe millennials should be considering Iceland, Japan, Norway, Switzerland for possible address changes.  Or, if English is all you can manage, Australia, Canada, the UK are all doing better if you aren't rich.  
Me, I'm still babysitting and trying to fix up my house.  Inertia is winning, but at least I'm not so confused I think we are the "richest country in the world" for us regular folks.

Live Long and proper!





Wednesday, February 13, 2019

"Everyone needs a College Degree"

Of course,

I heard that my whole life, and went out and got two of them from a highly reputable university and with highly annoying student loans.

But, not all degrees are created equally just as not all jobs are created equally.
Which means not all college educations are equally valuable--in fact some are a dadgum joke.
And, for most of us, they still come with those highly annoying student loans afterward.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/careersandeducation/the-highest-and-lowest-paying-college-majors-in-america/ss-BBSiHMO?ocid=spartanntp

While I am far past the stage of trying to figure out what to do with my life--college and job-wise, there is information out there that can help prevent younger people (and those my age that still just want to go to college and get a good job) from making costly mistakes--both with their money and their time.

From the above link, you will find both the top 25 highest paying college degrees and the bottom 25 lowest paying college degrees.  And while some people are needed in all those fields, it is important that people know which will require a rich spouse or 2nd job, which will allow them to live the life they want, and which are so flooded with applicants they are unlikely to evet get a chance to work in that field.  The best example I can think of is the man that becomes a dentist and hates it despite decent pay and then goes back and gets a teaching degree--and loves the rest of his career. But I also knew people with MA's in Literature that spent a lifetime working in the city parks--no jobs in his field without moving, the university he went to had saturated the local market.  Money is part of why we work, and figuring out what we want to do at 18 or even 21 with limited life experience makes choosing a degree for a lifetime of work rather  insane.

While reading, remember that the current, ALL-JOB unemployment rate is under 4% right now.  Jobs with a rate higher than that are probably not going to be needing more per year than the number of currently employed that are retiring or changing careers.

So, the twenty-five highest paying degrees are, in order:
1. Petroleum Engineering, average pay $118,721/year.  Unemployment rate is 7.9% and there are 26,461 in the workforce.  This degree takes most 5-6 years and is science- and math-intensive.  Also, if we address climate change, the need will go down not up.

2. Actuarial Science, average pay $99,421, 2.3% unemployment, 17,624 in the workforce.  Most are employed with a Bachelors degree only, so a decent use of 4 years of your life, but math-heavy and be prepared to sound boring for the rest of your life.  Don't worry, though, most of  us have jobs that are more boring than that and that don't pay as well.  There are currently 17,624 people with this degree in the workforce.  A dependable choice for the math oriented person.

3. Biochemical Science, average pay $98,332, 2.2% unemployment, 210,098 working with this degree but be aware, 44% have a doctorate which might mean that jobs with less do not pay so well. (Average is not a range)  Definitely a science-heavy degree.

4.  Molecular Biology, average pay $95,332, 2.2% unemployment, 75,600 in the workforce, 64% have a Master's degree prep at least and 44% have a Doctorate.

5.  Health and Medical Prep Programs, (pre-med, pre-dental, pre-pharmacy, pre-nursing, pre-physical therapy, etc, etc, so a very diverse set of jobs here.  This is a Bachelors, though many of these do not require a degree, only a set of required courses and acceptance to an actual Medical, Dental, Nursing, etc, program.  Average pay is 95,060 with 2.3% unemployment, and 97,977 people in the workforce, 59% go on to get a Doctorate, but be aware, those that do not get into an actual program are not the ones making it pay so well.  We all know that a Doctor of Medicine or Osteopathy  is going to be pretty well paid and that is raising the average.

6.  Applied Mathematics, average pay is $94,897, 2.0% unemployment, 38,349 in the workforce, and 66% have a master's degree.

7.  Geoscience, $94,500, 4.0% unemployment, only 14,650 in the workforce, with 86.7% having a Master's level preparation. Get it if you love it, but prepare for 6 years of college and have a job found as early as possible.

8.  Nuclear Engineering,$93,194, 1.9% unemployment, 17,648 in the workforce, 60% get a Masters and 20% go for a Doctorate.

9.  Computer Engineering,  $92,343, 2.6% unemployment, 306,292 in the workforce.  A good Bachelor degree buy.

10. Finance, $91,726, 2.7% unemployment, 1,101,724 in the workforce. (this average salary is from a very wide salary range)

11.  Public Policy, $90,631, 2.0% unemployment rate, 36,011 in the workforce, 75% have their Master's degree.

12. Economics, 13. Zoology (say veterinary school after this 95% of the time), 14. Biomedical Engineering, (unemployment 4.15) 15. Chemical Engineering, 16. Mathematics and computer science, 17. Computer Science, 18. electrical engineering, 19. metallurgical engineering (unemployment 5.1%), 20. Aerospace Engineering, (80% master's prep), 21. mechanical engineering, 22. mining and mineral engineering ((6.2% unemployed), 23. Pharmacology, (85% Doctorate prepared), 24. Industrial and Manufacturing engineer, and last but not least--25. Biology, with 47% with master's and 27% with doctorate and averaging $81,955.

Of the 25 lowest paid, the lowest averaging $26,462/year and the highest of the low averaging $39,438, their are 16 that usually prepare people to teach our children.  There are three that prepare people to work with poor and mentally ill/disabled people--one of those requiring a Master's degree for employment, there are 3 that train for various types of arts ( a field that is hard to make a living in, and requires talent and frequently a wait-staff job to keep from starving), 1 that leads to a religious life so it is presumed that money is not the object,2 that have traditionally been either vocational classes with certification or on-the-job training positions but are currently the fodder of career colleges that, for a very high fee, usually involving government grants and loans, with provide a bachelor's degree in an amazingly short time.

NOW!!!  From the national labor site, you get a slightly different view of the world of Jobs.

https://www.bls.gov/ooh/highest-paying.htm

The top 25 highest paid position include 13 kinds of physicians plus nurse anesthetists (no one with "just a bachelors degree) , CEO's (no specific degree for this one), computer information systems managers, architectural and engineering managers, airline pilots, copilots, and flight engineers (no degree for this one?),  Judges and magistrates--an elected position involving a law degree--notice that a law degree was not on the highest or lowest degree list?  lots make little and lots make a lot,  and petroleum engineers.  The lowest of them make over $130,000/year, the highest more than $204,000/year, as in most of the specialized physician make >204,000/year.  (no top number given)

https://www.bls.gov/ooh/fastest-growing.htm

Now, among fastest growing job positions expected on the horizon,  important when planning your future, seven require no degree and focus on skilled labor such as installers of solar panels and wind turbines--both paying better than any of the 25 worst paying degrees, service careers in such thing as nursing assistant, personal aid, physical therapy aid,  etc., that pay worse than the worst paying degrees but are trained by vo-tech's and career colleges, and several jobs that match the top 25 highest paying degrees  so that fastest growing pay ranges from $23,000 to $110,000---so much for supply and demand determining prices.

But what do we need most of?

https://www.bls.gov/ooh/most-new-jobs.htm

Of the top 20, 9 pay under $30,000, 14 require little or no training.   Only 6 offer jobs paying over $50,000/year.

How we pay people in the country tells us all what we value.

We don't value the people that care for our sick and dying on a day to day basis.
We don't value the people that educate our children.
We don't value the people that work with those with mental illness, disabilities, addictions, or extreme poverty.
We don't value those that care for our prisoners.
We don't value those that would create beautiful things or invent useful things.
We don't value those that build our homes or service our belongings.

We value money.

Odd, when you consider that money is like a zero.  It's a placeholder.  You can't even stack it up or count it now that it is mostly lines in a spreadsheet.

And, its only value is as a tool to trade for the things you need, the things you want.

So, if you or your loved one have a dream about what career to follow.  Examine it carefully to see if it is really something you want to do.  The TV shows don't really do a good job of explaining the details of a job.  If you can find someone that already does that job, see if you can shadow them for a week or at least a full day.  If you can't find anyone near you that has that job, then consider if you want to move where the jobs are.  If you want to move, excellent, but arrange an opportunity to see the job in action for more than an hour.

If college is the goal, whether or not a job is desired, well, you must be rich, so go on your dime with no loans.  Lots of people are trying to pay off student loans while not making anymore money than a hard working day laborer.

And beware of  the internet universities and career colleges.  Many have such poor reputations that employers don't even want to bother interviewing them for any but the lowest paying jobs.

If your family has a plumbing business, or a mechanic's garage or some other small business.  Consider working there and learning something there.  Many of us wish we had done that before we went out and got our degrees that dropped us into careers we knew nothing about and money that was just good enough to keep us from changing to something we actually enjoyed doing.

And, if you get a call about "we see you are interested in a degree", hang up, fast.  Reputable schools don't buy lists of numbers from the internet hoping to mine a little government gold off your student loans.


My suggestion to all of you busy trying to grab the brass ring via education.
Ask yourself some questions:  What do you enjoy doing, what do you read about for fun, what fascinates you, do you like making things or fixing things or planning things.  Who are you now---not who do you think you just might enjoy being?  Have you met someone that does what you think you want to do.  Will they let you watch them work?

When I taught, and I was a terrible teacher--not everyone has the patience for students that don't want to be there, but when I did, out of every 25 kids, 10 had plans for pro sports, 6 for entertainment, 5 lawyers and 3 doctors--usually only 1-2 of them making passing grades when they announced that, and 1 that planned on doing what a parent did.  If I had taught younger kids, it would have been 20 teachers, 2 dinosaurs, a princess, a president, and a soldier.

We do our children no service by not teaching them about the world, the work world, the real life world where what we do impacts our futures.

College was great.  I loved the history classes.  I learned a lot in the science classes. My math skills got better.

But I could have made the same money or better if I had apprenticed myself to a plumber for a couple of years.







Thursday, January 24, 2019

Migration of humans.

When I was a child, we would spend Memorial Day in the Cemeteries of my mother's people.

While her nuclear family was in a small town cemetery (the same one President Obamas's maternal grandmother is in--a worthless nugget of information that has stuck with me since it seems such a strange coincidence), the rest of her family was in three other Cemeteries in places of considerable isolation.  Two were old pastures, and well kept but without tree or bench, one was larger and rambling and full of ancient trees and strangely created family plots and roses and bushes and perennial flowers placed there by families, but also well tended.
In one of the pastures, there were tiny, little sugared stones that said merely a last name or "baby" and one of these was near my grandmother's mothers family.  My grandmother would always tell me about the family traveling through to the west and losing a newborn while by them--1870-1880, no date and before her time, so she was passing the stories told to her.  She had some good ones, before TV, people told a lot of stories.

Then, during the 3 hour trip back home, I would either annoy the crap out of my parents about those babies or ponder and daydream about people moving across the country and having to bury someone, a baby no less, on their trip.  I learned that babies were frequently not even named for months, and that some people would recycle the same name repeatedly till one lived long enough to warrant not using the name again.  I learned that a lot of people died on those trips from old home to new home and some were buried not in the small cemeteries of what are now ghost towns but in places that no one could ever find again, frequently with no more marker than a pile of rocks or a cross of two branches.  The babies in our cemeteries at least had markers made of limestone that the locals made after the migrating people had left.

But why did they migrate?  Why leave your extended family, your childhood home, to travel into a place you have never been, have only heard about and where you can only take small amounts of your belongings. And probably not go back for visits---ever?

Were they poor?  Had they lost everything?  Had they reached the peak of their success and were still disturbingly poor and hopeless?  Did they have a loved one that had health issues that supposedly were not as big a problem where they were going?  Were they adventurers? Were they chasing a gold nugget, free land, a vague job offer?  Rumors of places so rich the streets were paved in gold, so beautiful it was like living in Eden, so fertile that food practically fell in your lap?  Or were they escaping a place changed by a war, by a corrupt local politician, their own reputations after having been a less than charming youth.

Some of them had only been in this country from Europe a short while when they heard of places with cheap land; sometimes whole groups from their homeland would go start a small community that ended up looking and sounding much like the place far away they had left.  Sometimes they were prompted to move on by finding the new home even less welcoming than the one they had just left.

The first migrants to this land mostly arrived from Asia, probably via the Bering Strait more than 13,000 years ago but as much as 50,000 years ago.  Those migrants were here long enough to be genetically different than those people that did not make that journey.

Their were some isolated tourists in the intervening years, Vikings, Pacific Islanders, maybe even some Phoenicians or Egyptians. Not planned visitors but people that travelled by sea and accidently ended up here either permanently or temporarily. But there were no actual planned migrations till after 1492.

The next wave of migration was from Europe and Africa, Europeans, on purpose (1609-1775) and  West Coast Africans against their will (1492-1808 legally but till 1858 under cover of night).  This first wave of migration peaked before the American Revolution.  It brought to this continent colonizers mostly from England and Germany (which was not yet Germany but a group of Germanic language speakers from places that later became Germany--like Hessians of "SleepyHollow (the movie)" fame and the Palatines of William Penn's planning for great productive farmers,  but also France, Holland and assorted others in much smaller numbers.  It also brought unplanned migrators that came for the gold, adventure, glory, fur, and other natural resources and left behind their DNA and other marks.  And people from the Gold Coast and Ivory Coast that had the misfortune of being captured by traffickers after their own profits.

The third wave from Europe came later and lasted through the mid-nineteenth century and brought mostly Irish (due to the Irish Potato Famine) and Germans due to Industrial revolution effects on rural people. (and by this time, it might have been "Germany" as it became a unified nation between 1860 and 1870.)

The fourth wave came between 1870 and 1920 and this is the Ellis Island Group.  It mostly came from Asia, Southern Europe and Eastern Europe.

In 1965 we passed a law abolishing quotas by country.  At that point people from Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean Islands started migrating in, as well as other people from countries that had previously had complete blocks against or very small quotas for.

Right now, a thing we were warned about in the mid-sixties, has come to pass.  Our birthrate, "our" being those of us whose ancestors came here before this country was a country to those that entered before WWII are not  reproducing at a rate to maintain the population.  Our current population growth is from immigrants.

When thinking tribally, this is horrifying.
When thinking from a reality basis, this is not a problem.  Ancestry.com indicates that my two children and I share DNA with craploads of people that are also here so it's not going to be a genocide in the USA.

Of course, that was not what has this in the news.  Another word for tribalism is--racism.  In this case White Nationalism, and that is the group most worried about not being the majority by enough points, especially since white covers Hispanic and Muslims and Jews--who the white nationalists do NOT consider white.

In 1491, these two continents were 100% Native American.  There were a lot of tribes, but the amount of non-native DNA was so miniscule as to be nonexistent.

Today, less than 1% of this country's population is Native American.  White non-Hispanic is 61% (and includes people that are not of European ancestry), Hispanic is 18%,  African-American is 12%, Asian is 5%.

To White Nationalists, that is not a good enough majority, that is an almost minority.

So now, we have calls for more births of white babies.

We are not underpopulated.  We have the highest population of humans on this planet that we have ever had.

Humans:     7,600,000,000
Pandas:                     1,864
Grizzly bears:             32,200
lions:                           20,000
tigers:                           3,890
Gray Whales:             19,000
Bottlenose dolphins: 600,000
Southern White Rhino:20,405

So human beings are much more common than most large mammals that aren't considered our food.  We are more like small mammals, rodents, perhaps  or even insects.

We are definitely not endangered.

To keep from being endangered, we migrate---we leave places that are threatening to our survival and go to places less threatening.

It's what humans do; we adapt to new surroundings.

We learn to live in new places.

We humans most likely either killed or mated with our competition (Neanderthal, Denisovans)  Our DNA says we did both.

But we need to learn to share.  Not just with people that don't look like us, but with other creatures.

The dog in the manger is a very lonely being--but he does have that bed of hay all to himself.

We humans don't like to think we are just part of the biosphere, but I fear our silly egos will let us commit suicide by destroying everything else with our big brains.  All those plans to migrate to another planet when this one becomes untenable makes us more locust-like than god-like.  

Time to just accept we are one species on a planet full of species and try to respect all life.






Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Who Does That?

If you have seen either of the two videos the above picture is from, then ask yourself these three questions.   Why?  Why?  Why?

First Why?  Why was an all white, all male, bus of Catholic adolescents sent to the Washington Mall to March AGAINST women's rights on the day of the WOMENS March.

Second Why?  Why does no one discuss the jeering comments videotaped by others--directed at young women marchers.  Those videos are still out there.

Third Why?  Why does that smile on this boy's face match so many other smiles we have seen.




If you have ever been teased, ridiculed, or bullied publicly, this is the face that you saw that was doing the teasing, ridiculing, or bullying.  It is the face of a person that thinks you are nothing, that they are amazing, and funny, and above reproach.

That is the smile of entitlement, privilege, and unimpeachableness.

There is a lot of anger directed at the poster's of the short video, which looks like they are making fun of the drummers.  
"It doesn't tell the whole story" 
And now the school if getting threats and people are talking badly about the school and the boys and the town--a small one in Kentucky,  in the south,  where parochial schools were frequently used to keep the richer, whiter students from having to knock elbows with brown people and poor white trash.  "that video made them look bad".

How about this, all the videos made them look bad....because they were acting out, being turds, unsupervised, annoying people with school chants during a very emotional march by other groups that were fighting for their own, personal rights.

Not one of these boys will ever want or need an abortion.  
They were not marching for THEIR rights!
They were marching to end the rights of women.

If they want to end abortion, now is the time to be teaching them about not raping people, not have sex without protection, (or for the hardcore--abstinence---but from these videos and their behavior, these are not devout boys, so start handing out condoms and do the banana demonstration--soon)

And don't send a busload of adolescent boys off to a political demonstration.  
Use your judgement, the brains God gave you.  If you want to let them participate in something political, send them to Your state capital, two at a time, to observe politics in action.  And send enough adults to keep them from acting like they are feral.

In all the videos, you should ALL be ashamed of their raising.





Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Pocahontas

Pocahontas was named Amonute at birth and went by the name Matoaka.
https://www.history.com/topics/native-american-history/pocahontas

So, Trump actually childishly and tauntingly calling Elizabeth Warren a name that means playful.  Amonute was dead by age 22.  Her life was nothing like the Disney Romance.

Apparently the insult is because it is a well-known white legend about a Native American.  I suppose he could have called her Sacagawea--oh wait, he did that also.

Elizabeth Warren has "made the mistake" of discussing a family legend of Native ancestry.
Her DNA said the legend was true.  (Her family was in Oklahoma, and in Oklahoma many pale skinned and light eyed people have similar family legends.  For that matter, many dark skinned and black eyed individuals do also.   And not just in Oklahoma, but in any area where immigrants from other lands lived near indigenous Americans.  And many of those people also have Roll Numbers that tie them to their Tribe's Nation and benefits.)

The Tribes aren't happy about her claims and she has no Roll Number.

She has denied claiming a tribe or a searching for a Roll Number.  (And in Oklahoma, many of us claimed to have a Cherokee Princess as a  umpteenth great grandmother, even though none of our ancestors lived near Cherokee places---it just seemed romantic in the 1930's to 1950's, as did being related to Jesse James or Daniel Boone)

The Tribal Leaders need to be quiet unless they want to accept and explain their own parts in the passing of  much Native American DNA to the descendants of White and Black people in this country.

I had my DNA done, and both my father's and mother's side told stories of Native Ancestors, and I had none; zero, zilch, nada.  But my Grandmother's little sister had 2% and a trace of European Jew.(which I expected, from my father's side and I also had none of.
What? you say?  How can that be?  But genetics are funny things, random and filled with weird chances and all that crap about twins with different fathers is no more likely than that the two are fraternal siblings that got nearly completely different sets of each parents DNA.
My grandmother and her sister were obviously related, both resembling each other and both of their parents.  There is a French Canadian Grandma (several greats back, that looked decidedly indigenous but it was a drawing, and not necessarily accurate.)

And this is what the Tribal Leaders need to consider when speaking of Native blood outside the Tribes.
While England and Germany sent families to colonize the country, many countries sent single men, frequently young, but also older, married individuals that took care of business, and those men, due to transportation methods, frequently spent large amounts of time on the continent and in the "wilderness", going about their fur trapping and hat making and resource acquiring businesses.  They were also on an adventure.  The Tribes not only traded with them, but also accommodated them with women.  I have no idea if those women were prisoners from other tribes or just excessive baggage of the tribe, but women had no more power or worth in Native America than they did in the rest of the world at that time.  If you doubt that, read up on the real history of Pocahontas.

The indigenous people's of the America's got a raw deal, land stolen, culture stolen, many tribes extinct or so lost that one tribe's DNA is not recognizable from the next, languages lost to time.
But, the Treatied Tribes are sovereign nations, with land and their own governments and constitutions, election methods, budgets, etc, etc, etc.
Their continued existence and growing strength gives me hope for my own nation's soul.

But when one woman  from a state full of people that got here from somewhere else after traveling around in this country for 1-4 hundred years mentions that her family says they had Native Blood, that should not cause Native Americans to be disgusted or confused, their own ancestors were the ones handing out that DNA in the form of undervalued female members, and should not cause President's to deride anyone like Native Blood is an insult.

We are a melting pot.  And while it currently looks more like a chunky stew, those of us whose ancestors mostly got here after 1492 but before 1796, have more stories than those told in history classes.  They are verbal histories, much like those told by indigenous people all over the world, and we of the old immigrants have finally melted completely.

Now, can we all just act like grown-ups.




Friday, January 4, 2019

What if Congress looked like us?

https://www.npr.org/2019/01/04/678227272/what-it-looks-like-to-have-a-record-number-of-women-in-the-house-of-representati

NPR did a nice article about women in Congress over the years.  The link is above.
While obviously, the people representing us can not mirror our ages---the people represented are age 0-120, but they can mirror everything else, race, sex, economic level--at least when they start (politics seems to be a good way to get ahead, eventually), sexual orientation, marital status, religion---us, ALL of US.

The country, our USA is 50.73% women and 49.27% male.

We are 59.70% white, and 13.45% black,  6.02 % Asian,  1.27% native American, 0.24% Pacific Islander, 2.8% mixed race, and 18.73% Hispanic (and Hispanic has been pulled out of whatever racial group they would have been in because apparently speaking Spanish trumps (pun intended) race, which is genetically speaking not really a scientific thing.

We are also religiously diverse with 70.6% identifying as Christian (29.4% percent don't identify as Christian--that is more than voted for our current president in 2016).
That is divided by denomination:
Evangelicals 25.4%
Traditional Protestant  14.7%
Black Protestant 6.5%
Catholic 20.8%
Morman 1.6%
Orthodox 0.5%
Jehovahs Witness 0.8% ( a small group, but very annoying on relaxing Sunday mornings and their tracts have terrible artwork on them)

Jewish 1.9%
Muslim 0.9%
Buddhist 0.7%
Hindu 0.7%
Other world religions 1.8%
No religion 23.4%

Our current, as of the 2018 election, Congress is not nearly this diverse.
https://www.amny.com/news/politics/115th-congress-house-senate-leaders-and-demographics-1.12841856
The above link is to the congress from 2017 to now, I'm not finding more than the NPR link to show the 116 congressional makeup.
Amazingly, while a good number of registered voters are neither democrats or republicans, they are not always represented because our congress is all about the party.  The entire House was 2 party and there were 2 independents in the senate. I have found nothing about religion of the senators and representatives, since religion is not supposed to be hooked to our government, but I live in a state where religion is touted heavily by campaigning politicians.
Party affiliation is also not at all reflected in our congress.  At the 2016 presidential election, we were 27% republican, 31% democrat and 36% independent.  By the last election, November 2018 we were 28% republican, 31% democrat and 39% independent.

A breakdown of the just ended 115th congress is:
House of Representatives (435 total)

Parties: Republican: 241 (55.40%); Democrat: 194 (44.60%); Independent: 0 (0%)

Gender: Men: 352  (81%) now 335 (77%) but to reflect us, should be 49.27% or 214 men;  Women: 83 (19%), now 100 (23%) but to reflect us should be 220 (50.73%)

Race: White: 339 (77.9%)  which should only be 260 (59.7%); Black : 46(10.5%) which should be 59 representatives (13.45%); Hispanic: 33 (7.59%) which should be 81 (18.73%); Asian: 10 (2.3%) which should be 26 (6.02%); Other: 3 (0.7%) which should be 18.

Senate (100 total)

Parties: Republican: 52 (52%) went up by one for 2019 but should be 28; Democrat: 46 (46%)  went down by one but should be 31; Independent: 2 (2%) but should be 39

Gender: Men: 78 but should be 50; Women: 21 but should be 50 but only went up to 22.

Race: White: 90 but should be 60; Black: 3 but should be 13; Hispanic: 4 but should be 19; Asian: 3 but should be 6 and other, currently 0 but should be 4.
To understand who we are as a nation requires we interact with people not like ourselves.  We are a diverse nation built on a diverse foundation.  And while we have not always recognized everyone, it is long past time that we become the country our founding fathers idealized whether they made it real or not.
What I have left out is the way that economic and educational levels  are not represented.  The house was a collection of rich white men that had no idea what getting ahead as a poor person of color entailed.  They did not fear their children being shot at routine traffic stops or the mothers of their children going to jail over a bounced check because no one had bail.  
Their parents made sure they went to college because they could.
BUTTTTTTT  we currently have a shutdown government due to a crazy man wanting to please his fan base, the 27% of voters that got him where he is.  
He wants 5 billion dollars for this wall he promised, 5 billion after the giant tax break to the wealthy, so the budget is already strapped.  
We need a congress that will stand up for all of us.
That will pass sensible bills that benefit us all and that will use their ability to get past the presidential veto power.
Congress must approve the returned bill by a two-thirds majority in both Houses. Once the bill receives this approval, it becomes a law.
Loyalty to a tyrant, especially a childish tyrant is not any part of representing the people of this country.
We need the 116th congress to stand up like the equally powerful branch of our government it was meant to be.  The Congress is not the executive branch's rubber stamp. 
Do the job for all of us.
You have the power to be superheroes.



Sunday, December 23, 2018

Absolutely incensed. (MAKE AMERICA PURPLE AGAIN!)

I've been watching the slow movement of Trump's antics as too! much! by people that now consider him politics as usual.
Most people are moving on.
They have recalibrated themselves about the whole situation and are back to life as usual.

I'm not.  I can't.  I'm appalled, horrified incensed, dismayed, highly offended, choose a word and it never quite makes it to the level I want.

I'm not alone.

There are some of us that remain inflamed by everything that is happening politically.

We can't get over it.  IT has left us afloat in a world that no longer makes sense.

How can one man run the country---sabotaging the very checks and balances that were built into the government format to prevent that very thing.

We currently have a Republican-held Senate that is working harder and longer trying to not shut down the government while trying not to fund a wall that only a minor portion (about 25 percent--unfortunately it's the same fools that voted in the current president---in the future, everyone needs to vote, everyone, and we need a 28th amendment to stop monied corporations from counting too much, and open primaries with top two so no third candidates will waste anyone's vote, and we need automatic renewal of voting rights once a person has paid his debt to society, and required Civic classes from 7th to 12th grade and gerrymandering "police" to prevent that crap and no more electoral college--every single citizen of this country has a vote that counts as much as every other citizen, and rules for social media that prevent any foreign government from influencing out citizens and an independent group of psychiatrists that test each candidate for mental illness, personality disorders and early onset dementia.)
As I was saying, a small percent want the wall, because it's a stupid idea that will do nothing but waste billions of dollars and screw up more habitat for the creatures that live there.

When the president's name is used, those of us that can't get over it have a drastic rise in blood pressure.  We rant.  We curse.  We seek out others of our ilk that are also ranting and cursing, posting memes about his insane behavior, reposting insane news reports with tacky comments of our own, posting political cartoons and activist rap songs and pictures of t-shirts showing negative things about our president and the current political happenings.

We are also slowly dying inside every time someone normalizes what is going on.
Every time someone implies he is good for the economy, or "look, he is having them fix the ridiculous prison sentences" or "I'm glad he stopped the Iran deal or the Paris deal or NAFTA or Obamacare".  We decry the tacky Christmas decorations and the immigrant wife.  We hate golf and casinos, if not before, then definitely now.

And, we shake inside.

Like a chill has taken us.

Like our own body has become disloyal to our well-being.

Like we have fallen down Alice's hole to a terrible wonderland or our neighbors have been overtaken by pod people.

It's fear.  And I'm not a fearful person.  I can be quite brave, and brazen, and feisty.

But I'm afraid of what is happening in this country.  Even knowing it was never the "greatest nation that ever existed" (let's face it, that is not an award, there are no parameters for that, every country likes to think of itself like that) I feel a deep loss of national identity.

We are now, not just NOT the greatest nation, but not even particularly good.  And we, as a nation, allowed a person that is neither good nor honest, neither well-meaning nor loving, to become our leader and our representation to the world.

We, We the People, we, need to take back our country.
No more excuses about bad behavior, or hate, or corruption or lying or treating people badly because they aren't US.

We need to NOT let this be the new normal.

Monday, December 17, 2018

Russian Influence

The investigation into Trump campaign collusion with Russia has been ongoing since before the President-elect was sworn in.

He was voted in by the very people that, 50 years ago would have been trying to shoot anyone with ties to the USSR.

Those people, those far-right, ultra conservative voters that are now making up the fan base (fan is short for fanatic--did you know that?) are swearing there was no influence and thus no collusion.

Sometimes, the truth hurts.

No one wants to admit they were hornswoggled.
No one wants to believe they could be influenced by a bunch of well placed propaganda.
No one want to admit they were WRONG.

It is still confusing, though.

Donald Trump is not a very convincing guy.
He lies badly.
He can't keep his lies straight.
He has 7 billion dollars, or there about but played up the self-made man from simple roots story and that had not the slightest relationship to truth.
He dodged the draft and insulted veterans and that can't be seen as patriotic or respectful of their sacrifices for their country.
He made fun of disable people--which is pretty childish and not generally considered to be a sign of greatness.
He bragged about touching and kissing women without their consent and there are women that are in his fan club.
He went bankrupt multiple times and never once shared in the losses, instead letting everyone else take the loss.  (more villainous than heroic)
He is a philandering  man that has married multiple times and yet is representing the evangelical part of our nation with no hypocrisy seen--still, even after having the whole pay-offs for past indiscretions thing caught and magnified simultaneous to the campaign.
He has maintained his reality TV show method of hiring and firing-everyone, where people whose only qualifications are they hate the very organization they are leading and belong to the group that wants control, and firing them if they show any signs of disloyalty or worse, embarrass him.
Multiple people in his employee have been found to be in talks with Russian "spys" etc, and we are supposed to believe that was not something he knew---but he is obviously a micromanager that wants to know everything.  He even voiced the desire to have Russia interfere in the election during a debate.  (yes, we mostly took that as sarcasm or hyperbole or just plain weird nonsense)

I know that I discovered the need to fact check most of the crap on social media.
I know that I found many of the internet news sites to be highly opinion based sources of news and (dis)information.
I know that people that I considered to be smarter than that or better than that were suddenly only listening to FOX news, or Rush Limbaugh, or Breitbart  (or flip side, to some of the far left sites, although there doesn't seem to be a clear list of those, just that BBC is not on the American Right/Left spectrum)

https://www.forbes.com/sites/sirenabergman/2017/02/28/the-news-sites-on-the-far-left-and-far-right-may-be-owned-by-the-same-people/#6aba1256eaaf

The media is apparently more about fanning the flames and keeping the two sides as oppositional as possible.

But what does Russia have to win by doing this?

Or is Putin still mad about any influence the USA had on the disintegration of the USSR.
He was high up in that particular government.  Perhaps he misses the Cold War, a little nostalgia for the old days.

history repeating

gotta good beat and you can dance to it... seriously, i'm hearing alot about trump/hitler similarities. what i'm not hear is about t...