Oct 202014
 

You might have heard that Bill O’Reilly grew up in Levittown, New York, famous for creating the planned subdivision. Designers wanted Levittown to offer returning WWII veterans an affordable entry to the middle class of property-owning professionals. People with no prior experience in ownership could find a home at a low price with often intimidating details like landscaping, appliances and furniture already taken care of. Along with government policies with similar goals like the GI bill, Levittown and the communities that followed it helped to elevate millions of families that would otherwise have had no easy access to the middle class.

More to the point, it elevated white families.

In 1957, when Bill O’Reilly was 8 years old, the developer William Levitt explained [banning black homeowners from Levittown] this way to the New York Times:

The plain fact is that most whites prefer not to live in mixed communities. This attitude may be wrong morally, and some day it may change. I hope it will. But as matters now stand, it is unfair to charge an individual with the blame for creating this attitude or saddle him with the sole responsibility for correcting it.

A normal person who grew up in freaking Levittown would see that he might have had some chances in life that his black contemporaries never had. Of course saying that makes me a bad liberal, since the diversity of normal people includes more than the people with whom I hang out. Someone like the folks I know would acknowledge it, sure. To me the mental acrobatics it takes to deny that seem painful and maybe dangerous.

But conservatives are normal too. A lot of people would not at all agree with the fairly obvious point that I just brought up, and I think that this issue gets back to what I see as the deep heart of the liberal-conservative divide. Liberals want people to feel guilty about things and conservatives don’t want to. Some are sociopaths who cannot feel guilt but a lot of them just go a little nuts at the idea that they might in any way be a bad person. They’re not entirely wrong that guilt gets used sometimes recklessly and as a weapon but the absolute refusal to feel any at all has become the poisonous seed of our current national dysfunction.

Start with O’Reilly versus Stewart. Bill O’Reilly lifts his persona straight out of a three year old’s memory of John Wayne. He sees himself as not just a good guy but as some sort of moral achetype, crusading against evil and incapable of sin. Poke his pretensions and O’Reilly goes nuts, over the top, into wackadoo land.

index

Jon Stewart is not a perfect guy in any respect (e.g., his interviews often kind of suck), but then he doesn’t pretend to be. When he screws up a story he admits the mistake, makes fun of himself a little and moves on. I watched when he demolished Crossfire. Stewart looked the opposite of puffed up. He seemed deflated, like he was ahsamed to even be on the stupid program. In fact that was more or less his point.

The idea that Levittown, O’Reilly’s values factory that made moral paragons like spicy chili makes unappealing hot gas, only gave those fabled values to white people just short circuits O’Reilly’s brain. To process that cognitive dissonance he would have to become a person who can accept a little ‘personal responsibility’ for the unequal opportunities that America faced then and now. In other words he would have to become a little bit liberal. But he can’t, so he won’t.

And Cliven Bundy is still swallowing that damned foot.

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Referee thoughts

 Posted by at 8:21 am
Oct 202014
 

Referee Thoughts

  • Great preventative refereeing in the New Englands vs. New York Jets game last week. Officials for almost all sports are there to facilitate a safe and fair game according to the rules of competition. Most officials would like to do with the minimal needed involvement. Different sports have different definitions and prioritization of safety versus faireness, but that is the goal — safe and fair. In this situation, a quiet word moved a New England linebacker to a safe position before the play. Good teams want the referees to keep their guys healthy even if it minimizes foul count.
  • Entering the knock-out portion of the season. I love doing these games as there are hundreds or thousands of fans for some of the high school games, and hundreds of fans for the college games, and the players are going hard. I hate doing these games because the incentive structure changes dramatically when there is a two goal differential with thirty minutes left. In the regular season, two goals is a high hill and coaches will want to preserve their players for the next game. There is no next game, so two goals means the team that is behind goes to high variance, high risk, high contact strategies. Yesterday I had three red cards in the last thirty minutes for two hideous challenges and a coach losing his head. No coach, it was not my AR’s fault that #17 can’t run the fucking offside trap as he is two steps behind his center back and Magenta has been pounded the ball down #17’s side… it is your fault for either having him out there OR trying to trap with him out there as you’ve seen him for 25 games this season….You should know better
  • The toughest player to referee within 100 miles of my house is a 36 year old guy playing in a men’s league. He is a reasonably skilled player but a complete and utter asshole. There are some guys who are assholes on the field, but are super nice off the field, he is not one of them. He gives off the asshole vibe where if he gets within 15 feet of a group of people, they tense up. Five or six years ago, he could not control his behavior, so he was almost guaranteed a caution within the first twenty minutes of a game. Now he has just enough control where he can irritate, instigate and annoy at a level which any one act is not worth a foul, any one act is not worth a caution, but he tilts the game and makes it ugly. Most of it is that he plays at a level of physicality and aggression that is half a step above where the rest of the league wants to play, but it is not illegal most of the time. The rest of his schtick is having absolutely no self-awareness as to why the referee is trying to manage him. I was being assessed on one of his games on Saturday, and my assessor and I had no good way of working with or around him to make the game flow.
  • I learned a new phrase for diving/flopping last week — “horny lesbian” applied in a Men’s D-2 college game for the amount of grass a particular player was eating…. I was AR-2 and did not hear the expression but saw the center give the red card and then saw her turn to me as she tried to stifle a laugh. I could not contain myself in the lockerroom when I heard the entire story.
  • Things that I have learned this week from coaches and experts:  I can not give a red on a player’s first foul of the game. I can not give a yellow on the first foul of the game.  A yellow is mandatory for the first foul of the game.  I am obligated in NCAA play to give extra time to accomdate injuries (we stop the very visible clock instead), the epitome of tactical soccer for 10 year olds is to kick it really hard and let Johnny and Jose chase it down, working U-12 girls that can play intelligent tactical soccer is amazingly refreshing, a player that is 10 yards offside and 30 yards from the ball requires me to pop my flag.

Open thread until I write a post on integrated payer provider models.

Oct 202014
 

ebola whatever it takes wilkinson

(Signe Wilkinson via GoComics.com)


Good news, from the NYTimes:

At least one chapter of the Ebola saga neared a close Sunday, as most of the dozens of people who had direct or indirect contact here with Thomas Eric Duncan, the Liberian man who died of Ebola, had been told by officials that they were no longer at risk of contracting the disease…

All of those whose monitoring was coming to an end had been potentially exposed to Mr. Duncan before he was admitted and put into isolation at the hospital on Sept. 28. They have been released from monitoring in stages. At least 14 of them had been released by Saturday. Others were released Sunday afternoon and some, like Ms. Troh, were released midnight Sunday. A few others may be released after Monday, officials said.

“It’s a significant hurdle for us to get over,” Mayor Mike Rawlings said. “It brings a little bounce in our step, because we know the science is working.”…

And, per NYMag, the hospital lab worker who went on a Carnival cruise has tested negative for the virus. The BBC reports:

The Spanish nurse who became the first person to contract Ebola outside West Africa has now tested negative for the virus, the Spanish government says.

The result suggests Teresa Romero, 44, is no longer infected – although a second test is required before she can be declared free of Ebola…

Meanwhile, European foreign ministers are due to meet in Luxembourg on Monday to discuss how to strengthen their response to the threat posed by the spread of the Ebola virus.

European nations have committed hundreds of millions pounds to help the West African nations of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea reinforce overstretched healthcare systems and mitigate the damage Ebola is doing to their economies.

But BBC Europe correspondent Damian Grammaticas says there is a growing realisation that there is an urgent need for more medical and military teams to be sent to the region, and for more laboratories and hospital facilities to be built.

He adds that the aim to isolate the virus – not the nations affected.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation is expected to declare Nigeria to be officially free of Ebola later on Monday, after six weeks with no reported cases… Senegal has already been declared free of the disease.

Also too, commentor & medical lab professional LAMH36 has volunteered to answer questions tonight at 8pm EDT.
***********

Apart from quietly unbunching some panties, what’s on the agenda as we start another week?

Oct 202014
 

ebola nurses at the pointy end davies

(Matt Davies via GoComics.com)

.
Nothing can be made foolproof, because the fools are so ingenious. From the NYTimes, “Life in Quarantine for Ebola Exposure: 21 Days of Fear and Loathing“:

… As the Ebola scare spreads from Texas to Ohio and beyond, the number of people who have locked themselves away — some under government orders, others voluntarily — has grown well beyond those who lived with and cared for Mr. Duncan before his death on Oct. 8. The discovery last week that two nurses at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital here had caught the virus while treating Mr. Duncan extended concentric circles of fear to new sets of hospital workers and other contacts…

Dr. Howard Markel, who teaches the history of medicine at the University of Michigan, said the quarantines recalled the country’s distant epidemics of cholera, typhus and bubonic plague.

“Ebola is jerking us back to the 19th century,” he said. “It’s terrible. It’s isolating. It’s scary. You’re not connecting with other human beings, and you are fearful of a microbiologic time bomb ticking inside you.”

While a quarantine is designed to protect those on the outside, it also fuels the community’s fear, and sometimes its cruelty.

In Payson, Ariz., paranoia ignited after word spread that a missionary who had traveled to Liberia on a church trip was spending three weeks under a self-imposed quarantine with his wife and four children. The missionary, Allen Mann, strung yellow caution tape and a “No Trespassing” sign around his front door and left a bucket in the yard for neighbors to drop off food and treats for his children.

While most neighbors understood there was scant risk that Mr. Mann, 41, had carried the disease home, rumors nevertheless coursed around town that he had tested positive for Ebola and would soon be medically evacuated. Mr. Mann said an anonymous commentator on a local news website had suggested burning down his house.

“People had this lynch-mob mentality,” he said.

As with other aspects of the Ebola response, the criteria for recommending or requiring quarantine have often seemed ad hoc, random and evolving…

For the record, before I’m accused of wanting to kill innocent people: Quarantine can be a vital tool of public health, and used correctly has saved millions of lives. It’s the “used correctly” that’s an issue. There’s a part of our brains that never evolved beyond a bunch of primates squatting on a patch of brush, bristling in suspicion of the bunch of primates in the patch of brush over there, who are known to be filthy disease-bearing sub-primates with disgusting personal habits just slavering to befoul our precious primate bodily fluids and destroy our primate way of life. And every petty would-be leader knows that screaming imprecations at those primates-who-are-not-us will attract followers… Continue reading »

Tech Question

 Posted by at 6:10 pm
Oct 192014
 

I upgraded to Yosemite on my laptop, and now it is essentially worthless. Every time I fire it up and try to do anything, I get the spinning circle of doom forever. I get a message about Java 6 Legacy, but I can’t even get to force quit or shutdown, it locks up so tight. What do I do?

Oct 192014
 

Regular comment LAMH36 has volunteered to help us out:

So, with all this talk of Ebola and health care workers, of which I have been one for the past 10+ years, if ya’ll like, maybe you can put up a post concerning Ebola I would be willing to answer serious questions from commenters in the comments section to the best of my knowledge as an active Microbiology Medical Laboratory Scientist.

I don’t mind, and I plan to offer this to a few other blogs where I post. I figured when you have experienced knowledge about some subject, it always better to help spread factual information rather than allow misinformation to become embedded in the psyche.

Any questions, I cannot answer or that is outside my purview of knowledge, I can ask some of my other friends who are currently working in the hospital laboratory, CDC and beyond.

I’ve emailed her, and she decided that tomorrow, Monday evening, at 8pm EDT would be convenient. So I’ll put up a post then, and we can all get smarter about this topic together!

Only 34,500?

 Posted by at 2:20 pm
Oct 192014
 

My honest to goodness reaction when I saw this story was “Only 34,500?”:

A newly created database of New Yorkers deemed too mentally unstable to carry firearms has grown to roughly 34,500 names, a previously undisclosed figure that has raised concerns among some mental health advocates that too many people have been categorized as dangerous.

The database, established in the aftermath of the mass shooting in 2012 at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., and maintained by the state Division of Criminal Justice Services, is the result of the Safe Act. It is an expansive package of gun control measures pushed through by the administration of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo. The law, better known for its ban on assault weapons, compels licensed mental health professionals in New York to report to the authorities any patient “likely to engage in conduct that would result in serious harm to self or others.”

But the number of entries in the database highlights the difficulty of America’s complicated balancing act between public safety and the right to bear arms when it comes to people with mental health issues. “That seems extraordinarily high to me,” said Sam Tsemberis, a former director of New York City’s involuntary hospitalization program for homeless and dangerous people, now the chief executive of Pathways to Housing, which provides housing to the mentally ill. “Assumed dangerousness is a far cry from actual dangerousness.”

Unless NYC and New York have changed a helluva lot since the last time I was there (several years), you can walk a dozen blocks and cover an area with at least 34k people who most definitely should not own firearms. Right about now, there are probably at least that many diehard Jets fans who should own a gun.

*** Update ***

Via the comments, the NYPD FAQ:

How many Police Officers are there in the NYPD?

The NYPD’s current uniformed strength is approximately 34,500.

Hrmmm.

White Privilege Riot

 Posted by at 1:27 pm
Oct 192014
 

So apparently drunken idiots rioted at the Pumpkin Festival in Keene, NH (thus proving John Oliver wrong- they really do need their MRAP), and in Morgantown, WV, another riot broke out because WVU upset Baylor. I doubt there is much cell phone footage from WVU, because they had all been drinking since 7-8 am and their batteries were probably all dead or they were too drunk to use them.

Assholes.

At any rate, via Jezebel, here are otters eating sushi from chopsticks:

Otters are my favorites, even though I don’t really like the whole concept of a zoo (although if you go to a circus you are dead to me). When I was a kid I used to spend hours at the Good Zoo with my family, and the only thing that broke up my routine of being a little obnoxious bastard trying to drive my parents into an early grave was the otters. I could spend hours watching them. In fact, I did. And still am.

*** Searches for otter screensaver ***

Oct 192014
 

ndfg beesOnGoldenrod

More from commentor NewDealFarmGrrl:

I joined Bumblebeewatch.org this year. My native plant rain garden (17 species) was a big hit with the bees, I tentatively identified six of thirteen species of bumblebees native to Minnesota. For bumblebee watch, a bee must be photographed, tentatively identified, then emailed to bumblebeewatch.org for verification by experts. I was at my wit’s end trying to get pics of bumblebees, it was heading toward massive FAIL. My grandson thought it was hilarious, seeing me chasing around the yard and talking to the bees. “Hold still sweetie, that’s it, NOOOOOO COME BACK HERE”. I finally wised up and took videos with my phone, then used an app called stillShot to extract a good frame or two. That was how I ended up with one of my favorite pics, “hoveringBee.” Total beginner’s luck!

ndfg hoveringBee

ndfg monarch_onBeebalm

ndfg monarchCaterpillar

As i tell people in regard to critters and my native species, “If you plant it, they will come!”
ndfg raccoon

As for pets – I have three cats, all siblings from a litter of my niece’s cat. One male and two females, Meeko, Lynxie, and Queenie (left to right).
ndfg threeSleepingCats

ndfg Meeko&Gigi

The dog is my beloved grandoggie GigiBears who loves to visit and play with Teh Kittehs.

***********
Quite possibly the last Garden Chat of the season, unless somebody sends me more harvest pics (or you Left Coasters step up)…

What’s going on in your gardens this week?

Oct 182014
 

The topic deserves more attention than a Saturday-night drive-by, but I wanted to share my irk. As the McClatchy news bureau sees it:

A soon-to-be released Senate report on the CIA doesn’t assess the responsibility of former President George W. Bush or his top aides for any of the abuses of the agency’s detention and interrogation program, avoiding a full public accounting of one of the darkest chapters of the war on terror.

“This report is not about the White House. It’s not about the president. It’s not about criminal liability. It’s about the CIA’s actions or inactions,” said a person familiar with the document, who asked not to be further identified because the executive summary – the only part to that will be made public – still is in the final stages of declassification.

The Senate Intelligence Committee report also didn’t examine the responsibility of top Bush administration lawyers in crafting the legal framework that permitted the CIA to use simulated drowning called waterboarding and other interrogation methods widely described as torture, McClatchy has learned…

As a result, the $40 million, five-year inquiry passed up what may be the final opportunity to render an official verdict on the culpability of Bush, former Vice President Dick Cheney and other senior officials for the program, in which suspected terrorists were abducted, sent to secret overseas prisons, and subjected to the harsh interrogation techniques.

“If it’s the case that the report doesn’t really delve into the White House role, then that’s a pretty serious indictment of the report,” said Elizabeth Goitein, the co-director of the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty and National Security Program at the New York University Law School. “Ideally it should come to some sort of conclusions on whether there were legal violations and if so, who was responsible.”

At the same time, she said, the report still is critically important because it will give “the public facts even if it doesn’t come to these conclusions. The reason we have this factual accounting is not for prurient interest. It’s so we can avoid something like this ever happening again in the future.”…

“As an oversight document the main premise is about whether Congress was accurately and appropriately informed by the CIA,” said the person familiar with the report, one of several knowledgable sources who spoke to McClatchy. “The report will show that the CIA did not provide accurate information, and in some cases provided misleading information.”

The narrow parameters of the inquiry apparently were structured to secure the support of the committee’s minority Republicans. But the Republicans withdrew only months into the inquiry, and several experts said that the parameters were sufficiently flexible to have allowed an examination of the roles Bush, Cheney and other top administration officials played in a top-secret program that could only have been ordered by the president…

As Andrew Sullivan chooses to interpret McClatchey:

We don’t have merely passive indifference to the CIA’s record on torture, we have active opposition to the entire inquiry from the very beginning of Obama’s term in office. If you want to know why we are still waiting for the report almost two years since it was finished, and if you want to know why the White House refused to provide mountains of internal documents that would have added to the report’s factual inquiries, just absorb the anecdote above. And if you want to know why the White House did nothing to discipline the CIA after it hacked into the Senate Committee’s own computers, ditto. It’s impossible not to conclude that Obama wants as little of this material made public as possible. His pledge for the most transparent administration in history ends, it seems, at Langley…

Yesterday’s McClatchy story leads with the notion that the report does not follow the trail of responsibility up to Bush, Cheney, Tenet, Rumsfeld et al, and is thereby somehow toothless. But the committee was an investigation specifically into the CIA’s records on the program, to get a full accounting of what happened within that agency. It was not tasked with the essentially political job of holding the White House responsible. And it may be, in fact, that even some of the most powerful individuals in the Bush administration were actually unaware of what was really going on, or that they were merely repeating what the CIA was telling them, and the CIA was lying to cover its ass. That does not minimize the political responsibility of president Bush and others for presiding over such a grotesque torture program; but it’s essential context for understanding what actually happened…

Sully — it’s an active verb!

Oct 182014
 

Yeah, let’s shame the ammosexual enablers in public… if there’s any good to come out of the current Ebola Panic, this may be it. From Politico:

More than two dozen House Democrats are calling on the Senate to swiftly approve Vivek Murthy’s nomination to serve as surgeon general to help combat the spread of the deadly Ebola virus in the U.S.

Murthy’s nomination got sidelined after Republicans and vulnerable Senate Democrats voiced reservations about the Harvard Medical School physician’s outspoken views on gun violence and public health. But the House Democrats, in a letter set to be released next week, argue that the Obama administration needs a top official in place to help with the Ebola response.

“The American public would benefit from having a Surgeon General to disseminate information that is desperately needed,” the Democrats wrote. “The Surgeon General can also work to amplify the Center for Disease Control’s actions, reassure the American people, and combat misinformation here at home.”…

Obama announced on Friday that Ron Klain, a former senior staffer to Vice President Joe Biden, would serve as the administration’s chief coordinator for the Ebola crisis. A surgeon general would be a senior official in any White House response under Klain’s management.

The 29 House Democrats, led by California Reps. Barbara Lee, Judy Chu and Ami Bera, voice support for Murthy’s nomination in the letter.

“Given the public’s increasing fears regarding the spread of the disease, it is imperative that we confirm a Surgeon General who will play a significant role in educating the American public about the disease and how to best protect their health,” states the letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).

Even with growing pressure on politicians to show progress in the fight against Ebola, there is little time on the calendar to approve a surgeon general after senators return from their recess in November. Lawmakers have to approve a budget and have other high-profile posts like the attorney general and Secret Service director to potentially fill. There is also a chance that party control of the Senate isn’t decided until January because of run-off elections — a likely complication in scheduling a vote on Murthy.

Oct 182014
 

Just checked FB and my timeline is full of people tailgating at 9 am, and all I can think is “man, I don’t miss that shit at all.” A whole day, just lost. Although considering what Baylor is going to do to WVU, maybe some drinking is in order.

I felt the same way during homecoming last weekend. I never noticed how much time and effort goes into being a drunk until then. You have to make sure you have the booze, you have to deal with hauling around coolers and ice, you have to make sure you have a driver, and then you spend the whole time focusing on activities to get “fucked up,” then people spend the whole time talking about how “fucked up” they are, then you start to have no fun because your whole day was centered around getting “fucked up,” and now you are “fucked up” and having no fun because you’re “fucked up.” So then you go home and eat a bunch of crap and go to bed and pass out, and then wake up feeling like shit because you got so “fucked up” and you commiserate with others about how “fucked up” you all were and take your own personal remedy so you can feel better. And then, once you are feeling somewhat human again, you repeat the whole process to get “fucked up” again.

Something is “fucked up” here, no doubt. I don’t miss drinking or that crap at all. I wish I could go back 25 years and slap the shit out of younger me. I wonder how much money I would have if every dollar I spent on booze I had invested.

In fact, I think I am going to take a nap with the dogs while everyone else is standing outside in the cold and rain, wake up and watch the game while in my bathrobe (heaven is a thick terry cloth bathrobe), and then maybe go see Fury.

Oct 182014
 

From TPM:

The campaign manager for Republican congressional candidate Carl DeMaio (CA) once offered a set of tips for identifying opposition research trackers looking to catch DeMaio in a gaffe or compromising moment: if the person in question is young or black they could very well be a tracker…

The emails are the latest revelation in a campaign that has gotten national attention mostly for a former top staffer accusing DeMaio of sexual harassment and DeMaio’s staff, in response, accusing that staffer of breaking into a campaign office and also saying he was fired for a plagiarism scandal.

The email exchange reported by the Examiner on Friday started when DeMaio said he saw two trackers at an event…

Knepper has since apologized. Guess they did learn something from George Allen’s fate…

Of course, there’s still hope for 2016! [warning: Politico link]…

Sen. Rand Paul tells POLITICO that the Republican presidential candidate in 2016 could capture one-third or more of the African-American vote by pushing criminal-justice reform, school choice and economic empowerment…

Exit polls showed the GOP’s share of the African-American vote in the past six presidential elections ranged from 4 percent for John McCain in 2008 to 12 percent for Bob Dole in 1996, according to the Roper Center. Mitt Romney got 6 percent in 2012.

When pressed on his ambitious goal, Paul upped the ante: “I don’t want to limit it to that. I don’t want to say there’s only a third open. … The reason I use the number ‘a third,’ is that when you do surveys of African-American voters, a third of them are conservative on a preponderance of the issues. So, there is upside potential.”…

Pounding a message he has delivered in interview after interview, Paul said President Barack Obama and his administration have “underplayed the danger and transmissibility” of the Ebola virus and have had a “bossy, arrogant attitude.”

“Because they haven’t been really forthright about the disease, people suspect their leadership, their motives,” Paul said. “They … don’t feel like they’re being told the truth about this. … Because they so much don’t want to alarm people, I think they’ve … undersold the danger of this thing. … When you read their description [of how it is transmitted], it makes me think that they’re talking about AIDS.”…

“A month ago, I said that we should consider restricting commercial travel and visas to our country from West Africa,” Paul said.

“We should consider rescheduling international conclaves that include bringing leaders from West Africa until the contagion dies down. … Think about what happens if this gets into Third World countries in the Southern Hemisphere, it gets into countries that have no ability to stop this, how it could become a contagion in those countries.”

I do believe this falls under Mr. Pierce’s Five-Minute Rule, because I’m thinking that’s how long it took for Rand to pivot from counting up potential African-American votes to explaining that the first African-American president and his “bossy, arrogant attitude” is permitting leaders from West Africa to spread AIDS-like “contagion” in our personal hemisphere.

***********
Apart from being thankful (as always) that you’re not on Rand Paul’s team, what’s on the agenda for the day?