Friday, July 31, 2020

this is from 2013 - a long time ago.

but the way the drug is being used for covid patients is the same as it is being used for lupus patients.

does dr. fauci have any comments to make about a study such as this?

i'm not dr. fauci's peer, and i'm not going to pretend i am.

but, this is my opinion of his position.

this isn't a situation where a randomized study makes any sense. the study itself indicates that multiple treatments were used, and assigns the different results to that fact; fauci seems to think that's a bad thing, but it actually represents real-world use, as this drug probably wouldn't work as a sole treatment option. it's only going to be useful when you see patients fall into the cytokine storms. randomized trials are just going to lead to the drug being used in situations that are not actually appropriate.

so, his claim may sound convincing, but it isn't - it demonstrates that he doesn't really understand the situation very well. it seems like he's trying to rebut the second study rather than the first - but, as stated, i would expect the second study (the prophylactic one.) to fail.

i don't know what he's doing. maybe he's embarrassed and humiliated and digging in and hoping it works out. maybe he's legitimately confused.

but, i think an analysis and deconstruction by his actual peers would be highly useful, in context.
i mean, if you're going to tell me to pick between peer review and one guy, i'm going to pick peer review.

sorry.
"he's the country's leading..."

it doesn't matter; argument from authority. fallacy. wrong.
can we peer review dr fauci's testimony?

thanks.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/house-committee-coronavirus-1.5670440
how many people had tweets deleted or accounts restricted over challenging an article at cnn that insisted people were losing immunity?

it's surreal. truly.
our school systems are failing to teach basic science, and the media is just taking advantage of it to maximize profit - while the social media gatekeepers and government agencies tell us to relax and trust their lies.

it's a perfect dystopia, isn't it?

there's only one way out - educate yourself. do your own research. use critical reasoning; do not suspend disbelief.

only you are in charge of your mind.

be vigilant.
it took way too long for them to write this article, but it's better late than never.

read that and then compare it to the bullshit you've been reading in your twitter feed, for what? weeks? months?

my stepmother is (was? i don't even know. i guess she's over 65 now, anyways.) a bone marrow specialist with the red cross for some time, working specifically in the oncology department at the cbs. she ended up getting fired for harassing a colleague; i guess she couldn't throw the colleague out of the house. so, i admit i cheated a little. but, it's, like, introductory bio, guys...

i have a tendency to attack people for being ignorant fucking idiots, but i'm a patient person. you don't know this; maybe you should, but you don't. fine.

but, how some of this garbage got published at big sites like cnn, with no apparent attempt to bother checking the facts before generating the clickbait, is beyond me. there's dozens of articles by big organizations that made somebody a lot of money, but really, really just shouldn't exist.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/31/opinion/coronavirus-antibodies-immunity.html
wait.

pence's wife is named karen.

ahahahahahahahaha.

ahahahahahahahahahahahaha.
it's a shame there won't be any large gatherings between now and then, because i can just imagine a room full of mostly black people at an hbcu or something yelling...

KAREN! KAREN! KAREN!

or, how about this

SWEAR-IN, KAREN!
oh, it's fucking dodd.

that explains it.

dodd strikes again, apparently, with the dodd prank act, i guess?
....and, in other news, representative karen bass has reportedly filed to change her name to schmaren bass. hope that works out for her.
although, if she does end up in the white house, biden'd better be sure he doesn't break the law, eh?
i've never heard of karen bass, and i know nothing remotely about her.

but, it's a joke, right?

the name's a non-starter. is nobody over there reading twitter, or what?
so, if biden picks a black woman called karen, how long before black america spontaneously combusts, in a warp in space-time?

i'm imagining the speech. after five or ten minutes of empty pandering and talking about how important black americans are to the campaign, he stops and says.

so, i've picked my candidate, and we think that black americans will love her. her name is....

(pause)

KAREN....

...and, then all of a sudden, the earth starts shaking, the lights start blinking, and anybody that were to look towards the sky at that exact moment would have seen swirls of colours in the night sky, for that split second.

and, then that's it.

biden is gone. and, black america has imploded, gone to some other dimension within our vast & poorly understood cosmos.

well, this is nice to see.

hey, you give me some good news every fucking once in a while, and i'll post it, eh?

https://news.ontario.ca/mma/en/2020/07/canada-and-ontario-invest-in-affordable-housing-in-kingston.html
one thing that is probably true, though, is that the babylonians had more actual raw data than we do.

we have actual sunspot data, for example, going back a few hundred years.

they probably had thousands of years worth of observation, by the end of the process. those observations are probably lost, but (ignoring errors, like procession) they may have helped them understand cycles that we're really only able to guess with math. they probably recorded celestial objects we've never seen, and saw them come through more than once.

it's actually one of the great tragedies of history, and we can only hope we find something useful, eventually.
it's a fair enough critique; i may have been a little anachronistic in my language. i guess this clarifies what i meant to say.

but, this also helps to explain two things:

1) why the islamic authorities were so uncomfortable with the math & astronomy going on
2) the existence of certain strains of islam (like sufi.) that are kind of kabbalistic in scope. that is, there has continually been a synthesis of islam with astrology happening under the radar, and that's what they were trying to stop.

we had the same bullshit in europe. it's known now that newton, for example, was an avid alchemist - and that he spent a large amount of his life trying to convert base metals into gold. but, he had to keep it underground, or he'd have ended up dead.

and, if you look into it, the whole kepler/copernicus crowd had astrological streaks of it's own.

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/02/babylonians-scientists/462150/
ei is in need of reform and has been for a very long time; it's stuck in the 50s, in a lot of ways.

so, this is beyond necessary, and i hope they make it better.

but, my confidence is fairly low. let's hope they prove me wrong.

https://globalnews.ca/news/7239834/cerb-recipient-move-ei/
personally, i don't carry a phone.

you might want to think about that for a little while.
i highly advise against downloading this or otherwise interacting with it in any way at all.

in the end, you might get arrested for alcohol consumption.

https://toronto.citynews.ca/2020/07/31/health-canadas-covid-alert-app-goes-live-friday/
they're trying to shut the bars down.

that's what they want.
according to the official tallies, cases are supposedly going down. so, why are they targeting bars & restaurants, at this point in the process?

well, they just passed a hijab law for kids, with the apparent purpose of habituating them to mask use. i mean, just think about you're doing  - you're telling 10 to 15 year-old kids to wear masks at school. what's going to happen?

1) they're only going to wear them when there are adults looking over them.
2) they're going to grab the front of the mask repeatedly (defeating the point)
3) they're going to grab each other's masks and play games with them. there will be kids that have their masks stolen.

..and you can follow my train of thought from there.

these are actually exactly the reasons that health experts hesitated to even talk about masks for so long - if you don't wear them right, they'll make things worse.

on top of that, you're talking about kids in very close quarters. if actual medical masks may have some marginal benefit in stopping spread in spaces like malls, hijab-type cloth masks are going to be entirely useless in stopping the spread amongst kids in close proximity to each other.

and, you're not going to succeed in keeping kids apart from each other without exceedingly strict measures that nobody is going to tolerate.

it's a crazy idea, for any reason other than to try to habituate. that's what they're doing. deal with it.

and, what's next on the list?

alcohol.

muslims forbid any consumption of alcohol.

are you starting to get it yet?
and props to the first restaurant owner that hands out adult diapers in protest.
resign immediately, mr. ford.

your authority is no longer in force.
i mean, the rules are just getting hilarious at this point...
lol.

props to the first person that shits his pants in his seat in protest of the requirements.

they're breaking their own laws.

doug ford needs to resign, immediately. by breaking the rule of law in such an absurd fashion, he has defaulted on his previous mandate. he no longer has any authority, and no laws he passes have any force. 

we need an election, immediately.

in the mean time, how do you deal with this kind of fascism?

1) non-compliance, in whatever form it takes.
2) civil disobedience.
3) targeted legal action.

while i have no interest in sitting in a bar without live music, i will not be abiding by these rules, and i dare you to do something about it.

btw.

babylon > baghdad.

if you're wondering.
and, why do i call the "islamic golden age" a "babylonian renaissance"?

because that's what it was.

while muslims like to take credit for this now, the islamic authorities were actually not particularly impressed by all of the star gazing and astronomy that was going on and acted more to suppress it than to support it. the names that have come down to us are almost all kurdish. the contribution that islam played into this was really on the level of ending the damn war, which allowed the ancestral populations (which were semitic, not persian) to kind of regain themselves.

so, they built a city called baghdad on top of the ruins of babylon, but it just turned back into babylon, and picked back up where the babylonians had left off, in staring out at the stars and trying to figure it out.

the babylonians were, in their day, master astronomers, and we have stories of pythagoras traveling to babylon to meet the "sages" there for good reason; large amounts of what we call greek math are probably ultimately babylonian, in origin. we just can't trace it back; instead, we get these dead ends at the greek. more often than not, those dead ends are going to go back to babylon.

and, that's what happened - a return of babylonian science, in the city they built on top of the wreckage.

baghdad was eventually decimated by a grandson of genghis khan, and brother of kublai khan, and i'm in the camp that argues they never fully recovered.
i've been over this before, but briefly.

while there have been some attempts to link kurdish ethnogenesis further back in time, both the origin of the term (which means 'tent-dweller' or 'wanderer'.....which i'm interpreting as refugee) and the proposed date of linguistic differentiation from persian suggest that kurdish ethnogenesis did not actually take place until well after the islamization of the fertile crescent. stated very tersely, when the dust settled after the major shift in power that happened after the arabs moved north and (1) kicked the romans out and (2) flat out conquered the persians, there were all of a sudden all of these iraqi persians living in the mountains, and there's really not a story as to how that happened - kind of like how there's really not a story about how we ended up with a really large amount of jews in eastern europe.

we know that there was nobody called kurds in the region during the classical period, and we know that persians had been in control of iraq almost continually at that point for roughly 1500 years, with the only substantive break occurring in alexander's lifetime; the post-alexandrian seleucid state was eventually overrun by parthians from central asia, but it was essentially a continuation of the achaemenid state. so, the persians had a very deep history in iraq at the time of what was initially an arabic military occupation. so, we know that there was no such thing as a 'kurd' in any of the literature from the time of cyrus (c. 550 bce) until roughly the year 900 ce, and we know that the persians dominated the region for almost all of that period, until about 650 ce (roughly, and the dates are actually a little blurry).

then, we have these kurds living in the mountains like refugees, speaking a new dialect of persian that just pops into history just right then. further, we have a lot of muslims in mesopotamia, all of a sudden, living in baghdad rather than ctesiphon or seleucia (initially babylon). over time, we see these kurds develop as a kind of ruling elite, as well. if you look into it, you realize that the entire babylonian renaissance that was centered on baghdad was really kurdish, rather than arabic, in origin.

i don't even know how you'd convincingly prove the hypothesis, but it just seems obvious to me to put two and two together and deduce that quite a lot of iraqi persians must have ended up in the mountains around the time, as a way to evade what was happening in the city, and surrounding areas. and, all you have to do is look at what happened in the isis invasion to get a kind of rough idea of how that must have happened - the arab groups come in from the south in a rage, and the persians must have sought higher ground to get out. a few hundred years later, they have a new dialect and a new identity. or, sort of; if you can interpret being called a refugee as an identity.

what that means is that, if i'm right, the kurds are essentially a 1300 year old iraqi persian refugee population.

yes...

1300 years of being refugees in the mountains.
are ashkenazi jews really jews though?

the y-dna says that, yes, they are. the mt-dna suggests some admixture with indo-european types, although that's also true of mizrahi jews, due to the massive influence of the persian empire on hebrew ethnogenesis.

the science on this advanced rapidly about 15 years ago or so, when the technology finally allowed for it, and it's not really an open question. but, it's never really been clear how so many jews got so far north, and i'll admit having looked into the khazar thing...

there really does appear to have been a jewish empire parked roughly around the ukraine in the dark ages, and the story as to how they became jewish has not come down to us in any form other than myth. the story is that the khazar king converted to judaism to act as a buffer between the recently converted christian russians (they didn't actually convert for a long time after that) and the more seriously muslim caliphate to the south of the caucasus. i can't prove that didn't happen, but nobody really takes the legend all that seriously. so, nobody really knew for sure until they did the testing...

the thing is that eastern european jews don't actually look turkish, either. the turks are a central asian people that really have strongly eastern phenotypes. so, while the jewish empire was there, and for several centuries, it was actually observationally obvious that all these eastern european jews couldn't really be all that turkish, either.

they must have just migrated north sometime around the year 700. that would have been about the same time that the caliphate came in, and introduced coercive rules to stimulate conversion.

i have a similar hypothesis with the kurds, who show up out of nowhere at the same time, and the curiously close genetic relationship we've uncovered between kurds and jews is maybe kind of illuminating in that respect. both populations seem to have become migrant at about the same time, and apparently as refugees of the muslim takeover, after the conclusion of the lengthy roman-persian wars that ended the classical period.

but, yes - they are genetically jewish, even if they really don't look like it. and, it's just that curve tending to the limit, over time.

i used the example because it was the most obvious i could find...
i know there's this scare-mongering in these white supremacist groups.

"we're all going to end up half-brown! oh no!"

nah.

it's the other way around.
so, does that mean that if you're darker-skinned and move to canada then your descendants will lighten up over time.

yes, probably.

behold, the polish jew:


his (relatively recent) ancestors were much darker than he is, for sure.
"but skin pigment is caused by latitude and sun exposure"

well...

if you were to take sequential samples of italians over many thousands of years, you may find that they have a tendency towards a browner skin colour, as that phenotype repeatedly wins in that latitude.

but, if you were born in modern day germany, and your ancestors were from russia, and you migrate south to italy in a very large group of other similar looking people, you're bringing in dna that adapted to a very different climate, and it's going to take quite a while for that to get absorbed.

it works the other way, too - if you take darker skinned people and plonk them on the booted peninsula, their descendants may lighten up eventually, if they're lucky, but it's going to take quite a long time.

italians and spaniards seem to be roughly about where they ought to be, in terms of pigmentation, relative to other people at the same latitude, at this time. but, i believe the last major waves of migration to the peninsula were vikings and arabs, both pushing 1000 years ago, at this point.

immediately before the roman period, there would have been a large scale migration of very light-skinned people from over the alps, and that migration would be responsible for what we call the roman republic. when rome fell apart, you had germans from the north and arabs from the south meeting each other at that latitude, and the result would have been an infusion of darker skin, which has actually since lightened up - which is why it is both true that italians from the classical period look whiter than they do today and south italians from the dark ages look darker than they do, today.

if you look at a map more closely, you see this kind of thing all over the place, even with indigenous groups. people in the area north of china look more like people to the south of china than the chinese, themselves, because that was the direction of that migration. if you check back in a thousand years, that might change, but it takes some time to adjust....

likewise, european-americans are going to end up with the same skin tone as native americans, eventually. but, we're a few hundred years in, so far, and still waiting.

so, you need to be careful with that - the curve tends to a limit over time, but it's always going to be short-term migration that is dominant, overall.
when the romans started off, they would have looked more like modern day swiss or austrians than modern day italians. the italic languages are thought to have evolved alongside the celtic languages in modern day switzerland, before moving south into italy. but celtic and italic actually are thought to have split rather late, so the wide swath of western europe including spain, france, southern germany, italy and the british isles would have emerged from the bronze age roughly homogeneous in culture and language.

over time, the pax romana, which set in after augustus, led to large scale migration all over the place. the romans also brought in massive numbers of slaves from everywhere they conquered, and freed a large number of them in the end. genetic studies have demonstrated a major footprint from the orontes, which was noted in the classical literature as well.

so, rome changed over time. but, for the proper roman period, ending in 476, the emperors would have mostly been startlingly, pasty white.

if you want to know what a roman proper looked like, zuckerberg is actually pretty much spot on.

https://www.quora.com/Were-Roman-emperors-all-white
seems like i'm not the first person to think this through, huh?

i've noticed that about zuckerberg before.

the guy looks like a roman statue, straight up.
listen, though.

i'm an advocate of democracy, and in ways so intense you've probably never even imagined it, but history teaches us fairly clearly that the type of fake "democracy" that exists in the united states always ends up in dictatorship, in the end.

the american system almost seems like it intended for an augustus to take over, eventually.

i don't think trump's the guy, though. too old. past his due date...

i want to flip the conspiracy theory over, though.

trump talks about the opposition rigging the election when he's in the process of rigging it, himself. it's a deflection tactic.

the thing is that we just watched biden steal the primary.

Everyone knows it. Smart people know it. Stupid people may not know it

he's right.

this is going to end up as two old, corrupt white guys trying to steal the election by outcheating each other.
well......

just watch him, right?

if he were to delay the election by executive order or presidential proclamation (probably the latter.) at more or less the last minute, then challenge it at every level, he would no doubt be able to delay it for months.

1) the court is going to eventually rule on an election date. who knows when. but, that might be all he wants.
2) i couldn't imagine him winning an election that he delays by executive order, and then has overturned by the courts.

the more pressing issue is how self-identified conservatives are going to react to such a thing, and it would no doubt be pyrrhic, to say the least.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/donald-trump-united-states-election-delay-voter-fraud-1.5669270
would i have supported the american revolution?

no, i probably wouldn't have.

the american revolution is a little more complicated to me than the french revolution, which i would have supported very strongly (i may have even written a book tearing down edmund burke). i suspect i would have found myself in canada fairly quickly, but i can't say for sure; it may have depended a lot on what class i found myself born into.

france & russia are no brainers, for me, though - i would have been fully in support of all of the death and all of the carnage, as necessary to overthrow the ancien regime.
if i had a time machine, would i consider transporting myself back in time and bombing providence before it got going?

no.....because i'm not travelling at the speed of light with any bombs.
if i was in england in the 16th & 17th centuries, would i have argued in favour of bombing the puritan settlers?

i'd have a hard time making that argument....because bombs hadn't been developed yet.

cannons, maybe.

but, given the context, i'd have been more likely to encourage as many of them to leave england as possible; i'd have been more concerned about just getting rid of them first.

and, then, maybe, once every single puritan had been banished from england, then maybe we could start thinking about laying siege to them.
if only it was that easy, right?

if we could just hit delete and end religion forever, right?

*sigh*.

the difference between the bountiful colonies that i will again say i would support carpet bombing and...mennonitism?....is that in bountiful we're talking about one colony and with the mennonites there's many, many of them.

so, i can't uphold an example of rape as a reason to bomb all of the mennonite colonies. there may be the odd one that's ok; the point is i can't generalize like that, and i know it.

but, i'd certainly support bombing the bad ones.
yeah,

ugh.

how do we just delete these people?

https://www.bbc.com/news/stories-48265703
what do i think of these weirdo mennonites, though, anyways?

not much, frankly.

they're very quiet. i guess we all know they're there, but we don't hear much from them, so it's kind of like they're not. and, that's probably better for both of us.

i don't really know much about them, what they believe or how they live. i get the idea that they don't really like technology, and i guess they probably live in very patriarchal societies that are rooted by threats of violence, but i've really never thought about it much. if they were to ever show up with guns and try to take over the government, i guess i'd have a reason to look into them a little more. as it is, the fact that they're so quiet means i have essentially no reason to really care about them much, one way or the other.

i know i've been very critical of the mormon groups up in the mountains, like in bountiful. that was a case that they very badly screwed up. "religious freedom" is hardly a valid excuse for rape, and i'd be just as happy if they carpet-bombed the place.

i frankly don't know if that kind of thing goes on in these mennonite colonies or not, but i would support a crackdown on them if there is any evidence or suggestion that it does.

if not, the existing arrangement - where we barely acknowledge each other's existence in any way at all - is fine with me. so, carry on...
the issue is explicitly and specifically within the mennonite community and explicitly and specifically tied to the religious and cultural aspects of that community.

the media should not be referring to them by the language or ethnicity they may share with people of other faiths, or of no faith at all.
i will repeat: to generalize a religious community by the language they speak is racist, as it creates prejudice and discrimination towards speakers of that language that do not follow the religion.

it's especially racist in context, due to the issue being the religion, and not the language.
i saw this in a different paper and couldn't figure out what the hell they were talking about, what is a "low german speaking" population?

it turns out that the term is used to refer to people from the low countries that speak germanic languages. but, like....is there some dutch community out there that got hit? did it spare the walloons, specifically?

it turns out that by "low german speaking", what they mean is mennonite/hutterite, and this actually appears to be a case of political correctness that has gone full retard. that is, as far as i can tell, they're trying to avoid mentioning the religious character of the community so as to not create some kind of stigma.

but, if you see this term come up, that's what it means - the isolated mennonite communities that do indeed exist throughout canada, and apparently in essex county, and that have been experiencing heightened rates, indeed as a consequence of their religious practices.

and, i'm actually sort of uncomfortable with this. when i talk about muslims or christians or whatever else, i ensure that it's the religion i'm mentioning, because i know there are plenty of arabs that have abandoned islam and plenty of italians that have abandoned christianity (and whole swaths of hebrews that have abandoned judaism). like, there is a difference between a religion and a language.

i would actually consider it racist to use arab and muslim interchangeably - these are different concepts, and i'm very careful to separate them.

i would really like to see this use of language discontinued, and denounced as the racism that it really is - there's not an outbreak in the dutch-speaking community, whatever that might even mean. rather, there is a developing problem with outbreaks in religious mennonite communities.

https://windsorstar.com/news/local-news/health-unit-reports-covid-19-cases-among-low-german-speaking-community
the reason anarchists argue for a socialist economic system is that we interpret it as the best way to maximize actual, meaningful concepts of individual freedom.

and, the reason we oppose capitalism so strenuously is due to how coercive and enslaving it really is.
there's another foundational difference underlying the gap between how the americanized spectrum views these terms through colloquial language and what the terms actual mean, in the context of the theories they exist within, and that's this dichotomy around the individual v the collective.

what the americanized spectrum wants to do is set individualism (which it speciously associates strictly with hyper-capitalism) off against collectivism (which it equally speciously associates strictly with communism). so, in the americanized spectrum, you have individualists on one side and collectivists on the other and they're just always in struggle.

but, any european politico would acknowledge the centrality of hegel in the development of the politics of the left, and realize that the entire point of the left for the last 200 years has been about finding a way to synthesize the individual and collective into a dialectic, not set them off against each other in a fight. on the left, we fight about class, not about this individualist/collectivist canard.

the individual is more free when the collective takes control of private property; socialism maximizes personal freedom, it doesn't struggle against it. there is no contradiction, at all.

as an aside, one of the fun ways that left-libertarians like to piss off right-libertarians is to remind them that market theory is inherently collectivist in nature, and that the great ricardo was a total pinko. it's also fun to remind them that one of the defining traits of contemporary capitalism is the trivialization of individuality into market choice.

most people that call themselves socialists nowadays don't seem to care a lot about human rights in the face of government authority, and would probably be better off calling themselves conservatives, in the actual meaning of the word. what they want is an ordered, top down society where everybody has a defined role and rules are enforced relatively strictly. like star trek, or something. they think that's socialism.

they should read up on edmund burke; that's where they really are, and that is really where their movement is.

but, of course, the people that call themselves conservatives today are actually mostly classical liberals. so that's not their tribe, either.
i realize i just used a term i used to use more often but don't use as much anymore.

left libertarian.

nowadays, i usually just call myself an anarchist, but i haven't clarified the point in a while. due to the co-option of the term by hard-right classical liberals, anarchism has become kind of a damaged label - i know that, i get that. but, i guess at some point i stopped caring. or, maybe i decided there was enough writing out there at that point to make the distinction unnecessary.

but, as i'm ranting about masks in a way that is not that different than the ancaps are (and, this is the rare scenario where our shared libertarianism overpowers our diametrically opposed economic views), maybe it's a good time to remind you of the point: when i call myself an anarchist or a libertarian, i use the term in a mostly french/european context, just as i use the terms liberal and conservative in very british/canadian ways. i insist that i'm using the language correctly, and that i am right to use the language correctly, but i realize that the fact that americans are hopelessly lost in backwards colloquialisms may make my writing a little hard to follow if you watch too much tv.

this is a succinct quote:
anarchism is really a synonym for socialism. The anarchist is primarily a socialist whose aim is to abolish the exploitation of man by man. Anarchism is only one of the streams of socialist thought, that stream whose main components are concern for liberty and haste to abolish the State.

that's me, isn't it? spot on.

i realize that it's a contradiction within the americanized spectrum to simultaneously argue for individual liberty and the socialization of production at the same time, but that's where we are here on the libertarian left, and we don't see it as a contradiction at all but as two halves of a greater vision for a society where people are freer to live in less statist restrictions because they've socialized the means of production.

the last thing to point out is that a lot of the confusion comes from the fact that the word socialism, itself, is so warped in the americanized spectrum. in this highly colloquial americanized spectrum, the words liberal and conservative have almost perfectly reversed meaning and libertarianism has been co-opted by what most of the world calls liberals (and americans call conservatives). so, it's only natural that the world socialism has been colloquialized as well to mean a reference to big government, when socialism has always been about abolishing government everywhere else in the world.

so, of course you're confused - you don't really understand what any of the words i use mean, because you've managed to destroy the meaning of virtually all of them.

but, i'm not going to conform to your colloquialisms, i'm going to insist on the proper terminology and demand you try harder to keep up.

Thursday, July 30, 2020

when i sorted through this in 2016, the argument i made that i felt was most compelling was to point out that i had about an equal level of agreement with hillary and trump, which you might think is insane, but from a libertarian-left perspective (that opposes corporate globalization, the "free trade" system, imperialist wars and a number of other things that are central to the core messaging of contemporary neo-liberalism) it's really not if you look at it carefully.

so, i said something like that i agreed with about 40% of what clinton said and disagreed without about 60% of what she said - which is probably not all that different than your average fake-left "progressive". but, how many of them sat down and carefully sorted through what trump said and really carefully quantified it? they may have been surprised to realize that they probably agreed with more than 30% of what he said, anyways - and specifically regarding his opposition to this core neo-liberal agenda, some of which has actually panned out better than i actually expected (and some of which hasn't).

yes, it's sad that so many of us disagree with 60% of what the candidate we dislike less has to say, but...

unlike a lot of people, i would actually prefer clinton to biden, overall. she's at least bright; biden isn't. but, with clinton the problem was that she was ultimately evil to her core. biden's problem is that he's just kind of a dipshit.

so, i'm still basically in the same place with both of them - i agree with roughly 35% of what either of them say, and disagree with most of what both of them say, it's just over different specific issues. trump pisses me off on the climate the most; biden's going to piss me off the most with his foreign policy.

but, i might agree with 3% of what mike pence says, and it will mostly involve clauses that utilize the word puppy. he's pretty much the perfect personification of everything i hate about the world.
they're both clearly in bad health, but i'd guess that trump stays alive and cogent longer than biden.

it's just a perception, but i'd guess that trump will probably get through four years, and biden probably won't.
if trump actually quits, all bets are off on this.

as it is, i'm stuck trying to figure out what the least bad option is, who i think is going to die first, etc.

but, i'd vote for a warm pile of shit before i voted for mike pence.

i wouldn't even brake for mike pence if i saw him crossing the street. really.

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2020/07/30/why-trump-might-quit-387681
again: the spanish flu mutated. twice.

that's why there were waves.

will there be multiple waves of this, too?

if it mutates a couple times, you should expect that, yes. and, over time, because it's not going away, you would expect it to become seasonal - which is what happened to the spanish flu.

if it's very slow to mutate, the difference between a "wave" and a "season" will likely get blurry.

https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/coronavirus/coronavirus-is-one-big-wave-not-seasonal-who-expert-suggests-1.5044839
to be clear, though: because the ruling has to do with the quebec charter, the supreme court will be interpreting the situation from a civil law (that is, a franco-roman) perspective, and not the common law (that is, germanic law) that i was talking about.

i don't have a lot of patience for civil law (yuck.), and don't really want to get into this. i find the premise that law is void of interpretation to be too authoritarian for my tastes. that's one of the things i don't like much about quebec; i wish they'd come face-to-face with their franco-german origins and embrace the superiority of common law.

but, when the supreme court takes on these quebec-specific issues, and uses quebec-specific rules, they only apply within quebec. that is, any ruling or precedent that comes out of this will be in a civil law context and not be binding in the rest of the country.
if the case was in ontario, or probably anywhere else in canada, the complainant just wouldn't have grounds to file and if it made it to court at all it'd get thrown out almost immediately. you can't just sue people for being mean, that's crazy. no duty exists.

yet, such a duty does seem to have been erected in quebec statute, bizarrely - and i think it clearly would infringe on freedom of expression, to the point that it's not constitutional.

but, quebec never signed the constitution, and doesn't consider itself bound by it.

so, who knows what they do.

i would:

1) scratch out 10.1 (& 2, while i'm at it)
2) allow that the statements were discriminatory, but discrimination by private citizens is covered by federal free speech legislation.
3) award $0 in damages to the complainant
4) award costs to the defendant
ok, so i just took a flip through this and it's really quite a bizarre document.

generally, human rights legislation wouldn't have clauses like this in it:

Every person must come to the aid of anyone whose life is in peril, either personally or calling for aid, by giving him the necessary and immediate physical assistance, unless it involves danger to himself or a third person, or he has another valid reason.

that's not a right, it's actually more or less the opposite of one - and something that the supreme court has actually explicitly rejected on multiple occasions.

this is the specific rule:
No one may harass a person on the basis of any ground mentioned in section 10.

section 10 is the usual list of prohibited grounds.

that's not a right, either - that's a law. and, frankly, it's in direct contradiction to the federal charter.

so, my initial analysis was a canada-wide analysis (well, it was an ontario-specific analysis that is applicable in probably every other province) based on a combination of ontario and federal law. federal law still applies in quebec, but it's a delicate thing.

can the court rule the charter unconstitutional? because that clause shouldn't exist, subject to the federal constitution (which quebec never signed).

that case could actually get quite messy.

http://www.legisquebec.gouv.qc.ca/en/showdoc/cs/C-12
yeah, i'd have to look into this more specifically, but the premise underlying the discrimination tort is based on a duty of care that a comedian does not have to an audience member. there's no relationship there.

what does it mean for a comedian to discriminate against a private citizen? there's no contract involved. there's no commercial activity at hand. the comedian has no authority over the audience.

so, i don't really think it matters if it's discrimination or not, because a comedian does not have any legal obligation to avoid discriminatory jokes.

of course, if you don't like his jokes, you don't have to let him perform in your venue and etc. but to establish damages, the tort has to be built on a duty to the person claiming them that was not met by the person being accused, and i just don't see how that exists, here.

rather, it seems like the judges were just enforcing their moral opinions, and that shouldn't be happening, at all.

you could consequently potentially see a ruling that agrees that the comedian was discriminatory in his remarks, but awards damages to $0 and even gives him backs costs for wasting his time.

doug ford won most minority votes in the last election; it's the reason he won. they like him; he's popular in immigrant communities. he's the kind of leader they actually want.

but, he mostly got elected by swinging the muslim vote over the sex ed curriculum, which was key in specific ridings.

and, what has he done?

- banned sex ed
- passed a hijab law

i mean, what's next? mandatory praying? banning evolution?
my primary concern as a parent right now would be to ensure that my children do not become habituated to covering their faces in public, and that they don't develop the bad habit of putting faith in an idea over the realities of empirical science.

you may have faith in the idea of cloth face coverings reducing spread, but that's exactly what you're being conditioned to, and that's exactly why you need to pull the rug out from under the idea altogether.
this is how it starts.

it's up to us to stop it, via non-compliance, civil disobedience and carefully targeted legal battles.

and, if we don't?

get used to praying three times a day at the butt of a shotgun.
that's right.

ontario just mandated hijabs in the classroom.

that's what just happened, here.

it's very sad, and very depressing. but, all i can do is yell...
Students in Grades 4 through 12 will be required to wear a non-medical mask or cloth face covering while at school. Younger children will be encouraged, but not required, to do so.

that needs to be fought.

what if, as a parent, i find it revolting, humiliating, embarrassing and appalling to force my child to cover their face in public like a fucking religious idiot and refuse to do it?

and, let's be clear, here - there's no meaningful science underlying the idea that a hijab law (which is what this actually is. face the facts - your kids are being forced to wear religious gear at school.) is going to reduce the spread of anything amongst children except for self-confidence. this is not science; this is religion masquerading as science, and it's increasingly appearing as though it's actually a specific religion trying to enforce itself, underlying the issue.

if i had kids i would send them to school without face coverings and challenge the system to take me on. if they send the kids home that's fine - i'd rather home school them than send them to a fucking madrassa.

as it is, i find this law shameful, and it is just another reason that this government has given me to be ashamed and embarrassed about being an ontarian.

how do i get out of this collapsing society, that is heading into a dark age?

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/covid-19-coronavirus-ontario-july-30-back-to-school-1.5668495
when they came for those who refused to isolate, you said nothing.

and you should be condemned by history for it.
am i more afraid of the state than the virus?

yes.

the probability the virus is going to harm me is exceedingly low.

the probability that the state is going to harm me is moderate to concerning.
i repeat: it would seem that this is a time to be extra vigilant about protecting your personal information, because there's a very real possibility that some thugs with some guns might show up at your house and threaten you with violence if you don't obey their barked orders.
but, i mean....

this is why you shouldn't give your contact information out when people ask, or really even get tested unless you're sure you're sick.

this is a time to protect your privacy, right now; get in the habit of being a little extra vigilant in preventing the spread of your personal data.
you can't take away my rights by pretending it's an "emergency".

no, i'm not going to let you do that.

i'm going to stand up and fight back against the assault on the population by the state.
i can't, for a second, understand why the government decided to take this approach of trying to force everybody to follow a set of draconian rules instead of taking the people most vulnerable and isolating them until the thing passes.

but, they made a decision to take a stupid approach, and we're going to have to suffer through it.

so, do i blame a "recalcitrant" citizen for the crime of asserting his inalienable rights?

no.

i blame a government that was arrogant enough to think it had the prerogative to take those inalienable rights away in a "health emergency".

https://o.canada.com/news/case-of-ontario-man-who-ignored-covid-19-quarantine-order-shows-challenges-of-crucial-contact-tracing
i want all of you banhammers, tinpot dictators, petty tyrants, self-appointed grand poobahs and other type of totalitarian despots to ask yourself a question the next time you decide to burn a book:

what if i'm wrong?
leave the church.

delete your twitter account.
science cannot operate in a climate of totalitarianism and fear.

science relies on a free exchange of information, without censorship.

and, science does not make claims that are absolute truth - science is subject to modification, to alteration, to evolution, to change.

twitter's lost the plot.

clearly.
if some neo-galileo were to post an update on twitter today that challenged the existing science, would he not be accused of disinformation and have his posts deleted?

how did we get here?

and how do we get back?
we've seen this sort of scenario come up a few times, now, and it really has to go back to the point.

who exactly is twitter hiring to determine what is "disinformation" and what is not?

i'm going to guess it's a bunch of 19 year-olds working from their parents' basements, because they tend to label things as "disinformation" that are actually true fairly often.

and, what do you do when you have this organization like twitter that thinks it knows the truth well enough to censor others, but is in truth actually usually wrong, itself?

because that's what we're seeing over and over - twitter label valid science or perfectly legitimate debate as "disinformation" or "propaganda", and free-thinking people the world over wondering "how did we get to this point?".

but, it's a tendency of authoritarianism, isn't it?

just ask galileo.

or turing.
https://www.statnews.com/2020/06/03/who-resuming-hydroxychloroquine-study-for-covid-19/
dr. fauci is wrong.

he seems to be wrong a lot, doesn't he?

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/29/dr-fauci-says-all-the-valid-scientific-data-shows-hydroxychloroquine-isnt-effective-in-treating-coronavirus.html
i started writing this last night before i fell asleep.

=========

so, the msm is really going full gotcha on this hydroxycholoroquine thing, even going so far as to delete a tweet by madonna, who does not like being censored.

it's my job to weigh in on this bullshit and correct the shoddy journalism. so, let's survey the results on this drug here in a way that people can properly understand. and, i won't hold my breath that the idiots will get it through their numbskulls.

so, let's take a quick look through this:
https://www.henryford.com/news/2020/07/hydro-treatment-study

that is not a small scale trial in a sketchy field hospital in nigeria, it's a major study at a major medical institution that was published in a leading medical journal. and, this is what they say, rather clearly:

In a large-scale retrospective analysis of 2,541 patients hospitalized between March 10 and May 2, 2020 across the system’s six hospitals, the study found 13% of those treated with hydroxychloroquine alone died compared to 26.4% not treated with hydroxychloroquine. None of the patients had documented serious heart abnormalities; however, patients were monitored for a heart condition routinely pointed to as a reason to avoid the drug as a treatment for COVID-19.

they conclude there is some reason to think that the treatment was effective.

“The findings have been highly analyzed and peer-reviewed,” said Dr. Marcus Zervos, division head of Infectious Disease for Henry Ford Health System, who co-authored the study with Henry Ford epidemiologist Samia Arshad. “We attribute our findings that differ from other studies to early treatment, and part of a combination of interventions that were done in supportive care of patients, including careful cardiac monitoring. Our dosing also differed from other studies not showing a benefit of the drug. And other studies are either not peer reviewed, have limited numbers of patients, different patient populations or other differences from our patients.”

.
.
.

“Our analysis shows that using hydroxychloroquine helped saves lives,” said neurosurgeon Dr. Steven Kalkanis, CEO, Henry Ford Medical Group and Senior Vice President and Chief Academic Officer of Henry Ford Health System. “As doctors and scientists, we look to the data for insight. And the data here is clear that there was benefit to using the drug as a treatment for sick, hospitalized patients.”

they make an important caveat, though:

Dr. Zervos also pointed out, as does the paper, that the study results should be interpreted with some caution, should not be applied to patients treated outside of hospital settings and require further confirmation in prospective, randomized controlled trials that rigorously evaluate the safety and efficacy of hydroxychloroquine therapy for COVID-19.

“Currently, the drug should be used only in hospitalized patients with appropriate monitoring, and as part of study protocols, in accordance with all relevant federal regulations,” Dr. Zervos said.

so, why is this peer-reviewed study by a major institution in a leading academic journal being ignored in favour of some now-ancient preliminary studies at medrxiv?

well, it's at least 40% politics, surely. i can't correct your mistake if you're just being dishonest and know better anyways, and this seems to be something that is driving ratings at the news networks. so, they don't want to destroy a good story, i guess.

but, i can point out what the confusion no doubt is if the bad articles are being produced in good faith, and it's the question of what the drug does.

while the ford results actually don't surprise me, the same center is currently doing a prophylactic trial, and i don't expect this trial to produce positive results, in the end. that is, that while the science underlying the efficacy of the drug as a treatment in very specific scenarios may be compelling, the idea that it's going to ward the disease off certainly isn't. this is the study you probably imagine is underlying the science and yet hasn't even been done yet:

https://www.henryford.com/whip-covid-19

why are they experimenting with this drug? the answer is that it's an immunosuppressor. something that seems to happen with very sick covid patients is that their immune system starts attacking itself. the clinical purpose of this drug - as it is used for autoimmune disorders like lupus, rather than parasites like malaria, a confusion i ran into as well due to bad msm coverage - is to weaken the immune system, to stop it from attacking itself. when successful, this allows the patient to recover enough to seek other treatments.

then, does this drug cure the disease? no. but, it was never suggested by anybody (except trump, apparently) that it should be used for the purpose of curing the disease. what it does is eliminate a symptom, and that makes it a lot easier for doctors to help you beat it yourself. remember: at this stage, the only defense you have remains your own body. the best the doctors can do is help your body work, right now, and this drug does that by stopping it from attacking itself, just like it does with lupus patients.

so, let's be clear: no credible person ever argued that the hydroxy is an antiviral drug, or that it would help clear the disease from the system. what credible people suggested, and tested, and have found to be true, is that the drug has an effect on calming the immune system down, and preventing your immune response from killing you.

so, what is probably going to happen if you give random people the drug out in the wild? the answer is that they're going to be more likely to get sick, due to their immune system weakening, which is what the drug does. not only will the drug fail in warding off the disease, but it will likely increase the likelihood of serious infection.

that's what happens when you use medication wrong,  but we don't usually blame it on the medicine. generally, we blame it on the person who consumed the dose at the wrong time, or on the doctor for malpractice.

well what about the study that showed it kills people?

that actually got retracted:
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)31180-6/fulltext

i don't expect this to end any time soon; the ignorance of the general public, combined with the dishonesty of the mainstream press (and their own ignorance, feigned or real) has created a perfect storm of gotcha politics. but, nobody knows what the fuck they're even talking about.

there have been some other drugs brought in in the same class that are being utilized for the same reason, and there may be good reasons to use those drugs on some patients, instead. side effects would be one reason. that's fine, and i'm not going to second guess the doctors, or question why they pick one representative of a class of drugs over others, and there are lots, including price, availability and corporate interconnectedness.

and, again: the drug will neither cure you if you have it nor protect you from getting it. i don't need to wait for that study.

but, the actual science underlying this drug as a treatment option in specific scenarios has actually been established for many, many years, and the people you need to "get" are actually the mainstream media, for disseminating truly disastrous levels of disinformation around it.

everybody is a liar.

trust noone.
fwiw, i've now read in multiple sources that "north americans" don't put tobacco in their marijuana.

well, i grew up in ottawa, and everybody put lots of tobacco in their marijuana; it's the idea of smoking it pure that sounds weird, and sort of wasteful, to me. i guess i can imagine americans lighting their phillies with $100 bills sort of thing, but that is not the norm, here in canada - we mix.

and, while i've found that people in detroit don't use filters very often (something i find odd.), they do at least roll with tobacco in michigan.

and, i mean, don't tell me that marijuana is less dangerous; it might be less addictive, and that might be my concern, but it's just as bad for you, overall.

inhaling the smoke of any plant will increase your cancer risk, because it's not any specific chemical that is increasing the risk but the cellulose in the actual plant. there is no plant that is more safe to smoke than any other.
yeah.

why didn't i think of this before?

it seems like people have tried rolling pot with just about anything.

maybe i can find something with some potent phytoestrogens in it :)
yeah, this makes sense and is more or less what i'm feeling just right now.

the pot might not be addictive, but if you smoke it with tobacco then you're turning it into a concoction that actually is. and, you may end up with people that are less talented with intuitive approaches to primary component analyses than i am, and just think they're addicted to the marijuana.

no.

it's the two-three cigarettes that go into every j that have got you hooked.

https://www.royalqueenseeds.com/blog-smoking-tobacco-with-your-weed-increases-risk-of-addiction-n361
i'm going to try the edibles, first.

https://www.royalqueenseeds.com/blog-top-10-replacements-for-tobacco-in-spliffs-n858
why don't i just smoke the pot without the tobacco?

it's a lot more expensive and it's not really practical. if i roll a quarter of a gram, that's a potent persie, and it'll end up knocking me right out. but, short of getting a pipe, that's about as small a j as you can get without throwing something else in there.

do they sell, like, empty hemp that you can roll with or something? hrmnn.

so, why not get a pipe? well, why not get a pipe?

i'd rather try the edibles first, but that might be the next step.
summer is over?

well, what is summer?

winter: less than 15 degrees
fall/spring: 15-30 degrees
summer: 30+ degrees

24-25 is like a cool spring or fall day; it's not summer.
i mean, i think i've been pretty clear in this space that i don't really want to smoke anymore, except when i'm in specific social scenarios, and i suspect that that itself may fade a little in a reality where i have easier access to pot and kind of don't have to buzz around the edges of social groups anymore. 

i think i've been pretty clear that i don't want to habituate back into the smoking of anything, and that the chances of that happening are precisely zero.

so, when i tell you i'm looking forward to getting past the delivery mechanism, i think it should be clear that i'm really actually feeling that. like, i legit don't want to. but, i also legit want to get baked once in a while....

i'll admit this snuck up on me, and i didn't actually expect it. that's fine; i'll get through it.

the weather forecast for august is petty uninspiring, so it seems like the hot part of the summer is more or less over. don't misunderstand me: getting stoned in sweaty, hot weather is one of my favourite things in the world to do, and i don't regret it. but, it's been six weeks now of smoking more days than not, and i'm reminding myself why i quit.

if the edibles are a shitty buzz or whatever else, in the end, then i'll need to go back to the headcave model - twice a year, in binges. but, if they actually work, i may be within a few weeks of the last time i smoke any tobacco, ever.
marijuana really isn't addictive, and i've really never had a problem with it in that way, in 25 years. i've never had a problem with alcohol or with mushrooms or with anything else, either.

but, tobacco can get you on the first hit; they say it's more addictive than heroin.
so, to be clear.

i'm not buying another package of rolling tobacco. i'm not going to throw it away, i will get a little more pot to smoke through it, but that will be the end of that. i was hoping i could just leave it in the cupboard and hit it once in a while, but that idea isn't working out. i need to keep the tobacco out of the house....

that 26er of vodka is still untouched from march, though. it's weird. i'd have to have a deep conversation with my subconscious to kind of get my head around it entirely, but i feel like it's actually the tobacco that is driving me here, not the pot. see, and the trick is that of these three things, it's only tobacco that gets you physically hooked. it is the most damaging and the most dangerous of the three.

so, i think i'm at the point where i'm getting the urge to smoke more pot as an excuse to smoke more cigarettes. if that's the end result of leaving pot in the house, i can't leave pot sitting in the house. so, we're going to smoke through it...

but, i might react to a chocolate bar the same way i react to the 26er, because i can't put tobacco in it and smoke it. you see? so, i'm going to try that, instead.

but, the reality just right now is that i've been smoking a lot of tobacco with the pot, that i am actually feeling it and that i'm going to have to spend a week or two flushing it out. again. that is what i need to kind of clue into, and react to and actually come to terms with and move past.
that was a lot of posting, huh?

i seem to be "coming down" from too much marijuana use. so, i'm drinking too much coffee, kind of fidgety, wide awake, kind of distracted and smoking too much rolling tobacco....

i guess that's obvious.

i have managed to convince myself that i can't leave rolling tobacco in the cupboard, i'll end up smoking it. i should have known that - that idea isn't likely to work out well. and, frankly, i'm kind of looking forward to getting past the delivery mechanism. i'm going to have to smoke through it, which means buying a little more, but let's hope that i've turned the corner into some kind of edible by the start of next month.

i think i'll find it a lot easier to put some chocolate in the cupboard than to put anything i can smoke in the cupboard.

did i get some cleaning done? i got one of three piles of dishes done and spent some time washing my face. so, a little, but not much.

the temperature in here has been more pleasant over the last few days, which is better. i think he did have something running under the floor, and he's turned it off. regardless, that seems to be the big difference - the floor is much less cold than it was, which is letting the unit retain much more of the heat. temperature is weird when converted to language; i think my idea is getting across. it's maybe a little more humid, too, which is making the ambient air seem less winterish.

i'll get those last 2013-2014 posts up soon, i just need to clear my head and sort through the list of things.

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

this is useful. you see those dips? those are the results of openly anti-black immigration policies.

they weren't allowed in the country. for decades....

and, you see the giant change between 1971 and 1981 and the high rate of growth since.

and, this is another stat that floors people.

we saw that there were 1,198,540 black canadians in the 2016 census.

749,155 identify as "caribbean canadians", meaning they came here not from the united states but from countries like jamaica. that's 63%.

384,875 were actually born in africa. that's 32%.

so, 95% of african canadians either came from the caribbean, or from africa directly.

well, surely some are american, right?

not many. not for a long time. in fact, as a source of immigration, the united states is folded into the "rest of the americas" category, which, as you can see, is statistically very small.


if you're bad at geography and prefer a picture:


in fact, 623,195 were born in their country of origin. that is, a whopping 52% of black canadians were born elsewhere, and migrated here in their existing lifetimes. and almost all the rest are their kids...

these are just the facts.
the largest visible minorities in canada are east and south asians, not blacks and latinos/indigenous groups.

just somewhat of a reality check...

ontario & quebec have the largest number of black canadians, and the number is around 4.5% in either province (a little less in quebec). most provinces in canada are about 2-3% black. it's a little less than 4%, countrywide. this is a recent change, as well - it wasn't very long ago, like the early 00s, that the number of blacks in canada was < 1%.

after a round of racism earlier in the century that drove people back south (look up robert borden), there were almost no black people in this country between 1945 and 1970.

the indigenous population, on the other hand, is larger out west and in the 2-3% range in quebec. it's less than 5% countrywide, but is growing quite quickly in the west. of course, they were here first, but they also got badly decimated, and, as recently as a generation ago, 5% would have seemed unattainable.

so, in both cases these numbers are trending starkly upward. 20 years ago, <1% would have actually been proportional representation.

but, things are changing.

1700*.03 = 51
1700*.005 = 9

1700*.05 = 85
1700*.006 = 10

so, can they get those numbers up? i think they can, yeah.

but the answer to the disconnect is that those lower numbers were accurate until the turn of the last century. so, maybe the difference is a little less than you were thinking, and maybe the idea that we're long overdue for state intervention is in truth rather ahistorical.

https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/mcgill-professor-says-systemic-racism-exists-at-university/wcm/c4ffd192-2b05-42d4-8997-0e8aebdf10c3/
sending this woman to jail would have been exactly the wrong way to deal with this problem, as it would have exposed her to the culture in the prison, and likely set her up as a repeat offender.

further, i'm not aware of any damages caused.

i don't believe in punishment in the worst cases, and i certainly don't believe in it for something like this. but, she should be liable for any actual, dollar amount damages she caused.

i would also support sending her to some kind of counseling as a condition for her probation. she clearly needs to talk to somebody, in search of potential personality disorders, and a likely eventual life on disability.

that's the other thing about sending people to jail - they don't tend to be likely to find jobs when they get out. and, we don't just let people starve on the street in this country.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/22/americas/chair-girl-sentencing-toronto-scli-intl
i mean, do you know what the primary example these people use to base their monetary theory on?

they consistently cite germany after world war one, under this bizarre myth that what happened was some kind of natural event. it's never been clear to me if this was supposed to be taken seriously or was just some kind of excuse to ram through neo-liberal reforms, but it's certainly become this kind of bizarre article of faith...

in fact, the germans deflated their currency on purpose in order to pay off a ridiculous war debt, and the anglo-french alliance that won the war punished them severely for it. what you saw happen in germany in the weimar republic was not some kind of natural law of economics, but rather severe vengeance by the occupying powers, who then used the situation as a pretext to invade the ruhr. in the end, the americans had to step in and try to pull them back from exacting their vengeance, and we know what happened next...

we've tried this experiment over and over, and it just never happens. it's just wrong.
they're not going to print themselves to hyperinflation.

that was debunked in the 70s, in the 80s, in the 90s....
again: i'm an mmt advocate. this swing to social conservatism on the left pisses me off, sure, but i'm a strict socialist, and i don't have any patience for anybody pushing hayekian market theory.

in canada, we could print as much as we want - we'll just have to take a hit in the credit rating. there's nothing stopping us from doing it, and it's not likely to affect the currency all that much on it's own. but, when the credit agencies step in, they institute sell-offs and drive the price down. it's real in effect, but it's artificial in construction; it's not printing the money that's going to kill us, it's the ratings agencies that will come in and decimate us for their pound of flesh, afterwards.

that just doesn't matter in the united states, and it's never going to unless they either make a stupid decision to institute their own decline (ie. stop printing money) or they get outprinted by somebody bigger and badder than them.

now, if that does happen, if the floodgates open, if the agencies are set loose on america, you're going to have absolute carnage. granted. america will end up subject to imf austerity regimes, forced to sell-off assets - the whole thing. how much do you think the saudis would pay for the statue of liberty?

but, they're really in control of this - so long as they don't stop printing.
this idea that you're going to print so much money to devalue the dollar is just poppycock.

it's complete bollocks.
yeah, he's right that this is cyclical.

listen: people get scared and they move their money into something that they think can't deflate. but, the price of gold is just as much a pile of bullshit as the price of any other commodity, including money itself, really is. in the end, it's just a worthless lump of metal; at least worthless piles of paper can be exchanged. all you can do with gold at the end of the day is sell it, and hope you've broken even.

so, is there any longterm potential in this? no. the day the situation flips over and there's any kind of interest going on anywhere at all, the people that fled to gold will sell their worthless metal and float back. in the mean time, the demand will keep pushing gold up, unless some smartass like soros steps in to fuck with it (and remember: this is why sovereign countries have fiat currencies, to prevent foreign speculators from doing what soros did to defraud the uk government). soros is super old now, right? if somebody pulls the same trick...

but, might people exchange their gold for a different currency, in the end?

see, it's a circular loop. the more money the united states prints, the more it dominates the global economy, and the harder it is to evade it. so long as that remains the case, you can sell the gold for whatever you want, but it's going to end up back as us dollars in the end.

if you want to break the fed, you want to actually do the opposite - you want to dry the money up, for the fed to contract. as it pulls in more and more dollars, it's going to lose purchasing power, and it's only then that a euro can step in. but, that's essentially never going to happen, unless the americans elect an idiot that's going to push through a bunch of neo-liberal nonsense - and for all their rhetoric, they actually don't do that because they actually know better. it would need to be a total breakdown in the system that would lead to that sort of collapse.

so long as they continue to create money rather than destroy it, there is little threat of anybody stepping in any time soon. and, when somebody does take a run for it eventually, and it will no doubt be the chinese that do it, they're going to do it by outprinting them, and just flooding the market with their own currency.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/federal-reserve-u-s-dollar-economy-rates-jerome-powell-1.5666260
total pulling out of canada has been an ongoing process, but it's an intriguing one.

total has very deep ties to the canadian deep state, in it's relationship to this entity called power corp. i'm not going to run over this, but look it up. it's this company in canada that acts as a major revolving door for politicians coming out of all three of the major parties, but is particularly closely related to the liberals, who are of course currently in power.

so, how do you read this? the relationships are so close, that...if this is just business, it's a very damning reflection on the future of the tar sands, which would be good news if true, but....

i think there's actually two more likely possibilities:

1) they're trying to ruin kenney. if that's the truth, i hope they succeed. but, they'll be back in a few years...
2) this fracture in the liberal party between the desmarais clique (that runs power corp) and the ruling party is actually quite deep, to the point that they're more concerned about the current global unpopularity of canada and are essentially trying to distance themselves from it. if that's the case, this is essentially a bad breakup, and it could put a lot of pressure on trudeau to get out of the way.

trudeau is still leading the polls here, but it's partly a reflection of the opposition being in disarray. the conservatives have recently started loudly calling for his removal.

i don't think trudeau has anywhere to go but down in the polls, but he's still winning just right now. his days appear to be numbered...

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/suncor-total-fort-hills-conocophillips-tim-mcmillan-1.5668095
hey.

you want to live in a totalitarian state?

move to iran.

it's not how things are done here.

it never will be.
seems like california just plowed by canada in deaths, too.

that's significant because the population is roughly comparable.

...although we still have time to catch up, in the end.
i have to get up and do something.
and, let's be clear.

rights legislation doesn't exist except in emergencies; rights legislation exists to prevent abuses during emergencies.

this isn't a time to suspend our rights, it's a time to stand up for them, and give the state extra pushback if they're going to get despotic.

we don't need rights in normal times, we need them in abnormal times.
so, what does a bar owner do?

i'd just ignore it and challenge them to fight me on it. but, i'm a scrapper. i enjoy the conflict.

so, you know, people will set priorities and maybe it's better to let the patrons lie to them...

but, they should be aware that they can't make these requests, under federal and provincial law. i doubt a court would come down too hard on them, because they are in a hard situation, but the reality is that the toronto city council has just ordered toronto's nightlife to break the law, which renders it, itself, void of any force, until an election is called.
this is actually so weird that..

so, who is collecting the data here? the business? or the health authorities?

i'm going to go with the health authorities, because this isn't a part of a commercial transaction.

so, to begin with, the law is forcing bar owners to do unpaid labour. as a basic point, if you're going to employ bar staff to fulfil a function, you should give them a paycheck for it. otherwise, they're working for you for free. you can't just order people to do unpaid labour because of an epidemic.

so, then, do we treat the bar staff as volunteers, or what? they have no employment obligation to collect the data. there's no court order involved. what is the basis of the authority, here?

so, i'm going to assume that we're dealing with the regulations as they apply to the government itself, which is actually provincial rather than federal. if we were dealing with the bar, it would be federal.....but that doesn't make sense, because the information isn't being used by the bar at all, let alone for commercial purposes. the relevant law is here:
https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/04p03

Records kept in other places
(2) A health care practitioner may keep a record of personal health information about an individual in a place other than the individual’s home and other than a place in the control of the practitioner if,

(a) the record is kept in a reasonable manner;

(b) the individual consents;

(c) the health care practitioner is permitted to keep the record in the place in accordance with a regulation, by-law or published guideline under the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991, an Act referred to in Schedule 1 to that Act, the Drugless Practitioners Act or the Social Work and Social Service Work Act, 1998, if the health care practitioner is described in any of clauses (a) to (c) of the definition of “health care practitioner” in section 2; and

(d) the prescribed conditions, if any, are satisfied.  2004, c. 3, Sched. A, s. 14 (2).

these are pretty stringent requirements. what is consent, in context?

elements of consent
18 (1) If this Act or any other Act requires the consent of an individual for the collection, use or disclosure of personal health information by a health information custodian, the consent,

(a) must be a consent of the individual;

(b) must be knowledgeable;

(c) must relate to the information; and

(d) must not be obtained through deception or coercion.  2004, c. 3, Sched. A, s. 18 (1).

Implied consent
(2) Subject to subsection (3), a consent to the collection, use or disclosure of personal health information about an individual may be express or implied.  2004, c. 3, Sched. A, s. 18 (2).

Exception
(3) A consent to the disclosure of personal health information about an individual must be express, and not implied, if,

(a) a health information custodian makes the disclosure to a person that is not a health information custodian; or

(b) a health information custodian makes the disclosure to another health information custodian and the disclosure is not for the purposes of providing health care or assisting in providing health care.  2004, c. 3, Sched. A, s. 18 (3).

so, what that means is that the health authority is banned from asking the bar for your address unless you provide explicit consent for them to do so. even if you give the bar your number, if you deny consent to pass it on, it's the health authority that is breaking the law in asking for it.

under federal law, the bar can ask you for your number, but only for "valid commercial reasons". there's no exception for public health.
https://www.priv.gc.ca/en/privacy-topics/privacy-laws-in-canada/the-personal-information-protection-and-electronic-documents-act-pipeda/p_principle/

so, let's back up and count the ways that this is illegal.

1) it is illegal for the bar owner to collect information that is not for valid commercial reasons, and they have an obligation to ask you for consent, if they do. if you do not consent, they cannot collect.
2) it is illegal for the bar to share the data with the health authority.
3) it is illegal for the health authority to store data in a bar, or other random location.
4) it is illegal for the health authority to ask the bar to disclose the information.

i'm not citing the constitution; this is existing legislation.

can the mayor overrule the province?

not in canada. the mayor is just one voice on city council, and the city council only exists by statute. so, the premier can essentially walk into city hall and do whatever he wants. now, he shouldn't do that. but, we actually recently had a fight about this, and the city lost very badly. doug ford was actually able to go in there and redistrict toronto; that's not theoretical, he just did it and the court just upheld it.

the bylaw is meaningless.
and, of course, if particular bar owners want to be assholes, just boycott them.

forever.
i mean, what are they going to do?

charge you with providing false information to a private citizen bar owner that's breaking the law in asking for it?

lol.
actually, no.

don't call the cops.

just give them a fake address. make their database useless - that's better than dragging yourself through court.
if a bar owner tries to force you to provide this information, you should call the police and have them charged.
Council also passed bylaws, at the recommendation of Toronto Public Health, requiring bars and restaurants to keep contact information for patrons so that the health unit can quickly contact anyone who was in the vicinity of a person found to have COVID-19. .

they can't do that, either.

it's actually illegal to ask somebody for id, under federal law, unless you're a cop. this isn't even a constitutional question; it's just flat out against the law to ask, at all.
"but it'll take forever to go through the board."

yeah.

tenants have these things called rights.

and, they don't go away because of a weak virus that kills old people and fat people.
the only property that the city of toronto can pass a law like that on it's own property, which would include city-owned residences. unfortunately.

and, i'm not an advocate of property rights; but this is the isolated example where some concept of privacy is paramount.
if the residents of a building come together and decide, through a direct vote, to pass rules relating to their shared living space, then somebody could potentially be asked to leave the building if they refuse to abide by the rules.

the landlord and tenant board would likely require some kind of compensation in such a scenario, and would no doubt encourage mediation to get to that point. that is, if you're going to throw somebody out of a building because they don't want to follow a non-binding community declaration, you really have a duty of obligation to pay for their moving expenses, at least.

but, a government cannot come in from the outside and enforce a mask rule on somebody's living space without even consulting them.

that's fascistic. it's despotic. it's uncanadian.

and, the bylaw is not worth the paper it's written on - it's that simple.

it's worthless. garbage. meaningless.

it doesn't exist.
that's not an empty statement.

this is an unacceptable abuse of power, meaning they've permanently forfeited the right to govern. they must have an election. asap.

in the mean time, nothing john tory says is worth listening to - he no longer has any authority, at all.
when the government refuses to abide by the rule of law, it loses any legitimacy in enforcement, and any claim to have the right to pass laws, at all.

that's where toronto is.

resign right now, john tory.
every single one of them, immediately.
once you've lost legitimacy, you can't get it back without an election.

the toronto city council has abandoned any claims it may have had to even a pretense of the rule of law, and really must resign, en masse, immediately.
so, that's settled, then.

there is no mask bylaw in toronto.

carry on.
i repeat: the mask bylaw in toronto is not worth the paper it's written on.

don't bother even acknowledging it exists - it doesn't.
there's a point where laws become worthless, and toronto has passed that point, clearly.
this is ridiculously invasive and absurdly unacceptable, and i hope they get viciously sued for it.

i would laugh in somebody's face if they tried to enforce this.

https://www.cp24.com/news/toronto-makes-masks-mandatory-in-apartment-buildings-passes-other-bylaws-ahead-of-stage-3-1.5044074
but, listen.

just because autism is random error doesn't mean they shouldn't get human rights.

i mean, obviously.
this is purportedly obama's prom date, although who knows if that's true.

cute girl. hope they had fun.

actually, this is an issue that has been explored, partly on mr. obama's own initiative.

that is, we know this is true because he told us it is.

his racial identity struggles were a part of what launched him to prominence; people found it compelling on a human level. he didn't know who or what he was for most of his life, and didn't begin to really identify as black until he hit his mid-20s.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/barry-or-how-barack-obama-learned-to-stop-worrying-and-love-his-blackness

so, when i talk about obama being white, i'm not poking at him. i'm not making it up.

and, the fact that his policies ended up so racialized opens up a can of worms.

it really does.


that picture probably exists on the internet to criticize the biracial relationship, and i'm not going to do that. i hope barack & miss cook had lots of fun together.

but, it is what it is.

that's all i'm saying.

he identified as white (and is. half.) for a good part of his life and that doesn't ever go away. trust me.