Showing posts with label Bigotry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bigotry. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Random Notes from a Crank

 I'm trying to catch up on my public affairs magazine reading. 

Here are some factoids from the last three months of "Harper's Indexes":

  • Percentage decrease in the number of flu cases in the United States this season: 99
  • Factor by which U.S. police officers are more likely to use force against left-wing protesters than right-wing protesters: 3.4
  • Percentage of Black Lives Matter protests during which the police used force against protesters: 5
  • Of Stop the Steal protests during which police did so: 1
  • Percentage of Americans who identified as Republicans and Democrats, respectively, at the outset of 2020: 47, 45
  • At the end of 2020: 39, 50
  • Number of U.S. members of Congress who are not affiliated with a religion: 1
  • Portion of the American population that is not: 1/4
  • Percentage of 2020 Trump voters who feel more loyal to Trump than to the Republican Party: 54
  • Who would support a Trump party over the Republican Party: 46
  • Minimum number of identified long-term effects from contracting COVID-19: 55
  • Factor by which a solar farm was more expensive to build and maintain than a coal plant in 2009: 3.2
  • By which a coal plant is more expensive to build and maintain than a solar farm today: 2.2
  • Estimated number of Earths that humanity would require to sustain its current level of resource consumption: 1.6
  • Year in which humanity  is expected to require two Earths: 2030
  • Number of U.S. state legislatures that are considering new voting restrictions: 47
  • Number of such bills being considered: 361
  • Percentage of Democratic or Democratic-leaning voters who are "extremely concerned" about Trump supporters: 82
  • Who are "extremely concerned" about voter suppression: 53
  • Percentage of U.S. electric-car owners who are concerned about being able to charge their vehicles on the road: 47
  • Portion of U.S. electric-car charging outlets that are in California: 1/3
  • That support only Tesla vehicles: 1/5
  • Minimum number of state governments that are funding efforts to modify the weather with cloud seeding: 6

Usually when I provide the stats and figures from the Harper's Index, I just leave them as for readers to ponder for themselves. But for this post since it's three-months worth of numbers and percentages, I thought I'd comment on some of them. 

With the drop of flu cases, it's clear that masks work, people. That's why people in certain countries in Asia wear masks during flu season. 

In response to the "Blue Lives Matter" crowd, it seems that the police feel conservative lives matter more. 

I hesitantly take the party affiliation changes from the start of 2020 to the end as a good sign. The Republican Party has lost any sense of a moral and/or philosophical compass with people's irrational support of Moscow Don. 

That long-term effects figure should be a part of PSAs about getting the COVID-19 vaccine. 

We need to build more solar farms and electric-car charging outlets. 

Back to the GOP, they want to restrict voting access because doing so helps them. But will it? I wonder if these ridiculous bills like the one in Georgia will only motivate people to vote. That's my hope. 

Sunday, April 11, 2021

Random Notes from a Crank

It seems I've gotten to a point in my life that most of the time I don't know who the musical guest is on SNL, and about half of the time I don't know who the hell the guest host is. 

I've gotten back into watching Jeopardy on a regular basis. And I've downloaded the app on my phone. So I'm getting all trivia happy. 

I recently finished Elizabeth Kolbert's Under A White Sky: The Nature of the Future. Scientists of various specialities are working hard toward trying to fashion methods for us to alter climate change. As she says in the final chapter, "But, as a rule, this enthusiasm [for their work] was tempered by doubt. The electric fish barriers, the concrete crevasse, the fake cavern, the synthetic clouds--these were presented to me less in a spirit of techno-optimism than what might be called techno-fatalism. They weren't improvements on the originals; they were the best that anyone could come up with, given the circumstances." 

After reading the book, I'm confident the people working on solar geoengineering are going to be serious players in the various sets of solutions we have to use to fight against the consequences of climate change. If policy makers let them. 

Perhaps halting donations and investments will get the attention of people who sponsor these stupid voting bills in state legislatures: "Companies Are Considering Withholding Donations and Investments Over Controversial Voting Bills in States."