Number two in the "Monkeewrench" series, recommended to me by my wise
and perceptive sister. Set (mostly) in Minneapolis, the first book
described how a bunch of software wizards (company name: Monkeewrench)
got involved with a string of local murders, and their interaction with
the nice Minnesota (and Wisconsin) cops trying to bring an end to the
illegal carnage.
This one is more of a police procedural, with only one of the (surviving)
Monkeewrench gang playing a small but vital role. After a relatively
homicide-free Minneapolis
winter, there's suddenly a rash of unusual murder victims:
old folks living in upscale Uptown. The initial M.O.'s are various and
confusing. But poor dead
Morey Gilbert was widely regarded as a saint in his
community, always offering kind words and gentle help to his
acquaintances. He also has a concentration camp number tattooed on his
arm, wonder if that could have anything to do with it? His wife seems to
have known something like this might happen, why? His estranged son is a bitter
drunk, hm, suspect?
Many characters have their own secrets. As with the first book, it
strikes me as a tad contrived, but that's OK, because the writing is
pretty close to page-turning first-rate.
The book itself was a little beat up, obtained from an Amazon reseller.
Published at $7.50 suggested retail,
It has a 25¢ sticker, looks like from a yard sale, and a ".50"
sticker, looks like a used book store. And (finally) I paid $4.28
including shipping. Will it go on to further retail adventures? Who knows?
How Culture Is Driving Human Evolution, Domesticating Our Species, and Making Us Smarter
(paid link)
Yet another Interlibrary Loan book, this one from Tufts. I believe I put
it into my to-be-read list when I came across the author, Joseph
Henrich,
while reading Matt Ridley's
The
Evolution of Everything.
It's a fine "big idea" book, as you can tell from the subtitle. What
unlikely process, asks Henrich, has brought the human species to
dominate more terrestrial environments than any other land mammal? We
aren't very strong, not very fast, and not that good at tree-climbing.
Why weren't our ancestors all Tiger Chow
millions of years ago?
Well, we're smart, you say. But Henrich argues convincingly that
we aren't that smart either. His thought experiment: dump fifty
humans and fifty capuchin monkeys into a central African jungle. ("To be
kind we would allow the humans—but not the monkeys—to wear clothes.") Come
back two years later and it's a safe bet that there will be a lot fewer
surviving humans than monkeys. There are a couple of tragic real-world
examples presented: groups of "civilized" humans accidentally finding
themselves in an environment in which they rapidly die off, even in the
midst of native populations that are doing just fine.
Instead, Henrich argues, we're uniquely well-suited to cultural
evolution, the process by which knowledge and skills are transmitted
from one generation to the next. In addition, good old genetic evolution
co-evolves with the culture, to the extent that our species'
hardware/firmware is optimized
to handle cooked food, written language, throwing small, heavy objects with
deadly accuracy (Craig Kimbrel excluded), run long distances, and the
like.
It's a wide-ranging tale, and Henrich runs through his argument with
clarity and occasional understated humor. As is typical with these sorts
of books, a variety of research is cited from anthropology, psychology,
economics, and related fields. Some of these results I'd heard before,
most not.
As with most results of "dumb luck" evolution, the beneficiaries
often don't understand "the secret of their success". I was able to
impress my nutritionist wife with the mystery of why South American
natives put wood ash (or burned seashells) into their corn dishes before
serving. Why? The alkalinity of the ask
makes the niacin in the corn available to the
human digestive system.
When corn was introduced into "civilized" countries, this technique was
discarded, since nobody knew why it was useful. The result: pellagra,
caused by niacin deficiency. And (tragically) the cause of pellagra
remained a mystery until the mid-20th century.
Also very mind-bending was Henrich's discussion of the brain's
"firmware" for recognizing written language. We English-readers can look
at (for example) "READ" and "read" and know within milliseconds:
that's the same word, even though the letters don't look anything alike.
Multiply that feat over myriad font shapes and sizes. How could
that skill, developed only a few thousand years ago,
be a result of sluggish Darwinian processes? Cultural evolution, baby!
And there's a lot more. As always: there are controversies, and Henrich
is only giving his side. So maybe not the last word on this topic.
Nevertheless, a fun and fascinating read.
PredictWise
has Hillary Clinton with an 86% shot at being President, which means
Donald Trump is still technically alive at 14%, because math. As I type,
he's doing better than the Boston Red Sox, who are judged to have a mere
5% probability of winning the
World Series.
Over at
FiveThirtyEight,
Hillary's at 77.6-86.1% (depending on methodology). The Red Sox are at
5%
there
as well.
And in the Phony Poll, Jill Stein comes crashing back to earth, as the
Google Gods realize the true phonies this year are…
For our purposes, coverage of Trump's 2005 "extremely
lewd conversation"
demonstrated the interesting
rules various news outlets have for obscuring bad words.
For example, the WaPo goes PG-13 in this paragraph:
“I moved on her like a bitch, but I couldn’t get there. And she was
married,” Trump says. “Then all of a sudden I see her, she’s now got the
big phony
tits and everything. She’s totally changed her look.”
… but elsewhere in the article, it's "s---", "f---", and "p---y".
The bazongas in question belong to Ms. Nancy O'Dell, host of
Entertainment Tonight, a show I'm pretty sure I haven't watched
in decades. Her
official
statement makes no mention of the phoniness allegation (although
she's apparently denied it in the past,
and Googling does not reveal anything on this important issue
other than rumor and tawdry
speculation):
"Politics aside, I’m saddened that these comments still exist in our
society at all. When I heard the comments yesterday, it was
disappointing to hear such objectification of women. The conversation
needs to change because no female, no person, should be the subject of
such crass comments, whether or not cameras are rolling. Everyone
deserves respect no matter the setting or gender. As a woman who has
worked very hard to establish her career, and as a mom, I feel I must
speak out with the hope that as a society we will always strive to be
better."
It's probably ungentlemanly to observe that the
former beauty
queen has "established her career" on her extraordinary good looks,
so her whole "objectification" complaint rings a little hollow.
When will we know that "society" has successfully striven "to be better"
on this score? When
Rachel
Dratch
becomes an Entertainment Tonight
co-host.
Speaking of beauty queens: Steve Harvey, well known for
botching
his gig as host of a recent Miss Universe pageant, interviewed Hillary
back in February, during the heat of the primary campaign. You wouldn't
expect him to ask hardball questions.
But, as recently revealed in a leaked memo, Hillary was guaranteed
an even more comfy ride:
Talk show host Steve Harvey provided Hillary Clinton’s campaign with
the exact questions he would ask of Clinton during a February interview,
according to an internal campaign memo sent a week before the interview
and obtained by the Washington Free Beacon.
An impressively phony moment:
“During this segment Steve will take a trip down memory lane with YOU to
talk about the different moments of YOUR life displayed in the
photographs below,” the memo explained photos of Clinton that Harvey
pulled up on screen as she discussed her childhood, education,
relationship with her husband, and election to the U.S. Senate.
Clinton feigned surprise throughout the interview. “Oh boy. Oh my
goodness,” she exclaimed as Harvey displayed a photo of her at 12 years
old.
That's show biz. Also, consistently rendering YOU and YOUR in uppercase
is apparently a thing.
At a Hillary Clinton town hall yesterday in Haverford, Pennsylvania,
a 15 year old girl was supposedly "chosen at random" to
ask a question of the former Secretary of State. But, the
well-scripted performance raised some suspicion with a YouTuber named Spanglevision who
decided to dig a little deeper. And, wouldn't you know it,
the "random"
participant was none other than child actor, Brennan Leach, whose father
just happens to be Pennsylvania democratic State Senator Daylin Leach. Oh,
and in case it wasn't obvious, Daylin supports Hillary for
president...shocking.
Yeah, I think that's credible. Could do without all the bold and
underlines.
Note that
Snopes
attempts to debunk this, but the best they can do is "unproven". I also
found their wording of the "claim" to be a little dishonest:
Claim: Hillary Clinton "hired" a
child actor to be "planted" in the audience during a Town Hall campaign
event.
I'm bothered by Snopes putting "hired" in quotes, as if someone was
making the specific charge of money changing hands for little Brennan's
performance.
I may be missing something, but I don't see that word at Zero Hedge.
Is Snopes attempting to rebut an allegation that nobody's actually made?
Jacob Sullum watched last evening's debate, and solves the mystery:
"Clinton
Shows How She Manages to Be Less Trusted Than Trump". Casting her e-mail
negligence as a
"mistake" is well-known. The new
inconvenience that she needed to explain away last night: her two-faced
speech confession, kept secret until Wikileaked, was "So you need both a
public and a private position."
Her focus-grouped response: hey, it's exactly the same thing Lincoln
did in that Spielberg movie to get the Thirteenth Amendment passed!
Sullum rebuts:
Assuming the Wikileaks excerpts are accurate (and Clinton is not
claiming they're not), that is a serious distortion of what Clinton
actually said in her speech. She was not talking about tailoring your
arguments to your audience; she was talking about bribing legislators
with promises of lucrative jobs, which she argued was justified by the
importance of getting Congress to approve the 13th Amendment. More
generally, she said such tactics, although "unsavory," are both
necessary and appropriate, although it is best to conceal them from the
public, since otherwise people might "get a little nervous."
It is understandable
that Clinton would prefer not to admit endorsing this Machiavellian
view, especially given the broader
implications of saying one thing publicly and another privately. But
by pretending she did not say what she said, she only compounds the
impression that she is slippery, two-faced, and untrustworthy.
Had I been Jacob's editor, I might have suggested replacing "only
compounds the impression" with "demonstrates yet again".
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