CIA Officers Defend Their Conspiracy Theory 

John Sipher is not apologizing for his conduct. He’s proud of it.

He was one of 50 former CIA officials that published a letter just before the 2020 election alleging that the New York Poststory about Hunter Biden’s laptop and its contents “has all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.”

In a recent Twitter post, Sipher said, “I take special pride in personally swinging the election away from Trump.”

Former DNI James Clapper is also comfortable with promoting the Russian Conspiracy Theory. “I think sounding such a cautionary note at that time was appropriate,” he said.

And Russ Travers, former acting director of the National Counterterrorism Center, added, pathetically, “The letter explicitly stated that we didn’t know if the emails were genuine, but that we were concerned about Russian disinformation efforts.”

 

Despite Demand for Workers, US Unemployment Is Still High 

The night before I got my ass beat at the IBJJF, [LINK 4/13]two of my BJJ instructors and I went out for a light bite. Every restaurant we went to had long waiting lines. The problem was not demand. The problem was supply. Supply of waiters and kitchen help. At least half of the tables were and remained empty all night.

Fact: Currently, for every unemployed worker, 1.8 jobs are available. Meanwhile, 166,000 Americans filed initial unemployment claims the week ending Apr. 2, down from about 5,000 claims the previous week and better than industry experts predicted. This was the lowest figure since Nov. 1968, and the second-lowest since weekly reporting began in Jan. 1967.

What does that mean? Three things:

  1. Lots of people (like hundreds of thousands) who were fired during the Mandatory COVID Lockdown have apparently decided they can afford to stay idle, thanks to various government relief programs, including extended unemployment benefits.
  2. Those that are planning to return to work are taking their time and being picky because the demand for labor is so high.
  3. The resulting super-tight labor market has made it all but impossible for many employers (especially those in service industries) to get rid of underperforming employees.
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Magical Thinking: Some (Possibly) Surprising Facts About Going Green

I like the idea of safe, renewable energy. So does almost everyone. But I don’t know much about it. (And, be honest. Neither do you.) Because I know so little, I try to refrain from having an opinion about what should be done to solve the global warming issue. But that seems like copping out.

I don’t have time to become knowledgeable on the subject. But I do a bit of reading now and then. No longish scientific pieces. I favor data – specific facts, numbers – that help me at least recognize when some particular thesis or theory makes no sense.

My favorite discoveries are those that surprise me. For example…

Did you know that wind power provides only 2% of the world’s energy needs?

And that solar power provides even less? Like 1%?

Did it ever occur to you that electric cars are made using fossil fuels and use fossil fuels to run?

Fact is, fossil fuels supply about 80% of the world’s energy.

Pop quiz: According to 100% of all environmental scientists, there is a source of energy that produces exactly zero carbon emissions. Do you know what that is?

Answer: Nuclear power.

It turns out that green energy is anything but green. We are consuming energy to produce energy. Click here for a short video that is worth a look.

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Brussels, Belgium

In July of 2012, K and I spent a month in Europe on what we called our “B-Trip.” B because the tour consisted of stays in three cities: Brussels, Barcelona, and Berlin.

We had been to Barcelona many times and expected much from it. We were not disappointed. We had never been to Berlin, but were excited to get to know it. That, too, met and even exceeded our expectations. For Brussels, however, I had modest hopes. All I knew about it was that it was the capital of the European Union. So, I expected it to be like diplomacy and bureaucracy: a mixture of bullshit and boring.

Instead, we had a very pleasant time there. Some recommendations:

* Grote Markt (Grand Place) – the central square of the city

* “Manneken Pis” and “Jeanneke Pis” – the city’s two famous “pissing” statues

* Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts (Royal Museums of Fine Arts)

* Musée du Costume et da la Dentelle (Costume and Lace Museum)

* Le Botanique (“the herb garden”) – a cultural center dedicated to live music and art exhibitions

* Café Belga – for great ambiance and good food.

Facts about Brussels: 

* Brussels is the largest municipality and historical center of the Brussels-Capital Region, as well as the capital of Belgium. It is also the administrative center of the European Union, and is thus often dubbed, along with the region, the EU’s capital city.

* Brussels operates as a bilingual city where both French (85%) and Dutch (15%) are official languages. Thus, all the streets have two names, which can sound totally different. For example, the Main Square is called both la Grand Place and de Grote Markt.

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“A wise man is superior to any insults which can be put upon him, and the best reply to unseemly behavior is patience and moderation.” – Moliere

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Petrichor (PEH-truh-kor) is a pleasant smell that accompanies the first rain after a long period of warm, dry weather. The word was coined by two scientists who needed a name for the phenomenon to use in an article they were writing about their research in the journal Nature. They derived it from petra (Greek for “stone”) and ichor (a fluid said to flow like blood through the veins of the Greek gods).

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My favorite scene from one of my favorite movies – the young Mozart insulting the great Salieri by playing and then improving on Salieri’s composition…

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I wrote today’s review of King Richard before Will Smith had his sad and embarrassing Academy Award moment. What was worse? The slap? His tears in apologizing to everyone but Chris Rock? Or the standing ovation he received when he won?

Art, it is said, holds a mirror to life. Hollywood holds a mirror to our culture’s fundamental characteristic: our adolescent self-centeredness.

But boy was he good in King Richard!

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King Richard 

Release date: Nov. 19, 2021

Directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green

Starring Will Smith, Aunjanue Ellis, John Bernthal, and Saniyya Sidney

Currently available to rent or buy on various streaming services, including Amazon Prime

Before I saw the film, all I knew of Richard Williams was the character the media portrayed him to be: fanatical, egotistical, and abusive. The story told here, which was approved by Venus and Serena, showed evidence of the former two traits but none of the last. On the contrary, the Richard we see is a loving and devoted father, doing his best to raise five healthy, successful daughters.

I haven’t done any research to determine the veracity of this portrayal. If it’s good enough for Serena and Venus, it’s good enough for me. What’s impressive is the enormous drive Williams showed in overcoming the obstacles that stood in his (and his daughters’) way.

What I Liked About King Richard 

* The acting. Will Smith above all, but a great performance by Aunjanue Ellis as Oracene Williams, and Saniyya Sidney and Demi Singleton as Venus and Serena. I also liked Jon Berthal as Rick Macci. And Tony Goldwyn as Paul Cohen. Heck, the entire cast was very good.

* The treatment of racism. Kudos to everyone involved for resisting the cheap, anti-White-Man cliches. The scenes where racism came into play were mostly played out in Richard’s mind. The actual mean stuff is Black-on-Black.

* It’s a feel-good movie, pure and simple.

Critical Reception 

* “This is a dream role for Will Smith and he attacks it with gusto. Williams is a larger-than-life-character who just happens to be real, and Smith embodies his underdog, combative, indefatigable spirit to perfection.” (Max Weiss, Baltimore Magazine)

* “It is one of those crowd-pleasing movies that doesn’t make you feel embarrassed to be part of the crowd – you feel buoyed rather than talked down to.” (Stephanie Zacharek, TIME Magazine)

* “There is a tension between the film King Richard wants to be and the film it actually is. The film it wants to be is a tribute to a boot-strapping sports dad who had a plan for his daughters and executed it…. The film it actually is casts Richard in a less flattering light than the filmmakers seem to intend.” (Scott Tobias, The New York Times)

* “The movie’s brightest burning idea, and it is sincerely moving, is that Richard, for all his flaws, does what he does on behalf of the young Black women he’s raising. This rings true in real life and fiction.” (K. Austin Collins, Rolling Stone)

You can watch the trailer here.

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How to Do Nothing 

By Jenny Odell

256 pages

Published April 9, 2019 by Melville House

I’m not sure how I came to read this. It was on my audiobook file. I turned it on accidentally, and then was intrigued by the subtitle. So, I gave it a shot.

I’m about halfway through it now. And I have a theory about how it got onto my audiobook file. It is the sort of book, like The Maid (reviewed here on Feb. 25), that is destined for success. Topically interesting. Politically correct. And lush with complex sentences.

In fact, it was one of President Obama’s “Favorite Books of 2019.”

Unfortunately, the complexity is mostly in its literary style. The thought content is wide, but not deep. The analysis is superficial. The fundamental perspective is anti-capitalist, in the most unexamined way. And the solution it offers – dropping out while still caring (by staying anti-capitalist) – well, it’s only helpful for people who, like the author, make their living as entertainers or educators.

What I Like About How to Do Nothing 

* Odell admits that she is speaking from a privileged position and that “not everyone” can get paid good money to do the sort of thing she’s doing.

* She is right in saying that we can and should “refuse calls for our attention that do not serve us and reclaim our attention, directing it towards people and places and activities that we personally value.”

What I Don’t Like 

As I said, I haven’t finished the book. I don’t know if I will. That’s because my “don’t likes” outweigh my “likes.”

* Her analysis of the “problem” – capitalism – is inexcusably naïve, even for a university teacher. Her view of what’s wrong with the world today? “The colonization of the self by capitalist ideas of productivity and efficiency” and this idea that “we should all be entrepreneurs.”

* Her remedy to the problem: Refuse to do any sort of work that you don’t want to do. Find a job, such as teaching performance art, in a good university or become a writer.

Two examples from the book on how to refuse the demands of attention economy and “do nothing”: (1) Diogenes, whose contribution to philosophy consisted of walking backwards and other exhibits of performance art. And (2) Bartleby the scrivener, Melville’s lovable dope who, whenever asked to do a simple job, replied, “Thank you, but I prefer not to.”

Critical Reception 

How to Do Nothing was named one of the best books of the year by many critics, including those from Time, The New Yorker, NPR, GQ, Elle, and Fortune.

* “A complex, smart and ambitious book that at first reads like a self-help manual, then blossoms into a wide-ranging political manifesto.” (Jonah Engel Bromwich, The New York Times Book Review)

* “Approachable and incisive…. The book is clearly the work of a socially conscious artist and writer who considers careful attention to the rich variety of the world an antidote to the addictive products and platforms that technology provides…. [Odell] sails with capable ease between the Scylla and Charybdis of subjectivity and arid theory with the relatable humanity of her vision.” (Nicholas Cannariato, The Washington Post)

* “An erudite and thoughtful narrative about the importance of interiority and taking time to pay close attention to the spaces around us.” (Annie Vainshtein, San Francisco Chronicle)

About Jenny Odell 

Jenny Odell is an artist, writer, and educator based in Oakland, CA. In 2015, she started an organization she called The Bureau of Suspended Objects. She was then “artist-in-residence” at Recology SF, a.k.a. the San Francisco dump. Her “work” there, which consisted of scavenging, photographing, and detailing the histories of objects that had been thrown out, culminated in an exhibition and archive intended to bring attention to the resources involved in the objects’ production and consumption.

Click here to watch Odell discussing How to Do Nothing.

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