21 March 2026

Cantus firmus motet on a folk song ("Donald Trump is a Wanker")

  


.....
"The answer" to life, the universe & everything... (No, it's not 42, but it is a dimensionless real number): α (alpha), equal to the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles:
α = e24πε0ħc ⁠ 1/137

where 
e is the elementary charge (~1.602×10−19 C);
h is the Planck constant (~6.626×10−34 J⋅Hz−1);
 is the reduced Planck constant⁠(h/2π (~1.055×10−34 J⋅s);
c is the speed of light in a vacuum(~300Km⋅s−1);
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of space (~8.854×10−12 F⋅m−1).
As far as anyone knows, having no reason to suspect otherwise, this is and always has been and always will be true everywhere in the universe, but no one really knows why, if there is a why, this number has the value it does. 


Virus-free.www.avast.com

AI and our future

Pretty good example of what AI does that most people don't think that much about or understand. This is not large language model AI like ChatGPT, it's the "real" thing, that is specifically developed and programmed to guide automation to do things better than any human being, even a skilled person guiding advanced technology, can do. I honestly believe that human civilization is going to have to successfully transition from an economy of scarcity where labor is the principal value to an economy of abundance where for the most part the acquisition of resources and production of food, many services, resource extraction, and essentially all manufacturing will be done for humans by technology. Human time will be thought of as freedom, our birthright, and a fairly high degree of wealth will just come standard, for free. Most work will be unnecessary and most people will not "work." How coud this actually work? See... that word... deeply ingrained. Maybe it can't, and we'll fail to make this transition. But in the longer term, I'm convinced it's an existential imperative. What AI will not be able to do is compose songs worth listening to, write literature worth reading, or have genuine conscious feeling and experience. That is what we are for. Some may disagree, but I've heard AI music and it's all there in form, and it has no soul whatsoever (neither does some human music, but that's beside the point). 


  


.....
"The answer" to life, the universe & everything... (No, it's not 42, but it is a dimensionless real number): α (alpha), equal to the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles:
α = e24πε0ħc ⁠ 1/137

where 
e is the elementary charge (~1.602×10−19 C);
h is the Planck constant (~6.626×10−34 J⋅Hz−1);
 is the reduced Planck constant⁠(h/2π (~1.055×10−34 J⋅s);
c is the speed of light in a vacuum(~300Km⋅s−1);
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of space (~8.854×10−12 F⋅m−1).
As far as anyone knows, having no reason to suspect otherwise, this is and always has been and always will be true everywhere in the universe, but no one really knows why, if there is a why, this number has the value it does. 


Virus-free.www.avast.com

11 March 2026

Attending NO KINGS on Saturday Mar 28 at 12

  

Time

Saturday, March 28
12 – 4pm PDT

Location

Battleship Oregon Memorial
SW Naito Pkwy
Portland, OR 97204


.....
"The answer" to life, the universe & everything... (No, it's not 42, but it is a dimensionless real number): α (alpha), equal to the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles:
α = e24πε0ħc ⁠ 1/137

where 
e is the elementary charge (~1.602×10−19 C);
h is the Planck constant (~6.626×10−34 J⋅Hz−1);
 is the reduced Planck constant⁠(h/2π (~1.055×10−34 J⋅s);
c is the speed of light in a vacuum(~300Km⋅s−1);
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of space (~8.854×10−12 F⋅m−1).
As far as anyone knows, having no reason to suspect otherwise, this is and always has been and always will be true everywhere in the universe, but no one really knows why, if there is a why, this number has the value it does. 

Madman's spending spree with your money

It used to be common for Republicans to complain about the huge "deficit spending," but the fact is that the only president since Eisenhower who ever balanced the budget was Clinton, and Republicans, without exception, have driven up the debt and overall deficit far faster and more destructively, with less to show for it, than any Democrat ever has. Some deficit investment actually gives an RoI that far outstrips the cost, but Republican, and especially Trumpian drunken sailor spending is just the very "waste, fraud, and abuse" Reagan used to like to complain about, with NO appreciable benefit. Trump has been borrowing $50 bn. a week, and now the almost half a billion per hour this war is costing, including drawdown of supplies and armaments, is just added onto that. While they've cut taxes "strongly" (and only) on those who actually are under-taxed in this country, the filthy rich. Here's the bottom line, folks: this is all gonna come crashing down, sooner than later

09 March 2026

A great divide in life: front drive vs. rear drive

Turns out the automotive divide between front wheel drive and rear wheel drive is pretty basic to all life on Earth. Animals (and their distant relatives choanoflagellates and fungi) are Opisthokonts, meaning their motile cells have rear-mounted flagella. (In most metazoan animals, the most notable motile cells like this are sperm cells). Most other multicelluar life (plants, multicellular algae) are evolved from protists that had two front-mounted flagella that pulled them along rather than drove them from the back. Who'da thunk? 

Also interesting: animals, almost by definition, make almost all their intercellular structure out of triple helix proteins (collagens), whereas fungi make them out of complex polysaccharides (chitin, also used by insects to make external structural parts), and plants mostly use another polysaccharide, cellulose). Interesting twist: the biosynthesis of collagen apparently requires the presence of a considerable amount of oxygen in the environment to proceed. So animals, which began to evolve on a large scale about 700 million years ago, required a long history of photosynthetic organisms to have "poisoned" the atmosphere with enough oxygen for the reactions they used to literally make themselves out of nutrients to proceed. 

An aside: Young Earth creationists would have to twist themselves into triple helices to explain why Gawd would waste all that time and energy on that, except they mostly ignore such complexities in the contingent history of life in their dumb explanations. Ha ha. 

  


.....
"The answer" to life, the universe & everything... (No, it's not 42, but it is a dimensionless real number)α (alpha), equal to the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles:
α = e24πε0ħc ⁠ 1/137

where 
e is the elementary charge (~1.602×10−19 C);
h is the Planck constant (~6.626×10−34 J⋅Hz−1);
 is the reduced Planck constant⁠(h/2π (~1.055×10−34 J⋅s);
c is the speed of light in a vacuum(~300Km⋅s−1);
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of space (~8.854×10−12 F⋅m−1);
μ0 is the magnetic permeability of space (~1.2567×10−6 N⋅A−2).
As far as anyone knows, having no reason to suspect otherwise, this is and always has been and always will be true everywhere in the universe, but no one really knows why, if there is a why, this number has the value it does. 


Virus-free.www.avast.com

05 March 2026

No support for squishes on the war powers

I am a strong proponent of Democratic unity. Admire the bejeezus out of Jasmine Crockett but support Talarico 100%. Disagree with some positions of Peltola but intend to contribute heavily (for me) to her campaign because we need to win the Senate, and she will be a reliable vote for the most important matters. All that. But I'm sorry. Any and every Democrat who votes not to rein in Trump's unconstitutional exercise of illegal war powers in the present outrage can go to hell. I will not support them in any way, shape or form and will actively support any Democratic challengers to them. To me, this is the absolute red line in the fight against fascism and the anti-Constitutional establishment, which, unfortunately, has far too many adherents in our own party. I would sooner vote for a George Conway or a Michael Luttig constitutionalist former Republican than a neo-con "executive maximalist" Democrat. To me, Libya is the single worst blot on Obama's record, and I think Clinton was wrong not to obtain a clear mandate from Congress before engaging in war in the Balkans. This stuff matters

  


.....
"The answer" to life, the universe & everything... (No, it's not 42, but it is a dimensionless real number)α (alpha), equal to the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles:
α = e24πε0ħc ⁠ 1/137

where 
e is the elementary charge (~1.602×10−19 C);
h is the Planck constant (~6.626×10−34 J⋅Hz−1);
 is the reduced Planck constant⁠(h/2π (~1.055×10−34 J⋅s);
c is the speed of light in a vacuum(~300Km⋅s−1);
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of space (~8.854×10−12 F⋅m−1);
μ0 is the magnetic permeability of space (~1.2567×10−6 N⋅A−2).
As far as anyone knows, having no reason to suspect otherwise, this is and always has been and always will be true everywhere in the universe, but no one really knows why, if there is a why, this number has the value it does. 

04 March 2026

Weather West with Daniel Swain PhD

If you want a really good, science based source of information on climate and weather in the Western US, this is the best YouTube based site I've found. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJrPxdzBNKY&list=TLPQMDQwMzIwMjZYu5HwAjf0iQ&index=5&pp=iAQBsAgC 

  


.....
"The answer" to life, the universe & everything... (No, it's not 42, but it is a dimensionless real number)α (alpha), equal to the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles:
α = e24πε0ħc ⁠ 1/137

where 
e is the elementary charge (~1.602×10−19 C);
h is the Planck constant (~6.626×10−34 J⋅Hz−1);
 is the reduced Planck constant⁠(h/2π (~1.055×10−34 J⋅s);
c is the speed of light in a vacuum(~300Km⋅s−1);
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of space (~8.854×10−12 F⋅m−1);
μ0 is the magnetic permeability of space (~1.2567×10−6 N⋅A−2).
As far as anyone knows, having no reason to suspect otherwise, this is and always has been and always will be true everywhere in the universe, but no one really knows why, if there is a why, this number has the value it does. 

02 March 2026

Watch/isten to The Contrarian

Current number is a great essay on why Trump is violating the Constitution and International Law pursuing an aggressive war without legal predicate or authorization of Congress. 

Some random thoughts because I don't really even want to think about what's going on in the world

1. We say we "dreamed up" a good idea, like the design for a house or something. Or even a melody. What if it's literally true, that we do most of our important creative thought while dreaming, asleep? I think this is so. 

2. No doubt English spelling is weird. Noah Webster tried to make it rational in the days before formal linguistics, and many others have as well. One of its desirable features, especially in this brief era when we still use keyboards (don't think they're on the way out? They are)... is that it, almost without exception, eschews diacritical marks of all kinds. You know, accents, circumflexes, "umlauts," etc. (Banish forever as if it never existed the abominable spelling coöperation, which was actually in vogue to some extent in my lifetime). But here's the thing. English has a lot of sounds. Not necessarily phonemic, but at least some of them are represented in our spelling and it makes it easier to read the language. A minor example that occurred to me. We could think, perhaps, we'll reform spelling by using a series of digraphs, some for vowels and others, most of which we already use, for single sounds not served by any letter. Like the tch in match, which is actually a trigraph. A common one, which seems to be a diphthong, is the ie in tied. So let's replace it with a more logical representation, ai, and get taid. But what about priest? No one says praist (anymore, anyway), so we replace that one with, what? ii for "long i (ee)"? Maybe. But let's focus on the original diphthong. What about dyed? Past tense of "to dye," which seems to be the exact same sound as died, past tense of to die? Or pried, the past tense of to pry. And the same vowel as pride, which isn't a past tense at all. He we get into to a little trouble. I think die and dye are actual homonyms, so the spelling is just a graphical marker. But, I'm no linguist, but I think I hear a difference between pried, in he pried of the bottlecap, and pride, as in he was filled with pride. Say them in sequence. Pried has the slightest hint of a landing on the d where pride does not. See if you don't think so. Somehow praid for both would be an impoverishment, not an improvement. 

3. For my last random thought this morning, I'll share a dialog I had with the Great and Glorious God Chatgipiti

Me: "I tried to ask your nemesis, the Amazon AI, about this, but it wouldn't let me finish my question, so hopefully you will. Given that the Earth-Moon system is an anomaly because it was caused by the collision of two planet-sized bodies early in the history of the solar system, I'm wondering if we can derive from what little we know about the moons of exoplanets and what we know about the rest of the solar system to come up with a rule of thumb about terrestrial planets that may hold throughout the universe, more or less. And that would be the following (the moons of Mars being also an exception because they appear to be captured asteroids: from the other terrestrial planets in the solar system, which appear to be more typical, we could come to the conclusion that most terrestrial planets do not have moons. What do you say to that?

Here was its answer (it only thought for 17 sec., sometimes I get it thinking for a minute or more): 

Your proposed "rule of thumb" is pointing in a reasonable direction, but it needs two big caveats: (1) we still have essentially zero direct observational leverage on moons of terrestrial exoplanets, and (2) our own Solar System is a tiny sample, and it's "selection-biased" in the sense that we're sitting on the one terrestrial planet with a conspicuously large moon.

On the observational side: as of early 2026, no exomoon has been unambiguously confirmed, despite several candidates and a lot of effort. That matters because it means we cannot yet say, from data, whether "most rocky planets have no moons" is true in the broader galaxy. The non-detections so far are not very informative for terrestrial planets in particular, because the methods are strongly biased toward large moons around large planets on favorable orbits—exactly the regime where "if moons are there, they're easiest to see."

From theory and Solar System context, though, you can make a defensible, more careful statement:

Most terrestrial planets probably do not have large, Earth–Moon-scale moons.

That's different from "no moons at all." Tiny moons, temporary captures, quasi-moons, and small-body satellites may be common; what's probably uncommon is a big, dynamically important, long-lived satellite like ours.

Why that's a plausible generalization:

The main pathways to moons don't favor big moons around rocky planets.
For terrestrial planets, the "obvious" way to get a large moon is a giant impact that leaves a debris disk which re-accretes into one (or a few) moons. Earth's Moon is the archetype. But giant impacts are chaotic: you need the right impact geometry, the right mass ratio, and the right angular momentum budget, and then you need the resulting satellite to survive long-term tidal evolution. In other words, it's a real channel, but it's not guaranteed.
Giant impacts are common in late-stage terrestrial formation, but "Moon-making" outcomes may be a subset.
Numerical work emphasizes that late terrestrial planet growth is dominated by giant impacts. That supports the idea that "Earth-like systems" might often get whacked hard. But "often hit hard" doesn't automatically translate into "often end up with a big moon"; many impacts will lead to accretion without a substantial long-lived satellite, or to multiple small remnants, or to outcomes that later get destabilized.
Our Solar System's terrestrial sample does lean toward 'moon-poor.'
Mercury and Venus have none; Earth has one large one; Mars has two tiny ones that are widely treated as captured or otherwise non-Earthlike in origin (your point). If you restrict the discussion to "major moons of the four terrestrial planets," you end up with basically one clear success case: Earth. That makes it tempting to say "Earth is the anomaly." It probably is an anomaly in moon-to-planet mass ratio, even if "impact-born moons" in general aren't vanishingly rare.

So what I'd say, in plain terms, is this:

It's quite plausible that the typical terrestrial planet has either no moons or only small moons, and that large moons like ours are not the default outcome. But it is not yet something we can claim as an empirical rule across the universe, because (so far) exomoon detections are still unconfirmed and heavily biased toward big-planet systems rather than Earth analogs.

If you want a sharper prediction that's still honest, it would be: "Large moons around rocky planets exist, but are probably uncommon; small moons may be common." That's the version that fits both the Solar System pattern and what formation theory tends to suggest, without overclaiming beyond what we can currently observe.


I don't really agree, by the way. Call it intuition. I think it will turn out that most planets in the "terrestroid" class, which includes Venus and Earth, do not have moons at all. Earth is weird because of the Theia collision (if you don't know about that, look it up; it's very interesting and generally accepted now as correct). Captures like Phobos and Deimos (Mars's moons) don't count because they are tiny and don't actually last for billions of years; they get perturbed or crash into the planet. Same with impact ejecta "moonlets" that may survive for a while but aren't real moons. And my "rule of thumb," even if correct,  might not include a common class of planet that doesn't actually exist in the Solar System at all, Superearths.*




*For those who actually find this stuff fascinating, here's some more on Superearths (usually spelled with a hyphen)(Also from Chat GPT),  starting with a definition: 

A planet more massive than Earth but substantially less massive than the Solar System's ice giants (Uranus and Neptune).

Quantitatively

The commonly used ranges are:

Mass: ~1 to ~10 Earth masses (M⊕)
(Many researchers narrow this to ~1–5 M⊕.)
Radius: roughly ~1 to ~1.8 Earth radii (R⊕), though radius-based definitions vary.

Above about 1.6–1.8 Earth radii, many planets are no longer likely to be predominantly rocky; they tend to retain significant volatile envelopes (H/He or thick water layers). That transition is sometimes called the "radius valley" or "Fulton gap."

So in practice, people often distinguish:

Rocky super-Earths (≈1–1.6 R⊕, ≲5 M⊕)
Mini-Neptunes (≈1.6–3 R⊕, often with thick atmospheres)

The boundary is fuzzy and observationally driven rather than conceptually clean.


What a super-Earth is not

It does not mean "Earth-like."
It does not imply plate tectonics, oceans, or life.
It does not imply similar composition—some may be iron-rich, some water-rich, some gas-enveloped.

Why the term exists

We don't have any super-Earths in our Solar System. The terrestrial planets top out at 1 M⊕ (Earth), and then there's a large jump to Uranus and Neptune (~14–17 M⊕). Exoplanet surveys revealed that planets in the 1–5 M⊕ range are extremely common—probably the most common type of planet in the galaxy.

So the term "super-Earth" arose simply to describe this very common mass regime that our own Solar System happens not to contain.


Super-Earths may form differently from Earth (for example, via inward migration in dense inner disks), which means the moon-formation story could be quite different from the Earth–Moon giant-impact scenario. That's still an open theoretical question rather than a settled rule.


  


.....
"The answer" to life, the universe & everything... (No, it's not 42, but it is a dimensionless real number)α (alpha), equal to the strength of the electromagnetic interaction between elementary charged particles:
α = e24πε0ħc ⁠ 1/137

where 
e is the elementary charge (~1.602×10−19 C);
h is the Planck constant (~6.626×10−34 J⋅Hz−1);
 is the reduced Planck constant⁠(h/2π (~1.055×10−34 J⋅s);
c is the speed of light in a vacuum(~300Km⋅s−1);
ε0 is the electrical permittivity of space (~8.854×10−12 F⋅m−1);
μ0 is the magnetic permeability of space (~1.2567×10−6 N⋅A−2).
As far as anyone knows, having no reason to suspect otherwise, this is and always has been and always will be true everywhere in the universe, but no one really knows why, if there is a why, this number has the value it does.