Events
My neighborhood, yesterday morning: Unfortunately, tomorrow's parade might get a bit damp.
Week-end round-up
AstronomyBeerCorruptionEntertainmentGeneralGeographyJournalismMoviesPoliticsRepublican PartyRestaurantsScienceSCOTUSTravelUS PoliticsWork
I think I finally cracked the nut on a work problem that has consumed our team for almost three years. Unfortunately I can't write about it yet. I can say, though, that the solution became a lot clearer just a couple of weeks after our team got slightly smaller. I will say nothing more. Just remember, there are two types of people: those who can infer things from partial evidence. Just a few articles left to read before I take Cassie on her pre-dinner ambulation: Titanic director James Cameron, who has...
A wish list
ChicagoDemocratic PartyEconomicsGeneralGeographyHealthHistoryIllinoisLawPersonalPolicePoliticsRepublican PartySCOTUSTransport policyTravelUS PoliticsWorld Politics
I'll elaborate on this later, but I just want to list a couple of things I desperately want for my country and city during my lifetime. For comparison, I'm also listing when other places in the world got them first. For context, I expect (hope?) to live another 50 years or so. Universal health care, whether through extending Medicare to all residents or through some other mechanism. The UK got it in 1948, Canada in 1984, and Germany in 1883. We're the only holdout in the OECD, and it benefits no one...
The frustration of US infrastructure spending
ChicagoEconomicsEuropeGeneralGeographyPoliticsRailroadsTransport policyTravelUrban planningUS Politics
Every time I travel to a country that competes seriously with the US, I come back feeling frustrated and angry that we consistently lose. In every measure except our military, on a per-capita basis we keep sliding down the league tables. We have more people in prison, more people in poverty, worse health-care outcomes, more health-care spending, more regressive taxation, worse environmental regulation, and more crime (and more gun crime) than most our peers. We also have horrible infrastructure. For a...
Alito challenges Thomas for "Most Corrupt Justice" award
CorruptionPoliticsRepublican PartySCOTUSUS Politics
Pro Publica reported this morning that Justice Sam Alito (R-$), who authored the Court's decision in Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization that essentially (and I hope temporarily) undid Roe v Wade, spent some QT in Alaska with a billionaire and did not report this junket to the Court's ethics watchdog: In early July 2008, Samuel Alito stood on a riverbank in a remote corner of Alaska. The Supreme Court justice was on vacation at a luxury fishing lodge that charged more than $1,000 a day, and...
The suits are ruining your favorite shows
EconomicsEntertainmentGeneralMoviesTelevisionUS PoliticsWriting
The Writers Guild strike seems remote from people watching streaming shows right now because the big streamers still have a lot of film ready to go. That, and most viewers don't even understand many of the things the writers have demanded. Hollywood Reporter recently got 14 writers from the ABC show Happy Endings to talk about how having all that experience in one room made it a better show—and how the "mini-rooms" and siphoning creative control to line producers who have never written so much as a...
A tale of two health systems
ConservativesEconomicsGeneralHealthPoliticsRepublican PartyUK PoliticsUS Politics
The US and the UK share a common language, a common legal tradition, and a common scourge of right-leaning political parties trying to destroy anything that the government does better than private industry. Despite over a century of evidence that many public services are natural monopolies, and therefore will provide poor quality at inflated prices whenever personal profits get involved, the electorates of both countries keep believing the lie that "industry does it better." That's why 13 years of...
More photos from three weeks ago. Linzer Gasse, Salzburg: Along the train line from Freilassing to Berchtesgaden, approximately here: Berchtesgaden, near the border of Schönau am Königsee: And just a little ways farther up the Köningsseer Ache:
More photos. The Czech countryside, approximately here: Hafnersteig, in Vienna's Innere Stadt: The Schloss Belvedere, with (I am told) an Apollo capsule:
The overdue defenestration of Boris Johnson
ConservativesPoliticsRepublican PartyTrumpUK PoliticsUS Politics
Former UK Prime Minister and professional circus clown Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson (Cons.—Uxbridge and South Ruislip) resigned his seat in Parliament this week ahead of a damning all-parties report recommending he be suspended for 90 days: The death certificate for Boris Johnson’s career in politics read June 12th. A government statement appeared that evening appointing Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson as “Steward and Bailiff of the Three Hundreds of Chiltern”, the title MPs accept, according...
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