Manton says he made changes to the RSS feeds of this site. I am curious to see how that looks.

I feel for Toronto Bluejay fans, upon return to Toronto needing to win one out of two games you had to feel good about your chances of winning the World Series. You came one out away, and cannot help but feel as though the team did not capitalize on the chances it had. It is the type of loss that causes you to think “what if” for the rest of your life.

Finished reading: The Quantum Sayings Of Jesus by Keith Giles 📚

Usually the team that has the best pitching wins the World Series, and it looks like that is holding true once again.

It feels like we are at the precipice of another change as impactful as the industrial revolution but the people behind the wheel are most likely to drive us over the cliff than to help us safely transition in to it.

Because money is the American Idol (despite our being a Christian Nation) that means it is totally ok for one person to make money off the suffering of another. We have been unwilling to face this reality ever since it was put right in the front of our face by the tobacco industry in the 80s.

Really Solving Problems Means Knowing Root Causes

I was born in 1966 and thus part of Generation X. The primary norm that I was taught to be in good standing within the U.S. social order can be summed up in the phrase, “get a job!” It is that phrase, and all of the expectations around it, that I think is at the root of our problems in the United States today.

The obvious reason why society wants one to “get a job” is so that others in society do not have to provide for me. We not only glorify the self made man, we demand it! Another, unspoken reason why society demands I “get a job” is that having a job provides me the money to buy things that make others in society wealthy. Nearly all of the wealth in the United States is because someone else has spent, and thus given them, money. (Think about the real reason why Trump gave us those stimulus checks at the beginning of the COVID Pandemic.)

And of course, this also means that those who have a job are superior over those who do not have a job.

Today the United States government is “shut down” because no Democrat Senators will vote yes on the Continuing Resolution law that approves the money needed to keep the government running. Democrats are voting no on the CR because they want the government subsidies that lower the cost of health care people buy via the Affordable Care Act extended. The subsidies are expiring at the end of the year and if not extended the resulting monthly health care premiums people will have to pay in 2026 can be double what they paid this year.

Republicans who oppose the ACA generally do so because they do not want to help pay for healthcare for those people who do not “get a job.” Of course, they assume that anyone who has a job can pay for their own healthcare, which itself is not necessarily true. Many people who get healthcare via the ACA do have jobs. (As do many people who get food stamps.)

So, “get a job” dogma is at the root of our current government shutdown. I would also say that dogma is also the kindle for the wildfire set by Trump and his supporters.

The thinking that those who do not have a job are just lazy, that anyone who has a job has enough to money to live on, and that healthcare (and thus the right to live) is only a privilege for those who have a job is the root cause of the problems of our times. How can this be for a so called Christian nation? We might say Christ is King in the United States, forgetting how Jesus answered Pilate when he asked whether Jesus was king of the Jews. And if Christ is King then shouldn’t we be following his commandments?

If you think the problems we have are bad now, consider what is going to happen when “get a job” clashes with the elimination of jobs by Artificial Intelligence. Further consider that many of the jobs AI is going to eliminate are the very white collar jobs that so many are told are needed for them to be wealthy.

Jesus does have the answer, but many in the United States do not like it.

Francois Prowse has developed and released a sync tool for the Viwoods tablet that copies the contents of the files on a tablet to a computer. The tool is written in Python and uses the WLAN Transfer tool that provides local network access to the tablet.

Translating Handwriting To Text

I learned this weekend that I can use a LLM running on my Macbook Pro to translate notes that I write by hand on a tablet to a markdown text file that I can import in to Obsidian. The benefit is that allows me to securely produce the translation that I can then later use to search for the notes.

Read More →

Oklahoma House passes resolution declaring Christ Is King. I wonder whether they understand what early Christians meant when they declared Jesus is Lord? They meant Ceasar is not. I guess is this why knowing by their fruits is more meaningful than their words.

Betting On Dependencies

Earlier this week a chunk of the Internet went offline, which should be a surprise for those who know the history of the Internet.

During the COVID pandemic just a few years ago prices of nearly everything in the United States increased because most products that we depend upon are manufactured in countries outside the U.S. and the shipping of those products was disrupted.

Both of these events exposed how fragile normal functions have become, and they should be lessons learned about the risks of depending upon an external entity. I think those who have long been warning us about these risks have been drowned out by the strong emphasis on open source and Internet application development that demands the use of external libraries. The culture says that one should not re-create the wheel and instead use the code already written by others as building blocks for your own application, thereby speeding up development in a race to toward making money.

The 21st Century is being built on blind faith of dependencies, with seemingly little thought on their risks, which is why all of the AI hype I see sets off nothing but alarm bells in my head. I see companies betting their future of the AI developed by a handful of other companies. I see the U.S. stock market driven up by the inflated value of those handful of companies even though most of those companies have not made any money.

What happens when capitalists stop throwing money at these companies when they realize there is no return? We saw this in the dot.com boom, as fast as those companies ran up they went out of business. So, if you are CEO of a company and you are “all in” on AI as the future for the products or services your company produces, realize you are “all in” on a handful of companies that might be gone tomorrow and ask yourself to which direction you are leading your company towards.

If a society is based on consumption, what happens when the people in that society all lose their jobs?

Headline of an article on The Free Press, “Trump’s Been Bombing Boats in the Caribbean. Is This Legal?” I think is irrelevant in the current U.S. illiberal democracy in which anything The Executive does is legal according to the Supreme Court. (BTW, having the word “Supreme” in the name of a branch of government seems to be an Achilles heel hidden in plain sight.) Nearly everyone has not yet come to terms with the fact that the idea of “rule of law” was overturned by SCOTUS when it said The Executive had immunity from the law.

Physical and Metaphorical Demolition of America

While I thought that civil war could happen again in the United States, I never thought I would live to experience democracy die. I find the pictures of portions of the White House being demolished on the whim of a single person to be breathtaking. Unimaginable only a few years ago, now seemingly barely a blip on the news.

For years it became generally accepted to bitch about the U.S. government’s failures and inefficiencies. Government is too slow, they say, not knowing that was the very point. Dictatorships are more efficient but at the price of being enslaved to the whims of the dictator. Dictators being human are as prone to horrific acts in response to greed and anger as the human who decides to burst in to an elementary school and kill everyone inside. Worse still is the fact that the U.S. dictator has access to weapons of mass destruction far worse than AR-15s.

I really like how Dave Winer’s Old School blog platform handles pictures, it’s one of the things I wish could be replicated here.

Obligatory selfie along Tunnel of Trees, M119, that runs along the Lake Michigan shore.

We think the fall colors were at or near peak in the parts of the southern Upper Peninsula and northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan were we traveled, though these pictures don’t do it all justice.

This first picture is from the top of Pine Mountain, Iron Mountain, Michigan Auto-generated description: A vast landscape features autumn foliage with vibrant hues of orange, yellow, and green, seen from an elevated viewpoint with a small building in the foreground.

We drove through the Tunnel of Trees on M119 in northern Lower Michigan. The trees in this picture haven’t really turned much yet. Auto-generated description: A scenic road curves through a lush forest with trees displaying early autumn foliage.

This next picture shows the colors better along M119 with Lake Michigan in the back ground. Auto-generated description: A scenic view captures vibrant autumn foliage in a forested area with a distant body of water and overcast sky.

Here are a couple of Great Lakes pictures from our fall trip. The first is of Lake Huron.

Auto-generated description: A serene beach scene features the sun setting over the ocean, casting reflections on the water, with empty lounge chairs arranged on the sandy shore.

And this is Lake Michigan. Auto-generated description: A rocky shoreline is captured at dusk, with a tranquil sea and a sky painted in hues of blue and orange.

Last week we went on our annual fall trip to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and I took this picture of the Mackinac Bridge.

A long bridge stretches across a body of water under a cloudy, evening sky.

Great win by the Chicago Cubs last night to force a division series deciding game on Saturday night. They finally score in more than one inning of a game in this series! Both teams could employ bullpen pitchers to start the game and that will make it interesting. I do have a bone to pick with MLB for making the Cubs/Brewers game the late starter last night rather than the Dodgers/Phillies in LA, that made no sense.