Thursday, March 20, 2025

Smashing


Thumbs up for smashed windows in Tesla stores! Yay, smashing!

The psychology is not complicated. 1. Adopt a two-dimensional cartoon view of the world, removing humanity, consistency, and morality from consideration. Then... 2. Smash, with relish.

I don't like Elon Musk. I pray for his stock price to keep crashing so his loans get called in so he no longer has infinite money to perpetrate evil. I'll do anything legal and principled to try to stop him.

But Tesla dealerships are not run by Luftwaffe colonels. They're run by actual people, inconvenient as that might be to the two-dimensional cartoon view. I can't believe this needs stating, but a vandalized Tesla or Tesla dealership might be (and probably is!) run by a progressive who was trying to reduce carbon emissions. They're likely trying to get out from under their investment (tricky given the market). They might even be LGBTQ or trans or some other victim group you deem worth loads of extra consideration.

This is just one reason smashing is a bad tactic. The problem with summary judgement is that we're incredibly shitty/sloppy judges.

Smashing stuff smashes the vaunted "rule of law" you're suddenly super in love with this year. If you celebrate illegal smashing, you deserve a Daily Show-style clip contrasting that with your weighty pronouncements about Institutions and The Rule of Law, because—surprise!—now you're the flag-waving fake patriot hypocrite goon.

If you don't want to live in a cartoon world where the rule of law means nothing whenever anyone decides that Baddies need smashing, consider adding the magical third dimension of thoughtfulness and morality. At least don't *egg on* the smashers. Could you manage the milquetoast credo of "No 'Thumbs Up' for Smashing!"? That's not a heavy lift, is it? You don't necessarily need to scold them amid their smashy good fun. Just maybe don't offer your full-throated support.

Because the face-eating hyenas always eat your face in the end. Guaranteed. Not just the MAGAs. All extremists. All smashers. And your admiration fuels them.

Fuck.

Friday, March 14, 2025

Lobster Boil Update

Three years ago, I wrote about the sticky wicket of knowing when to jump out of the pot when you sense an impending lobster boil. I proposed a way to prepare for such eventuality without obligating yourself or going to undue expense or trouble (How to Plan an Alternative Timeline While Remaining Momentarily Complacent (Part 1) and How to Plan an Alternative Timeline While Remaining Momentarily Complacent (Part 2)).

The boil is now explicitly revealing its heat. You're not in immediate personal danger, but it's getting too late for a dilative, comfortably thoughtful appraoch. What is happening is not cyclical. Things are broken that will stay broken, and we are only getting started breaking things. And it's difficult but essential to register that the burn-it-down thirst is broad, and not confined to the Right. That, to me, is the tectonic problem, not Elon Musk's scampering atrocities (I may be wrong, but I imagine he'll be gone sooner or later).

I've repeated this thought twice in the last month not because I'm getting old and forgetful, but because it's super important: Bernie Sanders in 2015 was giving speeches proposing, with populist fire, sweeping, tectonic changes to institutions, while crowds roared appreciatively. There was serious MAGA energy (same vibe, different credo) at the time among the progressive Left, and it hasn't dissipated any.

A fundamental credo of this Slog is that "Recognizing stupidity doesn't mean you're smart, it just means you're observant". Same for spotting delusion, or bad behavior of most sorts. Simply noticing how deranged the Right is does not make you sane.

I'm not taking shots at the Left because I have a political credo to push. My point is that we don't just have a problem on the Right, we have a national problem transcending partisanship. As we learned from the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, it's possible to have extremely legitimate beefs with an opposing group without earning moral high ground for yours. Both of you might be awful. You must add that possibility to your calculus...or else consider moving to the lonely Center.

The Right seems a trillion times worse right now, but that's only because they actually got their shot at it. So I don't see a cyclical problem (which might get better) but a systemic one (which will get worse).

I'm looking ahead here, which is an unusual move amid tumult. But it's not my thing to stand frozen in a stupor repeating "This can't be happening!" I perpetually scan for the next shoe-drop. My life has been more difficult than most, so protracted struggles to accept the here-and-now are indulgences I could never have afforded. I've taught myself to reframe on a dime—to immediately accept the immediate and pay all attention forward.

To conclude: a piece of good news, and a piece of bad (or, ok, "even worse") news:

GOOD NEWS (doesn't start off sounding good, though): America is fast losing its position in the world (destruction is much swifter than construction). How much does this matter to an individual life? By chance, I asked the same question before moving to Portugal: "What do I give up going from the strongest country to a smaller, weaker one?" The full answer would require a separate posting, but the upshot is "not much".

Pundits and columnists are ruing the potential end of the American Century, but that big picture view is what they're paid to consider. For you and me, unless we have a severe case of scorekeeping and a rabid desire to be "NUMBER ONE!!!", it doesn't matter much. Individual lives are small, and living deeper down in the pack offers a helpful reminder of this. I don't need Portugal to be an awesome force in the world, I am completely ok with it merely feeling like home.

It might even make living in America more pleasant in the long run. The vibe is considerably kinder and chiller when you're not living amongst world-ruling titans, who can get a little tramply. So don't get too caught up in the pundit/columnist big picture framing. Tectonic changes are interesting for historians, but none of us are historic figures. So shave that lofty part off of your personal stress load and motivation.

BAD NEWS: Five Eyes, an Anglosphere intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States, has either stopped, slowed, or plans to stop (depending on news reports) sharing some or all intelligence with the United States. Frankly, I wouldn't pass the crown jewels of my country's safe-keeping past Tulsi Gabbard, either, even if the ultimate destination weren't Donald Trump.

Five Eyes is the most important thing you never heard of. Five Eyes is what keeps us safe, particularly when it comes to terrorism (I read up on intelligence stuff as a hobby). So if you live in a major city center, you might want to move somewhere less targetty. The insecurity urbanites felt in Fall 2001—which thankfully didn't amount to anything but spurred many of your neighbors to leave town, along with the second migration post-COVID—may have quietly passed a tipping point, creating a reasonable imperative, if not immediate panic. Sorry.

Thursday, March 13, 2025

A Rarely-Considered Angle on Food-Borne Illness

As a food critic who's eaten in tens of thousands of eateries in dozens of countries, I've felt pretty expert about foodborne illness, both experientially and scientifically. But four months with a seemingly unpurgeable Campylobacter infection—so severe that I lost 35 pounds and filled my kidneys with tiny stones from dehydration—proved educational.

Scientists know a lot, and eaters know a lot, but it takes an ordeal like that to bridge the two. I've pieced it all together, and it's useful knowledge for all chowhounds.

There's a widespread notion that greasy little ethnic joints can make you sick because they're careless and sloppy. And while you can get sick anywhere, odds do seem empirically worse in certain venues. It feels xenophobic to ascribe sloppy carelessness to certain groups. Also, it's wrong. Any human grouping cooking dangerously wouldn't last long. Humans are super good at reproducing, defecating, eating, and cooking. Those things are bedrock for us. Every group cooks healthy for their group (or at least did until modernity shifted diet).

So are the perceived perils entirely xenophobic? No. There's a reasonable explanation: the third world doesn't sweat cross contamination. Not because its standards are lower, but because it's usually unecessary...for two reasons. We'll get to those reasons in a moment.

This is a terrible time to be writing this, with a big chunk of America increasingly vocal about third world immigrants as filthy spreaders of pestilence. I'm doing the opposite. I'm explaining what's actually happening, which is perfectly innocent.

Cross contamination, for the few who don't know, is when hands, implements, or surfaces touch raw meat and then come into contact with cooked meat, contaminating the cooked meat. Absurdly extreme diligence is required to prevent this. I'm hyper-aware of the issue, and even I find it difficult to be 100% conscientious in my food handling.

Cross contamination is a fairly recent peril in the First World which, in the 20th century, industrialized its meat handling (densely packed farms and slaughterhouses, multiple processings, etc.). At some point, it became so laborious—i.e. expensive—to keep meat safe through that production line that we gave up trying. As a result, our meat must be handed like medical waste.

Yes. We are the sloppy, careless, dirty ones. And the Third World is unprepared for our slovenliness. In less developed parts of the world, much of the meat is butchered from known animals within a few miles of home, and reasonable butchering/cooking/storing practices keep things safe for people with healthy digestive systems. And people do have healthy digestive systems. Kids play in streets with dodgy sanitation, stoking the super fortified guts and immune systems we all enjoyed before First Worlders began raising kids in sterile bubbles, leaving them asthmatic, colicky, and eternally sensitive.

The Third World has no concept of meat as medical waste, so immigrants may not treat meat like medical waste. They cope in their home cooking because their guts and immune systems are hardy. And when they take jobs as cooks, they learn the strange practices of avoiding cross contamination. We enjoy their food without problems, as their cohorts, licensers, and inspectors ensure they're up to speed (though restaurants in more insular Indian communities may be more prone to old-fashioned cooking methods for the old-fashioned Indian guts of their clientele).

In Portugal, off-the-boat Indians cook largely Indian-style with no sub-community of native-friendly Indian restaurateurs to spread word about the colicky, sensitive stomachs of locals, or about the medical waste nature of industrialized meat. And their largely Indian clientele experience no problems, so they work with no sense of peril.

The good news is that even in worst case scenarios, most of us can endure food-borne illness without medical treatment. 24 hour turnaround is normal. But not me. For various reasons, I'm unusually susceptible, which has forced me to puzzle this all out.

Even for me, there's a solution. A brief (seconds, not minutes) reheating to a modest 165F/74C (internal) kills relevant cooties.
Disclaimer: This reheating advice covers typical cross-contamination scenarios from conscientious kitchens. Truly hazardous pathogens arising from severe neglect require prolonged boiling or sustained high heat, but such outbreaks would make news and you're generally no more vulnerable than anyone else.

A risk scenario between the two extremes occurs when cross-contaminated food sits at room temperature long enough for bacteria to multiply significantly. While brief reheating will still kill the organisms, their abundant microscopic remnants may still pose risks. Such cases, fortunately, are less common. Reasonably diligent chefs from everywhere know to take pains to refrigerate.
Two notes:

1. Use a thermometer to ensure that interiors hit that temperature (position meats at the bottom of the rewarming pan, close to heat source).

2. Be careful of your own cross contamination. Until heated, handle everything like raw meat.

Since I can't possibly train every immigrant in the knotty practice of avoiding cross-contamination (to them it seems like hysterical paranoia—which, in a way, it is), when I want Indian food, I take it home and briefly reheat. No problem. And any thriving business with non-Indian customers is safe, too. Again, kitchens that sicken customers don't last.

I eat tons of Indian food (my Bengali food is cooked by an Ayurvedic practitioner who is extra-healthy in ways even I can't fathom), and I haven't had a recurrence in quite some time. That said, I haven't figured out how I can safely travel to the Third World. My wanderings may be done.


More general advice on gastric issues

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Maslow's Sledgehammer

Once the radicals have thoroughly demolished the economy and the federal government's ability to function, and their supporters are forced to acknowledge how bad it is, most won’t cop to their part in it. They’ll say it’s just more proof that all politicians are liars who let you down, so we need even more deranged outsiders to come in and do things hyperbolically differently.

For most of history, crowds reverted to the mean. Fervor eventually drained, and they moved toward the center. That, I think is gone. Our nation of aristocrats will just keep huffily demanding relief from their imagined oppressors (and from the real ills created by previous relief efforts).

Monday, March 10, 2025

Contemplation in 2025

I sometimes hear from readers who figure that there's something wrong, either with me or them, because they can't easily pick up my gist, and must reread posts.

Either the problem's on my side—because I'm convoluting otherwise simple ideas (I'm not), or I'm just too "brainy" (that might be true if these ideas came easily to me, but I'm a normal guy who thinks long and hard)—or the problem's their's, for being foggily unable to connect as easily as they do with magazine articles and typical blog posts.

Neither is true.

Writers these days aim for easy digestibility above all. Like mama birds, they pre-chew everything to vomit down readers' gullets, terrified by their knowledge of how finicky folks are about unprocessed chunks. For years, I was one of the most easily digestible of writers. I don't regret it, it was fun, and I'm proud of my output (read some here).

But notions and insights percolate that do not lend themselves to glib premastication. Readers must chew a bit on writing which requires—and hopefully rewards—multiple re-readings. In 2025, that's a shocking ask. But while mental exercise isn't for everyone/anyone (super smart people get particularly frustrated when their powerful minds can't effortlessly Hoover everything up on the first pass), a few holdouts like me still demand it. Substance has no economic or aesthetic value in 2025, but it pings my Golden Rule. As a reader, I'd love this stuff.

I'm constantly bombarded by gooey glibness—the same ideas, the same buzzwords, the same framings with just a slight tilt to make it the writer's own. I can go weeks or months without seeing a single fresh idea. The Slog is mostly fresh ideas, and fresh ideas don't swallow easily. Re-reading is necessary.

I've re-read all the postings in the left sidebar multiple times, because I write to firm up nebulous intuition into more solid ideas and to try to connect them. Each time I reread, it firms up and connects better, propelling me toward new epiphanies and connections. I've been doing exactly what you've hopefully been doing - chewing on these ideas. The necessity of doing so is not a bug, it's a feature. It's not that I'm smart, or that you're dumb. It's that contemplation, while a sorely underused faculty, remains an option (for both of us!).

I addressed this seven years ago in a posting called "Cognitive Lozenges", noting that "these postings are cognitive lozenges which, by design, impede speedy absorption (by, for example, forcing you to unpack phrases like "cognitive lozenges"). The ideas that absorb me are counterintuitive and nuanced, and while I always leave a breadcrumb trail, I choose not to spoon-feed (having worked as a professional spoon-feeder for years). I want you to work it all through, as I have, and maybe go further than I could."

Friday, March 7, 2025

Jim's Rubric

Aiming deep leaves you shallow.

Depth sneaks up while you flail.

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Substantiality Inoculates Against Scammability

I recently wrote about the scam operations sweeping the globe using the business methods of international mega-corporations. Now with this, too:

....I've been thinking a lot about cons.

The perennial truth about cons is that only the greedy can be conned. Rubio isn't innocent. He put ambition above principle and above even the country he thirsts to lead. Trump merely exploited his original sin. Really, they deserve each other.

There's an alternative, which makes you immune to scams and cons:

Don't do any of that.

Principles first!


Here's why that's hard for people: Most don't have principles; they have placeholders, unthinkingly adopting the slogans and inclinations of their tribe, their class, their family, their workplace, their friends, their role models, some TV show or film. It's extraordinarily thin and propositional, and thus can be replaced by other principles with frightful ease whenever some actually deep drive (ego thirst, greed, fear, etc) supersedes, or merely when tides shift.

This explains, for instance, why conservatism meant one thing in 2015 and a nearly opposite thing in 2016 to tens of millions of people who felt solidly conservative through it all. Hypocrisy? Not really. Just empty tribalism. When a flock turns, the flock turns. They hardly notice.

Building principles deeply and carefully is like cooking deeply and carefully. Results will be meaningful, and that feedback loop solidifies the process. Haphazard cooking and thoughtful cooking are utterly different, and the cooks even more so. The latter stand for something. I haven't heard the word "substantial" used lately, and when I do, it usually refers someone with a great big house. We've lost the very concept! And insubstantial people are easily conned.

A big factor in my scam immunity is that I don't crave cheap shortcuts. Some people get emails from Nigerian princes and at least momentarily dream of $100 million windfalls. That wouldn't fulfill life fantasies for me. A bizarre fluke, nothing more. My satisfaction stems from writing something fresh and compelling, or playing or cooking something beautiful, or helping a stranger (and scramming before it turns kooky). Processing my confusion into insight. Finding a great hidden restaurant. Treasure hunting and treasure creation let me cling closely to treasure! Perhaps I'm the most deeply greedy of all, but I channel my greed differently.

And I don't stoically endure my process of seeking satisfaction—my work. As a karma yogi, I've found that the work itself is the juicy sweet spot. The crafting is infinitely more rewarding than the result. If you scheme to jump to the result—to haphazardly cook one up, or take a cheap shortcut—you're a nowhere man. Just more insubstantiality, our national curse.

"Fame is a by-product of doing something else. You don't go to a restaurant and order a meal just because you want to take a shit!" -- Banksy

If Kim Kardashian locked eyes with me in a bar and told me I seem fascinating, I'd tell her "No, I don't. I actually might be, but you have no way of knowing that. G'bye." Not just to avoid the inevitable con, but because I get no kicks from cheap shortcuts. The shortcut itself is like a scam, and I'm reality-based.

These disinclinations of mine - I don't want a hundred million dollars wired from Nigeria, and I don't want "a shot at" Kim Kardashian, and I don't want to be president, etc ad infinitum - have always made me seem like a loser. A grubby rat scurrying about, fretting over iPad charging cords, painstakingly editing each word like polishing rocks, fraughtly choosing between non-aspirational lunch places, and staying up till 4am to de-commercialize online food discussion. These are not the activities of studly, successful, admirable people. Such people make A HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS. They SCREW KIM KARDASHIAN. They become PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. And so they can be led around like slaves while seemingly ambition-less rats like me are free and impervious.

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Consorting With the Enemy

A right-wing friend-of-a-friend excoriated my assertion that scorning Ukraine and fellating Putin might have been, ahem, unwise. After spraying a farago of bizarre falsehoods, mostly involving that evil sith lord Biden, she concluded with this: "it really angers me when people refuse to learn the truth"

Nothing in this binary national stalemate of ours can possibly benefit from blunt oppositional shoves. A firehose of antithetical talking points is no antidote. The way out of this is human connection and re-framing.

My impulse is to lead with humility. The person I'm talking to is not a muddied waif requiring a cleansing spray from me as the high minister of idealogical cleanliness. If I ever feel myself positioned to scrub others into idealogical cleanliness, that sentiment is the red flag of all red flags that I need to reconsider and reframe, myself.

We are a nation of deluded neurotic maniacs, but everyone sincerely wants to get things right. I think the best way is to acknowledge that desire - in your interlocutor but first in yourself (everything I learn or figure out takes me another notch out of the mud pit of ignorance, but I'm still thoroughly muddy!)

Anyhoo, let's see if my reply helps. If she just scorns and screams at me less stridently, I'll consider that deceleration a happy result.

Re-reading, this is a bit too long and wordy. I should have gone right to the I-hate-to-be-spun part and the stimulating-my-brain-stem part. But, hey, I'm trying....


"it really angers me when people refuse to learn the truth"
I understand that you sincerely feel that you have it right and I have it wrong and I've been indoctrinated while you see clearly. I get that this is good faith.

But if I can ask you a question aside from world events and social media dialog, just a higher level check-in: Do you ever question whether maybe you're wrong, and your'e indoctrinated? Because I actually question myself constantly.

Do you have moments of doubt? Because if you don't, I'd suggest (and, again, this is just human to human, no politics, no Ukraine, no Biden) that this might be a condition worth questioning. Question the unquestioning confidence.

Again, I'm not insulting you with this because it's something I do constantly myself! I do it because I'd be horrified if I wound up hyper-confidently spouting sprays of falsehoods. I did this a few times when I was younger, and the memory makes me squirm with embarrassment.

In order to keep questioning myself, I seek out a diversity of news sources, avoiding any with an overriding point of view to sell, or tons of emotion, and anyone who tries to make me angry or fearful to addict me to their stimulation of my brain stem's fear/loathing centers just so they can make a buck. I ignore anyone super left or right. And, having, stripped those layers away, I try to hear from moderates on both sides, preferably non-partisan experts who don't have a idealogy to sell, and, most especially, from non-partisan or moderate experts who *disagree* with each other, so I can hear alternative viewpoints and weigh them.

I do this because I hate to be spun. Seriously hate it, especially because, as a centrist, to me everyone in America looks severely spun one way or the other. Ugh!



FWIW, I posed this whole thing to Facebook, where (non-MAGA) people responded in a way I found maddening, finally making me sputter forth my exasperation—something I've been trying to constrain since childhood.

If you'd like to see me discombobulate—to balance the unnaturally composed version of myself you read here—have a look here (it's my posting starting "I've called for an escape from binary thinking") once you've read some of the replies).

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

You Getting Poor Doesn't Mean They're Getting Rich

Here's a little flip of perspective I devised back in New York but have perfected here in Portugal. If someone is charging you for a good or service and you suspect they're being greedy on their end, stop and take stock. How's this person doing? Do they drive a shiny new Tesla? Big house? $200 shoes? If not—if they're poor, or just barely getting along, or even if they live a decent middle class life without 112" plasma televisions or FEDEX shipments of fresh-caught Alaskan Sockeye salmon and don't have a coke habit—pay the damned money and shut the hell up. You might be getting poor, but they're not getting rich.

This message has been brought to you by my ongoing project of trying to be less of an asshole.


(A local friend is removing the hideous cheap water jet tub installed under the shower by my apartment's previous owners. He quoted what seemed like a healthy sum by Portuguese standards. Eyebrow raised. Then found he needs do additional tile work, so he says it will cost more. Understandable, but my second eyebrow raised. He knows I have cleaning ladies coming after he leaves, but told me his wife, who's also my friend, will come and do cleanup when he's done. I was about to say no thanks I'm already paying cleaning ladies AS YOU KNOW, when I remembered that he and his wife and son (decent, kind, hard-working people) live basically in a chicken coop and his car is missing a door and she is surely looking forward to pitching in to what she sees as a family project. So, "Ok, great. Please have your wife clean and send me a bill." It's not charity. That's the wrong framing. It's just the correct form of transaction.)

Saturday, March 1, 2025

News Source: Times Radio

In case you missed it, we are in a different era now. We're past seething over the latest outrageous sound bite from Cheeto Jesus, and solidly in World War III, only the players this time are tiny children, like Lil' Archie comics.

There's a venal toddler in the White House who's cowed Congressional playground kids with his feckless tantrums and the drug-addled manic weird kid enforcer he's unleashed. Russia's destroyed its fifth-rate economy under a delusional hoodlum who styles himself a brilliant strategist even after largely wrecking his army—grinding to dust nearly 100 times more Russian soldiers than were lost in Afghanistan, plus virtually all of his twelve jillion scary Russian tanks. Baby Xi whines and whines about the big island he wants to add to his collection, and North Korea's xerox-of-a-xerox-of-a-xerox Kim sends his peeps to Ukraine to be run through the meat grinder for LOLs.

It's more Keystone Kops than Axis of Evil. But, that said, Hitler, Franco, and Mussolini seemed like hilarious, pathetic deviants before they got their grasping hands around everyone's spleen (never forget The Strong Drunk). So it could go either way.

At this point, media-wise, I'm long done with the centrist pockets of MSNBC (which served it's purpose of confirming that I was really seeing what I was seeing circa 2017) and, mostly, with Lincoln Project (taunting and ruing feel so 2022). My frame has widened, and I need a global perspective, ideally shorn of extreme liberal or conservative ideology or any other flamboyant doctrinal bullshit or entrenched point of view besides exasperated sanity.

I've found it. Check out the Times Radio channel on YouTube.

Super famous in UK, less so elsewhere, they fling out a hailstorm of 5-20 minute one-on-one interviews with knowledgable types nothing like the pundits on American cable news. There's lots of Bill Browder (I love me some Bill Browder) plus a bunch of veteran UK, Canadian, and European journalists, generals, and diplomats. Their American guests are a bit random (Richard Grenell mined for insights as if he were some real person), but you'll get more straight talk from a few minutes here than from hours of CNN.

Problems:

1. The headlines are clickbait.
Don't blame the channel or the hosts. There's one beleaguered dude coming up with this crap, he apparently doesn't have time to even watch the videos (they are churned out prodigiously), and it's all about feeding the algorithm. So ignore the headline and just play the clip. The first 30 secs or so is always the key point from the subsequent interview, so just scan those to decide whether to dig deeper

2. A Few Twit-ish Hosts
The.....deeper truth is...that....a...a…a...tortured means of, uh, elocution does not signify an, uh, uh, weighty uh, or, uh, august mind at work, necessarily.

A few hosts are, per long British tradition, inarticulate tools feigning weightiness as they struggle to compose minimally coherent sentences. You'll learn to avoid these.

3. Shit Production Values
A sea otter apparently makes the directoral choices of which camera to choose in a given moment. Lots of shots of sidekicks checking their phones, hosts gesturing at engineers while guests reply, etc. They make C-Span look like HBO.


By the way, YouTube Prime (ad-less) is well worth paying up for. Try it and you won't go back.

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