Tag Archives: Florida

Money and sex can both corrupt

In rereading The Essential Jekyll and Hyde, I came across a great quote by Robert Louis Stevenson in the footnotes. He’s explaining that no, Jekyll’s problem is hypocrisy, not sex and that being “a voluptuary” is not inherently bad. However, “the sexual field and the business field are perhaps the two best fitted for the display of cruelty and cowardice and selfishness.”

One of the standard rationales given by Puritans and religious conservatives (not all puritans are religious) for being so restrictive about sex is that it’s a powerful, destabilizing force that has to be controlled. As Christian feminist Samantha Field points out, this is one of those “every accusation is a confession” things — they believe humans have no natural restraints so society has to restrain them (which leads to conservatives declaring sexual consent is unimportant). Though in practice, of course, that usually means restraining women, not men.

It’s certainly true that sex is a powerful force that leads to us making bad decisions — especially when it’s mixed with ideas like “the woman’s consent doesn’t matter.” But the same is true of business, as Stevenson says. Believing slavery was Christian was an immoral decision but it makes great sense as a business position. Slaves were good business. Slave labor was good for business.

Yet a lot of the same conservatives who want to bottle up and control sex are dedicated to shielding and deregulating business as much as possible. And pretending this could not possibly have any bad side effects.

Free-market crusader Alan Greenspan, for instance, pushed for liberalizing regulations on banks and on companies giving investment advice from which they stood to profit. That was a major factor in the 2008 financial crisis. In hindsight, Greenspan said later, he “made a mistake in presuming that the self-interests of organizations, specifically banks and others, were such that they were best capable of protecting their own shareholders and their equity in the firms.”

See also Purdue Pharma and Elizabeth Holmes.

Unfortunately we’re only worse off than in 2008. Conservatives are still committed to bringing back the laissez-faire no-regulation economy of the 19th century. Many liberals want to go soft on prosecuting business criminals. The Supreme Court is doing its best to gut the government’s regulatory power completely.

Want some examples? Amazon’s One Medical switched its helpline to a call center that often gives bad advice.

In the same vein a former Cigna Medical Director says the company pressured her to review cases too fast.

“We’ve generally come to accept that when a product is free to use, we are not simply the users: We become the product, monetized over and over.”

Venture capitalist Marc Andressen says he’s grateful the opioid epidemic keeps white trash complacent.

In the unregulated world of home health tests, “incremental scientific innovations can be quickly funded, brought to market and peddled to consumers online before their health benefit has been proved.”

Sometimes bad business and bad sex go hand in hand.

Florida’s meat industry doesn’t fancy competition from lab-grown meat. So they’ve gotten DeSantis to ban it.

A man worth $16 billion is still allegedly willing to break the law to make an extra $400,000.

Then there’s Boeing and its defective airplanes.

As John Keynes once said, looking to a better future “The love of money as a possession – as distinguished from the love of money as a means to the enjoyments and realities of life – will be recognised for what it is, a somewhat disgusting morbidity, one of those semicriminal, semi-pathological propensities which one hands over with a shudder to the specialists in mental disease.” We are, alas, a long way from that future.

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A government of pure spite

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis just axed all state funding for the arts.

It’s not simply a cost-saving measure: “The slash in state funding comes abruptly, and two weeks before the new fiscal year begins for many of those groups, leaving them little time to prepare for the impact. The loss of state money is a double whammy because many organizations use the state funding for matching grants elsewhere.”

He could have announced this at any time during the budget process. Whether it’s because the arts are too liberal or too intellectual or there are too many gays in art or he worries artists won’t line up and parrot Party doctrine, waiting to the last minute is an act of pure malice.

And then there’s his bizarre support for a bill allowing Floridians to shoot cocaine bears.

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Republicans and the free market (and bad, bad business)

Republicans have a long history of gutting regulation on business. Not that Democrats are anti-business, despite the endless Republican screams of “socialism” — which typically have nothing to do with socialism, it’s just a scare word they throw around like “woke” and “DEI.” For example some cities in Florida want to require businesses provide water breaks for workers outside. Business doesn’t want to do that so Ron DeSantis and Florida Republicans say no mandating water breaks. Likewise, Southern business is anti-union and so are Southern Republican governors.

In practice, they care about the free market only when it’s in their interest. The Florida farm industry hates the idea of lab-grown meat; Florida therefore bans lab-grown meat. The oil industry doesn’t like renewable energy so Trump’s talking about stopping wind farms (he’s always had an odd obsession with wind power).

The tech industry cozied up to Trump in 2016 because they wanted to avoid regulation. Now we’re seeing Republicans talk all kinds of regulation and increased liability to break Big Tech and make it docile. Despite Trump’s team touting ideas that will trash the economy, a lot of tech entrepreneurs and CEOs can’t seem to imagine the Face Eating Leopard Party, under the control of an incompetent egomaniac, might eat their faces.

I suspect some Republican support by business leaders is driven by the same things that fuel ordinary Republican voters: they hate diversity and equality. They’re anti-anti racist (see here).Or they have a distorted idea of the causes of crime.

Now, some bad, bad business links:

Midwives are a valuable resource for expectant mothers. One of the nation’s largest hospital chains is gutting their midwife services. Another hospital hounds patients even when they’re broke and entitled to free care. When private equity buys up hospitals the results are unsurprisingly bad.

The pharmaceutical industry hates the idea of Medicare negotiating drug costs down.

Louisiana State Rep. Roger Wilder hates that state law gives kids working at his Smoothie King franchises mandatory lunch breaks. So he repealed them.

There are plenty of questions to raise about dieting and the diet industry. Now the food industry is pretending that identifying unhealthy food or suggesting how to eat healthier is food shaming. See also the book Unsavory Truth.

A major assisted living chain sets its staffing levels by algorithms. It goes as well as you’d expect.

The price-gouging private-equity companies extract from prisoners — the perfect captive customer base — shows how they’d treat the rest of us if they could.

Is paying college athletes for a cut of their future income bad business or smart business?

Definitely bad business: taking big bets on sports then using technicalities to stiff the winners. And will legalized gambling in North Carolina lead to bullying athletes on social media?

MLM marketing and loaded tea.

Boeing’s door-plug problem is a very bad sign for aviation’s future. It’s also a reminder that prioritizing profits over all works out badly.

Flexible scheduling is great for businesses, lousy for employees.

Veggie burgers and other plant-based meats may soon come with animal fat. I’ll be disappointed if that kills off genuinely veggie meats but as long as it’s clearly labeled it’s not bad business.

Trump Media’s stock tanked after it went public. Issuing more shares won’t improve it though I’m sure TFG will come out ahead.

To end on various bright notes:

Adam Neumann’s management of WeWork was a mess. The current board has no interest in him repurchasing the company.

Elon Musk’s compensation package at Tesla was so extreme and outrageous a judge struck it down.

The Biden Administration is capping credit-card late fees at $8.

The Supreme Court made it easier to sue for workplace discrimination.

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Republicans do not want freedom on the march. Well, for anyone but themselves.

If lab-grown meat ever goes on the market, you might think it’s your call whether to eat it. Not in Ron DeSantis’ Florida. But DeStalinist keeps insisting his state does not ban books. Though he’s happy to ban diversity programs. One Florida district has banned dictionaries because they include definitions of sex.

How about other schools? Texas has a law that protects the freedom of black students to wear black hairstyles but the state is now working to gut that. Fox News’ Greg Gutfeld pretends teaching about racism is teaching children of color to kill whites so best get rid of that too.

At least DeSantis and his anti-vax surgeon general are happy to give kids the freedom to get measles. They are, of course, whining that their critics are politicizing measles. In South Carolina, a bill in the Senate would ban employer vaccine mandates, and ban health departments from distributing vaccines if they were emergency-approved instead of the regular, years-long FDA process.

Fox News’ Jesse Watters doesn’t think men should eat ice cream without being mocked. Okay, I’m sure he doesn’t think that but since Biden eats ice cream in public, Watters has suddenly discovered his opposition.

Trump, however, has assured us he’ll give the police freedom to declare open season on immigrants. Just as Republicans’ support for religious people’s right to discriminate doesn’t extend to a First Amendment right to help illegal immigrants.

Republicans are fine with Putin taking over the Ukraine. I’m sure they’ll be fine if he takes more of Europe too — and then they’ll turn around and whine if Europe doesn’t support us when we need it. Wilhoit’s Law goes international.

They’re also fine with the idea someone vandalizing an LGBTQ-themed crosswalk constitutes free speech. I suspect given the opportunity they’ll justify worse offenses. Much the same way right-wing bullshit artist Jack Posobiec thinks destroying democracy is part of freedom. After all, if they can’t win the vote democracy’s in the way of their freedom to control us, right?

They’re also fine with spreading anti-vax lies as a constitutional right.

Christian nationalists are firm believers that the rest of us do not deserve the freedom to participate in running the country. No matter how much sexual harassment goes on in their churches, they’ll keep insisting secular people are the evil ones and a social liability.

On the plus side it turns out Kentucky clerk of court Kim Davis does not have the freedom to decide whose marriage licenses she signs. And Iran’s theocracy can’t completely crush the spirit of freedom. And a proposal for a Satanic school derailed Idaho Republican plans to channel tax dollars to religious schools.

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Fear of vaccinated lettuce and other science links

Tennessee State Rep. Scott Cepicky wants labels in supermarkets to warn us against vaccinated lettuce.

It’s a lot less funny that Ron DeSantis’ handpicked surgeon general is discouraging quarantine and vaccines in a measles outbreak. As Sherlock Holmes once put it, when a doctor goes bad he’s the worst of villains.

DeSantis himself now claims boosters increase the chance of Covid.

Andrew Wakefield, discredited anti-vax doctor, opposes the mumps vaccine too.

An NYC midwife has been fined $300,000 for taking payoffs to fake immunization remedies.

But let’s not forget how much Trump contributed to right-wing anti-vax sentiment

Don’t think anti-vax is just about bad ideas or loyalty to Trump: there’s big money in it: “Children’s Health Defense paid Kennedy, then chairman and chief legal counsel and now an independent candidate for president, more than $510,000 in 2022, double his 2019 salary, tax records show. Informed Consent Action Network paid Executive Director Del Bigtree $284,000 in 2022, a 22% increase from 2019. Bigtree now works as communications director for Kennedy’s presidential campaign.”

For more medical misdeeds, consider the WaPo’s report on how the NFL set standards for concussion damage that saved it millions in payouts to players.

And it seems there may be skullduggery in the organ-transplant sector.

Archeologists claim an Indonesian temple is a record-setting 25,000 years old — but other archeologists say the evidence is thin.

New light on the genetics and history of the earliest human beings.

Why are colon cancer rates rising among young Americans?

DNA tests on Beethoven’s hair show he wasn’t black, had hepatitis and didn’t suffer from lead poisoning. Plus some of the hair wasn’t really his.

Improved HVAC in schools could make millions of students healthier. States have the money to do it but they aren’t spending it.

“It would perhaps be too cynical to say that [AI} existential risk rhetoric has become a cynical hustle, intended to redirect the attentions of regulators toward possibly imaginary future risks in the future, and away from problematic but profitable activities that are happening right now.”

Watching someone act in a slow-motion film makes it easier to believe their actions are intentional.

“The Times’s lawsuit, however, includes multiple examples of OpenAI’s GPT-4 AI model outputting New York Times articles word for word.” — a look at a New York Times lawsuit against AI scraping the newspaper’s stories.

The legend of Washington DC’s dinosaur fossil, capitalsaurus!

Native American artifacts and bodies are going back to the tribes. Though from the details, it’s going to be complicated.

#SFWApro. Covers top to bottom by Bob Kane, Howie Post, Ross Andru.

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Manhandling the Destitute

“Politics is bad enough in any shape but it shouldn’t get around to manhandling the destitute.” — Martha Gellhorn. But that doesn’t stop conservatives (and sometimes non-conservatives) from trying. After all it’s much easier to punch down than go after the rich.

For example Florida Republican Rep. Ryan Chamberlin wants to eliminate property taxes as a revenue source in favor of a higher sales tax. According to Chamberlin, property taxes “create an arrangement under which homeowners never truly own their domiciles. We all simply rent it from the state, and as long as we pay those rents, then we can use the property we hold a deed for,” he said. “This is not a tax; it is slavery.””

Well, no, it isn’t. Right-wingers have been thumping taxation=slavery for decades but it isn’t. If Chamberlin sells his house and moves in with family, nobody’s going to come ordering him to buy real estate and pay tax again. Taxation is coercive, yes, but not slavery. Slaves didn’t have options.

And if property tax is slavery, why isn’t just as oppressive to be forced to pay tax every time you buy something that isn’t exempt (as food is)? The answer, of course, is that sales tax hits much harder at the working class and poor than the rich whereas rich McMansion owners feel much more pain from property tax. Chamberlin referring to it as “consumption tax” is presumably meant to hide that, making it sound as if it’s some kind of punishment inflicted on spendthrifts. It isn’t. And several legislators have pointed out it’s a bad economic idea.

If Chamberlin is concerned about homeowners losing their property, he could always fix the home insurance crisis. But well-connected business people are making bank off that so I don’t anticipate Chamberlin or anyone else doing the (in fairness extremely) hard work needed to fix things.

Overdraft fees hit the poor hardest too, which is why I’m glad the Biden Administration is moving to limit them.

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I guess I’m an orphan now

Another week without much accomplished, but I can’t blame myself. After learning a week ago that Dad was dying, I booked a flight and headed down Sunday. I came back yesterday.

It was an odd sort of farewell trip. Dad had most of his affairs wrapped up and for whatever reason he didn’t want a funeral or any equivalent ceremony. That meant a much lower key time than when Mom passed. My brother and I went with Tracy (Dad’s executor) to get some papers signed, mail off some packages. And we and several of Dad’s friends went out to dinner Tuesday. Otherwise it was mostly hanging around the house, chatting with each other, playing gin rummy, that sort of thing. And I did write an online obit for the website of the funeral home that cremated him. We also watched The Shermans, the compilation of old home movies my brother got digitized, then posted online.

One project my brother came up with was to duplicate an old photo of us as kids. Here’s the original—I think this would have been 1966 or 1967. That’s my sister Tracy, my brother Craig and then me, left to right. Here’s the sequel —It took a lot of posing and double-checking before Craig was satisfied with the second one, but it paid off.

I must admit, being with my family again felt better than Dad’s death hurt. I think that’s a good thing.

I did get one article finished for The Local Reporter, on local towns Carrboro and Chapel Hill and their commitment to LGBTQ+ rights. I got two posts up at Atomic Junk Shop, one about Marvel in 1967 and one on how L. Frank Baum created Oz.Con-Tinual posted a couple of panels to YouTube with me in them, one on comic-book villains and one on Magnus, Robot Fighter.And that’s about it. Hopefully nothing will derail me from work next week.

#SFWApro.  Cover by Russ Manning, all rights to images remain with current holders.

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Republicans: we have the right to silence you but you cannot silence us!

Online misinformation is one of the GOP’s weapons; it’s almost fascinating watching on Twitter as they all turn out the same talking points. Programs to monitor online lies are cracking under GOP pressure and legal action. That’s pretty typical of their playbook: fight for the right to say whatever lies they please, try to shut down everyone else.

Case in point, Moms for Liberty turning their book-banning up several notches: they called the police to arrest librarians for supposedly distributing porn. Another Mom for Liberty who wanted to ban a Diary of Anne Frank graphic-novel adaptation is perfectly fine with having appeared on Jew-hating preacher Rick Wiles’ podcast.

Matt Walsh has never much worried about facts when he unleashes his misogyny, homophobia or trans-hate. That made it easy to harass a trans-care clinic.  Walsh must be envious of Chaya Raichik of the Libs of Tik-Toks, who generates lots more harassment, including bomb threats and death threats, while piously pretending it’s a total coincidence they follow on her posts. Of course, despite the long history of right-wing terrorism, invariably shriek loudly when someone refers to right-wing terrorism; they want it, they just don’t want it blamed on them. This isn’t new: Sarah Palin still wants to sue the NYT for suggesting her rhetoric influenced a mass shooter. (More here).

Or Fox host Clay Travis who says the covid vaccines are fraudulent so the government should seize any profits Moderna and Pfizer made off them. RFK Jr. has more modest goals: end federal spending on infectious disease research for eight years and (according to NBC news) “use the power of that attorney general to threaten editors of medical journals and force them to publish studies that had been retracted (he often cites the retracted studies saying ivermectin, a parasite drug, is an effective treatment for Covid). ‘We’re gonna say we’re fixing to file some racketeering lawsuits if you don’t start telling the truth in your journals.'” As I’ve written before, RFK can’t get the scientific results he wants so he’s simply going to rig the game. Never mind that his anti-vax crusades have already hurt people. And this is a good example of why infection-disease research matters.

Of course, Junior has plenty of other anti-vax liars and idiots to help him out.

Bigot Stephen Miller has been working to wield the court system against anti-racism. NASCAR has diversity initiatives, therefore it’s anti-white people! He’s not the only one pushing back against diversity in business after college affirmative action lost at SCOTUS. And of course, Florida is all in on this. But children of alumni needn’t worry — unsurprisingly all that talk about merit still isn’t affecting legacy admissions.

Lawsuits defending business’s right to refuse gay customers are still a booming industry, even when the business owner hasn’t been asked. Mat Staver’s Liberty Counsel is once again suing the Southern Poverty Law Center for labeling an organization as a hate group.

Right-winger pastor Duncan Urbanek insists that yes, all gay people are pedophiles. He’s lying, but to an audience that wants to believe it.

Bernie Moreno, who’s running for senator in Ohio, claimed the state abortion rights amendment that won Tuesday would allow rapists to make their victims abort. This is a lie. The governor thinks protecting abortion rights is evil and radical; Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose suddenly purged 26,000 voters right before the vote. Among other dirty tricks. Unfortunately the lesson learned won’t be “let’s course-correct on abortion” but “we need to cheat better.” Just as Trump’s allies have concluded the problem with all those conservatives judges and Justice appointees Trump put into place is they’re not fascist enough.

Tom Fitton of the right-wing Judicial Watch has explained the Ohio amendment passing was a “big victory for George Soros.” Nothing anti-semitic in suggesting an international Jewish banker wants American babies dead, no sirree …

Mark Levin is just one of the many right-wing loudmouths — er, pundits — who think Trump should be able to threaten witnesses because free speech!

“Last December, Laramie Faith Community Church Elder Todd Schmidt displayed an anti-trans banner in the UW student union, identifying an individual transgender student by name.” Schmidt sued and collected $35,000.

To end on a good note, Indiana AG and forced birther Todd Rokita has been fined for some of his treatment of Dr. Caitlin Bernard. Moms for Liberty got their butts kicked in Pennsylvania and Iowa. So did a book-burning advocate in Virginia.

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A nostalgic visit

During my recent Florida visit, my sister Trace suggested I stop by Stagecrafters during one of their evening meetings to see a few people. I did, and it was cool to see several people I normally only interact with on Facebook. And to see that while the details of the props and sets in our warehouse have changed, it still feels very much the same.Like a lot of theater groups, they’re having a struggle at times to keep going but they are still going. Makes me glad. I spent a lot of my life there and it’s still very much a part of me.

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My trip to Florida

As always, my trip to Florida earlier this month was great fun. I stayed with my sister and our mutual best friend Cindy, attended Dad’s birthday party and unlike 2022 when I chauffeured Dad around, managed to spend time with some of my other friends. Here’s my departure —Then, a couple of hours later, I saw the water.It was colder than expected so I didn’t spend as much time in the early morning outside as I usually do. But I did get this cool shot.I took a walk down to the Books a Million (about three miles) and along the way saw a sign store with this lovely wall.Thursday, Cindy and I hit the beach and looked at the waves. A lot more pigeons out than usual.Saturday I went home. And Durham is home now, fond though my memories of Ft. Walton Beach are. But I look forward to visiting again in 2024.

#SFWApro.

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