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By Lambert Strether of Corrente
Fowl Track of the Day
Golden Vireo, Cañon del Sabino, Teotitlán, Oaxaca, Mexico.
Politics
“However what’s authorities itself, however the biggest of all reflections on human nature?” –James Madison, Federalist 51
“Right here’s meals for thought, had Ahab time to assume; however Ahab by no means thinks; he solely feels, feels, feels” –Herman Melville, Moby Dick
“The logic of the insult and the logic of scientific classification signify the 2 excessive poles of what a classification could also be within the social world.” –Pierre Bourdieu, Classification Struggles
Biden Administration
“Federal appeals court docket quickly halts Biden’s pupil debt aid program” [Politico]. • Oops. I suppose the Division of Training received’t be capable to develop its mailing record for collections in spite of everything.
2022
* * * “Ron DeSantis is Donald Trump with brains and with out the drama” [Financial Times (NL)]. “DeSantis, 44, boasts Yale and Harvard levels and what some describe as a photographic reminiscence. The restoration effort gave the impression to be in stable arms as he rattled off statistics and organisational plans with a vigour and fluency that President Biden’s handlers can solely dream of.” I didn’t know DeSantis was, like George W. Bush, a Yalie. Was DeSantis, too, a towel-snapping frat boy? Apparently so: “At Yale, he additionally discovered refuge on the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, an athlete-heavy membership that featured barrels of beer and outstanding former members, together with the Bushes and Supreme Court docket justice Brett Kavanaugh. In his latest pandemic memoir, What Simply Occurred: Notes on a Lengthy 12 months, the creator and critic Charles Finch recalled two issues about his former classmate, recognized then as ‘D’: he did an uncanny impression of baseball star Jose Canseco and, in keeping with a good friend, would inform dates he appreciated Thai meals, however pronounced it “thigh”. In the event that they corrected him, Finch wrote, he would discover an excuse to depart. ‘He didn’t desire a girlfriend who corrected him.’” • In fact, W’s persona labored out very effectively for him. Perhaps DeSantis’s will as effectively. Then once more. Trump is sui generis:
[2024 GOP debate]
TRUMP: Ron—Ron DeSantis. You have been superb to me, then what modified? [to audience] He’s even named after me. Ron, Ronald, Dona—
DeSANTIS [nervously swallowing]: my, uh, my dad and mom named me—
TRUMP: And he’s ashamed! What a shame. A shame. [the crowd boos]— Marbury v. Mad On-line (@NickTagliaferro) October 25, 2022
“With out an Financial Message, Democrats Will By no means Shut the Deal” [Jeet Heer, The Nation]. “Similar to the Labour Social gathering, the Democrats have surrendered on the sphere of financial debate.” • I don’t assume that’s true. The Democrats don’t really feel they should make an financial argument as a result of their PMC base is doing high-quality, simply high-quality. In any case, it’s far too late for some kinda pivot to “the financial system” within the midterms; two weeks of messaging received’t do the trick. Biden had the chance to take the railroads by the scruff of the neck on behalf of the unions, however he punted ’til after the midterms as effectively (sorry for combined metaphors). Similar with Starbucks, Amazon, every thing. Tactically, in any case, Heer is incorrect. “Dance with the one which brung ya,” which the working class isn’t. Amp up the present messaging. Extra hysteria on Ukraine, please, together with election stealing, racism, abortion, “our democracy,” Orange Man unhealthy, and so forth.
“GOP wave threatens blue-state strongholds” [The Hill]. “Democrats are more and more anxious that Republicans will make positive factors in deep-blue strongholds equivalent to New York and Oregon because the winds seem to shift within the GOP’s favor forward of subsequent month’s midterm elections. The GOP is making aggressive bids to take again governorships in each states, which reliably go for Democrats in presidential elections. The Republican positive factors may additionally prolong to the Home, the place the GOP is making inroads within the aforementioned states, together with Rhode Island and others. elsewhere too there are Home districts of assorted shades of blue the place this pattern is rising. Take, for instance, Rhode Island’s 2nd Congressional District: The seat has lengthy been thought of a safely Democratic one, having been represented by outgoing Rep. Jim Langevin (D) for twenty years. However latest polling has proven Republican Allan Fung main Democrat Seth Magaziner, together with a Suffolk College-Boston Globe ballot launched final week that had Fung at 45 p.c in comparison with Magaziner at 37 p.c. And the race has been rated a “toss up” by the nonpartisan election handicapper Prepare dinner Political Report. In Oregon’s sixth Congressional District, which has equally been seen as favoring Democrats and which went for Biden by double digits in 2020, the race has additionally been rated a “toss up” by Prepare dinner. Although the district isn’t fairly as blue as different Home seats, the aggressive setting has required Democrats to maneuver round their sources.”
“Within the last days earlier than the midterms, Democrats are deploying their celebration’s largest belongings in Pennsylvania” [FiveThirtyEight]. “[T]right here have been manner fewer polls in 2022 than in previous cycles. In 2010, pollsters performed nearly 1,700 polls of particular person races for Senate, Home and governor between early Might and late October. By comparability, we now have barely greater than half that quantity this time round — about 900. However this dropoff isn’t sudden; it’s been a extra gradual decline over the previous decade and a half. Curiously, because the variety of surveys of races on the state or district stage has fallen, the variety of nationwide polls that ask concerning the generic poll — which asks respondents which celebration they plan to assist of their native U.S. Home election — has greater than doubled in 2022. This may very well be all the way down to a few elements: For one factor, politics as we speak are extra nationalized than up to now, so pollsters could also be incentivized to conduct nationwide surveys, which is able to get extra clicks and views. And it’s additionally probably extra economical — and safer — to ballot a nationwide viewers on totally different points and the generic poll — which, for example, can produce a number of tales for a media group — than to ballot particular person races on the state stage. The previous includes weighting polls by details about the nationwide inhabitants, whereas state-level polls might require tougher selections to correctly interpret outcomes, as we’ve constantly seen bigger errors in sure states than on the nationwide stage.” • One other classification battle:
In Opinion
Quoctrung Bui, the deputy graphics director for Opinion, talked to 10 of the main pollsters within the U.S. to debate the midterm elections and what worries them essentially the most about polling. Here is what they mentioned. https://t.co/l6Zh96bGyZ
— The New York Instances (@nytimes) October 25, 2022
* * * NY: “NY-17 Ranking Change: DCCC Chair Maloney Strikes From Lean Democrat to Toss Up” [Cook Political Report]. “When Republicans’ prime Tremendous PAC introduced an advert purchase in opposition to Democratic Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (NY-17) in April, many assumed it was a gambit to troll or distract the DCCC chair. However two weeks out from Election Day, Maloney finds himself in deep hazard, concurrently combating for his political life in his Hudson Valley seat and desperately attempting to stop Democrats from being swept out of the Home majority. Each events’ inside polls present Maloney locked in a decent race in opposition to GOP Assemblyman Mike Lawler within the seventeenth CD, which is roughly three-quarters new to Maloney following redistricting. The CLF and NRCC have outspent Democratic teams $3.5 million to $384,000 to this point, and the local weather for Democrats within the state has deteriorated in the previous couple of weeks as GOP Rep. Lee Zeldin has surged within the governor’s race. Republicans have lampooned Maloney over revelations he hosted posh DCCC fundraisers in Paris and Geneva earlier this month, and for hiring his husband’s private coach as a part-time driver on his congressional payroll.” • $3.5 million v. $384,000? That’s quite a bit.
NY: “Democratic marketing campaign chief Maloney vulnerable to dropping Home seat” [Yahoo News]. “The irony is that Maloney truly switched districts earlier this yr to run in a neater seat for a Democratic candidate to win. It’s uncommon to see members of a celebration’s nationwide management lose their seats, and once they do, it’s normally a part of a dramatic wave election.” • The DCCC’s head defeated? What a disgrace that may be.
PA: “Trump Plans to Problem the 2022 Elections — Beginning in Philly” [Rolling Stone]. “Trump has been briefed on plans in a number of states and demanding races — together with in Georgia. However Pennsylvania has grabbed his curiosity most keenly, together with within the Senate contest between Democrat John Fetterman and the Trump-endorsed GOP contender Mehmet Oz. If the Republican doesn’t win by a large sufficient margin to set off a speedy concession from Fetterman — or if the vote tally is shut on or after Election Evening in November — Trump and different Republicans are already making ready to wage a authorized and activist campaign in opposition to the “election integrity” of Democratic strongholds such because the Philly space. Trump’s give attention to Pennsylvania, nevertheless, appears to be extra about his personal political future than about celebration allegiance or fealty to his celeb endorsee. As he hosts conferences on attainable 2022 election challenges, he’s additionally been laying the groundwork for a run in 2024 — the place Pennsylvania once more guarantees to be important and aggressive. As one supply who has spoken to Trump a number of occasions a couple of potential post-election-day authorized battle over the OzFetterman race places it, Trump views a possible midterm problem as a ‘costume rehearsal for Trump 2024.’ Trump received Pennsylvania in 2016 after which misplaced it to Biden in 2020 by greater than 80,000, and if the 2 candidates rematch in 2024, it may effectively be the state that picks the following president.” • Attention-grabbing…
PA: “I Don’t Care If It Prices Me the Subsequent Election. I’m Going to Do What’s Proper.” [Mother Jones]. “Marketing campaign finance data present Fetterman’s everyman persona is resonating. Greater than half of the $48 million Fetterman has raised comes from small contributions of $200 or much less. In distinction, simply 10 p.c of Ozs $35 million haul has come from small donors. ‘The phrase ‘vibes’ has grow to be so overused,’ says Adam Jentleson, a former senior aide to Senator Harry Reid, and the creator of Kill Change: The Rise of the Trendy Senate and the Crippling of American Democracy. ‘However I believe there’s one thing to it. Folks simply belief him extra on a intestine stage.’” • I believe races not often come all the way down to debates. I believe this one does. If puppy-killing charlatan Ozmanages to make Fetterman appear to be a gimp on TV, that’s not gonna be good. But when Fetterman makes it by means of the talk, I believe he ought to squeak by means of, regardless of Ozs latest gusher of money. Visiting each county actually should rely for one thing (and in the event you’re on the left, you should be praying it does).
PA: “Taylor Swift Has a Fan in John Fetterman” [Teen Vogue]. “On Friday (October 21), Fetterman’s workforce took to TikTok with a wonderfully soundtracked jab at his senate opponent Dr. Mehmet Oz. For the video, Fetterman used certainly one of Taylor’s latest singles, ‘Anti-Hero,’ which has shortly gone viral for its made-to-meme lyric: ‘It’s me/Hello/I’m the issue, it’s me.’ Because the lyrics play out, two blocks of textual content seem on the display, the primary of which learn: ‘The issue is individuals who run for workplace solely caring about $ + energy and never truly caring about individuals.’ A second block of textual content seems with the phrases, ‘I’m the issue it’s me.’ The video of Ozhas him pointing at each captions, as if acknowledging his standing because the referenced downside.”
PA: “Scoop: Democrats deploy Biden and Obama to lock down Pennsylvania” [Axios]. “President Biden and former President Obama will barnstorm the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh areas on Nov. 5 with the celebration’s nominees for Pennsylvania governor and Senate, in keeping with a Democrat with direct information of the plans. Within the last days earlier than the midterms, Democrats are deploying their celebration’s largest belongings in Pennsylvania.” • This isn’t going to “lock down” Pennsylvania. At finest it’s going to lock down Philly, possibly the burbs.
Democrats en Déshabillé
Affected person readers, plainly individuals are truly studying the back-dated put up! However I’ve not up to date it, and there are numerous updates. So I must try this. –lambert
I’ve moved my standing remarks on the Democrat Social gathering (“the Democrat Social gathering is a rotting corpse that may’t bury itself”) to a separate, back-dated put up, to which I’ll periodically add materials, summarizing the addition right here in a “reside” Water Cooler. (Hopefully, some Bourdieu.) It seems that defining the Democrat Social gathering is, in actual fact, a tough downside. I do assume the paragraph that follows is on level all the best way again to 2016, if not earlier than:
The Democrat Social gathering is the political expression of the category energy of PMC, their base (lucidly defined by Thomas Frank in Hear, Liberal!). ; if the Democrat Social gathering didn’t exist, the PMC must invent it. . (“PMC” modulo “class expatriates,” in fact.) Second, all of the working elements of the Social gathering reinforce one another. Go away apart characterizing the relationships between parts of the Social gathering (ka-ching, however not solely) these parts comprise a community — a Flex Web? An iron octagon? — of funders, distributors, apparatchiks, electeds, NGOs, and miscellaneous mercenaries, with belongings within the press and the intelligence neighborhood.
Notice, in fact, that the category energy of the PMC each expresses and is restricted by different lessons; oligarchs and American gentry (see ‘industrial mannequin’ of Ferguson, Jorgensen, and Jie) and the working class spring to thoughts. Suck up, kick down.
* * * “‘Individuals are livid’: Democratic backlash grows over progressive name to pursue diplomacy in Ukraine” [CNN]. “Home Democrats are offended at Democratic Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington state for sending out a letter calling for the Biden administration to pursue diplomacy in Ukraine, with many publicly and privately fuming that the progressive chief blindsided them and revealed new divisions inside their celebration over the struggle and with simply days to go earlier than the November midterms. ‘Individuals are livid – particularly front-liners,’ mentioned one senior Home Democrat, referring to essentially the most weak members vulnerable to dropping their seats within the November 8 midterms.” So0-called frontliners being, essentially, essentially the most reactionary Democrats. Extra: “‘Timing in diplomacy is every thing,’ mentioned California Rep. Sara Jacobs, a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus that Jayapal leads. ‘I signed this letter on June 30, however quite a bit has modified since then. I wouldn’t signal it as we speak.’…. A Jayapal aide declined to clarify why the letter went out Monday. And a few members mentioned they didn’t obtain a follow-up on it earlier than it was despatched to Biden. ‘They didn’t verify again with the signers earlier than releasing it. I might have taken my identify off,’ mentioned one member who signed the letter, who spoke with CNN beneath the situation of anonymity to talk freely. ‘Timing is horrible.’” In the meantime, the White Home continues to insist that Zelensky is an unbiased actor: “‘Mr. Zelensky will get to find out when he thinks that’s the suitable time, and Mr. Zelensky will get to find out, as a result of it’s his nation [tell that to the Azovs], what success seems to be like, what victory seems to be and and what kind of phrases he keen to barter on,’ [John Kirby, the strategic communications coordinator at the National Security Council] mentioned. ‘We’re not going to dictate that.’” • A sternly worded letter is quickly forgotten. However the timing appears odd to me, too. What’s the aim, whether or not tactical or strategic. In fact, if the Progressive Caucus had articulated a principled coverage in Ukraine again in February or March, and saved hammering at it, there’s be no want to assemble signatures, in June and July, for a letter that went out in October. What have been they ready for? For The Blob to come back to its senses, if any?
“Home Progressives Float Diplomatic Path Towards Ending Conflict In Ukraine, Get Annihilated, Shortly ‘Make clear’” [The Intercept]. “On Monday Morning, 30 members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus despatched a letter to the White Home that tried to gingerly open a dialog a couple of potential diplomatic finish to Russia’s struggle on Ukraine. The door was slammed shut by the night, met with sufficient fury to elicit a ‘clarification’ within the type of a press release from caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal. ‘Let me be clear,’ Jayapal mentioned in a press release issued simply earlier than 7 p.m., ‘We’re united as Democrats in our unequivocal dedication to supporting Ukraine of their struggle for his or her democracy and freedom within the face of the unlawful and outrageous Russian invasion, and nothing within the letter advocates for a change in that assist.’…. That the letter was met with fierce opposition is a measure of the house out there for debate amongst congressional Democrats in relation to assist for the struggle and the way it is perhaps stopped earlier than it turns nuclear: roughly zero.” • Oh, good. I’d prefer to herd all of them into the CDC constructing earlier than nailing the doorways shut. It’s actually an excessive amount of.
“How Democrats Botched Trump’s Impeachment” (interview) [The Intercept]. Ryan Grim: “A brand new ebook out this week “Unchecked: The Untold Story Behind Congress’s Botched Impeachments of Donald Trump” is chock-full of latest particulars about each of the failed makes an attempt to question Trump, together with what I think about to be one of the crucial vital: On the day of January 6, there was a concerted effort by rank-and-file Democrats to question Trump that very night time, and Democratic leaders from Nancy Pelosi on down rebuffed their effort in a manner which will have modified the course of historical past.” • Impeaching Bush in 2006 over warrantless surveillance plus Iraq would have modified historical past too, and Pelosi didn’t try this both. A lot of good element on this article.
Realignment and Legitimacy
“Hillary Clinton questions the integrity of 2024 election by already claiming ‘right-wing extremists have a plan to STEAL it’ – however provides ZERO proof in fundraising video (and after she mentioned questioning Biden’s win was ‘doing Putin’s work)” [Daily Mail]. “The 2-minute clip urged People to look previous the 2022 midterms and end up to vote of their native election, as a result of she claims the conservative majority U.S. Supreme Court docket would possibly give state legislatures the facility to overturn outcomes…. The video was put out on Twitter by the progressive group Indivisible Information [I wondered what happened to Indivisible], which is working an initiative geared toward selling progressive candidates in native state races on an internet site referred to as Crush the Coup… Crush the Coup’s web site homepage reads in enormous capital lettering: ‘MAGA has a plan to steal the election in 2024. We now have to cease them, as we speak.’ It additional claims that Democrats have to give attention to successful 29 native seats in six swing states – Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin…. Any Republicans who nonetheless query the end result of the 2020 presidential election have been dubbed ‘election deniers’, though Democrats have requested questions – and proceed to query – the end result of some earlier elections. Now, Clinton is questioning outcomes a full two years earlier than an election was even held, regardless of her claims that Republicans pushing election fraud claims are serving to push the Kremlin’s agenda.” • The Mail is true about that, not less than. I don’t very similar to “unbiased state legislature concept” both. I simply want the Democrats would discover somebody with standing to talk in opposition to it, and I want it weren’t being handled as simply one other “our democracy” speaking level.
“Biden admin set to warn about threats to nation’s election infrastructure” [Politico]. “The inner administration issues about election threats come days after a name was held between federal officers and native legislation enforcement personnel concerning the midterms, in keeping with one of many individuals acquainted with the matter. These on the decision mentioned the potential for violence in response to the unfold of false narratives concerning the election course of. Officers mentioned election staff, together with these working at polling stations, are more likely to face threats and harassment from extrements each on-line and offline, the particular person acquainted with the matter mentioned. ‘We are actually listening to experiences of individuals surrounding poll drop containers, some even sporting tactical gear, and questioning individuals,’ mentioned John Cohen, the previous counterterrorism chief at DHS. ‘Are the police ready for that? They should be. All of that is being pushed by the false narrative that the 2020 election was stolen.’” • Notice that the Democrats have completed nothing, zero, zilch, nada on this. (Tactically, all of the “comfort” crapola like drop containers and mail-in ballots does is improve the assault floor. Begin with making Election Day a nationwide vacation, after which return to the idea of voting areas by precinct, hopefully run by “little outdated girls” (sorry, truly present small elderettes), and with hand-marked paper ballots, counted (hopefully by hand) in public. (Sure, I do know that mail-in ballots work in Oregon. I simply don’t assume that’s going to scale out nationally, for apparent, if unjust, causes.)
#COVID19
• Maskstravaganza:
Enjoyable truth – Dr. Walensky has not tweeted the phrase “masks” since July (she has retweeted the CDC weekly neighborhood ranges with its “think about masking” steerage, however that’s it). pic.twitter.com/BfFvEKYcOH
— Jon Levy (@jonlevyBU) October 22, 2022
• Maskstravaganza:
Yup. We took the perfect of America, the helpers who risked their time and capital in a time of nice want, and betrayed them. And just about nobody able of energy even notices. https://t.co/gcwfOOp6Jj
— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) October 23, 2022
Biden Administration polices, IIRC, destroyed all of the small companies in favor of Chinese language producers and large monopolies like 3M as a result of hospital adminstrators needed masks the bottom attainable value. Therefore, the shortage of innovation. Nearly three years into what is definitely not the final pandemic of respiratory pathogens, and we’re sporting medical units on our faces, as an alternative of style objects (since that’s the type of innovation small companies not promoting to hospitals would create).
• Talking of style objects:
Thanks on your inspiration and steerage. That is our fourth one which my youngsters constructed by themselves. pic.twitter.com/XSzjs8F2IM
— Manu (@manup_us) October 22, 2022
Nonetheless ready for Physician Biden to go on Good Morning America and bulid a Corsi-Rosenthal field, together with some cute schoolchildren.
• ”Construct an Indoor Air High quality Monitor with WisBlock” [RAK Documentation Center]. “The WisBlock ecosystem now provides a number of sensors required to construct an indoor air high quality sensor that covers crucial values.” • An Arduino undertaking. I want there have been miniaturized sensors for cellphones, however maybe not but.
• An excellent query:
Extra truthful sport. Why do not we now have extra of it for COVID? pic.twitter.com/0EcEjraB1d
— Gregg Gonsalves (@gregggonsalves) October 23, 2022
ACT-UP was, AFAIK, a really bold, disciplined, and succcessful undertaking. Maybe that’s why amnesia has set in about its strategies and achievements.
• “The good Texas COVID tragedy” [PLOS One]. “America of America leads all high-income nations in COVID-19 deaths, though as a nation at had the best entry to antiviral vaccines and therapeutics. To know this disconnect we are able to look to the COVID-19 deaths and incapacity within the State of Texas. Due to COVID-19, Texas is enduring one of many biggest human tragedies in its 186-year historical past. It didn’t must be this fashion…. The disproportionate deaths in Texas amongst Hispanic and African American teams in 2020 (and presumably thereafter) adopted by conservatives who refused a COVID-19 immunization in 2021–22 will depart a haunting legacy for Texas…. In Texas, many if not most of those that died from COVID-19 within the final half of 2021 and into 2022 may have been saved by means of immunization. As a substitute, they grew to become victims of antivaccine activism and aggression that now predominates—for years Texas has been floor zero for the antivaccine well being freedom motion in America. One other grim actuality: It’s uncertain that antivaccine activism will dissipate with the tip of the COVID-19 pandemic. As a substitute, many indicators level to its spillover to all childhood vaccines resulting in vital protests and future legislative motion in opposition to Texas college immunization mandates.”
• And but there may be hope:
(“Expertise is a tough college, however a idiot will be taught in no different.” To qualify, I’m not making the argument that vax is nice in all instances; it isn’t. I’m arguing that minds can change, which is nice to know.)
• And for the RCT fetishists:
Present me the prime quality RCTs of unpolluted water to stop cholera.
I will wait.#FecalUrgencyofNormal #YouDoPoo https://t.co/RAVpFqROCi
— Neoliberal J🎃hn Snow (@NeoliberalSnow) October 25, 2022
The CDC is down, as of this writing:
How am I presupposed to be doing my private danger evaluation with no information?
Positivity
From the Walgreen’s check positivity tracker, October 18:
0.4%. Slowed improve.
Readers, please click on by means of on this, if in case you have a minute. Since Walgreens did the suitable factor, let’s give this undertaking some stats.
Variants
Lambert right here: It’s past irritating how sluggish the variant information is. Does no one within the public well being institution get a promotion for monitoring variants? Are there no grants? Is there a single lab that does this work, and everyone will get the outcomes from them? Extra sources from readers welcome [grinds teeth, bangs head on desk].
NEW Variant information, nationwide (Walgreens), October 7:
Lambert right here: BQ.1*, out of nowhere. So superior.
Deaths
Loss of life fee (Our World in Information):
Whole: 1,093,153 – 1,092,409 = 744 (744 * 365 = 271,560, which is as we speak’s LivingWith™ quantity (fairly a bit larger than the minimizers would love, although they’ll discuss themselves into something. If the LivingWith™ metric retains chugging alongside like this, I could must determine that is what the powers-that-be think about “mission completed” for this explicit tranche of demise and illness.
It’s good that for deaths I’ve a easy, day by day chart that simply retains chugging alongside, not like every thing else CDC and the White Home are screwing up or letting go darkish, good job.
Stats Watch
Manufacturing: “United States Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index” [Trading Economics]. “The Manufacturing Exercise Index within the US fifth district fell to -10 in October of 2022 from 0 in in September, the bottom since Might of 2022, as two of its three element indexes deteriorated notably. The indexes for shipments and quantity of latest orders fell from 14 and -11 in September to -3 and -22 in October, respectively. The third element, the employment index, remained unchanged at 0 in October, as hiring challenges persevered.”
Capital: “Ventures & Networks” (interview) [Sebastian Mallaby, Phenomenal World]. Mallaby: “A range of actors which have barely totally different goal features or analytical processes is in the end a wholesome factor. You get several types of buyers with totally different ranges of danger urge for food, and totally different specialties when it comes to which a part of the financial system they perceive. That range is extra more likely to yield sound capital allocation than a monolithic system by which all of the capital is allotted both by the federal government or by banks or by another explicit participant.” • Now clarify Silicon Valley’s flip towards modern rent-seeking.
Right now’s Concern & Greed Index: 52 Impartial (earlier shut: 48 Impartial) [CNN]. One week in the past: 34 (Concern). (0 is Excessive Concern; 100 is Excessive Greed). Final up to date Oct 25 at 1:37 PM EDT. October, and no crash but. It’s like ready for the Ukrainian Kherson counter-offensive. As all the time for bears, the difficulty is timing….
Rapture Index: Closes down one on Floods. “The dearth of exercise has downgraded this class” [Rapture Ready]. File Excessive, October 10, 2016: 189. Present: 187. (Do not forget that bringing on the Rapture is good.)
Picture E-book
Maybe the work are extra “correct” than the images?
Monet’s backyard photographed by me pic.twitter.com/FKV6EAhL1t
— Samantha Cavet (@samanthacavet) October 23, 2022
The Gallery
“The Warhol Basis’s Basquiat and Mine” [Ishmael Reed, Counterpunch]. “My play, “The Slave Who Beloved Caviar,” challenged the notion promoted by the Manhattan artwork trade that painter Jean Michel Basquiat was Andy Warhol’s ‘mascot.’ Or it was due to Warhol’s beneficence that Basquiat, born of Haitian and Puerto Rican dad and mom, grew to become well-known…. My play depicts Warhol as a wicked and decadent chief of a demise/suicide cult. He didn’t care whether or not the younger individuals he exploited lived or died, but in McCarten’s play, Warhol says to Basquiat: ‘Is that why your work are full of a lot demise?’ Warhol merchandised demise. Automotive crashes. Executions. Andy Warhol appropriated an image of Evelyn McHale’s suicide for his ‘Suicide: Fallen Physique’ (1962). His response to the suicide of his actress Edie Sedgewick and dancer Freddie Herko was that he wished he’d been there to movie their suicides. When he acquired an pressing plea from a kind of who really cared for Basquiat, Paige Powell, that Basquiat’s cocaine dependancy had grow to be life-threatening, Warhol quipped: ‘Perhaps he needs to be the primary to exit early.’ Nonetheless, in [a competing play] ‘The Collaboration,’ Warhol is portrayed as a naive, clear, church-going particular person who cares about Basquiat’s welfare…. Warhol discovered Basquiat disgusting. He referred to as him ‘soiled’ and regarded him as a nuisance. This and different damaging views of Basquiat held by Warhol are printed in Warhol On Basquiat, edited by Michael Dayton Hermann. Warhol’s screenwriter Ronald Tavel thought Warhol lacked compassion. He mentioned, ‘Generally I admit that his coldness was surprising.’” • Not a pleasant particular person in any respect, Warhol. Right here’s a Basquiat, immediately recognizable regardless of the shortage of images apart from, effectively er, a ship:
UNTITLED, Jean-Michel Basquiat, 1982 #blackarthistory pic.twitter.com/HcJwC8WRuK
— Artists of Color (@artistsofcolour) October 16, 2022
No mascot right here. As a palate cleanser to the controversy, one other Manufacturing facility than Warhol’s:
Edward Hopper, Field Manufacturing facility, Gloucester, (1928) #museumarchive #museumofmodernart https://t.co/A6ZECOQfSn pic.twitter.com/PMxwh7XDLN
— Edward Hopper (@artisthopper) October 22, 2022
Class Warfare
Deindustrialization:
One of the vital miserable issues on Reddit I discover is the “Machinist Hauls” people who discover a lifetime of instruments at a yard sale, offered by the kin of somebody who had nobody to cross them onto. Half a century or extra of skill- and nobody to hold in your legacy😢 pic.twitter.com/k3nA1SBJZt
— Naomi Wu 机械妖姬 (@RealSexyCyborg) October 23, 2022
Gadgets offered at property gross sales can be an especially attention-grabbing metric to have, though over a long time.
Information of the Wired
A really good grape arbor, too!
Contact data for crops: Readers, be at liberty to contact me at lambert [UNDERSCORE] strether [DOT] corrente [AT] yahoo [DOT] com, to (a) learn how to ship me a verify if you’re allergic to PayPal and (b) to learn how to ship me photos of crops. Greens are high-quality! Fungi and coral are deemed to be honorary crops! If you need your deal with to seem as a credit score, please place it at first of your mail in parentheses: (thus). In any other case, I’ll anonymize through the use of your initials. See the earlier Water Cooler (with plant) right here. From CF:
CF writes: “One of many busy volunteers on the Van Deusen Botanical Backyard.”
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Right here is the display that can seem, which I’ve helpfully annotated:
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