Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Wednesday Links

Mary Parker Follett The Godmother of Management She saw the invisible authority of common purpose as more powerful than hierarchical authority

Just Plain Rivka  has been added to my Tuesday Zoom book club and now her substack Logic and Morality goes on my sidebar. I think she said she has twelve children age 2-23, and now the the youngest is out of diapers she wants to create a change in her life. Just a remarkable thing to say, eh?

Data Republican on the one paranoia to rule them all. I remarked long ago that wherever a paranoia starts, it seems to slowly work its way to the Jews. I worked with paranoid people my whole career. I have to suspect that for all the focus on Musk and Bezos, the current focus on billionaires owes something to the old trope about "Jewish Bankers." Yet even I have been amazed at the speed and intensity at which it operates now. It has come to this:  I don't dare ask my brother what he thinks. He has been sympathetic to Palestine for a long time, but not at the expense of the Jews until Obama's first presidency. 

Strange Women Lying In Ponds 

I had heard that there is linguistic evidence of isolated words making it from Indo-European into Chinese, a completely unrelated language, but all I had seen before was names of tribes from Central Asia showing up in some very early Chinese records. Those Steppe barbarians got around, after all. But this is a clear word itself, mit in Old Chinese means "honey." As in Indo-European *medhu, found in descendant Greek methy, amethyst but most recognisably in "mead."  The contact point looks like Tocharian B, a wild eastern outlier of PIE that split off early. 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Tuesday Links

 Islam in America by Reiham Salam. American Muslims, especially those young, female, and US born, believe that Islamophobia is rampant. The evidence for this is not only missing, but backwards

Low-Conscientiousness Losers are Bad Senate Candidates  by Josh Barro. 

No, the failure to cover the tattoo indicates something different about Platner: Like John Fetterman, he is a fuckup. 

The death of the Summer Job You learn to deal with unreasonable people and are treated as a low-status individual. But you also learn some small competencies and in a narrow venue, people depend on you to get it right

Harari Vs Henrich For those of you who follow the overview of evolution. The prevailing 20th C view was that increased intelligence gave rise to language which gave rise to cooperation which produced culture. There is a developing consensus that this can't have been how it happened, and may even be reversed.  Henrich says it's Culture to Cooperation to Language to Intelligence. We have discussed this here before, most recently a year ago  

How Vermont Became Ground-Zero for the Anti-Israel Movement  This infuriates me. 

Wrong Eyeglasses

 


Sehnsucht

My college roommate was from Wayne Township and knew one of these guys. This song should have been a natural for us, but somehow it just wasn't cool enough at the time.  Too much Four Seasons in it. I didn't even like it much until about 20 years ago, but I must have listened to it because I knew all the words. I love it now and feel it was an important part of my childhood. 

Except it wasn't. There is no particular girlfriend attached to it, just all of them, and some I wanted but never had. Nostalgia lies and tells a different story.


Happy beginning of summer

A Billion Years

Instead of booksignings on tour, the new thing is to go on podcasts and get interviewed when you have a book come out. Steve Stewart-Williams of Nature-Nurture-Nietzsche just had A Billion Years of Sexual Differences come out. You can listen to him at any of these places, and most have transcripts. I have listened to a few and I also read him, so I eventually decided I don't need any more on this particular topic. at the moment.  But here you are, as much as you want. Well, actually, there are more.  This is enough.

We Can't Just Lie About This  Skeptiker

The Dissenter   

Keep Talking  

The Good Fight  Yascha Mounk, who interviews a lot of very good people.

The Overthinkers  Christian perspective

Monday, June 22, 2026

Links From 2015

 Slogging Through Woods on a Slushy Morning

(Jump Off The Page Title)  The first appearance of JM Smith, our resident geographer, in the comments

Hillary, perpetual martyr. Inserted irrelevantly into a public conversation

Ion Mihai Pacepa Evidence from the highest-ranking Soviet defector that Liberation Theology was intentionally created by the KGB, who arranged for an agent to become head of the World Council of Churches to introduce the concept into Latin America.  I had forgotten the story.

Archive of Old Radio Shows.  It's still there! 

The Afterlife In Popular Opinion.  Lots of comments. 

 

Recent Links

 The Shocking Truth About Fairness, by Lionel Page. 

 The idea that ruling ideas about fairness are an ideological veneer used to placate dominated groups is, however, unsatisfactory. If what matters are actual relations of power, why do powerful people need justifications in the domain of ideas? What role do these justifications play?

I think "unsatisfactory" is the right word. Everyone uses justifications for what they do, except in cases of extreme power imbalance. But this cannot be the whole story. Perhaps strange women lying in ponds distributing swords IS a good basis for government.

What's New In Biology from Works in Progress New drugs, vaccines, and therapies

The Commodification of Christianity  by Freya India, a newish Christian.  Interesting for us, as we have young relatives, one in particular, trying out Christianity

And as if in answer, Bench Press and Be Baptised by Josh Code. 

What's the Tax Rate of the Forbes 400?  A National Bureau of Economic Research estimate puts it at 24%, six points less than the national average of 30%.  This is for all taxes, including international, BTW.  But David Splinter has a detailed critique and finds that both numbers are wrong.  The real number should be 38% for billionaires, 25% for everyone else.  But wait, there's more! If we add in yearly charitable giving, the top 0.0002% give 59% to the citizenry, and if we add in their end-of-life bequests, it rises to 73%


Sunday, June 21, 2026

Victor Borge

 Always a joy.


More on Cognitive Genetics

Robert Plomin is a big name, and I think I have seen some of those other names with his before.  He has a King's College lab in the UK. The Genetics of Specific Cognitive Abilities, from a special issue of the journal Intelligence. Some knowledge of the Cattell-Horn-Carroll Theory of Intelligence will be needed to follow the terminology, even if the concepts are already known to you.  It is a hybrid that describes cognitive skills as a hierarchy. The most commonly researched is the most abstract type of intelligence that is closely related to the g-factor. That it is heritable is well-established, though the usual arguments about how much and what the interaction with nurture is remain. The other levels of intelligence usually regarded as less heritable and more responsive to what comes from the environment. To solve a new math problem requires abstract intelligence. To remember mathematical techniques you have been taught is considered more a product of what you have been exposed to.

So this one is interesting, because it finds that the second level of intelligence and abstraction is about equally heritable. Even more surprising, the specific abilities, the least abstract, are similarly heritable.  It's one study but it's worth paying attention to. You might go down the rabbit hole with this one, but I think you can pick up a fair bit with one pass. 

"The Nature of Nurture" is a fun phrase, anyway. 

 


 

The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry.

Adult Sunday School is reading John Mark Comer's The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry this summer. It will change the blog, I imagine. My prediction at present is that my posts will more often be links, because that is what has happened so far as I have eliminated hurry the last few years. I will try to not dispense wisdom.  If wisdom happens, it will be largely accidental.

But I admit I don't know. We'll see.  

Jonathan's Fence

 

This was an upgrading of an 80-y/o deck at my son's previous house. Much of the framing underneath this was kept, but the upper portions which had long been exposed to weather and people were 100% replaced, as you see. It was built on New England soil, so frost heaves destabilised it over the years. I had previously built a porch that included many of the features of this deck.  However, the construction was a bit different, and my son was doing the adaptation - I was mostly there just to be a worker bee. This railing you are looking at was the result of compromise upon compromise. Nothing was square, and attempts to correct that only seemed to make things worse.

The proper choice, in some sense, would have involved lots of digging, leveling, and replacing it all. But it was a deck on an old house.  The next owner, in fact, made some modifications to it that were changes, not merely corrections of what we had made. Putting twice as much effort into would have been inefficient, in retrospect. Even though a close look would reveal some adaptations that weren't quite perfect, it might fairly be said that this was the best choice. 

We don't uproot or tear down Chesterton's Fence until we know why it was put up.  Then, as you will. In this case, it was put up because it was necessary and was good enough. My son had to learn along the way what compromises would be necessary to be "good enough," and make choices. The next owner can do as she will. But she would be wise to know why the compromises were made, because they might be "good enough" for her also, and even the owner after that. 

There is a New England saying that is likely used in other places.  If it ain't broke, don't fix it.  

Value and Worth

Amy and Becky want to start a restaurant.  Amy will be the chef, Becky will be the business manager. To get started, they ask their friends Caitlin and Dierdre to lend them some money. At first, the restaurant has no value. But after a year or two, it is doing well.  Whatever we call the overall value of the restaurant, each of the four women owns a percentage of that and is "worth" that amount of money. 

Let's not even talk about the part where the state wants to raise taxes on the business in some way.  Let's pretend the tax rate is zero. But Amy is frustrated with something about the deal.  She doesn't like working with Becky, or she thinks she can make more somewhere else. Something.  She wants to take her percentage of the value - which she does own - and cash out. If she does, there is a strong possibility that the other three cannot rescue things efficiently with another chef quickly enough and the restaurant goes under. The remaining "worth" of all of them is pennies on the dollar.

Or Dierdre has a crisis in her life and needs to take her investment money out. The other three attempt a lot of juggling, restructuring, and negotiating, but it's not enough and the business goes bankrupt. Again, now instead of having 25% of something valuable, everyone has 25% of scattered restaurant equipment. Any of the four might try again with another restaurant or business and succeed. Each might still have market value, but now they have little "worth" unless they become part of building something else.

If you try to smuggle in some idea of a different kind of worth, like the worth of the labor they put in, or whether they are worth something just because they are human, or their infinite worth in God's eyes you are changing the subject and being deceitful.

I just explained billionaires to you. 

Friday, June 19, 2026

The Sweet

My older Romanian son used to have a T-shirt that read "I'm Big In Europe." That seems to have been true of The Sweet, previously The Sweetshop, and later just Sweet. I vaguely recalled this song from the radio but dismissed it as bubblegum.  I can't recall knowing anyone who had any of their records or ever seeing a picture of them. It's all rather horrifying, isn't it?

 

Yet they somehow sold 35M albums worldwide. Somebody somewhere must have liked them a whole lot. Remember we all thought that Europe was much more sophisticated than us in those days.

καθαίρω

Kathairo, to purge or cleanse.

What if Purgatory is hard work but deeply satisfying?

What if it is painful hard work but even more deeply satisfying?

I know the medieval descriptions were all of fire and torment, but everyone, Christian or not, seemed to talk a lot about torment anyway, both in this life and the next. The best you could hope for, it seemed was to be forgotten and left alone. 

If there is work to be done in Heaven, designed for our pleasure in being useful, the boundary between them... well, it would just be my speculation over another's. 

Urban Graveyards, Isolated Populations

Something long believed by anthropologists and prehistorians is receiving support from ancient DNA data. Cities were population sinks, where people traveled or even moved to make money but died in higher numbers. They were places of cultural life but physical death. There was art, trade, wealth, and mixing of peoples, but also disease (both fatal and merely debilitating), less fertility, and crime. The provinces were culturally conservative, preserving the old ways and refusing to adopt the new religions and methods, having more children, eating better, and being exposed to fewer diseases.

We see that even now, even in technologically advanced societies. There is a difference in the last century in Western society because medical care is better.  We have antibiotics.  We know about quarantining, vaccination, germ theory, and sanitation. This changes the balance of rural versus urban health, as rural people have more contact with animals and urban people have more hospitals and clinics. But as we saw during the Industrial Revolution and then, the old rules of exposure to more chemicals, filth, and even just plain people still apply.  What that means for the future as medical care improves I don't know. But it gives us an idea of what conditions must have been like in Dickens' London and during the plagues, fires, and sieges. 

We now see that same pattern in ancient and prehistoric DNA. The cities left little genetic trace, while there was continuity in the remote areas. However, the beliefs and culture of the urban areas grew and spread, while those in the hinterlands gradually disappeared. It has been an odd trade-off for humans.

Archaeologists like to study cities.  Geneticists now study isolated populations. 

I mentioned that Razib had the Greek geneticist Leonidas-Romanos Davranoglou on for an interview. His lab studies (among other things) isolated populations. On this podcast he talked about the Maniots and the Albanians, two groups with considerable continuity. Both are mountainous and inaccessible, and so mixed with other peoples very little.  There are such peoples all over the world, on islands, in mountainous areas, and deep in Amazonia. It is less common in the Mediterranean because trade, travel, and empires. But both groups have uniparental ancestries, both y-chromosome and mtDNA, that go back more centuries than their neighbors. Albania is only about 15% Slav and 15% Roman, the rest being ancient Balkan.  In the north the number is even higher. 

A very interesting tangent on Maniot ancestery:

"And this lineage we called the Marniot Modal Lineage because it hasn't been found outside Mani. Actually the only few instances where it has been found outside Marni these people have very large autosomal sectors, so they definitely descend their recent migrants from Mani. And by the way, just as a little parenthesis, in our study, we've found only a single example in the rest of the world. This is a real person in the world that has this deep Maniot modal lineage but doesn't have any autosomal heritage from Mani. And this person has now tested and is from an indigenous community in Latin America. And guess what? We did find that they do descend from Mani and we know the exact village and the exact clan. And it's going to be the subject of another paper because the journey of this person's ancestors is absolutely fascinating."(Italics mine.  Wild. I'm looking forward to learning what the story behind it is. It's the sort of impossibility found only in speculative fiction.)

Uniparental lineages sometimes have such oddities. There is a a rare but constant presence of a Chinese mtDNA line in Ashkenazi Jews - technically before there were Ashkenazi Jews. The joke is it explains the fondness for Chinese food among NY Jews.  I have an oddity myself, and am getting a new DNA sample done that focuses on my maternal lineage, because my U3 shouldn't be in Sweden. We'll see. 

When there is a strong founder effect it comes from a severe reduction in population. This might mean a small population migrating to a new area, or it might mean disease, famine, or warfare. Clan-based societies often exhibit these effects, and both of these groups are still clan-based, though this diminished in the 1900s.  Many of the clans have founder stories, of a shipwreck from Sicily or a small migration from Cyprus. The DNA reveals that the clan stories that people told about themselves were not true. But the kinship networks turned out to be remarkably accurate. 

So for example, a clan might claim a founder from 600 years ago with the particular story attached about where he came from. Testing the people who claim that clan descent in the various villages revealed that they are indeed all related and descended from someone in the 15th century. But there's no indication that that founder came from anywhere outside the province. This seems to accord with how human beings look at themselves, and that we need a story and we pick - or make up - a story that we like, and stick to it. But we actually are pretty good at keeping track of who our important relatives are even when the official records are lost. Clan identification is pretty accurate, despite everything else we lie about. Heck, I went to college at 18 and tried to reinvent myself.  Mostly burying some things and highlighting others, but some outright lies.  I'm not throwing any stones here. 

Some origin stories turn out to be amazingly true, even across centuries. We love those, and start to believe that most of them are based on a kernel of truth, but that's not quite what is showing out. Still, it's remarkable that it happens at all - rumors of a previous people who lived on the land who came from across the sea, or stories of long migrations from the East. BTW according to Davranoglou, the least-accurate origin stories in the Balkans come from the Serbs. Everyone is angry at the DNA researchers for exploding their myths, but the Serbs are sending death threats. 

Someone must have done the Scottish clans. I don't know the results. Mine were Wallaces, which was likely a favorite name to steal if you had to get out of town fast and start somewhere else, so I'm not confident of written records.  DNA may mislead, but it doesn't lie, though. 

250th

For the Bicentennial, I moved from Colonial Williamsburg to Sudbury, MA, Zip Code 01776, just south of Lexington and Concord. Frying pan. Fire. 

It's calmer this time. It's not following me everywhere.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Bad Things Come In Threes

So the old superstition goes.  Personally, I don't relax a bit after the third one.  

Shakespeare said it better.:  Claudius, in "Hamlet." When sorrows come they come not single spies, But as battalions.

Survey Suspicion

I never fill out surveys from medical practices asking me how they did.  I know that's part of how their economy works, but having been subject to them when I worked in a hospital, I concluded that they ask the wrong questions. They are geared to find out what box-checking the little guys did, not evaluate how well the whole system is working.  "Were you greeted when you came in?" rather than "How did the telephone tree work out for you?"

It may not be that way anymore.  My information is 10-20 years old now.  What's the word on the street for how surveys are used now? 

Take The A-Train

It was written for Duke Ellington and became his signature piece. But lots of other jazz musicians took a swing at it and I read that many consider Brubeck's version the best.


 

Monday, June 15, 2026

And Another One Bites The Dust

 James and his wife now have a substack.  I have one also, but never write anything on it. 

Is It A Premature Peace?

I do not pretend to know diplomacy and strategy, whether short or long term.  

I am seeing foreign opponents of Iran's IRG, and Hamas/Hezbollah claiming that Iran is not defeated enough and giving up enough.  I have been worried all along that we would have our usual shockingly complete opening victory but then pissing it away. It's an oversimplified and likely shallow view, I know.  Yet I worry still. Americans win and then get tired and move on to other things, and Trump has been quintessentially American in that way on other issues.

On the brighter side, I am also reading that despite the expenditure of weapons, our war with Iran has been a major setback for China's interest in Taiwan, leveraging India, controlling the polar regions, and influencing Latin America.  It has been a boon for them in terms of Russia, but at Russia's expense more than ours.  Africa a wash. I wish I knew more than bumper stickers about all this.

The Palestinian Substitute Child

I have a dislike for people explaining the behavior of women without children as somehow tied to that. I grant that instincts are powerful in all of us and there may be something to it, but it's too pat, too one-size-fits-all for my taste. Thus I was not initially sympathetic to Daniel Klein's explanation of the British left's intellectually impossible attachment to the Palestinian cause and almost stopped reading after a few paragraphs. Britain and the Palestinian Word-Symbol. But I stuck with it and some pieces did seem to fit. 

Persistently tracked to their origins, all the frothy debates surrounding Palestine devolve on this point. Why the woundedness? Why the empathetic overdrive in a single direction? The Palestine word-symbol represents collective humanity - humanity as Christ-like victim of the Jews’ unbearably disturbing presence: the mental presence of Jewish ideas that draw humanity away from innocence and instinct and animal-nature, and into the burdensome world of responsibility, moral choice and honesty before our Creator.

St. Greta makes an appearance.  When he gets to the men who are as deeply enamored with that cause he locates a separate instinct there, also plausible.  He may have overshot and told a just-so story in both cases, but I think it is worth a look. 

 

US Men's National Team

I get it that you almost have to do something flag-related for the World Cup and the 250th, but I'm not sure they got quite the look they wanted for the Stadium Home jerseys. This is major star Christian Pulisic, BTW


 At first glance I thought of gondoliers.  Put a straw boater with a long ribbon on that and give him a pole.