Saturday, November 20, 2021

Unsettled Matters


There's nothing quite like an old unsolved mystery to make an old retired investigator start to twitch and jingle. Maybe it's time to get back out there and show them how it's done...

And when it comes to old mysteries  a couple of doozies popped back up this week.

First, anyone who grew up in Michigan in the 50s and 60s has always wondered what happened to Jimmy Hoffa's body. Rumors have circulated for years but his bones have never been found. Now a deathbed confession has led searchers to a supposed burial site in New Jersey and once again the old Mob-related murder mystery is back in the news.

Hoffa was the former head of the Teamsters Union with deep Mafia ties when he disappeared in 1975. Despite many searches in Michigan and elsewhere his fate has never been confirmed. 

Now it turns out that a landfill worker who died in March 2020 reportedly told a friend that his father had said that he had been ordered to bury Hoffa's body underground in a steel drum in New Jersey. The FBI has searched the site with no results reported to date.

So that's one.

The other old case is the 1965 assassination of Malcolm X. By exonerating the two men convicted of his killing this week, New York City investigators have resurfaced the question of who actually did kill the black activist leader.

An investigation by the Manhattan district attorney’s office found that prosecutors, the FBI and the New York Police Department withheld key evidence that would probably have resulted in the men’s acquittal.

So they have been freed and the case is once again officially unsolved.

This long after the fact, it my seem extremely unlikely either that Hoffa's body will be located or Malcolm's killer(s) will be identified, but don't tell that to an old investigative reporter.

We aways believe that the answer is out there, under the next stone, around the next corner, or courtesy of the next deathbed confession.

It just requires the right person to show up at the right time to crack the case.

***

SATURDAY'S HEADLINES:

Africa’s rising cities -- By 2100, 13 of the world’s 20 biggest urban areas will be in Africa. This is how Africa will become the center of the world’s urban future. (WP)


* Tens of thousands march in Vienna against COVID measures before lockdown (Reuters)



Grammarly Raises $200 Million at $13 Billion Valuation (The Information)

*Jimmy Hoffa: Deathbed confession sparks long-missing U.S. union boss body hunt (BBC)

* FBI searched under New Jersey bridge for Jimmy Hoffa's remains last month (CNN)


F.B.I. Agents Became C.I.A. Operatives in Secret Overseas Prisons -- Lawyers disclosed the unusual arrangement in evidentiary hearings to prepare for the Sept. 11 trial at Guantánamo Bay. (NYT)

Native Americans dispel myths by living their truth: ‘We are still here’ (WP)

* U.S. wildfires have killed nearly 20% of world’s giant sequoias in two years (Guardian)

* Kyle Rittenhouse Acquitted of All Charges (Apple News)

France to ban sales of dogs and cats at pet shops (NHK)

* Britain seeks ban of single use plastic plates and cutlery in England (Reuters)

On Putin’s Strategic Chessboard, a Series of Destabilizing Moves (NYT)

Putin is testing U.S., NATO with buildup along Russia-Ukraine border, defense minister says (WP)

* U.S. seeks balance as fears grow Russia may invade Ukraine (AP)

Biden's balancing act in the Middle East has a problem: Israel (Politico)

Covid-19 live updates: Delta variant dangerous during pregnancy, CDC reports say (WP)

Europe’s Covid surge forces Austria to plan mandatory vaccination (Financial Times)

* Canada flood shows how climate change could fuel atmospheric river storms (Reuters)

Chinese naval ship enters Japan's waters (NHK)

Chinese, Russian bombers fly near Japan (NHK)

* Afghanistan: The teenage girls returning to school under the Taliban (BBC)



* Abducted Afghan psychiatrist found dead weeks after disappearance (Guardian)


CDC advisers back coronavirus boosters for all adults, urge them for people 50 or older (WP)

Is work getting better or worse for women? (Politico)

The Decision That Cost Hitler the War -- “Hitler’s American Gamble,” by Brendan Simms and Charlie Laderman, examines Hitler’s ill-fated choice to declare war on the United States. (NYT Books)

* 'Emotionally brilliant': Adele releases new album '30' (Reuters)

What to Know About Teen Boys and Videogames—According to Teen Boys (WSJ)


Economists Trace Great Resignation To Comedy Central Airing ‘Office Space’ Constantly During Workers’ Formative Years (The Onion)

*** 

"Now I Wonder."

Chris Isaak

 Now I wonder. 

I keep on praying for a blue sky, I keep on searching through the rain. I keep on thinking of the good times, will they ever come again? 

Now I wonder. Now I wonder. I keep on praying for a blue sky, I keep on searching through the rain. I keep on thinking of the good times, will they ever come again?

Now I wonder.
Now I wonder.

When I was younger I believed, that I could win.
Now I wonder.

There was a time when you and I, walked hand & hand.
Now I wonder.

I keep on searching for the old me, I keep on thinking I can change.
I keep on hoping for a new day, will I ever feel the same?

Now I wonder.
Oh I wonder.
Now I wonder.

Friday, November 19, 2021

We Were All There

(NOTE: I will eventually be closing this blog down for public viewing. Never miss a post by subscribing to my daily newsletter: https://davidweir.substack.com/.)

If I wrote more often about popular music, it would be about the lyrics, since I'm hardly competent to comment on the rest. But I have always had a certain fascination with the occasional long song that breaks through -- like the best Bob Dylan pieces. They resemble long-form journalism, which is largely a thing of the past now. 

In this context I recently watched Taylor Swift perform her 10-minute song, "All Too Well," on SNL, and it immediately struck me as an instant classic. I checked with my resident pop music expert and he agreed.

At the time I was ignorant about the song's origin but in this regard YouTube is a great research tool. It turns out that Swift first performed it at the age of 21 during a session not meant for recording but that engineers recorded anyway. 

That was ten years ago.

She was in a down state at the time, apparently over a failed relationship. As much as older people may minimize youthful love affairs, they often carry emotional consequences that can be especially devastating. 

This song reflects that.

Now, according to conventional wisdom, a ten minute song is much too long to get much commercial playing time, but there are exceptions to that rule. Recall "American Pie," "Alice's Restaurant," and others.

This song of Swift's, I suspect, may be such an exception.

Story-telling in song can have a greater emotional impact than other types of writing due to the way our brains respond to music. Neuroscientists have been able to map how certain musical patterns match the way neurons fire in out brains, and while the cause-and-effect may be unclear, the patterns are clear.

And as anyone who has ever been moved by opera will attest, you don't even have to know the language of a song to be deeply moved by it.

There are plenty of things to complain about with YouTube, like all of the big Internet services, but the ability to get lost in the archives of almost any genre of music is unparalleled there. Spotify is pretty damn good too.

As to why I would devote space and time to a pop song today as my "commentary on the news," all I can do is quote Ms. Swift: "I was there, I remember it all too well."


***

FRIDAY'S HEADLINES:

• First Known Covid Case Was Vendor at Wuhan Market, Scientist Says (NYT)

* Dems’ sweeping social, climate bill passes divided House (AP)

VIDEO: Colorado Wildfire Prompts Evacuations -- The fast-moving Kruger Rock fire in northern parts of the state led to the death of a pilot who was fighting the blaze. (AP, Storyful and Reuters)

Bipartisan state attorneys general launch investigation into Meta (Politico)

In Charlottesville trial, jurors learn to decode the secret slang of white supremacists (WP)

* Vancouver storm: A state of emergency has been declared in British Columbia (BBC)


* Residents brace for torrential rains in already flooded western Canada (Guardian)



The massive rains that unleashed floods and mudslides in the Canadian province of British Columbia exposed the country’s supply chain vulnerability as crucial railways and roads were severed from the country's biggest port. (Reuters)



California faces another dry winter, and without precipitation to nourish the state’s reservoirs, federal officials say water rationing will continue for another year. (SFC)



* Can Russia's Press Ever Be Free? (New Yorker)

Oklahoma governor commutes Julius Jones’ death sentence (AP/Politico)

China uses water cannon against Philippine boats (NHK)

* Travis McMichael says Ahmaud Arbery was no threat during chase (BBC)


Revealed: the places humanity must not destroy to avoid climate chaos (Guardian)

Alleged hackers from Iran charged with targeting U.S. voters in disinformation campaign in 2020 (WP)

Austria will become the first country in western Europe to reimpose a full COVID-19 lockdown, it said as neighboring Germany warned it may follow suit, sending shivers through financial markets worried about the economic fallout. (Reuters)

How widespread is Covid in animals and what are the risks to humans? (Financial Times)

UN concerned about ISIL threat in Afghanistan (NHK)

Say goodbye to swing districts. Lawmakers are drawing easy wins in dozens of states. (Politico)




Shocking new details emerged after a Manhattan judge exonerated two men convicted of killing revolutionary civil rights icon Malcolm X. Documents suggest that the late FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover ordered multiple witnesses in the trial not to tell police or prosecutors they were FBI informants. “I apologize for what were serious, unacceptable violations of law and the public trust,” Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. told the court, saying the men were wrongfully convicted. [AP]

* Young people more optimistic about the world than older generations – Unicef (Guardian)


A prominent scientist who said lab theory of covid-19 origin should be probed now says evidence points to Wuhan market (WP)

Biden’s war on inflation is a battle to change human behavior (Politico)

Pandemic creating long-term joblessness (NHK)

Biden says U.S. is ‘considering’ a diplomatic boycott of Winter Olympics in China (WP)

US states investigate Instagram’s targeting of younger users (Financial Times)

Shopping online surged during Covid. Now the environmental costs are becoming clearer. (Politico)

Japanese researcher films frog croaking underwater (NHK)

FBI Solving 80% More Cases After Getting Great Big Magnifying Glass (The Onion) 

***

"All Too Well"

By Elisabeth Wagner Rose  and Taylor Alison Swift


I walked through the door with you
The air was cold
But something about it felt like home somehow
And I, left my scarf there at your sister's house
And you've still got it in your drawer even now
Oh, your sweet disposition
And my wide-eyed gaze
We're singing in the car, getting lost upstate
Autumn leaves falling down like pieces into place
And I can picture it after all these days
And I know it's long gone and that magic's not here no more
And I might be okay but I'm not fine at all
'Cause there we are again on that little town street
You almost ran the red 'cause you were lookin' over at me
Wind in my hair, I was there
I remember it all too well
Photo album on the counter
Your cheeks were turning red
You used to be a little kid with glasses in a twin-sized bed
And your mother's telling stories 'bout you on the tee-ball team
You told me 'bout your past thinking your future was me
And I know it's long gone and there was nothing else I could do
And I forget about you long enough to forget why I needed to
'Cause there we are again in the middle of the night
We're dancing 'round the kitchen in the refrigerator light
Down the stairs, I was there
I remember it all too well, yeah
And maybe we got lost in translation
Maybe I asked for too much
But maybe this thing was a masterpiece 'til you tore it all up
Running scared, I was there
I remember it all too well
And you call me up again just to break me like a promise
So casually cruel in the name of being honest
I'm a crumpled up piece of paper lying here
'Cause I remember it all, all, all
Too well
Time won't fly, it's like I'm paralyzed by it
I'd like to be my old self again
But I'm still trying to find it
After plaid shirt days and nights when you made me your own
Now you mail back my things and I walk home alone
But you keep my old scarf from that very first week
'Cause it reminds you of innocence
And it smells like me
You can't get rid of it
'Cause you remember it all too well, yeah
'Cause there we are again when I loved you so
Back before you lost the one real thing you've ever known
It was rare, I was there, I remember it all too well
Wind in my hair, you were there, you remember it all
Down the stairs, you were there, you remember it all
It was rare, I was there, I remember it all too well

Thursday, November 18, 2021

As Covid Recedes

[NOTE: If you want to support my writing please subscribe to my newsletter. It is free or paid -- your choice.]

During the height of the Covid pandemic, I spent some time looking into the history of similar events throughout recorded human history. Suffice it to say that there have been a lot of them.

And through most of these crises a singular pattern became clear -- that there are two distinct phases of the Event. First is the killer plague itself, wreaking havoc.

 Second there is the aftermath.

The aftermath wreaks havoc too, but it is more subtle, long-lasting and consequential.

During any pandemic's peak period, people are falling ill and dying everywhere. It spreads almost unabated. Nobody knows the cause or even if they do, they don't know how how to cure it. Conspiracy theories flourish, various groups are blamed for the disease.

Panic rules the day.

We've certainly witnessed all of that with Covid-19, but now we have entered the aftermath of the crisis, we may have trouble recognizing the new signs of danger all around us.

But they are everywhere. 

The accelerating toll from addiction is only gradually becoming clear. Addiction thrives amidst isolation and hopelessness, both of which are endemic in modern society and were greatly impacted by the pandemic.

And the problem with addiction is that while it is given lip-service as a disease every bit as much as cancer, stroke or heart disease, it is the only one that is widely blamed on the patient.

Alcoholics and drug addicts are blamed and stigmatized by virtually everyone for getting sick, for making the "choice" to harm themselves. Closely related to the addiction crisis are the plagues of depression and anxiety that have beset many, especially the young.

These conditions are condescendingly labeled as "mental" illnesses (as if the brain were not part of the body). They result tragically in the silent killer wave of suicides that courses through our society with an unabated relentlessness.

Addiction, depression, suicide are all personal. Then there are the wider social impacts.

The damage to small, local businesses by the pandemic was only partially ameliorated in the U.S. by government aid; millions of businesses failed and will not be reopening. Meanwhile, some of the big national chain stores are benefiting; others have rushed to convert to online shopping and home delivery -- the big winners commercially during Covid.

The "mass resignations" occurring are a sign of how deeply dissatisfying most jobs are to people; working remotely brought this into focus for many, and now they are quitting in droves.

Even as the social and economic impacts of the pandemic set in, the political impacts remain unknown.

In theory, surviving a plague that threatened us all in spite of wealth or status could have united us toward a greater sense of common purpose. Had that happened, we may have been able to breach the partisan divides and addressed the largest issues facing our society -- wealth disparity, poverty, health system disfunction, discrimination, educational inequity, housing crisis, environmental decline, climate change.

But that didn't happen.

What has happened historically after pandemics is the rise of extremism, where events like the shameful coup attempt of January 6th occur, with the as-yet-unpunished perpetrators freely plotting a return to power in 2022 and 2024.

Despots thrive in an environment of fear and ignorance.

The novel coronavirus illness itself may recede in importance now. But the damage to democracy has yet to fully occur.

***

THURSDAY's HEADLINES:

An estimated 100,000 people died of drug overdoses in the United States in one year, a historic milestone that reflects the struggle to treat addiction. Experts say the key drivers are likely the spread of deadly fentanyl and the ongoing pandemic, which left Americans isolated and unable to get treatment or support. [AP

Protesters disrupt the world’s largest coal port: ‘This is us responding to the climate crisis’ (WP)

1,200 Miles From Kabul, a Celebrated Music School Reunites -- Students and teachers of the Afghanistan National Institute of Music and their families, almost 200 in the past week, have fled to Qatar to escape Taliban restrictions on music. (NYT)

* Taliban calls on Congress to release Afghanistan assets (The Hill)

* They fled Afghanistan. Now they live with 16 people in a single Kansas City apartment (KansasCity.com)

U.S. considering sending some evacuees who don't pass vetting process back to Afghanistan (CNN)

* 'This experience broke a lot of people': Inside State amid the Afghanistan withdrawal (Politico)

* Afghan judges in UK fear for colleagues left behind -- Under Taliban rule, female judges in Afghanistan have reportedly been tortured and received death threats. Hundreds were forced into hiding, worried that those they'd convicted would now come to seek their revenge after being released from prison. (BBC)


Delhi indefinitely shuts schools as smog worsens (NHK)

* Leaders of the United States, Canada and Mexico are set to agree to new methane curbs and COVID-19 vaccine donations when they meet for the first time in five years, according to senior Biden administration officials. (Reuters)

* Fourth wave hitting Germany with ‘full force’ (Guardian)

2 men to be cleared in 1965 killing of Malcolm X -- Muhammad Aziz and the late Khalil Islam, who spent decades in prison for the crime, were being exonerated after a nearly two-year legal investigation. (NYT)

Vancouver storm: Minister says there is 'no doubt' it is linked to climate change (BBC)

How obituaries got a jolt of new life in the Internet era (WP)

Oil and gas companies purchased drilling rights for more than 1.7 million acres in the Gulf of Mexico in the largest offshore lease sale in U.S. history. The Biden administration, fresh off hopeful talks at the U.N. Climate Summit, argued its hands were tied on the matter due to a court ruling. Environmental groups are not thrilled, calling the sale a “carbon bomb” that left them “aghast” and “shattered.” [HuffPost]

* The Double-Whammy COVID-Flu -- It’s becoming clear that “coinfections” happen all the time. Just how bad are they? (Atlantic)

Self-driving bullet train put to the test (NHK)

The University of California and the union representing 6,500 lecturers reached a tentative agreement early Wednesday that averted a planned two-day walkout. (AP)


A partial lunar eclipse, the longest in 580 years, is coming Thursday night (WP)

Disney Acquires All Of America’s Children For $52 Billion (The Onion)

***

"The Day After"

Songwriters: Duda Mariusz / Kozieradzki Piotr Wlodzimierz
What if it's not
If it's not meant to be
What if someone
Has made a mistake
What we've become
There's no turning back
Maybe it's time
To say that out loud
Question marks are falling down
Crushing underneath our memories
As we stand and look around
The world that remained
On the walls we paint our dreams
Hiding in the fallout shelters
While The Gardens of Eden
Are burning above
What if it's not
If it's not meant to be
What if someone
Has made a mistake
What we've become
There's no turning back
Maybe it's time
To say that out loud