"The longest-running, least-read blog in the world" Peter Forsythe in Hong Kong
Friday, 31 July 2020
‘Mainland and overseas Chinese may be worlds apart over China’
Washington is mistaken to assume that Chinese citizens within China are about to rise up against a hated communist party. Not going to happen.
Beijing is mistaken to assume that the Chinese diaspora will automatically support them. Many may (often in the US, Canada, Australia and Britain) and many may not (often in SE Asia).
https://www.scmp.com/comment/opinion/article/3095418/mainland-and-overseas-chinese-may-be-worlds-apart-over-china
Un-good trends in Hong Kong
1. A new daily high of new cases, 149.
2. A swag of pan-Dems disqualified from September Legco elections. Under the new National Security Law. So much for the hopes it would be used with a light hand. Many of those disqualified I don’t have any time for. Joshua Wong, for example. But that’s not the point. Which is… once this has been swallowed and absorbed, what, who next?
3. Retail sales down 33%. Desperate tenants send mayday. Jobless rate doubles.
4. UPS joins FedEx in demanding the “right” not to fly to Hong Kong because of quarantine restrictions.
Krugman claims Republicans “sacrialize” selfishness
Imagine this turned about. If we were to make as broad a generalisation about the Democrats. That they were all crazy-left socialists who want to “sacralize” state to control all the means of production and to compel and control your every activity. Fair? Well, no. It’s generally considered bigoted to tar whole groups with one brush. Even if in the converse case it’s truer of where democrats have got to than the alleged selfishness of Republicans. Repeated polls show that Democrats have shifted further left, while Republicans have stayed pretty much Center right.
Back to Krugman. This is a man who has got all the major calls wrong. He said in 1994 that the internet would have no more impact than the fax. On Trump’s election he predicted the worst stock market crash sine the Great Depression, just as it began its longest sustained bull run, that hasn’t quite finished even in this pandemic. He called a crash in 2019, before Nasdaq and Dow reached new records.
He’s also free and easy with figures.
Daniel Okrent, a former New York Times ombudsman, writes that Krugman has “the disturbing habit of shaping, slicing, and selectively citing numbers in a fashion that pleases his acolytes but leaves him open to substantive assaults.” [Link]In the article he links to this chart of Covid deaths, failing to mention America numbers are inflated by include previously unrecorded deaths from June whereas European deaths are deflated, by changed measures giving lower than trend figures. That’s why the US comes out so badly, an effect exaggerated by using a daily figure. Overall, the US is in the mid range of Europe as I show in my spreadsheet here. (Worse than France and Germany, better than Italy, Spain ams Britain).
Of course Krugman puts this bad US figure — exaggerated as it is — down to Trump. Whereas the measures to fight Covid are virtually all taken at the state level. And at the state level, as I showed yesterday, the top ten worst states are all run by Democrat governors.
To his main point about the alleged "sacralisation of selfishness” by Republicans, is this perhaps a projection? After all, what can be more selfish than wanting power so much that you attempt to invalidate an election by phoney charges of Russian collusion — as is now manifestly clear from revelations of FBI treatment of the Steele dossier, etc…
And how easy to invert Krugman. Here he is:
You see, the modern U.S. right is committed to the proposition that greed is good, that we’re all better off when individuals engage in the untrammelled pursuit of self-interest. In their vision, unrestricted profit maximization by businesses and unregulated consumer choice is the recipe for a good society.Support for this proposition is, if anything, more emotional than intellectual....And here’s the inverse:
You see, the modern U.S. Left is committed to the proposition that equity is good, that we’re all better off when the government engages in the untrammelled pursuit of control of all means of production. In their vision, unrestricted control by government and restriction of consumer choice is the recipe for a good society.Support for this proposition is, if anything, more emotional than intellectual....I don’t need to refute Krugman’s crude stereotype, nor substantiate the inverse -- after all, we’ve have plenty of evidence of the horrors of socialism in actual practice if not in theory.
In all, Krugman’s piece strikes me as a bit of a rant. I’m guilty of rants myself. But then I’m not a New York Times columnist. A bit more fact-checking by the “paper of record”, would do wonders, especially given the importance of fact checking the Times itself claimed to be motivated by in the fracas over the recent editorial by Tom Cotton -- and editorial, let’s recall, that reflected the beliefs of 58% of the American populace.
Thursday, 30 July 2020
Bret and Heather on Portland and Covid
How are we doing, here in Hong Kong?
Backyard pano: lush in rain and heat |
HK: The whole place is now shut down, though the dining shut down is causing blow back. Pools and beaches closed which also makes no sense. Both our Piazzas sealed off with police tape.
So we sit and gaze at green.
Croton and “Wallet-lower” on Traveller palms |
Our Flame Tree (left) nearly joining up with the Traveller Palm |
Wednesday, 29 July 2020
Why is Bob Ross still so popular?
Hi Folks! Long-time listener, first time commenter...
I first learnt about Bob Ross on Frank’s podcast. I bought all the Bob Ross gear and am looking forward to deploying it. I agree with Frank that Bob paints the same painting 400 times.
But I don’t agree with Frank that Bob is some kind of charlatan for copying the technique from someone else. Yes he did, but the “wet-on-wet” technique goes back to the Italian Renaissance. Bob never hid or denied that he’d learned from Bill Alexander. There’s a great new article in The Atlantic on “Why is Bob Ross still so popular?” It’s a great read. /Snip:
Ross was a force of pure positivity in a world without a lot of it. Later in life, when writing magazine stories became my full-time job, I started watching old Joy of Painting episodes when I wanted some inspiration. Writing can be a lonely endeavor, and writers are prone to self-doubt. Sometimes when I need a bit of outside encouragement, I turn to my old friend Bob Ross. His calming voice helps me cut through the noise of life and focus on creating something new.
It turns out that a lot of other people feel the same way. As long as he’s been on television, he’s had a large, devoted fan base. At the end of the 1980s, Joy of Painting had 80 million worldwide viewers and received 200 letters in the mail every day, according to old newspaper stories. Not long after the show went on the air, the company that Ross started with his business partners created an 800 number fans could call to ask questions about the painting technique: My trees are blurry or My rivers look funny or My colors are mixing when they shouldn’t. Sometimes people would call just to talk about life in general.
Fact checking the New York pandemic performance
All top ten are Democrat States. From Statista |
At least not if you follow the facts — aka the data.
First up is the chart above, which is deaths per 100,000 ranked top to bottom, about which two points:
1. New York is at the top of the list. Not only that. New York has the highest per capita Covid deaths in the world. Sure the curve is flattened, but only after huge spikes It’s surely a bit rich to claim this is terrific performance, when it’s really rather the polar opposite.
2. Every state in the top ten worst performers has a Democrat Governor. Given that the states are 24 Democrat and 26 Republican, it is surely no coincidence that every single one of the worst performers is Dem. Again, it’s rich to present this as evidence of how well Democrat states are doing vs the Sunshine states, when the data show exactly the opposite.
To the extent he acknowledges New York’s high death rate, Boot excuses it, thus:
…our misfortune was primarily not of our own devising. New York City paid a heavy price for being the most dynamic and densely populated city in the country — the No. 1 travel destination for foreign travelers in North America. Covid-19 spread far and wide before anyone knew what was really happening.About which again two points:
1. Bill De Blasio, mayor of New York, was encouraging people to come to New York. During Chinese New Year he encouraged people to go out and party. In big groups. I remember this clearly at the time, and I agreed with him. (I was in my “herd-immunity uber alles” stage). Appears I was wrong, and so was De Blasio. I’ll admit I was wrong, as were many people, scientists included. De Blasio, however, shifts the blame. To Trump, of course. When it happens that, at the time, Trump was closing borders with China and Europe, to the (then) chagrin of De Blasio and co, who said it was “racist” and “xenophobic“ — but who now have the temerity to say Trump “didn’t do enough”! That is, at the very least, breathtaking hypocrisy. Or perhaps he just doesn’t remember … (Mind, I don’t think Trump has had a good pandemic. He’s been fitful, contradictory, disengaged. Even conservatives are critical)..
2. While Boot gives New York and De Blasio a pass — “Covid-19 spread far and wide before anyone knew what was happening” — he gives the federal government no such slack. Everyone in every country has been blindsided and made some missteps at some stage during this pandemic. (Look at us here in HK!). I’m just looking for consistency, is all.
Boot appears to believe that he alone has the answer to controlling Covid. Rather odd when you see what bizarre conclusions he comes to with clear and unequivocal data above,, but hubris will have its way…
Fact is, no country, no expert, has all the answers. We know some things (schools safe to open) we don’t know lots of things. Even Dr Fauci makes mistakes. A little modesty needed here.
Tuesday, 28 July 2020
Coleman Hughes, refuting the “epidemic” of police killing African Americans
Thus, BLM, the movement focussed in police killings, cares nought for the data.
And Coleman finishes off on the data issues. He’s “playing a different game”:
'Even if genocide were to happen': Han treatment of Uygurs
Free speech in the balance?
Click to enlarge |
The above is in today’s print edition of the South China Morning Post. It is not in the online version. Could this be a bit of self-censorship? After all, Beijing can easily get the inline version. Whereas the print version just goes to old dodderers like me, and we don’t need to worry about them too much, do we? Let them play around in their sand pit and believe free speech remains.
I hope I’m wrong and it’s just an oversight.
The article is by Henry Litton, retired court of Final Appeal judge, who has been a staunch proponent of focusing on keeping OCTS going past 2047. Had we focussed on that, we wouldn’t be dealing with a harsh NSL as we are now.
We brought this on ourselves, lads.
Monday, 27 July 2020
Can we stop a civil war in the US?
Bret and his interviewers are all of the Left. In Bret’s case he calls himself a revolutionary, a Bernie supporter. And Francis Foster is a solid leftie. The thing that will get others on the Left in knots is that they criticise some of the crazy stuff that’s going on at the moment. Calls not for reform, but foe “dismantling”.
To watch the whole interview: click on “YouTube” in the bottom right.
Hong Kong: dining out banned; masks required outdoors; sixth straight day of triple-digit cases
But where is the “Second Wave”? |
- Exemptions for mask wearing will be granted in the case of ‘reasonable excuses’ such as medical conditions, but not for exercise
- The measures come as the city records two more coronavirus deaths, a 76-year-old woman and a 92-year-old man. Here...
And Bernard-Henri Levy, France’s rock-star philosopher, and Lockdown Sceptic, says we have “to resist the wind of madness blowing over the world’.
I agree. Delusion, hallucination and paranoia. We have to learn to live with the virus:protect the elderly, disinfect, mask, get on with life. (H/t Lockdown Sceptics)
I know why so many people don’t believe in the American Dream
But I know I am blessed to have had the luxury of living fearlessly though the first four decades of my life. Unlike my Post colleague Eugene Robinson, I never had to warn my teenage boys how to behave when stopped by a police officer. And unlike the writer Ta-Nehisi Coates, I did not know the fear that arises from being born of “a people who control nothing, who can protect nothing.” As Coates told his son, “Black people love their children with a kind of obsession. You are all we have, and you come to us endangered.”
The streets of West Baltimore do not allow a child to walk through life carrying a sense of invincibility. Instead, parents harbor an unremitting dread when their child does something as mundane as walking to school.
Fathers across the South Side of Chicago cannot assure their children that a faith in God, a love of country and a life filled with hard work will lead them to The Dream. For millions of Americans, that dream appears to be little more than a white man’s conjuring, designed to conceal a country’s sins and hold its citizens harmless for crimes committed against black humanity over the past 400 years.
President Trump understands better than most politicians the allure of cheap racial absolution. That is why he spent this week defending the Confederate flag and attacking a reporter who asked about the continued killing of black Americans. Just as he preached moral equivalence after Charlottesville, Trump suggested that we ignore the uncomfortable fact that a disproportionate number of black people are killed every year by law enforcement officers.
South Chicago is way more dangerous than that. Murders are common, multiple daily. But here’s the thing. It’s not police doing the murdering. It’s young black men killing other young black men.
*Carbondale: said to be the most boring city in the world. Wouldn’t argue
We’re all thought criminals now
Added: a nice Snip:
Bill Buckley used to observe that liberals always say they are in favor of entertaining opinions opposed to their own but are then surprised to discover that there are opinions opposed to their own. Here.
white people, stop capitalizing on your skin color
I feel confident that we will begin to make huge strides towards true racial equality once we learn to treat people differently according to our preconceived notions regarding their skin color, and I would like to thank the Associated Press for taking that first brave step.
Baby Bulbuls now grown up…
Baby first seen in my workshop |
Sunday, 26 July 2020
‘What we know – and what we don’t know – about stopping the spread of the coronavirus’
My comment at the site is :
Hamzelou:"Another strategy that appears to have been successful is the use of lockdowns: imposing restrictions on movement to contain the spread of disease."
The data do NOT support this assertion. Oxford U has a measure of the "Stringency of Lockdown". It has no correlation with no. of cases or deaths per million. (HK is an example!).
Meantime a UK Government study suggests up to 200,000 "excess deaths" as a result of lockdown. That is deaths not Covid-related, but caused by effects of *lockdowns* — eg, people going to hospitals less, not getting regular treatments, "excess" suicides, etc. You *cannot* ignore the costs — in *lives* as well as the economy — of lockdowns. This is a sloppy and superficial piece on a subject too important to treat so glibly.
Saturday, 25 July 2020
Bret and Zuby how the US looks to the outside
Hong Kong democracy camp wants many things, but do their demands add up?
Protesters who loathe Trump loathe China even more and urge him to “Make HK Great” while waving US flag |
To be clear, I also don’t want Hong komg to be “just another Chinese city” that’s why I live here and not Beijing or Shanghai.
I think the protesters were right to protest the extradition bill. And if their gripes include ridiculous house prices and widening economic gaps, then I’m all in. But they ended up with an inchoate and irrational set of “Five Demands, Not One Less”, which is where we part company. And I stick by my belief that all the year of protests have achieved is greater Chinese interference and greater repression and erosion of lie Seven Freedoms. They are turning Hong Kong into “just another Chinese city” with the willing acquiescence of the US, for it is playing a bigger game, the Great Game, the battle of the old hegemon with the rising hegemon.
In short, the protesters are achieving the very thing they say they are fighting against. The road to hell…
Spot on letter:
China - US reciprocity. If only they’d thought of this earlier
It might have helped if China had been a bit more reciprocal after the US chaperoned them into the World Trade Organisation in 2001. China got free access to western markets, most importantly the United States. And boy did it do well! In return? Pretty much nothing. They were supposed to. According to the WTO. But they simply didn’t.
Here’s an incomplete list of companies that China did not allow access to China’s market: Google, Facebook, YouTube, Blogger, Twitter…sure, were better off without lots of these. But that’s not what happened. China simply copied them and gave the home grown version exclusive access to China’s market. Whole sectors, like finance, insurance, telecoms, were off limits. In China, not to China in the west.
They forced foreign companies to transfer technology if they wanted access. This was specifically illegal under WTO rules they had signed up to. And I saw this, experienced this, myself via Australian companies.
Did they need to do this? Of course not. They just did. Because they could. And the west did nothing in return.
Until now. It’s too bad the fight back had to be by a man as unsuited to the fight as Donald Trump. But no president before had done anything other than cavil.
And so back to the reciprocity. If China had been more reciprocal four decades ago, maybe we’d not be reciprocating at each other now.
Friday, 24 July 2020
Hong Kong Covid: record cases in “Third wave”
From Worldometer |
Whatever… we have a chart like no other, except Spain is having a bit of an uptick. Nothing to be proud of, especially since I’ve been banging on about how well Hong Kong has done…
Seems most of the new cases are from crews on ships and planes that were neither tested nor quarantined. Why not? I don’t know.
[Professor Gabriel] Leung said the “working hypothesis” or credible explanation was that the latest cases came from multiple imported infections in those previously exempted from quarantine and testing, such as sea and air crew members.Taxis and restaurants are also vectors.
That said, we still have very low cases and deaths per million, still amongst the lowest in the world.
Dean of the Medical School at HKU, professor Gabriel Leung says that the “R number” has dropped sharply from 3-4 a few weeks ago, to under 0.5 now, result of measures taken, that I call “soft lockdown”.
Leung warned on July 12 that the city’s Covid-19 reproductive number had shot up to between three and four people infected by a carrier, but he said on Thursday that the figure had plunged on the back of a raft of social-distancing measures, including school closures, two weeks ago.It seems to me a pretty arbitrary set of measures that are assumed to be working. Maybe they are. Maybe not. The measures used across the world are all over the shop and it’s going to take some pretty sophisticated analysis to work out precisely which ones have worked and which ones haven’t. School closures, for example: there is little to no evidence that school closures affect the spread of Covid one way or the other.
The number fell to the current level of around 0.5 after more measures, including capping public gathering to groups of four, banning dine-in services at restaurants after 6pm and mandating mask-wearing on public transport, were put in place about a week ago.
Why Australia is exercising in South China Sea
From here. I haven’t checked the thread but guess it’ll be the “Australia is a US poodle” vein |
1. India, Japan, US, all democracies, like Australia. Democracies stick together against a clear and present threat. Which is that …
2. Xi Jinping's China is increasingly aggressive in the SC Sea. (And beyond, of you count the Belt and Road strategy).
Australia bread has been buttered by China. The US has provided a security umbrella for 70 years. When push comes to shove, security matters more than bread.
John Mearsheimer predicted* that Asian countries caught in the China-US bind — including Australia— would have to make a choice some day. Seems that day is here. Largely courtesy Xi Jinping. He has brought this in himself and on China. * )“Australia caught between the dragon and the eagle”).
Plus ca change |
Thursday, 23 July 2020
Robin DiAngelo and white fragility: does her message make sense? And do her methods work? « Why Evolution Is True
The New York Times Magazine has a very long article on Robin DiAngelo, her white fragility hypothesis (and her best-selling book about it), and her methods of training people in government, colleges, and businesses to be anti-racist and promote diversity in the workplace. As the article notes, she's made a ton of money off her hypothesis, but I don't begrudge her that. After all, the Kardashians, who are completely useless, make much more. Rather, I'll focus on the efficacy of her methods and whether her very message is consistent. If you read this site yesterday, you'll have seen a post about John McWhorter's take on DiAngelo's book White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk about Racism, a take that was not only highly critical, but accused her methods of fostering a bigotry of low expectations towards African-Americans.
The NYT piece, which is pretty positive, raises some of these questions, but they're examined in depth—and criticized—in a piece by Jonathan Chait in New York Magazine. The two pieces are below; click on screenshot to see the articles.
Do Teachers Have an Excuse for Missing Class?
I also wonder about locking down swimming pools. That can't make any sense, given that there are three reasons the virus will die there: 1. The sun. (UV kills germs) 2. The outside. 3. The Chlorine. I haven't seen that one case has been caught in a swimming pool.
Back to schools:
The Times: There has been no recorded case of a teacher catching the coronavirus from a pupil anywhere in the world, according to one of the government's leading scientific advisers.…
WSJ: Around the world, citizens have perhaps become more wary lately of the claims of epidemiologists. But at a minimum this report puts new pressure on lockdown advocates to produce evidence of alleged harms to justify school closures. This also creates a rather awkward moment for U.S. teachers unions and their media friends.…Do Teachers Have an Excuse for Missing Class?
Wednesday, 22 July 2020
'Harper’s Versus the Carpers'
It was at this point that he [Bertolt Brecht, German playwright and refugee from Hitler] said in words I have never forgotten, ‘As for them [the doomed defendants in Stalin’s show trials], the more innocent they are, the more they deserve to be shot.” I was so taken aback that I thought I had misheard him.
“What are you saying?” I asked.
He calmly repeated himself, “The more innocent they are, the more they deserve to be shot.” . . .
I was stunned by his words. “Why? Why?” I exclaimed. All he did was smile at me in a nervous sort of way. I waited, but he said nothing after I repeated my question.
I got up, went into the next room, and fetched his hat and coat. When I returned, he was still sitting in his chair, holding a drink in his hand. When he saw me with his hat and coat, he looked surprised. He put his glass down, rose, and with a sickly smile took his hat and coat and left. Neither of us said a word. I never saw him again.
“What are you saying?” I asked.
He calmly repeated himself, “The more innocent they are, the more they deserve to be shot.” . . .
I was stunned by his words. “Why? Why?” I exclaimed. All he did was smile at me in a nervous sort of way. I waited, but he said nothing after I repeated my question.
I got up, went into the next room, and fetched his hat and coat. When I returned, he was still sitting in his chair, holding a drink in his hand. When he saw me with his hat and coat, he looked surprised. He put his glass down, rose, and with a sickly smile took his hat and coat and left. Neither of us said a word. I never saw him again.
The narrator of that modest domestic but morally significant moment in 1935 is the late and much-lamented Sidney Hook in his 1985 memoir Out of Step: An Unquiet Life in the 20th Century.The above is the intro to John O’Sullivan’s eloquent essay on the kerfuffle after the release of a rather anodyne letter in support of free speech by 153 leftish worthies. The “Harper’s Letter”.
I’ve heard of Bertolt Brecht, of course, but never quite realised that as an early Marxist he was a profound supporter of Stalin in all his goriness, all his genocide of kulaks, all the purges and the Red Terror and all that. One of Brecht's plays is The Decision which is pretty much a straight-up justification for mass killing of even your own supporters... the more innocent they are....
Or, in O’Sullivan’s nice take, on the cancelling of people in leftish media -- Kevin Williamson (The Atlantic), Andrew Sullivan (New York magazine), Bari Weiss (the New York Times) --
The more talented they are, the more they deserve to be silenced.
Sun Tzu’s The Art of War and how it applies to battles modern and ancient
A super sounding edition bound in traditional Ming dynasty style |
Reviewed in today’s Post.
Barber’s Adagio for Strings
Soul Muisc…
Tuesday, 21 July 2020
‘Slow Train to Democracy’: Shanghai’s early democracy movement
From today’s review in the Post:
ADDED: From Amazon, where it’s on pre-order:
- Anne E. McLaren’s book about her time as a student in Shanghai in 1978 and 1979 stands out because it takes place in a time of huge transition in China
- Slow Train to Democracy recalls the city’s protest poster movement, and encounters with Chinese students who spoke about politics and changes in the country
About the Author
Action against China over treatment of Uygurs
This looks like a “Vocational Skills Training Centre”, right? Right. Dabancheng, Xinjiang, September 2018 |
Britain too, is taking action, via the Magnitsky Act against Chinese officials engaged in the oppression.
Glaringly absent: the Organisation of the Islamic Conference. Its 57 members have been silent on the treatment of its coreligionists in Xinjiang. The power of Chinese mammon.
A thread on how we got to action stations.
LATER: China’s horrid treatment of Uygur women
Monday, 20 July 2020
New York’s record on Covid is the worst in America (and the world)
Yesterday, down the Plaza here in Discovery Bay, HK, bumped into an old mate, resident here, but originally a New Yorker. who said, in passing, how badly Florida was doing in handling Covid -- his elderly parents live there-- and so much worse than New York.
- Deaths total: New York = 32,570 Florida = 4,985 (NY = 6.5 times as many)
- Death per million: New York = 1,777 Florida = 232 (NY = 7.7 times as many)
Don't forget: how bad this is, v. Sweden |
Chinese people are happy. Yes
Two points:
(A) I speak from experience, of visiting China regularly, at least pre-pandemic. I speak Chinese, usually travel on my own and Chinese folks are warm and chatty, So I have talked with many of the laobaixing — 老百姓, the “old hundred names”, your “average Zhou’s”, the “broad masses of the Chinese people”.
(B) Same time, I’ve heard many commenters in the West, on all sides of politics, tell me that Chinese are living in a “hellhole”, that it’s a “police state”, that all thinking is suppressed.
BUT, Because of (A) I can say of (B): it is simply not true.
A “hellhole”?? No,
In the forty-four years since Deng Xiaoping opened up the economy in 1977, average wages have increased 14% each and every year. The “wonder of compounding”, as Warren Buffet calls it, means that average incomes in China have massively increased — If you earned 100 a month in 1976, by 2020 you earned 31,920. More than 300 times as much! Truly the wonder of compounding.
As a result, nearly half the Chinese population are Middle Class.
This has happened at the same time as real wages in the West have stagnated: cue discontent and regular rioting. Just as flat real wages make unhappy, rising real wages make happy.
Thus: China ain’t no hellhole. There are plenty of places in China I’d rather live, than some places in the US (south Chicago, west Baltimore, bits of LA…)
Restaurant lockdown Hong Kong style
We go down to Plaza, Discovery Bay style, just before 6:00 pm as that’s when the new restrictions come into play. Dining at Il Bel Paese, which has refurbed in these virus days. New cutlery and crockery, elicited many positive comments, as I’m told by the waiter when I too effuse. We order, pasta, salad and prosecco. All served as normal, on the new gear.
Then, come 6:00 pm and they have to remove said cuttle-crock and replace all with plastic, plates, knives, forks and glasses. There is no difference in social distancing but we’re abiding by the new regulations, apparently.
In short: zero benefit in keeping virus at bay. And we end up with a pile of plastic. Which we help get rid of with the people who take over our table. In the trash, as there’s no recycle bin. (While: pandemic rubbish piles up).
Crazy, what?
Other: New restrictions in Hong Kong, while record new cases and no signs virus is in control here
Sunday, 19 July 2020
Hong Kong: this is what a Third Wave looks like
Hong Kong daily new cases. From Worldometer |
Further: there’s zero evidence, as far as I know, that you can catch the virus at the beach or pool. For the pool you have three things against it: UV, open air and chlorine.
Meantime we’re back in a form of lockdown. Pools, beaches, schools, gyms, included.
Still, Yonden Lhatoo thinks we’re “staring into the abyss”. I hope not. But I’ve given up predicting anything about this perplexing virus.
Saturday, 18 July 2020
Yikes! Hong Kong python swallows a deer
This link has more on the story — nature red in tooth and jaw, right here in rural Hong Kong. And also a vid of a python consuming a pig, in our north-east suburb of Sai Kung.
Why Sweden Succeeded in “Flattening the Curve” and New York Failed
With h/t to PN |
Here you have another case of the New York Times running a “narrative” rather than the news, when it says that we must “learn lessons” from Sweden. Yes we must, but not the ones the Times wants us to learn: viz, that lockdowns are a must. The lessons we must learn are that we do better when we count on people’s innate good sense to do the right thing, as long as we are clear on what that is: namely: distance, mask and disinfect. And protect the elderly, especially those with preexisting conditions.
Oh dear.... we are being Covid-clobbered, and not in a good way.
Link
Friday, 17 July 2020
“I talk a lot about cow farts”…
We must handle the other 75% |
Now Burger King has put out a video promoting a type of lemongrass additive to reduce methane in cow farts. Reduce by around 33%, according to BK.
Good, right? Not according to farmers who slam the video as “condescending and hypocritical”. They point out that cow burps are worse than cow farts, methane-wise. (I did not know that!).
Still, isn’t doing a bit better than doing nothing?
Btw, I’m all in favour of our growing meat in the lab, rather then on actual animals. In a hundred years’ time we may well look back with horror at humans today who raised actual living creatures for meat.
Anyhoo… here’s the BBC, where I just found this lovely little story, and learnt about cow belches v. cow farts:
Fast food chain Burger King has released an advertisement encouraging US farmers to change cow diets in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.The controversial video ad features children in cowboy hats singing about the impact methane gas emitted due to cow flatulence has on global warming.Memo to Bill: it’s the belching, not the farting. Or, more correctly: it’s farting and belching.
Burger King claims adding lemongrass to cow diets could ease digestion and dramatically reduce methane emissions.
But farm leaders say the ad is "condescending and hypocritical". More…
LATER: I actually got around to watching the vid. It’s quite cute. I don’t understand why people should get so het up about it. And no doubt helps raise the issue of cattle-sourced methane. By the way, it doesn’t miss out on belching! Link to the vid.
Thursday, 16 July 2020
‘We had to destroy it in order to save it’. Part II
Alex Lo makes the same point today in How to weaponise Hong Kong against China.
/Snip:
“Hong Kong will now be treated the same as mainland China,” Trump said. “No special privileges, no special economic treatment, and no export of sensitive technologies.”
It’s hard to see how any of that will help Hong Kong, its people and their “autonomy” by treating it as part of China. Surely this couldn’t have been what the opposition and protest movement had in mind when they openly urged Washington to sanction Hong Kong and Beijing. They had wanted the threat, not the execution, in the belief that Beijing would back off.This is down to the actions of protesters and rioters. There is not another reason we are in the pickle we are in now. We were never an “oppressed” society under Beijing’s boot. That’s a myth and a delusion. We’ve enjoyed wide freedoms, more than most nations. We did have a niggling issue — universal voting for the chief executive. But it’s not that we had no democracy. We have, especially at the local level, and as someone once said, “all politics is local”. And look elsewhere at voter turnouts in places that do have wide suffrage. For the position of Mayor for example, which is what our chief executive really is - an executive mayor - turnouts in the US are as low as mid 20%. I’m not downplaying the importance of universal suffrage. It’s a fine and dandy thing. But to destroy our city for it? To invite Beijing interference because of it? Especially when the driving force is nativist bigotry against Mandarin-speaking cousins? Surely not.
Alex Lo again:
Some opposition leaders thought they could change the behaviour of one superpower by inviting the intervention of another one. They rather neglect the fact that Hongkongers are small fry caught in a titanic power struggle between the two. If someone is going to be trampled on, any sensible person could have guessed which one.
The new American laws – there are more in the pipeline – will harm Hong Kong a lot more than Beijing. Washington is on a warpath to take on China in every domain it can think of – think of – South China Sea, 5G, trade, international disease control, Chinese students and researchers in America, US-listed Chinese companies …
Either they are too naive or stupid to realise what has happened. Or they hate China more than they love their own city. Maybe giving Beijing a bloody nose is worth it even if it means breaking Hong Kong in the process. And many of our noble freedom fighters can move to the Five Eyes English-speaking nations to avoid facing the consequences of their actions.