Japan, The U.S., The Moon And More,
Japan, The U.S., The Moon And More, Weldon Berger, Bad Crow Review
Links are at the end, with the steam trains.
The train station had a 7-11 outside the platforms. The station was near my hotel and I went there for evening snacks a few times—bentos and musubi and azuki bean pastries and the like. Good food, really, in context.
I miss trains, as regular readers will know. Trains and crows, neither of which I got any good shots, the latter because they wouldn’t fucking stand still and the former, I don’t know, just because. Japanese train platforms aren’t really designed for dawdling.
You have to watch the Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins video linked below. It will leave you questioning everything you think you know. Also I’ve reconsidered my position on Tilly and the Wall from yesterday.
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Hyatt Regency Osaka will soon offer cat-friendly hotel rooms for you and your feline friend
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Every day is Caturday in Osaka as of February 1 this year. The upscale chain has your kitty’s back.1 Check’um out:
In addition (to the cat tree and cat hammock), a scratching post, nail clippers, corrugated cardboard, and toys are also at you and your cat’s disposal. Forget exploring the city–this room has everything you need to enjoy a quick getaway!
No vacation would be complete without some fine dining, and luckily, Hyatt Regency Osaka also offers an incredible room service menu geared towards cats and dogs. The menu includes delectable-sounding Daisendori chicken meatballs, deer pot-au-feu, fish, and vegetable dishes that your pet can enjoy while you (presumably) order off of the human menu yourself.
None of the cats with which I’m on speaking terms travel well, but if I had any money I’d be tempted.
Which reminds me: if you like the Review and you’re not already subscribed, consider signing up. It’s free unless you want to pay.
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Hawai’i Supreme Court Assaults An Obvious
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I love Hawai’i but damn, the political culture here can be maddening.
The Hawaii Supreme Court said in a ruling Tuesday that the Honolulu Police Commission was wrong when it decided that the city should defend ex-HPD Chief Louis Kealoha in one of Hawaii’s biggest corruption trials.
The high court said Kealoha didn’t qualify for city legal representation because he acted in his own self-interest when he helped frame his wife’s uncle, Gerard Puana, to gain leverage in a civil dispute over money, according to the ruling.
“Kealoha’s duties did not include overseeing a criminal conspiracy to hide his and his wife’s misappropriation of funds belonging to others,” the justices wrote. “Nothing in this record indicated that Kealoha was acting in any way to perform his duties as chief of police.”2
I think the commission also paid Kealoha $250,000 to resign, although they may have gotten that back. In any event, he and his now-former wife are doing significant time in the federal pokey, and the city has paid out more than a million bucks to her uncle for his trouble.
Still, Hawai’i nō ka ʻoi.
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“We have to recognise as a national crisis this under-representation of women in politics”
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Not the U.S. for once. I like a lot of things about Japan, but in many, maybe most respects the formal attitude toward women sucks, which this BBC story about the mayor of one Tokyo ward illustrates.
Japan is the world’s third largest economy, but it has an abysmal record when it comes to the gender gap index. In the most recent report released by the World Economic Forum in July 2022, Japan ranked 116th out of 146 countries.
It is the worst performing G7 nation when it comes to gender issues. The country has never had a female prime minister, and there are only two women in the current cabinet.3
Satoko Kishimoto ran and won with no political experience and after a long sojurn in Europe, where she was sensitized to political issues around women.
As things stand, she is one of only three female mayors in Tokyo’s 23 main districts.
“We have to recognise as a national crisis this under-representation of women in politics,” Ms Kishimoto said.
“Women’s representation has stayed almost the same for 75 years. This is insane!”
Kishimoto said she had been routinely harassed while running, and that the men in her government are sulky to an extreme about answering to a woman, making policy discussions and simple administration a chore. A city council member in another Tokyo ward, Tomomi Higashi, added some graphic details from her experience.
“I was most surprised by the physical harassment,” Ms Higashi said – saying there were times when she was touched inappropriately during the early days of campaigning. “I was shocked.”
. . .
“Being showered with insults by old men. [Men] coming very close to me and interrupting my speeches. Being asked to come for drinks at midnight. That’s when I really felt the male-dominated society. It was a wake-up call for me,” she said.
The U.S. is obviously not great on women’s issues, including political representation, but even conservatives here have a better record than Japan, with women holding important cabinet posts in the last two Republican administrations. And of course Hillary Clinton won the popular vote in her run.
In 2021 the LDP – who’ve been in power almost uninterrupted since 1955 – proposed allowing five female lawmakers to join its board meetings as observers – under the condition that they stay silent during meetings.
Yowsa.
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Lunar Standard Time
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What time is it on the moon?
Since the dawn of the space age, the answer has been: It depends. For decades, lunar missions have operated on the time of the country that launched them. But with several lunar explorations heading for the launchpad, the European Space Agency has deemed the current system unsustainable.
The solution, the agency said last week, is a lunar time zone.4
Midnight on the Dark Side. The surprisingly crowed body will see missions from the ESA and a half-dozen countries during the next few years, as well as the construction of a multinational lunar orbital station to serve as a staging ground for lunar expeditions.
So maybe not right away but relatively soon, we can talk about lunar time, as devised to adjust to earth’s lying atomic clocks.
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Music, sweet music
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Those Darlins are fun; The Detroit Cobras were (are? I’m not sure) a punk/garage band fronted by the late Rachel Nagy, whose vocals could be described as uncompromising; the Jennys in the next two groups are both Jenny Lewis, who has a wonderful sense of humor; Laura Stephenson is more into ballads than I generally care for but has a lovely voice and plays a nice guitar; Ex Hex is a power-pop trio which I’m enjoying, and the linked live video is a good one.
Those Darlins, “Blur the Line;”5 The Detroit Cobras, “Life, Love and Leaving;”6 Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins, “Rabbit Fur Coat;”7 Jenny and Johnny, “I’m Having Fun Now;”8 Laura Stephenson, “Laura Stephenson;”9 Ex Hex, “It’s Real.”10
That, Comrades, is all there is
Still a little dazed from yesterday’s ketamine adventure, I must say.
If you like what I write, please share it and if you’ve not already subscribed, please consider it—it’s free unless you want to pay.
Be well, take care.
1 SoraNews24 with the skinny on the Hyatt cathouse
2 Honolulu Civil Beat on the Hawai’i Supreme Court’s scorcher
3 The BBC on Satoko Kishimoto’s rough mayoral go
5 Those Darlins live, In the Wilderness
7 Jenny Lewis and the Watson Twins, Rise Up With Fists
8 Jenny and Johnny live on Conan, Big Wave
I got tons of crows in the backyard and he can shoot as many as he wants, but please throw them over the fence down the slope. Turkey buzzards will clean it up. Won’t take long. I recommend a 20 gauge if he’s got the touch. They don’t need to be perfectly still. With a 12 gauge he might get 3 or 4 at a time, though.
Eric
This is someone I have known for about 20 – something years. Another vet and not to be messed with . . . He is the other side of the spectrum. Where I mess with numbers, he creates. Good guy though and intelligent.
yep. we need more women in office. Marjorie Taylor Greene for President!
I wonder what Mrs Macbeth would say about that.
And more… (In some sense, we are already living in the future.)
Forget Utopia. Ignore Dystopia. Embrace Protopia!
NY Times – March 14
Some proponents of protopian thinking believe that it can lead us to a better future. Others maintain we’re already living in a protopia.
In 2009, Kevin Kelly, the white-bearded futurist and co-founder of Wired magazine, was searching his brain for a word that did not yet exist.
“Either we’re headed for a dystopia or we’re headed for a utopia,” Mr. Kelly, 70, recalled in a recent interview, describing the prevailing attitudes about the future at the time. “Neither of those seemed to be feasible, or even desirable.”
So Mr. Kelly coined a term to describe a third option, meant to represent the reality in which he believed we already lived: protopia.
The concept, which Mr. Kelly debuted in his 2010 book, “What Technology Wants,” refers to a society that, rather than solving all its problems (as in a utopia) or falling into dire dysfunction (as in a dystopia), makes incremental progress over a long period of time — thanks to the ways in which technological advancement is enhancing the natural evolutionary process.
(The root of the word has many derivations, Mr. Kelly said. “Pro as in progress. As in progression. As in prototype, early. As in pro versus con, meaning yes versus no. Pro as in professional. All the positives of pro going forward.”)
“You can’t see a difference of 1 percent unless you turn around and look behind you,” Mr. Kelly said. “One percent a year, for 100 years — that’s a big difference.”
Protopia did not attract much attention when Mr. Kelly’s book was first released. But it has started to gain traction among futurists in recent years as an alternative to the existing binary.
One failure of that binary: Many of these futurists will point out that, historically speaking, a utopia for some has meant dystopia for others. At a time of rising anti-democratic sentiment across the world, advocates of the protopian concept believe it offers a more realistic, more humane and potentially more inclusive pathway to a better future. …
Wikipedia: What Technology Wants
What Technology Wants is a 2010 nonfiction book by Kevin Kelly focused on technology as an extension of life.
The opening chapter of What Technology Wants, entitled “My Question”, chronicles an early period in the author’s life and conveys a sense of how he went from being a nomadic traveler with few possessions to a co-founder of Wired. The book invokes a giant force – the technium – which is “the greater, global, massively interconnected system of technology vibrating around us”. …
Kelly’s book has been criticized for espousing a teleological view of biological evolution that is rejected by some scientists, and for promoting a “bizarre neo-mystical progressivism” (by Jerry Coyne). …
Denied by AI: How Medicare Advantage plans use algorithms to cut off care for seniors in need
Stat News via Boston Globe – March 14
An algorithm, not a doctor, predicted a rapid recovery for Frances Walter, an 85-year-old Wisconsin woman with a shattered left shoulder and a respiratory condition that made it hard to breathe. In 16.6 days, it estimated, she would be ready to leave her nursing home.
On the 17th day, her Medicare Advantage insurer, Security Health Plan, followed the algorithm and cut off payment for her care, concluding she was ready to return to the apartment where she lived alone. Meanwhile, medical notes in June 2019 showed Walter’s pain was maxing out the scales and that she could not dress herself, go to the bathroom, or even push a walker without help.
It would take more than a year for a federal judge to conclude the insurer’s decision was “at best, speculative” and that Walter was owed thousands of dollars for more than three weeks of treatment. While she fought the denial, she had to spend down her life savings and enroll in Medicaid just to progress to the point of putting on her shoes, her arm still in a sling.
Health insurance companies have rejected medical claims for as long as they’ve been around. But a STAT investigation found artificial intelligence is now driving their denials to new heights in Medicare Advantage, the taxpayer-funded alternative to traditional Medicare that covers more than 31 million people.
Behind the scenes, insurers are using unregulated predictive algorithms, under the guise of scientific rigor, to pinpoint the precise moment when they can plausibly cut off payment for an elderly patient’s treatment. The denials that follow are setting off heated disputes between doctors and insurers, often delaying treatment of seriously ill patients who are neither aware of the algorithms, nor able to question their calculations.
Elderly people who spent their lives paying into Medicare, and are now facing amputation, fast-spreading cancers, and other devastating diagnoses, are left to either pay for their care themselves or get by without it. If they disagree, they can file an appeal, and spend months trying to recover their costs, even if they don’t recover from their illnesses.
“We take patients who are going to die of their diseases within a three-month period of time, and we force them into a denial and appeals process that lasts up to 2.5 years,” Chris Comfort, chief operating officer of Calvary Hospital, a palliative and hospice facility in the Bronx, N.Y., said of Medicare Advantage. “So what happens is the appeal outlasts the beneficiary.”
The algorithms sit at the beginning of the process, promising to deliver personalized care and better outcomes. But patient advocates said in many cases they do the exact opposite — spitting out recommendations that fail to adjust for a patient’s individual circumstances and conflict with basic rules on what Medicare plans must cover. …