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Picasso-esque Yet

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 Eye in the Desert Researching Western Australia for the book I'm currently hammering on (it's about  Super i ntelligence), this wonder leapt right out at me.  I SEE that person to your right. It's the Wolfe Creek Meteor Crater, on the easter edge of Western Australia. The Picasso part is the tiling collage effect of merging satellite shots. I thought you might like to see it.  I know you are just dying to know something about this new book!  Working title: What Would Supe Do?  Perhaps I should weave in something about the Wolfe Creek Crater.

A Hen in the Foxhouse?

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Why Is This My First Recommendation to Watch Fox News? Because this guy is so handsome? Handsome is as handsome does. Some Much Needed Clarification CLICK THIS AND HANG ON TIGHT TO YOUR PRECONCEPTIONS. Scooter the Tooter

Not the Way You Want to Die

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A Mysterious Infection, Spanning the Globe in a Climate of Secrecy                                                                                       NYTimes There is a fungus among us - maybe at a hospital near you - AND YOU WONT HEAR ABOUT IT! I just LOVE hospitals! Super investigative story on the front page of the NY Times!  Scary, enlightening, infuriating... everything good investigative reporting provides, this story should win a Pulitzer. It's about a drug resistant fungus that blossoms in hospitals.  It is one bad  dude of a "germ,"  Candida auris. "Nearly half of patients who contract C. auris die within 90 days." (Some reports say 60%.) "With bacteria and fungi alike, hospitals and local governments are reluctant to disclose outbreaks for fear of being seen as infection hubs . Even the C.D.C., under its agreement with states, is not allowed to make public the location or name of hospitals involved in outbreaks. "

And This Was Before Covid (update 2.21.23)

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                        Wired Magazine   There IS NO PATH back to "normality" if by normal you mean like it used to be. Not the 1950s or the '80s, or the '10s or yesterday . Things are just changing too fast and too much. It's going to get stranger and stranger. The fine article (and podcast) in Wired is actually about how sci-fi writers are getting more political, and how the "abnormality" is Trump, etc., but this back-to-normality thing is way bigger than politics.  Science is becoming science fiction. Artificial intelligence, CRSPR gene editing, hypersonics, supercomputing, crowdsourcing, gravity waves, Instagram,  augmented reality, virtual sex, quantum stuff, nanotech, fracking,  climate freaking change... And, really, don't get me started on world politics.  There's not a path back to when all that isn't happening. Are you going to the sock hop tonight? Being a science fiction writer myself (I'm com

One of the Biggies, Ambivalence

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What's Going to Wreck Our World? (If we are not careful) The Plasticocalypse? No,  AMBIVALENCE! (Heres an example) Shell Oil is spending huge ($10 billion) on a giant plant outside of Pittsburg to make   Polyethelene Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair! To make a lot more of this.....  The Shell plant will turn 1.6 billion gallons of ethane into 3.3 billion pounds of little white polyethylene beads. Annually. Sounds (and looks) gross. But the ambivalence sets in with: "More than 6,000 tradespeople and laborers will be on the site during the peak summer construction period. Some 600 full-time workers will manage automated technology to operate the completed plant. A 97-mile pipeline from gas separation installations in Ohio and West Virginia will supply ethane; a 250-megawatt gas-fired electrical generating station will power the plant." Manufacturing on the rebound in America!  Here's to you, Mrs. Robinson... Think about 3.

Unless somebody reminds us...

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We Forget How Many Ways America Is Changing The British Newspaper The Guardian Reminds us... (Those Brits, always reminding of stuff we'd rather forget) The American family farm is disappearing I miss my people. 1950  (Scooter was in the 7th grade)         Total population: 151,132,000; farm population: 25,058,000 ; Number of farms:          5,388,000; average acres: 216 (About 5 folks per farm family) 1998 (Olde Scooter was about to retire) Total population: 275,900,000; farm population: 2,987,552 ; Number of farms: 2,143,150; average acres: 461 (About 1.4 folks per farm "family") I.e. In one man's work life, about 22 million folks left their farms. Huge "industrial" farms frequently have NO ONE living on the farm.  Maybe a few thousand hogs or tens of thousands of chickens, or endless waves of grain - soy and corn mostly. We sort of know all this.  It just slips out of consciousness without a reminder now and then.  How Americ

'Nuff Said

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* En garde! Ten-year-Long study!  Half a million kids!  Super study and incontestable findings. So you anti-vaxers better come up with some other excuse.   Just sayin'..... * Good summary