Death Is Not the Worst Thing

Our collapsing civilization has been shedding its core beliefs by the dozens for decades now. Concepts such as civic duty, ethical behavior, the greater good, compassion and selflessness litter our wake through history like discarded snake skins cast off as we swelled up from our relentless pursuit of money, luxury and power. Oddly, while we seem eager to shed these essential qualities — traits that made us prosperous in the first place — we still cling to, and loudly profess, other beliefs that assure our downfall.

These articles of faith cut across party lines, ideological differences, racial and economic strata. Among them the most deeply revered, and increasingly the most problematic, is the notion of the sanctity of life. Continue reading

A Tour of the Burning Horizon

To look at a map of the high temperatures recorded on July 21, 2018, is to get the impression that the world is on fire. The funny thing is, it is.

A wise old book editor taught me years ago that every long story needs, occasionally, what he called a “tour of the horizon” — a pause in the narrative during which the narrator reviews what is going on offstage, as it were, to make sure the reader keeps in mind the context of what is happening on stage, as it were. Let’s do it. Let’s put ourselves in the middle of America, and do a tour of the horizon.  Continue reading

Genetic Engineering is an Oxymoron

Scientists are frantically applying wrenches to human cells in order to install improved traits and defeat disease. It is not going well, and never will.

It was a privilege to be able to hear about the latest research into a particular neurological affliction at a small seminar in Maryland a few years ago. The audience consisted of people who suffered from the affliction, and their families. The speaker was a neurologist who had gained national prominence for his expertise and research on this particular disorder. His presentation was upbeat for a discussion of a malady that has no known cause, no cure, and few effective treatments — all doctors can do is manage the symptoms, which vary widely from case to case. But he stressed the many research programs under way to find at least a treatment for the disease, maybe one day a cure, as he sought to give hope for improvement to people who do not now have any.

What he talked about most was genetic research. The gene associated with the disease has been identified, he said, and any day now scientists will learn how to shut that gene off and perhaps cure the disease.

That’s what he said, the gene “associated” with the disease. I’m sure what everybody in the room heard was, the gene that causes the disease. Anyone can find out whether they have the gene with a simple test — a test that costs $3,000, and which no insurance policy covers.

But you’d know, right, and you’d be poised to join the stampede for the cure as soon as they got the “genetic engineering” right.

When the seminar was winding down, I asked the good doctor two questions that told me everything I need to know about genetically-manipulated cures. Continue reading

Migration is the Unstoppable Force: No Country is Immovable

Tell you what — let’s convene a Blue Ribbon commission to make recommendations about what to plan on doing when the tsunami gets here. All in favor say aye.

Pity for a nanosecond the unfortunate Donald Trump, who has just been run over by migration, something that is spreading across the world like a vast tsunami, threatening to overwash entire countries. It doesn’t really matter that, because he neither reads nor thinks, he has no clue what it was that just flattened him like a possum on an Alabama Interstate (“Why a Rogue President Was Forced to Back Down on Family Separation,” — The New Yorker); because few people in the world, including some very smart people, seem to know what to do about it.

Spoiler alert: It’s too late to do anything about it. Children are going to be crying at the borders for a very long time. Continue reading

Promises, Promises (You Knew You’d Never Keep)*

A perfect illustration of the fallacy underlying the false promises of gene therapy: that you can work on an organism as if it were a machine.

(*From the Burt Bacharach musical “Promises, Promises.)

It is the best of times, it is the worst of times: the best because of what we are being promised, by the loudest and most persistent voices of our culture, blaring from every screen; the worst because what we are actually getting as fulfilment of those promises is crapified beyond belief.

The promises come thick and fast. We are soon to be whisked around our town houses and country estates, totally safe and completely at ease, by driverless cars and pilotless planes. We won’t have to work because robots with artificial intelligence — which is so much better than the real thing — will do our menial jobs for us and cater to our every whim, whether it be dinners of hummingbird tongues or machine sex. (What’s that? You think I’m exaggerating the sex part? You don’t know about the sexbot Samantha, who among other things is being taught how to say, “No, stop!” to amorous approaches that are too rough or too boring? Google it.)

These promises are being made by people who are being paid lavishly to keep the promises coming. They are executing a kind of bank shot — they don’t really care if we believe their promises, they just want to get us talking about them, to create that essential “buzz” of interest that attracts grant money to the universities, investor money to the initial public offerings, bank money to the underleveraged, crypto money to the bare-faced maniacs. The process was illustrated recently by a near-perfect example. Continue reading

It Makes No Difference to the Indifferents

And these days, every vote not counted, counts.

Ask any candidate for public office to explain a poll that finds 98 percent of the electorate despises him, and this will be his answer: “The only poll that matters is taken on election day.” Self-serving? Yes. Dodging the question? Sure. Putting lipstick on a pig? Uh-huh. The thing is, though, it is absolutely true.

Polls don’t tell us much of anything. Many of them have small samples, or self-selected samples (as in Internet polls), or loaded questions, and actually subtract from the sum total of human knowledge. The ones that are well done offer us a snapshot of opinions held when the poll was taken, and that almost certainly have changed by the time we hear about the poll.

But polls are the junk food of journalists — no nutrition, but tasty, with no work required. Thus every day we are told what polls have to say about the economy, international diplomacy, and whether brain surgery should be conducted with stainless steel, or ceramic, scalpels. In that last category, we have recently been informed that Robert Mueller’s approval rating among the American populace has dropped. The assumption apparently is that only popular prosecutors get convictions. Continue reading

Costa Rica: A Love Song

Its scenery, and the profusion of its natural wonders, are not the only reasons to think of Costa Rica as “almost heaven.”

I happened to be in Costa Rica when Jose Figueres Ferrer died, or I may never have heard his remarkable story, or ever have grasped the dimensions of the near-miracle he wrought in his country. Spoiler alert: if you are among the vast majority of sophisticates who today find cynicism an appealing substitute for thought and effort, don’t read any further. This story could be dangerous to your sneer.

In 1948, Costa Rica was just another one of your garden-variety Central American banana republics. Its army spent most of its time beating up on its citizens, its government was incompetent, the people miserable. Rebellion ensued. Ho hum. But it soon became apparent that this was not your grandfather’s rebellion. It was Jose Figueres Ferrer’s rebellion.  Its first shots were fired on March 11, 1948. On April 11, the government gave up and on April 24 Ferrer’s forces entered the capital of San Jose.

Most accounts I have read of the conflict refer to it as the bloodiest chapter in Costa Rica’s history.  About 2,000 people were killed, a thousand fewer than died on the 9/11 attacks in the United States. Apparently Costa Rica’s history wasn’t very bloody. And in the spring of 1948 it took a sharp turn away from the normal course of its own history, and that of every other Central American country, indeed just about every country in the world. Continue reading

Pirates of the Industrial Age

This is what it looks like when investment companies take over your ship. Except that in reality, it’s often more brutal.

They do not wear eye patches, or wooden legs, or carry parrots on their shoulders. Their uniforms are suits of a dark color, they travel in private jets, and rather than bury their plunder in oaken chests they wire it to an offshore account. But they are pirates, make no mistake, who attack the vessels of commerce built by other people, take them over, plunder them, and leave them ghost ships drifting aimlessly, the crew gone and the lives of many thousands in ruins.

Consider just two examples of their work. Continue reading

Run From the Bank

The good news is that with modern technology there’s no such thing as a run on the bank, because the bank doesn’t spend your money, it vaporizes it.

We were proud to be early adopters, back in the day. For example, I was the first editor at the enormous publishing company where I worked to own a personal computer — an Osborne with a four-inch screen and a storage capacity of a massive 64k worth of text, as I recall. I was among the first in my family to own a smartphone, and delighted in its capabilities. When it came to online banking, depositing checks with my phone, paying bills automatically and electronically, I was way out in the vanguard, and happily so.

I have always been a terrible typist, who with my manual typewriter often ruined an excruciatingly picked-out page with a misplaced digit on the last line, one who used gallons of whiteout. A day. Not only did the computer eliminate the agony of the misdirected fingertip, it invited me to play with alternate words and phrases, to see without penalty how different constructions would look on the page, and these were gifts beyond price for a struggling wordsmith. The phone, too, delivered value way beyond its price, acting as my navigator, internet browser, e mailer, entertainer and oh, yeah, it could make phone calls.

I have written elsewhere about how updates have nearly ruined my computer and smartphone. But more than that, the spread of technology oncology (more aptly christened by the folks over at Naked Capitalism “the crapification of everything”) is strongly suggesting to me that, as habitual early adopters, it is time for us to do a 180, as the pilots say.   Continue reading

Don’t Update Me, Bro!

He made “Don’t Tase me, Bro!” a national meme. But computer updates are way more terrifying.

The other morning when I turned on my computer it was not my computer, it was a complete stranger. It demanded a password, which I had never used. My desktop icons were gone, my preferences obliterated, many of my links disabled. My lock screen no longer displayed my favorite family picture. My default browser was now Microsoft’s Edge instead of Google’s Chrome, my default email was now Outlook instead of Gmail, on and on. More importantly all my file folders, including one containing a fairly complex tax return in progress, were gone. When I clicked on the shortcut to the tax return it locked up the computer. Continue reading