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Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Reading, death of

I like to read.  And I like to read long stuff. I remember devouring Eliot Morison’s 14 volume History of U.S. Naval Operations in WW II in high school. I like New Yorker and Atlantic articles’ I also like information and facts and mysteries. I even subscribe to Longform, a site that delivers long articles of interest. I love the Internet with its access to original documents and instant access to things to read more of. Want to read the original Supreme Court opinion on something?  No problem. Twenty seconds to get a copy off the SCOTUS website. Can’t find an article you are sure you read years ago? Maybe 30 seconds of searching and you’ll find a reference and location.

 

I also recognize the “book reading” as the greatest anti-social device ever invented. Waiting for a bus, a doctor, on an airplane, anywhere, and don’t want to talk to anyone, whip out your Kindle, magazine, or book and everyone will recognize and honor the invisible barrier you have erected around yourself. 

 

My liberal friends (oops, almost typed the adjective “luddite) constantly decry the current generation’s inability to pay attention and to read long books, not to mention their overly social obsession with Tik-Tok and narcissistic blogs. So I was really interested to read an essay by Daniel Immerwahr in the latest New Yorker (January 27, 2025.)

 

Immerwahr – I love the name: translates from the German as “always true” – quotes the theologian Adam Kotsko, ““I have been teaching in small liberal arts colleges for over 15 years now, and in the past five years, it’s as though someone flipped a switch  “Students are intimidated by anything over 10 pages and seem to walk away from

readings of as little as 20 pages with no real understanding.” I remember reading not too long ago about a professor at Columbia where they have a “Great Books” required reading course being approached by a struggling student who remarked she was unable to get through a book having never been assigned one in high school.


 
Several technology writers have raised concerns about the Internet and its distractive quality.  For example Clifford Stoll’s Silicon Snake Oil from 1995 and Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains and other fearful prognostications by Johann Hari, Jenny Odell, and Nyir Eyal all warn of our lack of attention. 

 

It seems every generation fears the deleterious effects of each new technology.  I remember reading a piece concerned that the telephone would drive us apart by eliminating the neighborly front porch conversations when all we had to do was pick up the phone. And a book by a pilot (you become an expert by simply belonging to a profession) who was sure the advent of swept wing aircraft like the 707 would have planes falling from the skies. Immerwahr cites lots of historical examples of the fear.

  • Hawthorne in 1843 “warns of the arrival of a technology so powerful that those born after it will lose the capacity for mature conversation. They will seek separate corners rather than common spaces, he prophesies. Their discussions will devolve into acrid debates, and “all mortal intercourse” will be “chilled with a fatal frost.” Hawthorne’s worry? The replacement of the open fireplace by the iron stove.”

  • “ a long section in Plato’s Phaedrus in which Socrates argues that writing will wreck people’s memories.”

  • Remember the panic about comic books?  My mother made my brother and me throw out a box of comics found in the attic of a house we had just moved into.

  • Although today’s critics rue our inability to get through long novels, such books were once widely regarded as the intellectual equivalent of junk food. “They fix attention so deeply, and afford so lively a pleasure, that the mind, once accustomed to them, cannot submit to the painful task of serious study,” the Anglican priest Vicesimus Knox complained. Thomas Jefferson warned that once readers fell under the spell of novels—“this mass of trash”—they would lose patience for “wholesome reading.” They’d suffer from “bloated imagination, sickly judgement, and disgust toward all the real business of life.”

  • “As far as the distractions caused by the Internet, Samuel Johnson in two essays, “The Rambler” (1750-52) and “The Idler” (1758-60), two essays  exulted in such mental wandering. Johnson was constantly picking up books and just as constantly putting them down. When a friend asked whether Johnson had actually finished a book he claimed to have “looked into,” he replied, “No, Sir, do you read books through?” 


 
But perhaps attentiveness is not healthy. “ Maybe the mind required a little leaping around to do its work.” “the loudest calls to attention have been directed toward subordinates, schoolchildren, and women. “Atten-TION!” military commanders shout at their men to get them to stand straight. The arts of attention are a form of self-discipline, but they’re also ways to discipline others.”  Industrial life demands attention as does school work. Being part of a machine requires attentiveness to prevent accidents and poor quality of work.  Not being fully attentive during a class lecture is considered rude and is demanded by professors who take it as an insult to their hard preparation, even if their work may be stultifying in delivery. Revolutionary consciousness meant asserting “the right to be lazy,” Paul Lafargue, Karl Marx’s son

Insisted.” Attention was a mechanism of subjugation.

 

Of course, to hammer away at the insidiousness of the new technologies, they are labeled as “addictive.” Surely anything as addictive as the Internet can’t be good for you.  I don’t know how much attention  they have given to ice cream, my personal addiction. The “sound bites” everyone decries may be simply a way to capture the attention of the audience in order to sell them something. But short doesn’t necessarily mean devoid of content. There are many cogent short essays and videos, not to mention poems,  that convey much in the way of emotion and content.  Do you really need a 45 minute lecture on the value and meaning of the 1st amendment?  For lawyers, perhaps, but would the average student not be better off with a short summary of the important points?


 
Immerwahr is skeptical of many of the “sky is falling claims.”  The apparent decline of reading is also not so straightforward. Print book sales are holding steady, and audiobook sales are rising. The National Center for Education Statistics has tracked a recent drop in U.S. children’s reading abilities, yet that mostly coincides with the pandemic, and scores are still as good as or better than when the center started measuring, in 1971. If reading assignments at top colleges are shorter, it might be because today’s hypercompetitive students are busier, rather than because they’re less capable (and how many were actually doing all the reading in the old days?). What about Nicholas Carr’s insistence in 2010 that a Rhodes Scholar who didn’t read books heralded a post-literate future? “Of course I read books!” that Rhodes Scholar protested to another writer. Today, he holds a Ph.D. from Oxford and has written two books of his own.

But enough, back to reading while listening to some downloaded Bach organ.

 


Sunday, February 09, 2025

History Repeats Itself in Different Guises

 "This screaming gave us goose pimples. They were the screams of thousands of people being murdered. It traveled through the silent spaces of the city from among a red glow of fires, under indifferent stars, into the benevolent silence of gardens in which plants laboriously emitted oxygen, the air was fragrant, and a man felt that it was good to be alive. There was something particularly cruel in this peace of the night, whose beauty and human crime struck the heart simultaneously. We did not look each other in the eye."

Czeslaw Milosz re the genocide of the Warsaw Ghetto

Living in Berkeley, California, while the U.S. military bombed and killed hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese, an atrocity [Milosz] compared to the crimes of Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin, Milosz again knew shameful complicity in extreme barbarity. “If we are capable of compassion and at the same time are powerless,” he wrote, “then we live in a state of desperate exasperation.”

And now we come to Gaza where thousands of civilians have been bombed and killed in the same of what?  Cynically so Netanyahu can retain the seat of power?  To gain more land? In revenge for the Hamas attack.  What do we consider proportional response? 

History is littered with disproportionate responses to perceived injustice, real or perceptual.  We humans do love our revenge.

 

 

Monday, January 27, 2025

Review: Heavy Metal: The Hard Days and Nights of the Shipyard Workers Who Build America's Supercarriers by Michael Fabey

The book follows the construction of the John F Kennedy aircraft carrier at Newport News beginning in 2011. At the time of the book’s release in 2021, the ship remained to be completed (the completion date has been announced as 2024 – it was christened in 2019 - and now is scheduled to be delivered in 2025). The Kennedy is the 2nd in the Ford class which had suffered spectacular cost overruns and delays as they tried to initiate new technologies for launching aircraft (EMALS) and to operate the ship with fewer sailors. At the same time, new techniques were being tried to speed up construction ordered by Robert Gates as a way to reduce costs and to complete the proposed 10 ship class as a replacement for the current Nimitz class of carriers. 
 
These ships are extraordinarily expensive, the Ford costing north of $12 billion. The Navy hoped to recover some of these costs with reduced manpower through the use of new technologies. The assumptions behind these predictions have been challenged by numerous officials. But it was also the first to be designed digitally, a system that was supposed to bring new efficiencies to the process. No more did workers have to carry around heavy rolls of blueprints. The simply looked at their tablets, scanned the wire bundle bar codes and it was revealed exactly where the cables should go and what they should be connected to. The amount of wiring was staggering. There was four million feet of fiber-optic cabling alone since the ship was to have all the communications interconnected. No more eyeballing or guessing where things went.  The tablets laid out everything instantly and corrected, saving dreaded and expensive rework.
At least that’s the way it was supposed to work, but sometimes, because those driving the computers didn’t have the historical knowledge and experience of building ships, they might not allow enough room to weld some pipes together, for example.  The idea was to create a “system” one that could be duplicated and save money and time building these dinosaurs.
I question whether the current trend to build extremely complex weapons systems like the F-35, the new class of carriers, and other systems, making them far more expensive thus reducing the number that can be built and requiring far more maintenance, is an intelligent use of taxpayer money, not to mention reducing the effectiveness of the smaller forces. The scandals of the Seventh Fleet revealed after the collisions showed poor training and deferred maintenance because of cost that can only hurt the country’s defense.  In a changing environment where drones do battle and are really cheap and expendable, I wonder whether carriers will not pass the way of the battleships.   I recommend any of a number of recent books on drone warfare.
A really interesting book.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Problem with "Journalism" Today.

The recent debacle at the Washington Post and LA Times regarding endorsements has got me thinkingJohn Dickerson is one of the most astute and smart analysts out there today, so I was dismayed when he became the anchor of the CBS News.  Instead of writing terrific books, he'll now be focusing on reading the news script and introducing Beth from Poduck IA on improvements to her layer cake.  Journalism is now about becoming a celebrity.  Where is IF Stone when we need him? Spinning in his grave, no doubt.  The NYTimes and mainstream media just don't ask pertinent questions any more.

Two excellent summaries of the problem.  James Fallows nailed it in the nineties; and Jeff Jarvis more recently:

https://buzzmachine.com/2024/09/19/how-they-have-failed-us/

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1996/02/why-americans-hate-the-media/305060/

         For those who can't get past the paywall:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vYwhjbk4IpSE1pCmWxkhj-wZB6yL8Xeo/view?usp=sharing

Saturday, October 05, 2024

Tracers in the Dark: The Global Hunt for the Crime Lords of Cryptocurrency by Andy Greenberg

 I swear this book reads more like a spy novel than accurate events surrounding the tracking down and arrest of cryptocurrency crooks. One of the attractions of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies was their supposed impenetrability to law enforcement. But as with anything digital, there’s always a way, and this is also a story of how clever researchers and cops discovered ways to track transactions by using the very device, the blockchain, that was supposed to guarantee both anonymity and security.

But a more basic and skeptical thought immediately struck Gambaryan about this new form of currency. “Participants can be anonymous,” he had read. But if this blockchain truly recorded every transaction in the entire Bitcoin economy, then it sounded like the precise opposite of anonymity: a trail of bread crumbs left behind by every single payment. A forensic accountant’s dream...Gambaryan had always had his doubts about Bitcoin’s untraceability. From the very first time he’d read about Bitcoin, back in 2010, his accountant’s brain had wondered how it could truly provide anonymity when the records of every transaction were shared with so many thousands of machines around the world—even if those transactions were to addresses rather than names

The blockchain is a form of public ledger that is duplicated across millions of computers and involves solving a mathematical algorithm that requires increasing amounts of computer power. Because it is public and always duplicated, it’s trusted, but it also provides an enormous amount of data for analysis.  

When someone moves a sum of bitcoins, their wallet software broadcasts the transaction over the internet to Bitcoin’s network of “nodes,” the thousands of servers around the world that store copies of the blockchain. Whichever node first receives the announcement of the new transaction then passes it on to other nodes, which in turn broadcast it out further, so that the record of the payment is confirmed and copied into the blockchain’s global ledger of all transactions. The system is a bit like a crowd of people who each whisper a rumor to their immediate neighbors, so that the information spreads virally through the crowd in ripples—but at digital speeds designed to inform the entire network in minutes or even seconds.

Some of the agencies involved in the hunt are unknown to the vast majority of people.  The IRS-CI, for example, an arm of the IRS had some very sophisticated analysts who loved the challenge of breaking the unbreakable and beating a new cipher. 

“Every Bitcoin user has access to the public Bitcoin blockchain and can see every Bitcoin address and its respective transfers. Due to this publicity, it is possible to determine the identities of Bitcoin address owners by analyzing the blockchain,” the ruling read. “There is no intrusion into a constitutionally protected area because there is no constitutional privacy interest in the information on the blockchain.The HSI agent wasn’t caught in the Welcome to Video dragnet because IRS agents had violated his privacy. He was caught, the judges concluded, because he had mistakenly believed his Bitcoin transactions to have ever been private in the first place.”

As the Berkeley researcher Nick Weaver had warned, and as cryptocurrency users around the world were finally learning, “The blockchain is forever.” 

Very interesting book that should cause those wanting to transact criminally in cryptocurrency to tremble.


Note that Tigran Gambaryan, one of the principal IRS investigators working on tracing bitcoin blockchain  transactions has been imprisoned in Nigeria. “Gambaryan was detained alongside a colleague in mid-March on the grounds that Binance had devalued the country’s fiat currency and enabled the “illicit” transfer of funds. While his colleague was able to escape, Gambaryan remains imprisoned on financial crimes charges—even as a growing number of US lawmakers pressure the Biden administration to facilitate his release.”  Wired Magazine