Author Archives: Egg Syntax

An American citizen asking in court to be taken off America’s kill list

Matt Taibbi, so pitched heavily toward the sensational. But still deeply troubling.

[The judge] veered into troubling language when she added that Kareem seeks only “his birthright… a timely assertion of his due process rights under the Constitution to be heard before he might be included on the Kill List and his First Amendment rights to free speech before he might be targeted for lethal action” (emphasis mine).

This is just the beginning of what will surely be a fight for the ages. Civil cases in America can last years, and few are this complex.

The state has a few options, any of which could still end up with the drone murder of Americans pre-sanctified.

https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/how-to-survive-americas-kill-list-699334/

A Theory of Trump Kompromat

This seems incredibly plausible to me. I think if Trump were explicitly receiving orders from Moscow, his actions toward Russia would have been more subtle and coherent. Whereas in this scenario, what we’re seeing is Trump trying, in his own bizarre ways, to placate people whose exact agenda and even identity he doesn’t even know with any certainty.

The scenario that, to my mind, makes the most sense of the given facts and requires the fewest fantastical leaps is that, a decade or so ago, Trump, naïve, covetous, and struggling for cash, may have laundered money for a business partner from the former Soviet Union or engaged in some other financial crime. This placed him, unawares, squarely within sistema, where he remained, conducting business with other members of a handful of overlapping Central Asian networks. Had he never sought the Presidency, he may never have had to come to terms with these decisions. But now he is much like everyone else in sistema. He fears there is kompromat out there—maybe a lot of it—but he doesn’t know precisely what it is, who has it, or what might set them off.

Trump and many of his defenders have declared his businesses, including those in the former Soviet Union, to be off-limits to the Mueller investigation. They argue that the special counsel should focus only on the possibility of explicit acts of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government. This neatly avoids the reality of sistema. As Pavlovsky wrote, “Under Putin, sistema has become a method for making deals among businesses, powerful players, and the people. Business has not taken over the state, nor vice versa; the two have merged in a union of total and seamless corruption.”

https://www.newyorker.com/news-desk/swamp-chronicles/a-theory-of-trump-kompromat

While We Sleep, Our Mind Goes on an Amazing Journey

Good if breezy review of our current understanding of sleep. Most interesting factoid: turns out that fetuses dream for about a month continuously, starting at about 26 weeks.

Our brain profoundly alters its behavior and purpose, dimming our consciousness. For a while, we become almost entirely paralyzed. We can’t even shiver. Our eyes, however, periodically dart about behind closed lids as if seeing, and the tiny muscles in our middle ear, even in silence, move as though hearing. We are sexually stimulated, men and women both, repeatedly. We sometimes believe we can fly. We approach the frontiers of death. We sleep.

Around 350 B.C., Aristotle wrote an essay, “On Sleep and Sleeplessness,” wondering just what we were doing and why. For the next 2,300 years no one had a good answer. In 1924 German psychiatrist Hans Berger invented the electroencephalograph, which records electrical activity in the brain, and the study of sleep shifted from philosophy to science. It’s only in the past few decades, though, as imaging machines have allowed ever deeper glimpses of the brain’s inner workings, that we’ve approached a convincing answer to Aristotle.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2018/08/science-of-sleep/

Recent books

Hannu Rajamiemi, Summerland. From the author of The Quantum Thief, but you’d never guess it by reading the book. It’s a classic British spy novel, but set in an alternate history. What if instead of just creating radio, the inventors of the early 20th century had discovered a way to communicate with the afterlife? And what if that afterlife were ripe for colonization? Fun read, and much quicker than Rajamiemi’s extremely dense earlier work.

Claire North, 84K. North brings a literary voice to a dystopian novel about a possible future in which everything has been financialized and privatized, including crime and punishment. The fractured timeline makes for some lovely puzzles.

Maggie Stiefvater, The Raven Cycle. I just reread this top-notch YA fantasy quartet, because she’s just added a short novelette to the cycle, one which gives a direct view into the head of Opal, aka Orphan Girl. She’s apparently working on a new trilogy primarily about Ronan, and this makes a delicious apertif while we wait for it.

Scott Alexander, Unsong. The first novel from one of my favorite nonfiction bloggers (SlateStarCodex) is really entertaining, and describes an alternate America dominated by Qabalistic magic.

Poison-Taster Ants Help Save Colonies – Seeker

We’ve been poisoning ants this week, so I got curious about what strategies and colonies had evolved for dealing with poisonous food sources in the wild.

https://www.seeker.com/poison-taster-ants-help-save-colonies-1764994009.html

Why some studies make campus rape look like an epidemic while others say it’s rare – Vox

One of the most alarming things about sexual assault on college campuses is how little we know about it. Is there really an epidemic of campus sexual assault? Or are college-age women just at a risky point in their lifetime, regardless of their campus environment?

https://www.vox.com/2014/12/11/7378271/why-some-studies-make-campus-rape-look-like-an-epidemic-while-others