
Jean Meslier
Prejudice tends to confirm in us the opinions of those who are charged with our instruction.

Jean Meslier
Prejudice tends to confirm in us the opinions of those who are charged with our instruction.
Jeff Bezos has just purchased the biggest house in Washington – a gorgeous $24 million textile museum designed by the great architect John Russell Pope. Plans are to turn it into a single family home.[1]
Warning: this post is kind of long.
I like to avoid psychological terms, because I am skeptical regarding the epistemology of psychology* – but, to simplify the rest of this posting, I am going to freely use a term: “Sociopath”/Sociopathic.
(Pause) Oh! Hi! Hello There!!!
I’m sorry, I was having a little problem with my headset. Anyway, I’m Amy …
My dad says it’s something that happens naturally after you’ve worked in a field long enough: you start to feel like you’re looping back and forth on yourself. He used to say he’d find himself going to American Historical Association meetings as an “emeritus professor” that he had gone to as a newly-minted professor: some things had changed, some things hadn’t, so the changes and the gaps in the change were what really jumped out.
I keep a few canary accounts. Those are email accounts that I don’t use to send anything, but I use to sign up to various sites. I used to do this so I could track which conferences sold their contact databases to spammers or marketers. On my ranum.com server, I set up forwarders that push most of the flood into my inbox, which uses bayesian spam classifiers to sort out the gunk.
Someone is offering to teach me how to talk to cats.
“The Cat Language Bible” – sounds like future litterbox lining.
Universities that run pro sports teams under the cover of “academics” like to justify it as bringing in funding and helping the endowment.
One reason I’ve been all over the map (physically and mentally) lately is because I’m in the middle of starting up a new company.
