My New Backyard Squirrel Feeder
I just bought a new squirrel feeder for my backyard. This squirrel was giving a stern lecture to these birds to stay the hell away.
I just bought a new squirrel feeder for my backyard. This squirrel was giving a stern lecture to these birds to stay the hell away.
Eric Weinstein reminds us that much of the "news media" is in the business of keeping us polarized and then offering us membership on one team or the other in a national cage match. Much of our news media (but not "The Hill," which featured Weinstein for this story), fails to report on the following big story: Our "news media" has become a predator of the United States, convincing us that being a patriot requires us to hate "the other." Eric Weinstein urged
the news media to end the “business model that is based upon dividing the country" in the wake of last week’s deadly pro-Trump mob attack on the Capitol. In a Friday interview on Hill.TV’s “Rising,” Weinstein, who also hosts “The Portal” podcast, said that the U.S. is now increasingly divided into two “cults,” one right-wing and the other on the left.
Remember all the people claiming that COVID is like the flu? That is true in the same sense that a week is like a year.
When I was growing up in the 60's-00's, we all used to run to pick it up the ringing phone to say "hello." Those days are now gone. My quest in modern times is to only get calls (and emails) from those from certain people and not from anyone else. It's a tricky task. I do know a list of friends and family I want to hear from and I use my DND exceptions list to allow only those people to get through. But there are also those other people I want to hear from, but I don't know who they are. They include potential new clients for my law practice, old friends and all the people in the "miscellaneous" category. My phone greeting invites all of these people to leave messages that I screen periodically and this approach works fairly well. The reason for this approach, as many of you are doubtless experiencing, is that leaving my phone wide open would result in dozens of robocalls and unwanted solicitations every day.
I was provoked to think these thoughts as I read an article on the evolution of phone usage, "Why No One Answers Their Phone Anymore: Telephone culture is disappearing." Here's an excerpt:
No one picks up the phone anymore. Even many businesses do everything they can to avoid picking up the phone. Of the 50 or so calls I received in the last month, I might have picked up four or five times. The reflex of answering—built so deeply into people who grew up in 20th-century telephonic culture—is gone.
Telephone exchanges of that era were what the scholar Robert Hopper described as “not quite ritual, but routine to the extent that its appearance approaches ritual.” When the phone rang, everyone knew to answer and speak in “the liturgy of the national attitude.” Now, people have forgotten how to pick up, the words, when to sing. There are many reasons for the slow erosion of this commons. The most important aspect is structural: There are simply more communication options.
I can't get a song out of my head this morning. It's the hold music inflicted on customers by CIGNA Health Insurance Company. They drilled it deep over the last two days. They cheerfully announce "Your call is important to us." Then, after 20 minutes, or 42 minutes, or 33 minutes, they hang up on you. They also asked whether I'd like a call back. I twice indicated "yes." They they hung up on me the first time, never called back the second time. I finally got a CIGNA guy on the phone and he clarified the incoherent CIGNA letters I just received. He then indicated no, they don't have email, so they cannot confirm in writing. And the hold music is now the gift that keeps on giving . . .