Thursday, December 31, 2020

Happy 2021 … So Slow in Coming … So Needed by So Many

 



 Thinking ahead to the coming year

From a Jewish perspective … atonement …

In the Al Chet prayer, we ask forgiveness for the sins that anyone among us has committed … as if someone else committed that sin, we are also responsible … a sobering thought of social responsibility … https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/6577/jewish/Text-of-Al-Chet.htm ...

 

From an American perspective … resolutions …

The practice of making resolutions dates back to ancient times … https://www.history.com/news/the-history-of-new-years-resolutions ...  but the basic idea is that one can become a better person in the coming year … and recognizing the mistakes of the past made by oneself and others can help one become a better person …

 

From an Asian perspective … begin debt free …

To have good fortune in the coming year, start debt free … and then one will start the new year with a clean slate and prosper … remembering and honoring the past so that one can become better in the year of the ox … https://www.calendardate.com/chinese_new_year_2021.htm

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Happyday Thoughts: Yet Another Pretentious Portmanteau (YAPP)

 

Happyday Thoughts: Yet Another Pretentious Portmanteau (YAPP)

 I have been spending some spare time (not as expansive as my spare tire) thinking about people I have met and benefitted from over the years. My first realization (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VP8qXnnn4tc) was that there too many to name and thank. I grew up in East Tennessee, having moved from LA (Lower Alabama) and headed West (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAgWklREPWI) to the Air Force Academy in Colorado after high school. And then it was off to a depressing and very short career as an intelligence officer during the Conflict in Vietnam … ‘conflict’ is much softer than ‘war’ … but people died … (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iyng_cdupo8&list=RDIyng_cdupo8&start_radio=1&t=11). Three marriages, five children and six grandchildren later (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9NACZ8BxE8&list=PL-haAX7WTpwmviOUc4cxaca4xzUoWagrW&index=7), I got to thinking about people I had met and how they had managed to affect me … mostly in positive ways (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=flLoj5qxURw). What this reminiscing leads me to is an overwhelming conclusion (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/poems/44212/the-love-song-of-j-alfred-prufrock) – namely, that there has been time to wonder, time to ponder, time to look under and over and beyond myself … time to become someone else … not just a fly-boy, not just a fly-by-the-night boy, but someone who can pause and see the night sky, with one hand waving free (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OeP4FFr88SQ), lend a helping hand to those who think they know more than they could possibly know (https://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingAid.cfm?eadid=01286), to those who cannot pass over in silence what cannot be said (http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/5740), to those who talk high but walk low, with head held high when it should be bent in shame, but I digress, I have to roll  the bottoms of my trousers … I have to pause and thank the countless people who have enriched my life and help me become the person I am becoming … a “pair of ragged claws scuttling across the floors of silent seas” but a pair of helping hands, applauding those who have helped me become a slightly better person … so many, in so many different ways, large and small, I remember them one and all … well, probably not all, my memory is not as sharp as it used to be … as my wit got sharper my memory grew more dull … such is life … it is meant to be lived … to be full of wonder and love and things one could not dream without help … from above and from below … a toddler tugging on those rolled trousers … how can one possibly say thanks?

mike

Thursday, December 17, 2020

End of 2020 Thoughts

 

The year is winding down. Classes have ended. Grades have been submitted. Looking back on 2020 with less than 20-20 hindsight, I become dizzy. So much has happened. After more than 25,000 lies and more than 3.000 deaths in the USA from COVID-19, it is time to catch one’s breath, exhale a sigh of relief that relief from the lies and the deaths is in sight … if only that could happen sooner. The disruptions have been many and varied, occurring at nearly every level. My hindsight leaves me with mixed feelings about my work. My university has been very accommodating and understanding of students during the pandemic and during multiple crises involving minorities. UNT fully embraces the black lives matter movement and is engaging in a strong and ongoing campaign to promote diversity and inclusion. That is on the positive side of the ledger. However, the rate of change at UNT for things that involve faculty and staff seems to have been increasing during the pandemic. Administrators are generating changes in many systems causing more work and stress for many faculty and staff even though those changes seem warranted if considered in isolation from all else that is happening. So I am seeing faculty and staff colleagues somewhat stressed due to the increasing rate of changes generated by administrators in these troubled times. All is not well, even at this well-intentioned and well-led institution. IMLTHO. Yes … that is a word … actually it represents a phrase … in my less than humble opinion. I stumbled upon that word when it was made evident to me some years ago that I actually knew much less than I claimed to know. I find frequent reminders of that message highly useful.

In the midst of this pandemic, when UNT was doing so many things that were so positive, the Canvas system crashed the first week of the Fall semester and some courses had to be restored from a prior version, including my course which was not close to the prior version … the resulting confusion lasted most of the semester as bit by bit the restored course was transformed into what had been planned. Students complained – understandably. I was trying to keep things simple and constrained to just the weekly discussion forums which I brought back to the intended state. But students were looking at other things and getting confused. The best laid schemes of mice and men gang aft agley – look it up … you may find something interesting by Robert Burns.

Anyway, students complained and resisted my approach to instruction. Of course they had their own pressures during COVID-19 and wanted to see a course laid out like other courses with modules and separate pages for each activity and assignment, unlike my attempt to put everything in one place .. and they expected to see specific grading rubrics and being told exactly what to do for each assignment, unlike my inclination to give rather open-ended assignments with minimal initial guidance and feedback along the way as part of a developmental strategy.

The experience reminded me of my using the Strategy Dynamics Beefeater Restaurants game in educational technology seminars in Sweden and Norway only to discover that of 75 student attempts to succeed in the game, only one managed to do so and that person could not repeat his winning strategy to stay in business 10 years. Later, I had the chance to talk to the game inventors at the London Business School – John Morecroft and Kim Warren. I told them about my experience using Beefeater Restaurants and asked them how they expected learners to learn anything from that game. Their quick answer was they didn’t expect players to succeed. Rather, they used players’ failure to get those highly gifted students to realize they knew less than they thought they knew … their failure put them in a position to learn. That approach to learning appealed to me and has stayed with me ever since. The doctoral students we have in our program at UNT are highly knowledgeable and highly experienced and inclined to believe they know and understand much more than many of their instructors. They are often mistaken, but getting them to become aware of that is a challenge. And, I have to admit I am not doing very well at meeting that challenge.

The challenge is simple. To learn X, one must first admit to not knowing or understanding X. One then must be willing to commit time and effort in investigating X, preferably from multiple perspectives and with different assumptions guiding the investigations. Learning is not simple and often not easy. So, I view my task as a teacher not to feed knowledge or answers or formulaic responses to students. Rather, I see my task as getting students to HAVE questions – to admit to not knowing or understanding, to commit time and effort to finding answers, to explore alternative possibilities, to question assumptions, to go where they might not have gone before. But I rarely succeed in such efforts.

I hate ending the year on such a down note. I could pretend things were other than they are. Some politician do that so well. I could never be a politician. I did once serve as the campaign manager for a politician in El Paso – Pat O’Rouke – yes, he was Beto’s father. Pat lost that election for the EPCC Board and I got fired from El Paso Community College for supporting him. The year away from El Paso allowed me to finish my PhD at UT-Austin, and Pat filed a lawsuit on my behalf through the National Education Association that got me re-instated at EPCC. Life is sometimes just too weird, even for me.

Sunday, November 15, 2020

A Reading List for the Reading Impaired

 


1.       In Solitary Witness by Gordan Zahn

2.       The Federalist Papers by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay and James Madison

3.       The Anti-Federalist Papers by Patrick Henry and others

4.       Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo

5.       The Diary of Anne Frank by Anne Frank

6.       Night and Fog – a documentary video for the one intended audience of these notes who prefers not to read but who will have to read the translated notes

Sunday, October 25, 2020

Random quotations with elaboration

 

Source

Quotation/Paraphrase

Elaboration/Question

Roger Schank

All learning is failure driven.

Why are some so unforgiving of a child failing but look the other way when an adult leader fails?

Anders Ericsson

Sustained reflective practice leads to the development of expertise.

What happens when someone is incapable of self-reflection?

Oets Kolk Bouwsma

Surely your life will show what you think of yourself.

Where can I hide from others?

Leviticus (Hebrew Bible)

Love your neighbor as yourself.

All neighbors, near and far, those like you and those unlike you.

Friedrich Nietzsche

The surest way youth is to teach them to hold in higher esteem those who think alike than those who think differently.

Respecting and trying to understand those with whom one disagrees is an attribute unique to humankind, but not found in all persons.

Socrates

The unexamined life is not worth living.

An examination implies admission of ignorance and a search for understanding.

Confucius

The man who says he can and the man who says he cannot are both correct.

Becoming is a harder challenge than being.

Buddha

Those who are free from resentful thoughts surely find peace.

Probably also true for those who speak ill of others.

Quran

Speak to all people good words.

When they are here or not.

Moses

I have been a stranger in a strange land.

Welcome to America.

Lincoln

You cannot escape the responsibility of tomorrow by evading today.

For those who like to refer to Lincoln …

Ruth to Naomi

Where you shall go, I shall go.

Friendship and loyalty are real treasures.

 


Wednesday, October 14, 2020

I voted

 I voted by mail in Texas last week. I did not vote for someone who has lied more than 20,000 times in the last four years. I did not vote for someone who continues to separate families at the border. I did not vote for someone who disparages women and people of color and anyone who happens to disagree or challenge him. I did not vote for someone who pays less income tax than I do. I did not vote for someone who infected others with a deadly virus. I did not vote for someone who wants to take away affordable health care from millions of people during a pandemic. I did not vote for someone who is packing the supreme court during an election. But I did vote. By mail. Without risking exposure or risk exposing others. In Texas. I voted in a state in the midst of active vote and voter suppression by the governor. I voted. Could this be the third time I voted for someone who wins the popular vote but is not elected President? To paraphrase Charles Dickens, it is the best of times (for too few probably) … it is the worst of time (for too many probably) … should I escape to Canada or move to Bali where differences are respected and embraced?  "do I dare disturb the  universe?" (thanks to T. S. Eliot). Do I dare? I am most certainly disturbed. 

Saturday, September 19, 2020

Limits to Hypocrisy ?

Here is a standard definition of hypocrisy:  "the practice of claiming to have moral standards or beliefs to which one's own behavior does not conform; pretense." Here is another definition of hypocrisy: "Hypocrisy is the practice of engaging in the same behavior or activity for which one criticizes another. In moral psychology, it is the failure to follow one's own expressed moral rules and principles."

Are there no limits to the hypocrisy of current political leaders? Apparently not. Are there no limits to a person remaining a believer in the words of Abraham Lincoln in 1858 that "A house divided against itself cannot stand"? Apparently not. We are losing the opportunity to form "a more perfect union" and realize "a decent respect to the opinions of mankind." We are losing and we have lost a clarion voice for the civil rights of all Americans, rich and poor, male and female, young and old, black or brown, red or white or  blue. Such a sad day, week, and year ... more than 200,000 lost lives to protect the ego of one person. So sad ... the loss of a dream.


Saturday, August 29, 2020

Big Questions

 

I was quoted by a doctoral student saying that “things change.” What I have said on multiple occasions is that technologies change … technologies change what people do … what people can do … what people will want to do.” It is Heraclitus, an ancient Greek philosopher, who argued that things change. What he actually said, according to other early Greeks familiar with Heraclitus’ lost book, was panta rhei – variously translated as everything flows or everything is in flux. Thinking of the essence of everything flowing like a river, Plato writes in the Cratylus that one cannot step into the same river twice since the water is continuously changing, and Plutarch takes it further noting that one cannot step into the same river once as the concept of sameness is then lost both for the river and for the individual. People are continuously changing and evolving along with everything else, according to Heraclitus’s philosophy.

While there are problems and inconsistencies in Heraclitus’ philosophy as it has come down to us over the ages (see https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/heraclitus/), and Heraclitus clearly influenced subsequent thinkers, what is notable is the early form of humanism found in Heraclitus as expressed in the notion that a guardian spirit is inherent in human nature. While there is much to unpack in that notion, the ordinary interpretation in modern English would seem to lead one to deny that notion.

Nonetheless, thinking about this reminds me of a note in one of Bouwsma’s (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oets_Kolk_Bouwsma) unpublished notebooks – namely that one’s life must show what one thinks of oneself. One cannot judge one’s own life, a rare mistake that Nietzsche attributes to Socrates, as others will judge one based on what one is doing and has done and those things accumulate over time. Each choice or decision that one takes makes one more like one kind of person and less like another kind of person. The unanswerable question that one should be asking is what kind of person one is becoming.

Perhaps that is the unique trait of being human – the ability to ask unanswerable questions. Unfortunately, some people claim to have those answers about themselves.

Thursday, August 20, 2020

We the people

We be the people … the people of these divided states, with plates of plenty for a select few, 

A select few, who with silver spoons in twisted tongues, separated mothers from their young, 

Young ones, starving at the rivers edge, in order to float across to this land of plenty, 

Plenty for those who have plenty and want to establish plenty more for those select few, 

Who insure domestic inequity, provide for their own defense, promote welfare for the wealthy, 

And secure self-praise and blessings to themselves and their progeny, and a few loyal friends, 

So weep the people … we the people of these united fates of America … the bountiful America. 

A new preamble for #45's new Constitution …. Mike Spector, August, 2020 

P.S. 

20,000 lies and counting - see https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/07/13/president-trump-has-made-more-than-20000-false-or-misleading-claims/ 

5.5 million cases and counting - see https://www.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#cases 

952 pagesdocumenting Russian interfence in the election that contnues - see https://www.intelligence.senate.gov/sites/default/files/documents/report_volume5.pdf 

Trump's bankruptcies - see https://www.abi.org/feed-item/examining-donald-trump%E2%80%99s-chapter-11-bankruptcies 

Times that Trump paid no income tax - see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_returns_of_Donald_Trump#:~:text=On%20March%2014%2C%202017%2C%20the,%2438%20million%20in%20federal%20taxes. 

Improvement in Trump's golf game after almost 300 games since taking office - zero; see https://thegolfnewsnet.com/golfnewsnetteam/2020/08/15/how-many-times-president-donald-trump-played-golf-in-office-103836/ 


Numberof people who think Mike Spector's views are garbage - still counting

Sunday, August 16, 2020

honor among theives

  I took the following oath as a cadet at USAFA: " I will not lie, steal, or cheat, nor tolerate anyone who does.' I left that Air Force as a young intelligence officer due to the many lies being told by the intelligence community about the conflict in Vietnam. 


Now I am thinking about the temporary occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. He has told about 20,000 lies since being elected, stolen the election from HRC with the  help of the GRU - Russian military intelligence agency, and  he is now planning to cheat in the next election with the help of (a) the US Postmaster General Louis DeJoy (no joy in that black heart), (b) the US Attorney General William Barr (a smooth talker with a twisted tongue), (c) Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell - who got a federal loan to a company he owns with his wealthy wife, Elaine Chao, Secretary of Transportation,  through the Paycheck Protection, , Program, and (d) so many other self-aggrandizing Trumplicans. 

So hard to tolerate ... harder to tolerate the 36% who support that person regardless of how mean-spirited, self-centered, and uncaring about others he becomes ... all in plain sight with those who bother to look and process what they see. Open eyes, open hearts, open minds, stop separating families at the border, stop the systemic racism that I thought had ended years ago, think about evidence, and apply that rare gift and uniquely human capability - namely, logical reasoning. 

Saturday, August 1, 2020

Talking to myself

 

Talking to myself

In the several months I have been working at home and have been mostly alone due to COVID-19, I have developed the habit of having conversations with myself. It is so important to have someone with whom to discuss issues and ask questions. As my students can attest, I am mostly inclined to ask questions, so it has been good to have someone here to answer those questions. These conversations with myself have led me to identify a number of hypocrisies which are the focus of these remarks. I only recently realized how hypocritical I have become, so I have my interlocutor to thank for that realization.

Q: If one really supports the first amendment and free speech, and, how can one protest speeches on a campus which conflict with one’s beliefs, such as opposing the rights of the KKK to come to campus and give a talk on white supremacy (see http://hrlibrary.umn.edu/education/all_amendments_usconst.htm)? 

A: Let them talk and avoid any confrontations with those people while they are on campus. Then, schedule a talk by others about the many contributions to society and the country made by non-white citizens (see https://www.nortonlifelock.com/blogs/diversity-inclusion/black-innovators-who-made-huge-impact-technology_/   and   https://www.times-news.com/african-americans-have-made-valuable-contributions/article_cea03a6a-c58b-5918-905b-b71d851bca7c.html).

Q: How can one protest wearing a mask when out and about during COVID-19 on the basis of freedom of choice, but gladly acknowledge the importance of having everyone wear seat belts in cars?

A: One cannot reconcile such dissonant beliefs, nor can two, but one might initiate a conversation about the social contract that is the foundation of all democracies (see https://iep.utm.edu/soc-cont/).

Q: How can a person who claims the right not to wear a mask on the basis of freedom of choice, deny freedom of choice to a woman wishing to have an abortion?

A: Mind your own business, and think about the possibility of you harming others by not wearing a mask (see https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/p0714-americans-to-wear-masks.html).

Q; How can a person reconcile a belief in minimizing the role of the national government and the budget for the national government with the significant increase in the national government’s budget and intrusion into the everyday affairs of citizens?

A: Ask #45 (see also https://www.google.com/search?rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS721US721&biw=1222&bih=573&sxsrf=ALeKk02xUrK-fIyKAzwuQ0MA4EB6yyWYlw%3A1596305321546&ei=qa8lX_LlII_SsAWwq6LoCg&q=trump+budget+deficit&oq=trump+budget+deficit&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQAzoECAAQRzoECCMQJzoOCC4QsQMQgwEQkQIQiwM6CAgAEJECEIsDOg4ILhCxAxDHARCjAhCLAzoLCAAQsQMQgwEQiwM6BwgAEEMQiwM6DggAELEDEIMBEJECEIsDOhQILhCxAxDHARCjAhCLAxCnAxCoAzoLCC4QsQMQgwEQkQI6CwgAELEDEIMBEJECOggIABCxAxCDAToECAAQQzoFCAAQsQM6CAguEMcBEK8BOgIIADoFCAAQkQI6BAgAEAo6BQguEJMCUPsgWOFGYIJIaABwAXgAgAGTAYgBihGSAQQ2LjE0mAEAoAEBqgEHZ3dzLXdpergBAsABAQ&sclient=psy-ab&ved=0ahUKEwiy3pLdzPrqAhUPKawKHbCVCK0Q4dUDCAw&uact=5).

Q: How can #45 ban TicTok from the Internet but let consumers continue going to AMC theaters?

A: See https://www.axios.com/working-for-china-1515542281-d4bc0ab4-bed6-4085-a26e-c5d7c66be74c.html and start thinking for yourself.

Okay, I will try to start thinking for myself, which is what my students often advise me to do (and they referred me to #276 in Nietzsche's "The Gay Science" - https://web.stanford.edu/~jsabol/existentialism/materials/nietzsche-gay-science-hurry.pdf00).

 

J. Michael Spector, 1 Aug 2020


Monday, July 27, 2020

Thinking about John Robert Lewis

Random Quotations/Thoughts for the Conscience of America Who Lies in State in Washington, DC                    (credits on the right)

 

“Do not go gentle into that good night”                              (Dylan Thomas)

He left behind “footprints in the sands of time”                (H. W. Longfellow)

He dared “to disturb the universe”                                     (T. S. Eliot)\

He is still waiting for a” rebirth of wonder”                       (Lawrence Ferlinghetti)

He said what “people did not want to hear”                       (Friedrich Nietzschd)

His “life showed what he thought of himself”                     (Oets Kolk Bouwsma)

He asked “if I am only for myself, what am I?”                  (Rabbi Hillel)

He showed us that “beauty is in one’s heart”                       (Kahlil Gibran)

He would rather prevent poverty than give charity             (Maimonides)

His wisdom emanated from how little he understood          (Socrates)

He respected himself and his beliefs, as did others               (Confucius)

He did his best to bring out the best in others                       (Rabbi Spector)

He did not mistake paradise for fame of fortune                   (Bob Dylan)

 

 

J. Michael Spector

July 27, 2020

 

 


Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Untimely Reflections



As my 75th birthday approaches, I find myself engaged in the 9th phase of my critical thinking framework. I added reflection to all the other critical thinking competencies we found in the research literature. These reflections were prompted by the deteriorating relationship between China and the USA. I have had many rewarding experiences in China and with Chinese colleagues in the last ten plus years. Those experiences brought to mind many other enriching experiences in other countries including most especially Norway and Indonesia. I unconsciously grew up with a belief that America was the best in almost any category one could name. I have come to a much different conclusion late in life.

We are products shaped by our families, friends, education and experiences. My mother was a plain-spoken woman who did not hold her tongue nor hesitate to tell you directly what she thought. My father was more tactful and aimed to instill a sense of responsibility and respect in us. His words - “be the voice that encourages, the ear that listens, the eye that reflects, the hand that guides, the face that does not turn away” – still echo in my conscience. My older brother, Danny, was an accomplished Middle East scholar who embodied both of my parents strong attributes. My sister Peggy was someone dedicated to family, friends and strangers who was always willing to lend a helping hand. My sister Minnie overcame a childhood disability and raised two amazing children who live close to me here in Round Rock, Texas.

My five children have taught me far more than they are able to realize, And I am learning so much from my six grandchildren … children are such amazing creatures … learning … always learning … doing amazing things … always amazing.

My early friends disappointed me in many ways but I managed to find many friends in other countries, including Norway, Germany and Australia. My education at the United States Air Force Academy and the University of Texas at Austin have helped my professionally as well as personally. My experiences with scholars in other countries, though, are what have been most prominent in my reflections on my past, due in part to the global pandemic and worsening international relationships among so many countries.

I met a colleague in Norway who considered hiking on Sunday in the seven mountains around Bergen as his weekly religious obligation experience. Indeed, giving thanks for the beauty and bounty of this planet seems an appropriate way to say thanks to something higher. I met parents in a remote village in Java who said they wanted their sons and daughters to go on to high school in a faraway city and get an education even if it eventually led to demise of their remote mountain village. They valued education of their children more than their livelihood. Such a humbling experience and  not one I can ever forget.

After many years of collaborating with colleagues in Shanghai, Beijing, and Fuzhou I have come to the conclusion that there are many things in China which are getting better than things in the USA = and vice versa. Respect for elders is one thing I see very strong in China and from which I have personally benefitted – some Chinese doctoral students even call me their grandfather – the highest degree of respect I never earned. I see both China and the USA exceptionally adept at political spinning of truth and facts, although I doubt the Chinese leader has uttered 20,000 lies since becoming President. National unity seems much stronger in China than in the USA although my experience there is quite limited. The Chinese are apparently repressing Muslims in Xinjiang and the USA is repressing blacks in many places. Just as no individual is flawless, no nation is flawless. Individuals with integrity seem capable of admitting their flaws and striving to do betters. Perhaps it is the same with countries. Germany has admitted to the flaws of the Nazi regime and has systematically done better in the years since WWII. I am not sure the USA has fully admitted to dropping atomic bombs on Japan in the year I was born. We can do better. All of us can do better. Every nation can do better. I can do better however many years I have left to apply what I have gathered from coincidence over the years.

I so appreciate my many friends and colleagues in China, in Indonesia, in India, in Malaysia, in Hong Kong, in Taiwan, in Thailand, in Tunisia, in South Africa, in Chile, in Brazil, in Canada, in Mexico, in Norway, in Germany, in Belgium, in The Netherlands, in Portugal, in Spain, in Crete, in Greece, in Italy, in Turkey, in Israel, in New Zealand and in many places across the USA. From them I am slowly learning what it means to be human, to be flawed, to be capable of becoming still more human.



Saturday, July 11, 2020

The [b]right side?


When I wrote the  note below in my journal, aside from the irony and sarcasm I suppose I was really hoping that things would improve significantly and that reason, tolerance, and respect would return to dominance … and then I wondered if those values and others were ever widely embraced … there are wonderful stories and memories of people who lived those values – for example Franz Jägerstätter (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDvW42iSeVs) comes to mind for me often … but then the story of Cain and Able, the first two brothers, is not all that encouraging … I used to joke about the first words in the Jewish bible … “In the beginning there was chaos and the void …” and then I would add that not much has changed since then. And then I imagine my father telling me from the grave that my interpretation is correct and that the message is for us to make needed changes … his words from the great beyond haunt me … what changes have I made to make things better … less chaotic … less empty of meaning …  my father's message echos: "the gift we have been given (life) is the opportunity to make things better." “If not now, then when?” as Hillel asked.

-----------------------------------------

Okay … I admit it. I tried listening to DJT and looking at the good things that have come to pass under his reign. I start with an advance organizer and a disclaimer pertaining to DJT’s advice about stemming the spread of the coronavirus by drinking or injecting disinfectant. Being cautious and somewhat creative, I thought that it made more sense to start with one’s feet rather than one’s mouth or arm. So … I soaked my feet in Lysol last week, and I am now happy to report that there is no evidence that my feet are contagious. More good news in what follows.
Because I believe that we should let evidence be the key arbiter in difficult situations, I have been examining several different bodies of evidence … but not any of the 134,000 American bodies lost to COVID-19 as access is restricted. So, a second disclaimer is that the evidence reviewed herein is basically evidence gathered due to the convenience of samples.
Mass shootings in the USA in 2020 are on a track similar to the number of mass shootings in the USA in 2019. However, there are many fewer mass shootings in schools, universities, shopping malls, movie theaters, concerts, and churches in 2020 compared with the previous year. Our analysis shows that this is one major benefit of the coronavirus … looking on the bright side. It should be noted that a possible confounding variable could be the percentage of schools, universities, shopping malls, movie theaters, concerts, and churches that have been closed or cancelled due to the coronavirus. Analysis continues.
Also, the number of foreigners wishing to enter the USAm, legally or illegally, has declined significantly in 2020. This means that those children currently held in cages at the border can be released, and the worries about an invading horde from the South can be set aside, except perhaps those seeking to leave Brazil where the coronavirus is spreading faster even than in the USA and where the rich-poor gap is even greater than that in the USA.
So, in closing, I am encouraging an attitude of hope along with that encouraged by DJT. Things could have been much worse. He could have bombed North Korea or sold Alaska to Russia or moved to Greenland. DJT has probably added more to his ego than to his bank account, although the evidence has yet to confirm that conclusion. And as a final note, air pollution due to automobile traffic seems to be declining in 2020 in the USA Take heart, America ... DJT is the one responsible for this new climate of hope.

mike spector

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Rethinking the 10 Commandments



Perhaps it is time for a new ten commandments:

1.      Thou shalt not resort to violence to settle disagreements.

2.      Thou shalt not put the rights of others behind your rights.

3.      Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s success.

4.      Thou shalt respect the life, liberty and livelihood of everyone.

5.      Thou shalt respect differences and diversity as much as similarities and homogeneity.

6.      Thou shalt respect lawful displays of disagreements.

7.      Thou shalt support the health and livelihood of everyone.

8.      Thou shalt live in peace and harmony with your neighbor.

9.      Thou shalt value tolerance, learning, and openmindedness.

10.  Thou shalt not hate.

FFor those unable to remember or recall ten things (see http://www2.psych.utoronto.ca/users/peterson/psy430s2001/Miller%20GA%20Magical%20Seven%20Psych%20Review%201955.pdf), here is a shorter version:

1.      Thou shalt not hate.

2.      Thou shalt not resort to violence.

3.      Thou shalt value the health and welfare of everyone.


Alternatives are open for discussion.

Jonathan Michael Spector, A Worlizen
June 25, 2020

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Actions - Not Just Words


I have been home bound, first due to COVID-19 and then to a back operation leaving me with not much energy to do much more than answer occasional emails and listen to the news. I have been hearing lots of words about how best to respond to COVID-19 (frequent hand washing, wearing a mask in public, and practicing physical distance); such practical advice is easy to implement and I have been doing so although on my rare trips out, I notice that many others are not – the hospital and doctor’s office are notable exceptions where everyone is following those best practices. 

I also am hearing a lot about how best to respond to the murder of George Floyd and other abuses by police in recent times including pushing a 75 year old white man to the ground leaving him in critical condition. Since I turn 75 next month, I identify with that old man. The police initially said the old man simply tripped. My lying eyes watching the video tell me otherwise. Then I try to imagine being choked for 8 minutes and 46 seconds. Cold-blooded murder when I watch that one. As I am out of shape, I might last 2 minutes and 46 seconds at most. 

Then I think about this country I once swore to defend as an officer in the Air Force. What was I defending? The right of the President to lie on a daily – or hourly – basis. Is that the right of free speech I was defending? The right of the Senate to confirm someone who assaulted women to the Supreme Court? I cannot remember when I voted for a Senator who was elected. And I certainly did not vote for anyone who confirmed an attorney general who is behaving as the President’s Himmler. I did vote twice for a person running for the Presidency who got the most votes but was not elected. So, I have been reflecting about things that I have seen develop over the years. Well, my remarks may seem partisan, so I should add that a Republican Representative (Howard Baker) nominated me to become a cadet at the Air  Force Academy and a Democratic Senator (Albert Gore Sr.) initiated an investigation that led to my honorable discharge from the Air Force. Over the years I have mostly voted for Democrats although I have voted for a Republican and an Independent. I think of myself as a principled citizen, although others think of me as a foolish old man. Go with the majority.

I think there are three laws that would solve many of the problems we have experienced in this fractured democracy. Number one is to change the way we elect the President and Vice President so for that most important election it is simply one person, one vote – no electoral college – and the one with the most votes wins. If more than two are running, then the winner must have more than 50% of the votes, which might require a run-off election. Second, make a law that encourages early voting and voting by mail so that many more people have easy access to this most important right of citizenship. Third, thinking about healthcare and the virus that has killed more than 100,000 Americans with a significant majority being persons of color and persons of advanced age (like me), this nation should commit to universal medical coverage similar to what members of Congress or what retired members of the military or civil service  have or to what postal workers have. Medical care should be provided for all just as primary and secondary education are provided to all at no cost to citizens (e.g., funded by taxes).

I have many other changes I would like to see enacted in law. Those three changes strike me as fundamental, and they address the current crises confronting our fragile democracy. Moreover, each and every citizen would benefit from those three changes, unlike the tax breaks given to corporations and the wealthy. 

Mike Spector (June 6, 2020)

Sunday, May 10, 2020

What is the right question to be asking?


In these trying times of the COVID-19 pandemic, one might wonder what questions we should be asking.

There are plenty of people and websites telling us how to stay safe and healthy (i.e., minimize contact with others, wear a mask, maintain six or more feet from others, wash hands often, check your temperature frequently, eat your veggies, and say nice things to everyone you meet).

There are also people telling us what we should start doing as soon as possible (i.e., go out for dinner, get a haircut, meet your friends at a bar, meet those you want to impress at a place of worship, get a tatoo of Mara Lago, get a massage, and if you happen to have any finger nails left, get your nails done).

One might ask how many people in the USA will die of the virus this year? Will it exceed 100,000? Should we create a betting site for the unemployed as a new lottery game?

One could ask when a reliable vaccine will be widely available. Will it be this year?

Who is likely to win the next presidential election in these divided states of America? DJT? JRB? AMC? MLRO? I plan to vote for Elmer Fudd as I think that he also has an outside chance and I like his hair style.

When is Mara Lago going to be underwater as a result of climate change? “When will the American eagle really spread its wings and straighten up and fly right?” (LMH)  “Is there balm in Gilead?” (EAP)

Seriously speaking, though, should we be worried about the degradation of the rule of law? Of pervasive e and pernicious racism? Of another civil war, less civil than the last one? Of being overrun by people scaling the imaginary Southern border wall? Of a new CSA (not the Confederate States of America – the Canadian States of America or the Chinese States of America?) Of becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of Amazon? (If it involves the star of the recent Wonder Woman movie about an Amazonian princess, I will go for that option.)

More seriously speaking … I mean asking … what kind of country do we want our grandchildren to grow up and thrive in?

Is it the earth that the meek inherit or is it the dirt?

My new mantra for 2020 – bullies of the world unit and move to Mara Lago.