Why Evolution is True is a blog written by Jerry Coyne, centered on evolution and biology but also dealing with diverse topics like politics, culture, and cats.
. . . and I’m in Tenerife, the largest of the Canary Islands of Spain (also the largest in population, with nearly a million). I’m dwelling in a fancy hotel at Puerto de la Cruz.
I didn’t realize that the Canaries are so far south: at the latitude of southern Morocco. No wonder it’s warm here, with lots of palm trees and subtropical vegetation.
The island and my one-day residence in red (our ship leaves tomorrow evening after a city tour):
It was a a rough trip. Thunderstorms delayed our departure from Chicago by about three hours, and I had budgeted a 4-hour layover in Madrid before the flight to Tenerife. It was jammed in Madrid, with multiple health checks, passport controls, baggage security checks, and then a long train ride to the gate area, where the location of the gates wasn’t at all evident. I barely made it, running with a small suitcase and heavey daypack, but got there 5 minutes before they the gate. I was the last person aboard. I was soaked with sweat, too, as I was wearing cold-weather Chicago clothes and of course it’s warm here.
The flight from Chicago to Madrid was about nine hours, and then from Madrid to Tenerife a shade under three hours. I’ve done some traveling, and I’m tired. But now it’s almost time for tea and meeting my fellow passengers. (Movies watched on the plane: “Badlands”, “Erin Brockovitch” (I can’t get enough Julia Roberts) and “Dead Poets Society,” which didn’t excite me much with its predictable ending.
The hotel: here’s my room at the Hotel Botánico. It’s really fancy: perhaps the spiffiest hotel room I’ve inhabited in decades—or ever. The hotel is a five-minute walk to the famous Botanical Gardens, which we visited for a long time this afternoon. I have many pictures of plants, indigenous or otherwise, which I took with my good camera. I’ll show them another time.
These are all iPhone photos embedded at low resolution, as the internet is slow here.
The hotel exterior:
My room, far fancier than I deserve:
My bathroom, with lots of washing goodies and a real rose! There’s also a bidet peeking around the corner.
The view from my balcony—plants and a sweeping vista down to the ocean:
Me, dressed up a bit but totally exhausted (I had not a minute’s sleep since I left Chicago). I need a good meal and some sleep!
I’m writing this from O’Hare airport for posting tomorrow, just to ensure that the Caturday felids don’t skip a week.
The first item comes from the BBC (click on screenshot below), and recounts a short but heartening tail of a rescued stowaway cat. (No photo credits were given.)
So here’s all the news fit to print:
A stowaway cat who was flown ashore from a North Sea platform has been reunited with his owner – five years after going missing.
The one-eyed cat was discovered on Thursday inside a shipping container that had been shipped from Peterhead.
It emerged he had previously been a regular visitor to HMP Grampian, where prison staff fed him and nicknamed him “one-eyed Joe”.
The publicity has now led to the wanderer being identified as Dexter.
The crew of the offshore platform fed their unexpected visitor on chicken from the canteen and called in the Scottish SPCA.
Here’s Dexter/One-Eyed Joe:
On Friday morning he was flown by helicopter into Aberdeen and handed over to the charity.
Animal rescue officer Aimee Findlay, who collected the cat, said: “We’ve no idea how the cat ended up there.
“After checking him for a microchip it turns out his real name is Dexter and he has been missing for five years.”
She added: “We are so glad that he was well looked after for the time he was missing, but were even more delighted to be able to reunite him with his original owner thanks to his microchip being up to date.”
Delighted owner Bridie Dorta told BBC Scotland she was “quite shocked” to have Dexter back.
“He’s always been a wanderer,” she said. “He went away a few years ago and we never heard anything about him since.
“We never expected him to end up back here.”
What I want to know is how a cat can wander into and out of prison at will. And imagine what it could be used to smuggle! How did he lose his eye?
Well, I don’t know, but he’s home and got chicken. Another photo:
Oh, there’s one more line:
[Bridie] hopes to be able to keep Dexter in touch with his fans at the prison.
Does that mean the cat will be smuggling in files, cellphone, or even drugs? Has Bridie thought of what might happen to the cat if he associates with the incarcerated. I still think that has something to do with his missing eye.
****************
This 3-minute Facebook video shows the skinniest feral cat that reader Malcolm or I had ever seen—indeed, I didn’t think such a skeletal frame was compatible with life! Look at this waif: the feline equivalent of Oliver Twist. It comes from the Dodo, though, so you know that in the end everything will be right. He weighed 1.8 kilos when he turned up, but look at him now! Be sure to put the sound up, though there are subtitles too.
***************
I had totally forgotten about the world’s most famous cat—Maru, of course—until I saw this video “suggested” for me on YouTube. Apparently, since I last checked in, after Marus owner adopted another tabby named Hana, she’s gotten yet ANOTHER cat, which is mostly white .
The translation of this video, the “Beer Box Challenge”:
Beer Box Challenge 2. If Maru goes through the beer boxes first, he doesn’t jump over to the end.
Maru can’t even make it over level one He’s a lazy cat, but we also know that he loves going through boxes (in fact, he drags the whole apparatus with him). As I remember him saying a while back, “When I see a box, I cannot help but enter.” And so he does, and that’s why we love him.
23 April 1945 | Rudolf Löwith, a Czech Jew, perished in Dachau.
Rudolf was born in Prague on 29 November 1920. He was incarcerated in #Theresienstadt ghetto on 5 July 1943 and deported to #Auschwitz on 1 October 1944 from where he was later transferred to the west.
By this evening I’ll be winging my way to Tenerife via Madrid, and thence on a ship to Morocco, Spain, Gibraltar, and Portugal. I’ve been to all these countries save Tenerife and Gibraltar, and am most excited about seeing the new places. I’ll also be visiting Jerez in Spain—a city I’ve never seen. It’s the home of sherry, and I hope to indulge in some sherry tasting.
As in Antarctica, I’ll be lecturing—this time to University of Chicago alumni, and perhaps to alumni of other colleges and institutions, as it’s a general “alumni” cruise. It will be fun to meet and talk to graduates of the U of C, especially those who went here decades ago.
The ship will be smaller this time: the Sea Spirit, which seems to be even fancier than the Roald Amundsen. A photo is below, and you can read more about the ship here
The upshot: I’m not yet sure how often I’ll have access to email until I return in early May, so posting may be considerably lighter. It will resume at its normal pace in two weeks or so.
Now, the note to readers. Both yesterday afternoon and this morning I had a bit of a problem embedding tweets in the posts (this is, I think, a temporary glitch from Twitter), so when the subscribers’ emails arrived, no tweets were in them. This was also true on the website itself. I fixed it by simply tracking down the errant tweets on Twitter and embedding them again, which took some time. That fixed the issue, at last for now. But of course the original emails remain tweetless.
I always recommend that, when possible, readers view the posts on computers themselves rather than reading them in emails. The glitch above is one reason, but another is more important. I often update posts, not only fixing glitches and typos but also by making additions. Greg, for example, sometimes puts in an addendum. These will not show up on the emails, which don’t get updated, but you’ll see them on the website.
So, if you can, avoid reading my site via the emails that go out when a new post goes up. Instead, check the site itself online from time to time. As I almost never post after 2:30 pm Chicago time, if you go to the site after that you’ll see the entire day’s offerings.
Thanks! I am Professor Ceiling Cat (Emeritus) and. . .
Today we have another history/natural history/general interest contribution from reader Athayde Tonhasca Junior. His notes are indented, and click on the photos to enlarge them.
If you walk into a British supermarket and pick up a tin of Lyle’s Golden Syrup or Black Treacle (these are by-products of sugar refining processes, similar to corn syrup and molasses), you will notice one of the strangest logos for a food product: a dead lion surrounded by a swarm of bees above the slogan ‘Out of the strong came forth sweetness’.
Lyle’s Black Treacle:
The image and text are based on the Biblical tale in which Samson kills a lion to find a honeycomb inside it. This unexpected discovery led Samson to write a riddle: ‘Out of the eater came forth meat and out of the strong came forth sweetness’. Meaning: from the carcass of a lion (the eater and the strong), Samson had meat and honey (sweetness). The story impressed the staunch Presbyterian Abram Lyle (1820-1891), businessman and founder of the sugar refinery Abram Lyle & Sons. And so one of Britain’s oldest brands was born: the logo hasn’t changed much since 1885.
But the yarn about dead animals and bees is older than Samson’s adventure. The Greeks, the Romans and other Mediterranean peoples believed that honey bees originated spontaneously from animal carcasses, primarily of oxen. The Greeks had a name for this miracle: bugonia, from bous (ox) and gon (generation). The Roman poet Virgil (70-19 BC) told the story of a farmer, who in want of bees, slaughtered an ox and waited for a new swarm. Bugonia inspired Shakespeare as well: ‘Tis seldom when the bee doth leave her comb, in the dead carrion’ (Henry IV).
Bugonia, unknown author, 1517:
But the belief in carcass apiculture suffered a fatal blow in 1668, when the Italian physician, naturalist, biologist and poet Francesco Redi (1626-1697) published Esperienze Intorno alla Generazione degl’Insetti (Experiments on the generation of insects). By comparing covered and uncovered meat-filled glass containers and observing the presence or absence of flies and maggots, Redi put an end to the idea of spontaneous generation.
Bugonia was dead, but the recurrent reports of bees swarming around carcasses, just like in Lyle’s logo, still required explanation. Enter diplomat and entomologist Baron Karl-Robert von Osten-Sacken (1828-1906), who, despite his Teutonic name, was Russian. The Baron suggested that the ‘bees’ found around dead animals were in fact flies: not the expected carrion-seeking blow flies and blue bottles, but the drone fly, Eristalis tenax.
The name ‘drone fly’ comes from its resemblance, in appearance and behaviour, to honey bees. The adults feed on pollen, especially from yellow flowers such as dandelions, and are known to pollinate various crops. The larva has a long ‘tail’, which is a specialized respiratory structure that works as a snorkel, allowing the insect to breathe air from the surface when submerged in liquids. This respiratory appendage gives the larva its common name: the rat-tailed maggot.
In his 1894 publication ‘On the oxen-born bees of the Ancients (bugonia) and their relation to Eristalis tenax, a two-winged insect’, von Osten-Sacken explained the bugonia phenomenon as this: ‘The original cause of this delusion lies in the fact that a very common fly, scientifically called Eristalis tenax (popularly the drone-fly), lays its eggs upon carcasses of animals, that its larvae develop in the putrescent mass, and finally change into a swarm of flies which, in their shape, hairy clothing and colour, look exactly like bees, although they belong to a totally different order of insects.’
The Baron was close: the female drone fly does not lay her eggs on carcasses, but on the exudates and foul water accumulated around them. Other contaminated water sources would do, such as sewage, manure lagoons, holding pits in livestock areas, ditches and wet silage.
Hence an entomological/historical mystery may have been solved.
Drone flies are not the only insects interested in a dead lion: blow flies of the genus Lucilia may get to it first – or to a dead bird or small mammal in your neighbourhood. You will certainly have seen these shiny, metallic green flies, known as green bottles, in your garden or around your bins. They comprise several species that are difficult to tell apart.
A female green bottle fly.
Female green bottle flies use their powerful sense of smell to track minute volumes of sulphur volatiles released by recently deceased animals. Once a fly finds a corpse, sometimes within minutes of death, she lays 150 to 200 eggs on it. The eggs quickly hatch into maggots, which feed on the rotting flesh. After about ten days, they leave the body and pupate in the soil nearby.
Gross, you say? Well, green bottle flies help decompose carcasses, accelerating the release of organic matter and nutrients into the ecosystem. Without them and other scavenging insects such as flesh flies and carrion beetles, decomposition by microorganisms would take much longer, and rotting carcasses would accumulate in the landscape. Alas, these flies can lay their eggs on live bodies as well. The common green bottle fly Lucillia sericata is a serious pest of sheep, causing significant expenses for farmers.
However, green bottle flies are not all death and pestilence. Because their maggots preferentially consume dead tissue, they have been used for the treatment of non-healing wounds in people and animals. Maggot therapy has been known since 1557 when Ambroise Paré (c. 1510-1590), the Chief Surgeon of King Charles IX of France, described a soldier with a deep head wound filled with a ‘great number of worms’, and noted that the patient ‘recovered beyond all men’s expectation’. This unusual but effective treatment saved many lives before antibiotics become widely available, and the therapy is experiencing a comeback because of antibiotic resistance. Disinfected L. sericata maggots are placed in a diabetic ulcer, bedsore or other chronic wound, where they eat the necrotic tissue and produce antimicrobial enzymes that prevent infections, thus speeding the growth of new tissue.
Wound healing is not the only service provided by L. sericata. This species is a good pollinator of crops that produce few flowers or little pollen such as cauliflower, cabbage, lettuce, carrot, onion, leek, and asparagus; so much so that this fly is commercially available to complement the pollination by bees in glasshouses. Not so bad for those green creatures buzzing around your rubbish!
Because drone flies and green bottles are dependent on dead bodies, they are important aids to forensic science. By noting the flies’ life stage, criminal investigators can determine a person’s time of death, and the presence or absence of flies in certain environments can be an indication of tampering with the body: drone flies for example are indicators of partially submerged cadavers.
Shortly after an animal expires, its body starts releasing the scents of decay. Thanks to their sensitive antennae, sexton beetles such as Nicrophorus vespilloidescan locate a corpse within an hour of death and from as far away as 3 km. The first male-female pair to arrive examines it to assess its size; bodies too big to be handled are rejected. If the ground is unsuitable for digging, they drag the body to a better location, all the while fencing off late arrivals and competitors.
The beetles loosen the soil with their heads and shove it aside, gradually constructing a burial chamber that eventually sinks the carcass into the ground, a process that may take up to 8 hours. After burial, the beetles strip away any fur or feathers and shape the flesh into a compact ball, dousing it with secretions that act as anti-bacterial agents to slow down decomposition. The female then lays her eggs in the soil nearby. Watch sexton beetles in action here and here.
Until they are about three days old, sexton beetle larvae beg for food by pressing against the adult’s jaws, which stimulates regurgitation – a behaviour normally associated with birds and their nestlings. Afterwards the larvae feed directly on the carcass, but they are cared for by their parents throughout their development. This is a rare and highly developed behaviour in insects, normally found in social bees, wasps, ants, and termites. But it’s not all love and care in the life of a young sexton beetle; if the adults sense that the brood is too big or the carcass is too small, some of the smaller larvae are eaten, so that the remaining ones will have a sufficient food supply.
These complex interactions between parents and offspring represent the highest degree of sociality among Coleoptera, and that’s why sexton beetles are considered to have attained the level of ‘subsocial’ on insects’ sociality spectrum. And recently, a new twist has been revealed in their intricate lives.
A female dedicates her time and energy to the offspring. The male however may have other ideas thanks to sexual competition; he may be driven to pester her for sex to guarantee paternity because given the chance, other males will have a go with the busy female. She has a chemical solution for this harassment problem: during early stages of larval growth, she releases methyl geranate, which has anti-aphrodisiac properties and inhibits the mating instinct of males.
So there you have it: sexton beetles have created the first anti-Viagra.
If you bump into a dead lion or another cadaver, you may pause to brood over life and mortality. But although that carcass was the end of the line for one life, by no means was it the end of the line for life. Dead animals (and dung as well) are valuable resources, full of complex proteins, carbohydrates, fats and sugars. And many creatures are ready to exploit the life opportunities offered by a corpse.
Welcome to the end of the work week: Friday, April 22, 2022. This evening I’ll be over the Atlantic on my way to Tenerife via Madrid. It’s National Jelly Bean Day (didn’t we just have that?) as well as Earth Day and April Showers Day.
I’lll be traveling until the beginning of May, so posting will likely be light. Bear with me. I do my best.
Stuff that happened on April 22 includes:
1529 – Treaty of Zaragoza divides the eastern hemisphere between Spain and Portugal along a line 297.5 leagues (1,250 kilometres (780 mi)) east of the Moluccas.
1836 – Texas Revolution: A day after the Battle of San Jacinto, forces under Texas General Sam Houston identify Mexican General Antonio López de Santa Anna among the captives of the battle when some of his fellow soldiers mistakenly give away his identity.
1864 – The U.S. Congress passes the Coinage Act of 1864 that permitted the inscription In God We Trust be placed on all coins minted as United States currency.
And that year, superstition made its appearance on the coins. Here’s one from that year:
1876 – The first National League baseball game is played at the Jefferson Street Grounds in Philadelphia.
1889 – At noon, thousands rush to claim land in the Land Rush of 1889. Within hours the cities of Oklahoma City and Guthrie are formed with populations of at least 10,000.
Below is a famous photo of the Land Rush. A bit more from Wikipedia:
12 o’clock noon that the Unassigned Land in Indian Territory would be open for settlement. At the time of the opening, which was indicated by gunshot, the line of people on horse and in wagons dispersed into a kaleidoscope of motion and dust and oxen and wagons. The chase for land was frenzied and much chaos and disorder ensued. The rush did not last long, and by the end of the day nearly two million acres of land had been claimed. By the end of the year, 62,000 settlers lived in the Unassigned Lands located between the Five Tribes on the east and the Plains Tribes on the west.
1993 – Eighteen-year-old Stephen Lawrence is murdered in a racially motivated attack while waiting for a bus in Well Hall, Eltham.
Here’s Lawrence, who was stabbed to death for no reason except his race. Two murderer were convicted in 2012, receiving 14- or 15-year sentences:
Notables born on this day include:
1707 – Henry Fielding, English novelist and playwright (d. 1754)
1870 – Vladimir Lenin, Russian revolutionary and founder of Soviet Russia (d. 1924)
Lenin was not a well man in his later years, suffering from a variety of ailments (some say syphilis, others arteriosclerosis), but he did have a series of strokes, the first in 1922. Here he is the next year in a wheelchair:
1891 – Nicola Sacco, Italian-American anarchist (d. 1927)
1899 – Vladimir Nabokov, Russian-born novelist and critic (d. 1977)
I just realized that Nabokov never won a Nobel Prize for Literature, and I’m wondering why.
Did you know that Nabokov had a lifelong interest in butterflies, and worked on them at Harvard? From the Atlas Obscura:
Between 1942 and 1948, Nabokov was a Researcher Fellow in the Harvard University Comparative Zoology department. The university allowed him to have a little shop furnished with scientific equipment to pursue his taxonomic research. Nabokov was already a practiced expert of Blue Butterflies and focused his classification theory on one specific point: the study of male butterfly genitalia. Invisible to our bare eyes, the butterflies’ privates were described by Nabokov as “minuscule sculptural hooks, teeth, spurs, etc… visible only under a microscope.” These aedeagus would be taken away from each specimen, places in littles vials or on glass plates, and labeled. By doing so, Nabokov could observe new physiognomic differences between identical-looking butterflies and reevaluate their belonging to one species or another. Each specimen was indexed and placed in a small wooden cabinet.
This miraculous little collection still exists today, but is kept out of sight, in the Harvard Entomology Departments.
That’s especially cool because I worked on fly genitalia for a long time. Here’s Nabokov’s genital cabinet:
The so-called Nabokov Genitalia Cabinet in his former office in the Harvard University Comparative Zoology department. (photograph from The Rarest of the Rare: Stories Behind the Treasures at the Harvard Museum of Natural History by Nancy Pick and Mark Sloan)
1904 – J. Robert Oppenheimer, American physicist and academic (d. 1967)
1916 – Yehudi Menuhin, American-Swiss violinist and conductor (d. 1999)
1922 – Charles Mingus, American bassist, composer, and bandleader (d. 1979)
1936 – Glen Campbell, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor (d. 2017)
This is my favorite song by Campbell, and his guitar solo is dynamite (remember, he was a session guitarist before he became famous as a solo artist):
1945 – Käthe Kollwitz, German painter and sculptor (b. 1867)
1984 – Ansel Adams, American photographer and environmentalist (b. 1902)
Here’s Adams and his kitten:
1994 – Richard Nixon, 37th President of the United States (b. 1913)
2013 – Richie Havens, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1941)
Here’s his famous performance of “Freedom” at Woodstock in 1969. As you can see, he had no teeth in his upper jaw:
News:
*Here’s today’s NYT upper-left-hand-corner headline (click to read):
. . . and the news highlights:
In the besieged southern port city of Mariupol, uncertainty loomed over the fate of the Azovstal steel plant, where hundreds if not thousands of Ukrainian fighters and civilians have been holed up for weeks in fortified underground warrens with diminishing supplies of food, water and ammunition.
The plant was being shelled on Thursday, according to a Ukrainian soldier there, though President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia had called off an assault hours earlier in favor of a blockade “that a fly can’t get through,” apparently with the intent of starving the defenders out.
Capturing the steel plant would effectively signal the fall of Mariupol, a significant victory for Russia — allowing a land bridge between the Crimean peninsula in the south, which Russia annexed in 2014, and territory that Russian forces already hold in the Donbas region in the east. Though Mr. Putin prematurely claimed victory in Mariupol on Thursday, a soldier with the Ukrainian National Guard inside a bunker at the steel plant said that Ukrainian forces were holding on while they had ammunition.
Attacks continued across Ukraine on Thursday, even as President Biden announced another $800 million package of weapons to help the country, pushing U.S. support to over $2 billion since the war’s start eight weeks ago. The aid will allow the creation of five new Ukrainian artillery battalions, and it includes more than 120 new drones built specifically to be used by Ukrainian forces.
*Meanwhile, the NYT has an editorial board op-ed called “Acknowledging the limits of sanctions.” While praising Biden’s sanctions, the editors also note that “sanctions historically have not been particularly effective in changing regimes, and their record at changing dictators’ behavior is mixed at best.” The solutions? Well, those offered by the editors aren’t promising:
Even Mr. Putin acknowledged that they have “achieved certain results.” But focusing on helping Ukraine financially and with military equipment might prove more productive than thinking up new sanctions on Russia. The Biden administration appears to recognize this, at least in part, with its latest $800 million in military aid and $500 million in emergency funding announced on Thursday.
. . . . The United States could tighten the economic screws on Russia by imposing secondary sanctions. U.S. officials already appear to be threatening as much in meetings and calls with officials in India and China. Secondary sanctions are a powerful tool to compel other countries to get in line with American policy. But the potential benefits need to be weighed against the risks and costs. The extraterritorial application of American laws can also incite deep resentment, even from European allies at times. Secondary sanctions should be used sparingly, and only after consultation with partners.
And that’s about it. In effect, they’re suggesting that we “roll back the sanctions” and try other stuff:
All the more reason that the United States should have a clear plan for how and under what circumstances it would be appropriate to roll back these latest sanctions. Right now, this has been left deliberately vague to allow the Ukrainians to directly negotiate with Russia. It is laudable to give deference to Ukrainians whose lives are on the line in this terrible war. But creating clear goals and communicating benchmarks for sanctions relief is an important factor in successful sanctions. Too often, sanctions are left in place for decades, without evaluation of whether or not they are achieving what they were put in place to do.
They might be right that the sanctions won’t deter Putin (oh, sorry, I forgot they weren’t a “deterrent”), but then what solution do the editors have to offer while Ukrainians continue to die? They have none.
*But at the Washington Post, Fared Zakaria says that “the only plausible path” to keeping the pressure on Russia is to tighten the sanctions:
That means the only way out of this conflict is to put enough pressure on Russia to force it to the negotiating table and seek sanctions relief in exchange for a peace deal.
To achieve this, the coalition against it needs the staying power to maintain and even ratchet up sanctions and embargoes against Moscow. And that is only conceivable in a scenario in which energy prices come down from their current highs.
This shows that there is no plausible way to save Ukraine—unless we want to trigger World War III and destroy everyone. Putin’s move was a canny one, even if the Russian Army has proven itself pretty hamhanded.
*As you know, a federal judge overturned the government’s mask mandate on airplanes and other forms of public transportation (though not all). The CDC has appealed to the Department of Justice to appeal that ruling, and the Department of Justice has indeed filed an appeal. But it won’t be ruled on for several months at the earliest. In the meantime, I will continue to wear my mask on planes and mask public transportation (I’m not sure about Uber). From CNBC.
The new appeal is largely expected to have no immediate effect given that the Justice Department has not yet made an attempt to block Mizelle’s order. The appeal process is slated to unfold over a number of months.
On the heels of Mizelle’s decision, the White House said that it will likely appeal the decision but that the Transportation Security Administration will not enforce the order on public transport while the ruling is reviewed
Some transportation companies, such as the airlines United and Delta and the railroad operator Amtrak, were quick to announce Monday evening that wearing masks was now optional for passengers and employees using their travel services.
The legislation would dismantle Disney’s special district on June 1, 2023. The district, which was created by a 1967 state law, allows Disney to self-govern by collecting taxes and providing emergency services. Disney controls about 25,000 acres in the Orlando area, and the district allows the company to build new structures and pay impact fees for such construction without the approval of a local planning commission.
But Disney transgressed when corporation leaders criticized the new Florida law, signed by DeSantis, that bans “classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity” in Florida’s public schools. That criticism was too much for Florida Republicans and DeSantis in particular:
For months, DeSantis has steadily increased his rhetoric denouncing “the rise of corporate wokeness,” but he didn’t have a clear target until Disney announced its opposition to the measure, which critics have called the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, on March 9. Since then, the company — Florida’s largest employer — has been a singular focus for the governor as he runs for re-election and eyes a 2024 presidential bid. As a vestige of Florida’s old business-aligned GOP, Disney provided DeSantis a perfect foil to highlight the revolution in Republican politics as it de-emphasizes talk about free markets in favor of culture war attacks on “wokeness.”
Now, both houses of the Florida legislature have passed a bill that will eliminate Disney’s special district of self-governance. DeSantis will almost surely sign that bill, and Disney will have to be subject to Florida law as of June 1, 2023. Such is the price of dissent.
*A report from reader Ken: “Among the five recipients of this year’s JFK Profile in Courage awards announced today are Ukraine president Voldymyr Zelensky and Wyoming congresswoman Liz Cheney.” There are three other recipients. I can see Zelensky, and surely Cheney has been admirable in standing up for principle and going against her party, but they’re not exactly in the same class. Never mind: here are all the winners:
In the face of grave threats to democracy around the world, the JFK Library Foundation will honor five individuals with the #ProfileInCourage Award.
*Andrew Sullivan announced that he contracted covid, but he’ll be fine. His weekly column, however, has been postponed. As I recall, he recently had a hip replacement as well.
Because of long-term HIV and chronic asthma problems, my doc put me on Paxlovid, which I’m almost done with. It may be psychosomatic, but I did feel a turn for the better a day after taking it. It turns out that a key drug in this anti-Covid cocktail is my old friend ritonavir, one of the first protease inhibitors to break through HIV in the 1990s — evidence of how progress in one medical area can translate into progress in another. The difference between now and 1996 is that I take two pills a day — when I used to take 18 (we were guinea pigs and they were terrified of under-dosing). But the weird metallic after-taste remains oh so familiar after these decades — like an AIDSy madeleine.
Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Hili ruminates on the Spring with Paulina (who took the photo):
Paulina: This time of year everything is more colorful.
Hili: The mice are still grey but it doesn’t bother me.
In Polish:
Paulina: O tej porze roku wszystko jest bardziej kolorowe.
Hili: Myszy są nadal szare, ale mnie to nie przeszkadza.
From Facebook:
Reader Andrée sent a revelation:
I found this in my folder of future stuff to post:
And lagniappe from Natalie, a lovely cat of amr via Harmonia Early Music. The caption: “Weird medieval cats of the week: Cat of arms.
(Scheibler Armorial, Germany ca. 1450-1480, Munchen BSB,_sheet 44)
Abigail Shrier goes after Jen Psaki and “affirmative care” in a Substack piece:
In an address full of fiction, Psaki’s most surprising assertion was that – unlike the economy and COVID – the risks gender activists pose to children is not a “kitchen table issue.”
From Ginger K.. I still couldn’t bear it! I bet it makes them faster and more precise because they want to get it over with faster so they don’t have to listen to the damn music!
— former fetus 4 choice is tired. So very tired. (@godfree_kd) April 16, 2022
I’ve gotten this thread from a lot of people. Of course Sean is right that we should be speaking of “the laws of physics” and not “determinism”, but you can also call what he’s talking about “naturalism”, which is what I do. However, you can also assert that quantum mechanics, when properly understood some day, is deterministic, and add that on the level of human decisions, classical mechanics (“macro” determinism) is a sufficient explainer. The last tweet is especially important to understand if, like me, you don’t accept libertarian free will.
Anti-free-will people have to stop leaning on determinism. It's perhaps the most wrong that an argument can be.
1) The world is not deterministic. Quantum mechanics exists. When there is hidden determinism (MWI, Bohm), it's hidden! Irrelevant to what people experience. (1/n)
2) The question of whether the laws of nature are deterministic is utterly irrelevant to the question of whether there is libertarian free will. All that matters is whether there are laws. Stochastic laws don't allow for free will any more than deterministic ones do. (3/n)
Sean is a compatibilist, but he does reject libertarian free will, so far as I know from reading his books. (I wish he had said that in this thread.)
Tweets from Matthew. This, is says, is a genuine part of a Japanese reception for New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. She was there to promote the sale of Kiwifruit (a big NZ export) to Japan.
Ah, the famous Hodge; this is the first time I’ve seen a drawing. The bit about the oysters is true:
Every good ghost hunter needs an animal side kick. Here's Dr Johnson cat Hodge, who he treated with great indulgence, tasking a resentful servant to go out and buy the cherished feline fresh oysters pic.twitter.com/suFJXKYzA5
Four minutes from the BBC on the steel-factory siege in Mariupol:
To imagine the hell of the last Ukrainian defenders in Mariupol is impossible. To witness the heartbreak and terror of their loved-ones in Kyiv is deeply moving. Our #BBCNewsTen piece with relatives of those on the frontline. With Chris Parkinson @MichaSteininger @MarianaMatevic1 pic.twitter.com/yjOZ8OtBib
April 19 was the 140th anniversary of Darwin’s death, and the wonderful “Darwin Online” project, which presents virtually everything the man ever wrote, has released a bunch of messages received by the Darwin family after his death. Kudos to John van Wyhe, who curates this project and sent out a notice that this material has been released.
Below is the site’s introduction to the many letters, of which I reproduce but a few (via links) below:
2022, 04.19
On the occasion of the 140th anniversary of Darwin’s death, we are providing the Darwin family’s collection of letters and telegrams from his relatives, friends, contemporaries and institutions at home and abroad upon the news of his death in 1882. The messages, addressed to the Darwin family, expressed grief and sorrow, offered condolences, reminiscences and tributes to the scientific figure who had transformed our understanding of the world forever. Over ninety of these letters reveal intimate and personal sentiments felt by the sender. These have been transcribed for the first time, only on Darwin Online.
Click on the link below to access them all.
Here are some notable letters from Darwin’s friends and colleagues, as well as people whom he influenced (with links):
Galton, Francis. 1882.04.20. Letter to George Howard Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.7h
Haeckel, Ernst. 1882.04.24. Letter to Francis Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.8a
Huxley Thomas Henry. 1882.04.21. Letter to Francis Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.10k
Huxley, T. H. 1882.04.22. Letter to George Howard Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.6c
Hooker, Joseph Dalton. 1882.04.21. Letter to Francis Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.10i
Hooker, Joseph Dalton. 1882.04.29. Letter to William Erasmus and George Howard Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.10j
Murray, John. [1882].04.24. Letter to William Erasmus Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.10p
Murray was Darwin’s publisher, which included the various editions of On the Origin of Species
Papé, Charlotte. 1882.04.21. Letter to [Francis] Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.7k
Romanes, George John. 1882.04.22. Letter to Francis Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.8e
Gray, Asa. 1882.04.23. Letter to Francis Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.10h
Students, Agricultural Academy in Petrovsky, Moscow. 1882.04.24. Telegram to Francis Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.12l
Vries, Hugo de. 1882.04.25. Letter to Francis Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.9i
Moscow University Geological Department. 1882.04.28. Letter to George Howard Darwin. Text & image CUL-DAR215.11o