Monday, February 3, 2020
The Electric Car
Super Bowl ads featuring electric vehicles used to be rare. But this year, at least three car companies — GM, Porsche, and Audi — ran flashy commercials for new plug-in models. It’s a sign that a shift is underway as automakers try to persuade a skeptical public that electric vehicles really are the future.
Brad Plumer & Nadja Popovich. NYT.
It's time we had electric cars the public will pursue.
So this is what I think the manufacturers should do.
Buy up all the oilfields and then plug 'em tight as hell.
Then snap up all convenience stores, and no gas let 'em sell.
But that is only one part of my master plan to force
motorists to buy electric cars -- or get a horse.
The chassis must be stylish and the inside so deluxe
that drivers will imagine that they own a million bucks.
Get some super models to recline upon the hood;
that is advertising that all men have understood.
Somehow get the President to pose behind the wheel
of one electric auto -- you will hear the rednecks squeal.
Offer those who buy a new electrical jalopy
calendars and key chains -- and perhaps a pet okapi.
But now I come to think of it, with so much sacrifice,
is the human race exactly worth the vexing price?
Sunday, February 2, 2020
In China Secrets Dwell Secure
At critical turning points, Chinese authorities put secrecy and order ahead of openly confronting the growing coronavirus crisis and risking public alarm or political embarrassment.
Chris Buckley & Steven Lee Meyers. NYT.
In China secrets dwell secure
because they're always kept obscure.
The public has no right to know
if it will rain or it will snow.
No need for citizens to fret
about coronavirus threat.
By keeping people unaware
the government shows splendid care.
And if the Great Wall tumbles down
or rivers flood and people drown,
it's kinder to all those concerned
to have the news concealed and burned.
The truth may set all people free,
but Xi Jinping would disagree.
He plays 'em close up to his vest --
but, after all, he must know best.
In Beijing doctors do not warn
their patients; it would be like porn.
Disgraceful to spread news of plague!
Tis best to keep things very vague.
So if you want the latest news
from China, I suggest you use
a source outside the country, since
in China all the truth is mince.
The Pollsters
Iowans typically finalize their choice late in the campaign, often deciding in the days before the caucuses occur. The late-breaking nature of the state’s political culture lends the poll outsized influence, with the power to fuel a last-minute surge in the state or can be an early dirge for candidates struggling.
(Lisa Lerer; Jonathan Martin; Michael M. Grynbaum. NYT)
In the land of Iowa the pollsters reigned supreme.
They cataloged opinions for a massive data stream.
No politician running for an office dared neglect
the findings of this powerful and conscientious sect.
They call you in the shower and they call you when in bed.
They call you at the office and when you're about to wed.
Who you will be voting for -- that is their standard quest.
They want a ready answer, and I wouldn't try to jest.
Perfection is their watchword; aberrations ain't allowed.
They tolerate no error while they grill the corny crowd.
But yet it happened one fine day a pollster made a gaffe,
and either missed a coma or perhaps a paragraph.
When this was discovered, there was consternation wide.
In Des Moines the pollsters lost their prestige and their pride.
They cancelled further phone calls and they let go all their staff,
and all because one operator made a little gaffe.
Today among the corn stalks in the Iowa hinterland,
there's not a single pollster left to question or demand.
They've gone to greener pastures, or they maybe are extinct.
Anyhow, you won't be bothered at your next precinct.
And now you know the story of the pollster's sad demise,
of the consequences and the moral it implies.
Don't be a nosy parker or buttinski on the phone.
Minding your own bizness is how happiness is grown.
Saturday, February 1, 2020
Photo Essay: Calf Liver Curry.
This is what I had in the fridge tonight.
So I decided to make liver curry, with rice.
And serve it to anybody who came by
the Community Room at 6 p.m.
I haven't cooked liver in a long time.
Forgot to let it stay half-froze so it would slice easy.
Trying to cut thawed liver is like cutting a large
garden slug.
I added the fried liver to the curry gravy for
just the last five minutes before
serving. You let liver cook
too long and it turns into
shoe leather.
A la Carte. Rice. Muffins. Kimchi. Curry.
Good old Bernie -- she'll eat anything I make.
These two had seconds.
At 6:45 I wheeled the cart out of the
Community Room, so we could
set up for Church at ten
tomorrow.
It ain't the immigrants that take our jobs, I know quite well . . .
When iHeartMedia announced this month it would fire hundreds of workers across the country, the radio conglomerate said the restructuring was critical to take advantage of its “significant investments … in technology and artificial intelligence.” In a companywide email, chief executive Bob Pittman said the “employee dislocation” was “the unfortunate price we pay to modernize the company.”
Drew Harwell. Washington Post.
It ain't the immigrants that take our jobs, I know quite well;
it's automated robots that make bread lines start to swell.
Dislocated workers find their jobs done by A.I.
Algorithm dj's and then cyborg pizza pie!
Factories and offices will quiet soon become;
automatons accomplish more, and never even hum.
Doctors, and then lawyers, and professors by the score,
will soon be clerking at the counters of the Dollar Store.
Have a microchip into your brain pan deeply twined --
then a steady job you will most positively find!
Republicans Snub Impeachment Witnesses, Guaranteeing a Trump Acquittal
WASHINGTON — The Senate brought President Trump to the brink of acquittal on Friday of charges that he abused his power and obstructed Congress, as Republicans voted to block consideration of new witnesses and documents in his impeachment trial and shut down a final push by Democrats to bolster their case for the president’s removal.
(by Nicholas Fandos & Michael D. Shear. NYT)
The President of Cockaigne has been summoned to a trial
by a Congress boiling with high factions and low bile.
Some of them have whetted all their knives with horrid care,
hoping they can scalp him and take home a piece of hair.
Others cry 'injustice' and proclaim there is a plot
to railroad the poor President with paltry tommyrot.
So a big shot justice of the peace steps in the mess,
flapping his black robes just like a raven in distress.
Witnesses are shuffled like a deck of cards, but stay!
They don't seem to testify in any useful way.
All their testimony is recorded and ignored;
it runs on like a river and soon ev'ryone gets bored.
Congress sits so long and hard that rumps turn into stone;
way up in the gallery there's nothing but ozone.
People in the streets are seething, but their only goal
is to purchase chips and beer -- then watch the Super Bowl.
The President of Cockaigne in his palace broods and tweets,
and when he sees a journalist he steps on them with cleats.
He knows he'll be acquitted by his toadies loyal and true,
and yet he starts to gibber as if sniffing lots of glue.
He'll take Cockaigne to war, he says, and then he says he shan't;
his logic is as pretzeled as that stuff by Manny Kant.
And when the trial is over all Cockaigne will breathe a sigh,
and nothing will have changed except more Democrats will cry.
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Snail Mail Rides Again!
As people become numb to targeted digital ads that follow them across social media and into their email inboxes, some high-tech marketers are turning to a surprisingly old-school approach to cut through the noise: snail mail.
(Heather Kelly. Washington Post.)
Litter letters in your box
flourish like a clump of phlox.
Growing ever more urbane,
they will drive you quite insane
with prodigious insight, cuz
they now know what makes you buzz.
From your tweets and texts and posts
they invade your mind like ghosts;
making absolutely sure
you will get the right brochure --
then start on a buying spree
that will lead to bankruptcy.
Curse you, USPS staff,
For delivering such chaff!
Poets are more changeable than the wind.
Poets are more changeable than the wind.
And less dependable.
And always broke.
And always complaining about it.
And always secretly envious of those who
Manage to live wisely and prudently and
So can be comfortably well off, even if
Their house is falling down around their
Ears.
Never trust a rich artist -- they have sold out.
Except for Norman Rockwell.
And the Beatles.
Being poor is interesting and fun,
Until it becomes a habit.
So get to know people who are just
Starting to experience poverty.
Then dump them when they can’t
Get back on top again.
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