Saturday, March 14, 2026

Saturday Sounds - Anne's Choir - For Anne in the Attic

This week's musical treat is piece of music that links the horrors of the Holocaust to the terrorizing of immigrant communities by ICE raids in the United States. "For Anne in the Attic" was performed in Spokane, WA earlier this month. From The Globe and Mail article (gift link) titled "Chorus of Discontent"

Dressed in church choir black, the women standing at the front of the Unity Spiritual Center in Spokane, Wash., last Sunday began to sing a new song that likens the U.S. treatment of asylum seekers to the Holocaust.

“Could they see you run for your lives as the forces of hatred pursued you, found you,” the choir sang.

“Where was their humanity?”

Midway through, the pronouns shifted − no longer “they,” but “we,” a switch from the past to the present. “Do we know? Do we know?” they sang. “Can we hear your pleas for asylum when fleeing, afraid for your lives?”

The choral arrangement, For Anne in the Attic, was written by Janice Mayfield, a local woman who penned the words after rereading The Diary of Anne Frank amid the cou--ntless headlines about U.S. immigration enforcement

I have been wondering why the current political situation hasn't generated more protest songs. There have been some, as pointed out by NPR.  I blogged about Bruce Springsteen's "Streets of Minneapolis" recently, but you're more likely to the 60-year-old Stephen Stills classic, "For What It's Worth" than the Springsteen song on what passes for radio these days.

You probably won't hear "For Anne in the Attic" on the radio, but it may become a modern standard in church and choral performances. (If anyone can find the lyrics online, please let me know in the comments). 


Friday, March 13, 2026

The US versus Canada 12

Trump is at it again, just this week talking about "Governor Carney" again. I think Carney, as a former central banker, must have a fairly thick skin, but the disprespect is surely pissing off a lot of Canadians, including me. 

So here are more articles about how Canada and our formerly friendly neighbour have been doing.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Amazing Stories Hits 100

Amazing Stories, the first science fiction magazine, has just turned 100. Almost all magazines from the pulp era are long gone, but somehow Amazing has managed to hang on. Even more amazing, I know its editor, Lloyd Penney, who co-published a Torus, an SF fanzine, in the early 1990s. 

1st issue of Amazing Stories

Amazing is still around, at least as a website, and you can order their annaul best of anthology on Amazon or other online relailers.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Featured Links - March 11, 2026

Things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

A small brown and white cat sitting in an empty box of lactose-free yogurt
Lactose-free cat



Monday, March 09, 2026

Detecting Logical Fallacies

I had some lectures on formal logic as part of a university philosophy course and reading current news stories is making wish I'd paid more attention. There are many ways of twisting logic to persuade an audience for a dubious argument, known as logical fallacies.

Your Local Epidemiologist has just published an article describing five common logical fallacies, using statements by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. as examples. It's an excellent article, cleanly written with clear explanations and lots of examples.
How do we address the firehose of inaccurate information that is flooding the internet right now? It’s tempting to try to play whack-a-mole, tackling one rumor after another, and there is certainly value in addressing individual claims.

But emerging research shows that a better (and less exhausting) method —“prebunking,” or teaching people to recognize falsehoods before they encounter them—is highly effective. If you can teach people to recognize the common rhetorical tricks that are used to sell falsehoods, they can identify them for themselves in the wild, instead of relying on scientists and doctors to chase down every individual claim, meme, or video (which is impossible).

With that, here’s a prebunking lesson for you.

I can't recommend this article highly enough. Read it, remember it, and apply it in your daily reading. You won't regret it.  

Saturday, March 07, 2026

Saturday Sounds - Philip Glass - 2019/05/27 - Live in Stockholm

This week's musical treat is a performance by Philip Glass with his Ensemble from Stockholm on May 27, 2019. I've seem Glass perform with the Ensemble many times (at least eight) and every performance has been wonderful. This concert is pretty much a greatest hits affair featuring selections from Music in 12 Parts, Koyaanisqatsi, Glassworks, and Einstein on the Beach among others. 

0:02:00 the CIVIL warS: Cologne Section Act IV
0:11:26 In the Upper Room: Dance IX
0:20:39 Music in 12 Parts: Part I
0:27:35 Music in 12 Parts: Part II
[0:42:55 Intermission]
0:44:58 Koyaanisqatsi: The Grid
0:52:52 Glassworks: Floe
0:59:13 Glassworks: Façades
1:06:50 Glassworks: Rubric
[1:13:31 Philip Glass introduces the members of the ensemble]
1:15:25 The Photographer: Act III
1:38:18 [encore] Einstein on the Beach: Spaceship
[1:46:40 final applause and credits]

The video is not pro-shot and appears to be shot from a balcony close to the stage. Comments show that two good-quality mics were used so the audio is just fine. In any case, recordings of Glass' live performances are rare and this is a real treat. Enjoy. 

Friday, March 06, 2026

A Cautiously Optimistic Look at the Future

It's easy to get depressed when looking at the news and thinking that everything is getting worse. But there are some trends that provide some hope, at least in the middle and long-term futures. 

Science fiction author and futurist, Karl Schroeder, has published a blog post in which he highlights some things that might lead to cautious optimism about our future prospects. It's long but worth a read.  

Today I’m going to describe some hard, apocalyptic truths about our short-term future. Basically, using fossil fuels for geopolitical extortion is resulting in catastrophe. But then I’m going to make three unapocalyptic claims: first, that fossil fuel coercion is becoming structurally self-defeating; second, that future material scarcities that can be used to coerce weaker nations are shallower and shorter-lived than their predecessors; and third, that the limiting constraint on industrial civilization is ultimately ecological rather than technological or political. Finally, I’ll show how this is cause for a (cautious) optimism about our mid- to long-term future.