Map of life expectancy at birth from Global Education Project.

Friday, July 26, 2024

Not much has changed.

I just rediscovered something I wrote ten years ago. Other than the anecdote, which is old but could still happen today, it's completely current. 

And btw, why is it ridiculous to say that the most likely use for a firearm stored in the home (other than hunting or target practice) is suicide? It's just a fact. Maybe it's a fact you don't like, but it is, you know, true.


Hed: How to Buy a Miracle Cure



Dek: To make cures like gene therapy possible, the US will have to overturn everything we think we know about Economics 101



In 2014, Charlene Dill, a mother of 3 from Orlando who was estranged from her husband, was trying to make ends meet by selling vacuum cleaners. She had a heart condition for which she needed medication, but when Florida rejected the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion, she fell into the gap between Medicaid and subsidized insurance, and was forced to go without.



But some other chronic conditions, such as cystic fibrosis, may one day have a quick fix. This isn’t science fiction; gene therapy may soon make cures for such congenital diseases possible in a single treatment. However, to recoup the high cost of developing treatments for comparatively rare conditions, companies will have to slap on a price tag on the order of a million dollars. Since that’s actually less than the life-long cost of treating cystic fibrosis, one can imagine that an insurer might want to pay for it. But there’s a catch: the insurance company might not recoup the cost because the same insurer won’t necessarily be covering that person in the future.



Though we might not realize it, this dilemma is one we already face. Take some new cancer therapies, which offer only a few weeks of added life for most patients at a cost of more than $100,000. Established therapies such as organ and bone marrow transplants are comparably expensive, as much as a half million dollars, and are often unsuccessful, or leave patients with diminished quality of life. We’re all paying for these treatments, as taxpayers or through our insurance premiums, and most people support these expenditures; people will typically say that “You can’t put a price on human life.”



But we put a price on human life all the time, or nobody would ever ride in an automobile. And we certainly wouldn’t let three million children under five die every year from causes such as malaria, or vaccine preventable diseases that would only cost a few dollars to prevent. (http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs178/en/) And we still let some people like Charlene Dill, in our own country, go without health care entirely.



Paradoxically, though we spend more on health care than any other country on earth, our health status and life expectancy are well down the list. The problem is, we aren’t allocating our resources to get the most out of our health care spending.



We often hear that our country’s “free market” solutions constrain costs, improve quality, and give consumers more control over their own health care. A common argument is that when people are insulated from health care costs by insurance, they don’t shop wisely, as they would for other goods and services.



These claims have superficial appeal, but the truth is that health care doesn’t work anything like the idealized “free market” taught to beginning economics students. Here are some assumptions underlying cartoon Economics 101: All costs and benefits to society are captured in transactions between buyers and sellers
Buyers have perfect information, and know everything about the product and alternatives
Consumers have sovereignty, and consumer choice drives demand

And a grand conclusion: “Free markets” are self-regulating and efficient.



However, these postulates are always false, and so must be any theory based on them. Anyway, the theory does not tell us anything about whether outcomes are fair and just. Yet many politicians and pundits go from the supposed "is" -- that this fictitious "free market" is the natural state of affairs -- to an "ought" -- that whatever outcomes it produces must be the right ones.



Let's start with that first assumption: that all costs and benefits of a transaction affect only the participants. A person who receives health care might indeed benefit. But benefits are conveyed to others as well.



An obvious benefit is communicable disease control. If you cure or prevent an infection in one person, you protect a whole lot of other people. Furthermore, the good health of one may contribute to the prosperity of all. Good health allows people to care for children and disabled relatives, to volunteer – all sorts of good works that aren’t part of the money economy. Some might even feel bad about suffering in general, and enjoy being part of a society that provides basic, compassionate care for everybody. If that doesn’t apply to you, you might at least find it unpleasant to have to step over sick and dying people in the street.



So health care is, in fact, in part a public good. If we had to depend on people to buy only as much as they could afford, it would be under-produced – all of us would be losers.



Next up: as patients, we don’t have perfect information. That’s why we pay doctors – they know more than we do. The result is called “provider-induced demand.” For the most part, people don’t consume health care because they want it, but because a doctor tells them it’s what they need.



Lastly, the need for health care differs radically among consumers. It’s just bad luck if you develop rheumatoid arthritis, but few could pay for the needed medical services out of their paycheck. Meanwhile, for sane people, getting medical interventions is generally unpleasant; we undergo them out of necessity. I might have a lobster dinner because somebody else is paying for it, but I’m not going to have an appendectomy just because it’s free.



Therefore, every other affluent country provides universal health care, and makes it affordable for everyone by some form of progressive financing. But how is it also cheaper for them? There are a few reasons, including negotiated drug prices and lower physician salaries. I’ll leave that aside for now and focus on this aspect: Countries with universal systems allocate resources more cost-effectively than in the U.S.



The United Kingdom has a National Health Service (NHS) that takes care of everybody (although it’s currently underfunded by the Tory government and struggling); it also has the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, or NICE, which decides what treatments the NHS will provide, in part on a cost/benefit standard. If you’re rich enough, you can buy unapproved treatments, but the taxpayers won’t.



This isn’t the “death panel” concept that was (falsely) claimed by certain politicians to be hidden in the Affordable Care Act. NICE doesn’t review individual cases, and they don’t value one person more than another, although age is sometimes a factor. But so is cold cash. NICE needs especially compelling reasons to approve a treatment that costs more than 30,000 pounds per “Quality Adjusted Life Year,” which is a way of combining length and quality of life in a common currency. The fictive “free market” can’t do that.



NICE decisions are often controversial, but Britons generally accept the necessity of making them. There is ample public participation in NICE decision making, and the basic philosophy and standards are subject to robust public debate.



How will NICE treat gene therapy? Since one treatment will probably be cost saving over a lifetime, it will presumably be approved, in spite of the high cost. However, some cancer therapies with limited benefits might not be.



Now imagine these same treatments being weighed in the US. Treatments like gene therapy may soon be a reality—however, a discussion about their relative value in our country still remains science fiction. And while we were waiting for that discussion, on March 21, 2014, Charlene Dill collapsed and died on a stranger’s floor while trying to sell a vacuum cleaner.

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Wednesday Bible Study: Wise guy?

As I have said, the Book of Proverbs is really several books smooshed together. (Is that the correct verb?) With chapter 10 we come to the next chunk. As far as I have been able to determine scholars don't really have a good idea about the origins of this or when it was composed. It does consist of those pithy two-liners that we usually think of as a "proverb." However, the content not theological. The rabbis who compiled the masoretic text considered excluding this from the canon, not only because of its secular nature but also because it contains contradictions and, well, inanities. Apparently the (fictitious) ascription to Solomon is the only reason it's here. 

 

I won't go through this critically in any detail, but most of it is inane. Does the Lord not let the righteous go hungry? You can decide for yourself how wise this is.

 

 

 A reminder: Anonymous comments won't be published, no matter how sound they are otherwise. That's just a policy. Also, I won't amplify bullshit racist talking points.

10 The proverbs of Solomon:

A wise son brings joy to his father,
    but a foolish son brings grief to his mother.

Ill-gotten treasures have no lasting value,
    but righteousness delivers from death.

The Lord does not let the righteous go hungry,
    but he thwarts the craving of the wicked.

Lazy hands make for poverty,
    but diligent hands bring wealth.

He who gathers crops in summer is a prudent son,
    but he who sleeps during harvest is a disgraceful son.

Blessings crown the head of the righteous,
    but violence overwhelms the mouth of the wicked.[a]

The name of the righteous is used in blessings,[b]
    but the name of the wicked will rot.

The wise in heart accept commands,
    but a chattering fool comes to ruin.

Whoever walks in integrity walks securely,
    but whoever takes crooked paths will be found out.

10 Whoever winks maliciously causes grief,
    and a chattering fool comes to ruin.

11 The mouth of the righteous is a fountain of life,
    but the mouth of the wicked conceals violence.

12 Hatred stirs up conflict,
    but love covers over all wrongs.

13 Wisdom is found on the lips of the discerning,
    but a rod is for the back of one who has no sense.

14 The wise store up knowledge,
    but the mouth of a fool invites ruin.

15 The wealth of the rich is their fortified city,
    but poverty is the ruin of the poor.

16 The wages of the righteous is life,
    but the earnings of the wicked are sin and death.

17 Whoever heeds discipline shows the way to life,
    but whoever ignores correction leads others astray.

18 Whoever conceals hatred with lying lips
    and spreads slander is a fool.

19 Sin is not ended by multiplying words,
    but the prudent hold their tongues.

20 The tongue of the righteous is choice silver,
    but the heart of the wicked is of little value.

21 The lips of the righteous nourish many,
    but fools die for lack of sense.

22 The blessing of the Lord brings wealth,
    without painful toil for it.

23 A fool finds pleasure in wicked schemes,
    but a person of understanding delights in wisdom.

24 What the wicked dread will overtake them;
    what the righteous desire will be granted.

25 When the storm has swept by, the wicked are gone,
    but the righteous stand firm forever.

26 As vinegar to the teeth and smoke to the eyes,
    so are sluggards to those who send them.

27 The fear of the Lord adds length to life,
    but the years of the wicked are cut short.

28 The prospect of the righteous is joy,
    but the hopes of the wicked come to nothing.

29 The way of the Lord is a refuge for the blameless,
    but it is the ruin of those who do evil.

30 The righteous will never be uprooted,
    but the wicked will not remain in the land.

31 From the mouth of the righteous comes the fruit of wisdom,
    but a perverse tongue will be silenced.

32 The lips of the righteous know what finds favor,
    but the mouth of the wicked only what is perverse.

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 10:6 Or righteous, / but the mouth of the wicked conceals violence
  2. Proverbs 10:7 See Gen. 48:20.

 

Monday, July 22, 2024

Nobody asked me . . .

 ... and nobody cares what I think, which is why I have largely stayed above the vitriolic fray over whether Joe Biden should withdraw his candidacy for reelection. But now that the dust is settling I'll offer my 1 1/2 cents, just for the heck of it.


I think he made the right decision. I think his physical and mental decline is evident -- I've seen it before, I know what it looks like. People who complained that the corporate media weren't paying proportionate attention to the manifest insanity and raving idiocy of his Republican opponent were missing the point. The cult doesn't care about that, and they care less than zero what CNN and the New York Times say about it. People who went on about the excellent job Biden has done as president and how he would be a better choice than his opponent even if he was a vegetable are equally missing the point. 


The point is that we can't allow the insane idiot to win the election and there are a lot of people who cast their votes based entirely on style points. They aren't listening to your litany of Biden's accomplishments or your complaints about the New York Times. But, the days when a woman, and a person of African and Indian (Bharati) descent can't possibly win are past. In fact, I think a lot of people are going to be galvanized by the Harris candidacy. She's quite young for a presidential candidate, vigorous, smart, and there's no way Cheeto Benito is going to debate her. Or rather, I sure hope he will. She's been raking in the moolah and we won't be hearing any more about Hunter Biden's laptop.

 

I think we've got this.


Sunday, July 21, 2024

Clarifying the issues about immigration

Historically, the U.S. has regularly faced fraught political conflicts over immigration. I'm not going to recount all that history, I just want to keep in mind that controversy about this subject is definitely not new. What I will do here is try to sort out the issues, because there seems to be a lot of confusion. There are not just two kinds of immigration or immigrants, legal or illegal. It's more complicated.


First -- and this is important so pay attention! -- the so-called crisis at the southern border is not about illegal immigration. The people who are massing along the border and who have crossed in large numbers and been bussed to northern cities by Greg Abbot and flown to Martha's Vineyard by Ron DeSantis are not in the country illegally. If they were, they would simply have been immediately deported. They are asylum seekers. By current U.S. law and international treaties, people who enter the country and who have a credible claim for political asylum or refugee status must be given a hearing

 

The status of these people is that they are in the United States "under color of law," awaiting a legal hearing on their claim for asylum. The problem is that the courts are backed up and it takes a long time for their cases to come up. When they finally do, most claims are denied and the people are in fact deported. Some get refugee status. The solution to this problem is not to build a wall at the southern border, which is ridiculous, inane, physically impossible and would be horribly environmentally destructive. The solution is to hire more judges and move the cases faster. And no, they are not coming from prisons or mental hospitals. They are families for whom conditions in their countries of origin are intolerable. Arguably, it wouldn't be a bad idea to relax the standards and accept more refugees and asylees, but that's a separate question which I will now get to  . . . 


Some of the people who are in the U.S. illegally did cross the border illegally, but many, probably most, overstayed visas. They cannot and do not receive any government benefits. They can't get "welfare" (which doesn't really exist any more anyway), food stamps, Medicaid, or any other benefits of any kind. Neither can people awaiting asylum hearings, although they could legally receive work permits. Furthermore, people who are not U.S. citizens, even legal permanent residents, cannot and do not vote. Anybody who tells you otherwise is lying to you.

 

People who are in the U.S. illegally, therefore, work, because they must. There is a labor shortage in the U.S. right now, and it is basically impossible for farmers to hire enough legal residents or guest workers. It is also impossible to hire enough people in the meat processing industry. Without undocumented immigrants, crops would rot in the fields, and it would be impossible to turn cattle and sheep and chickens into the products in the supermarket. In fact, where there have been crackdowns, crops have in fact rotted in the fields. If you are complaining about grocery prices, the last thing in the world you want to happen is to expel all those people who are putting food on your table.


The final category is legal immigration. This is very limited right now. In case you didn't know it, the U.S. has a demographic problem in that the birth rate is below the rate of replacement, which means that the ratio of retired people to workers is steadily falling, which means that we risk not having a sufficient work force to fund Social Security and Medicare, or for that matter just to sustain our current level of economic output. Therefore it is worth asking whether we should increase the volume of legal immigration. One way to do that would be to offer legal status to people who have been in the country for a substantial period and have been law abiding -- as the vast majority are. Illegal immigrants commit crimes at a lower rate than U.S. citizens. That way, the people who pick crops could keep doing it, with legal protections against exploitation, and you could keep eating, which I presume you want to do.


Now, you might not agree with my modest proposals, but if you want to disagree, it has to be on the basis of the true facts which I have put in bold type. These are the real issues and the actual public policy questions at stake. And no, my blood is not being poisoned.

Sunday Sermonette: Metaphors ought to mean something

Chapter 9 is the conclusion of the first book that became part of the compilation now known as proverbs. Up until now wisdom has been personified as a woman. The figure of the married seductress was not explicitly labeled as folly, but perhaps that was the author's intent. In any case, a female personification of folly appears here. Both are presented as hostesses, but the language is highly figurative, so the intent of the author is often unclear and translations differ enormously. From Wikipedia:


A foolish woman is clamorous;
she is simple, and knows nothing.[19]

Like Wisdom in the previous chapter, Folly is also personified as a character, called "Dame Folly" in the Jerusalem Bible, "the woman called Folly" in the New English Translation.[20]

  • In different languages, this verse is rendered as follows:[21]
    • The Hebrew Masoretic Text reads "The foolish woman is boisterous, simplicity, and knows not what." and the Targum translates it, “a foolish woman and a gadabout, ignorant, and she knows not good.”
    • The Greek Septuagint reads "A foolish and impudent woman comes to lack a morsel, she who knows not shame."
    • The Syriac version has "a woman lacking in discretion, seductive"
    • The Latin Vulgate has, "a woman foolish and noisy, and full of wiles, and knowing nothing at all."[21]
  • "Clamorous": or "boisterous"[22] or close to “riotous”.[23]
  • "Simple" or "full of simpleness",[24] from a Hebrew noun meaning “foolishness”.[25]
Whatever. Again, there really isn't any content here. Wisdom good, folly bad. How to tell which is which, we are not enlightened. Anyway, the next chapter introduces a new book, which I'll discuss next time. I should note, however, that the masoretic scholars considered excluding Proverbs from the canon, partly because it is riddled with direct contradictions, and partly because much of it has purely secular content. The (fictitious) ascription to Solomon is probably the only reason this is in the Bible.

 

Invitations of Wisdom and Folly

Wisdom has built her house;
    she has set up[a] its seven pillars.
She has prepared her meat and mixed her wine;
    she has also set her table.
She has sent out her servants, and she calls
    from the highest point of the city,
    “Let all who are simple come to my house!”
To those who have no sense she says,
    “Come, eat my food
    and drink the wine I have mixed.
Leave your simple ways and you will live;
    walk in the way of insight.”

Whoever corrects a mocker invites insults;
    whoever rebukes the wicked incurs abuse.
Do not rebuke mockers or they will hate you;
    rebuke the wise and they will love you.
Instruct the wise and they will be wiser still;
    teach the righteous and they will add to their learning.

10 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom,
    and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.
11 For through wisdom[b] your days will be many,
    and years will be added to your life.
12 If you are wise, your wisdom will reward you;
    if you are a mocker, you alone will suffer.

13 Folly is an unruly woman;
    she is simple and knows nothing.
14 She sits at the door of her house,
    on a seat at the highest point of the city,
15 calling out to those who pass by,
    who go straight on their way,
16     “Let all who are simple come to my house!”
To those who have no sense she says,
17     “Stolen water is sweet;
    food eaten in secret is delicious!”
18 But little do they know that the dead are there,
    that her guests are deep in the realm of the dead.

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 9:1 Septuagint, Syriac and Targum; Hebrew has hewn out
  2. Proverbs 9:11 Septuagint, Syriac and Targum; Hebrew me

 

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Risk perception

One of the classic problems in the field of public health is that people's perceptions of risk do not remotely correspond to the provable numerical facts. There are a number of cognitive and social-cognitive biases involved. One of the most important is simply familiarity. More than 42,500 American died in car crashes in 2022, which is about twice the number who die of influenza in a typical season. Furthermore motor vehicle crashes are no respecter of age or previous state of health, unlike influenza and other infectious diseases, including Covid-19, that disproportionately kill people who are old or infirm. 


Unless you are a professional tree feller, riding in a motor vehicle is very likely the most dangerous thing you will ever do. (By the way, being a police officer is not a particularly dangerous job. It's more dangerous to be a roofer.) But people give it no thought at all, even if they're afraid of flying. The reason for that is not only that for most of us flying is not as familiar as riding in a car -- we don't do it every day -- we also are not in control. For some reason having agency in a situation makes it feel less dangerous, even though airline pilots are far more skilled, vigilant, and regulated than motor vehicle operators, and flying is vastly safer than driving.

Another example, one which particularly frustrates us, is firearms. There are actually slightly more firearm related deaths in a given year than traffic related deaths, but most of them -- about 56% -- are suicides. The corporate media, and the public, pay little attention to this. Good data on the question is hard to come by, but based on the National Crime Victimization Survey, guns are used defensively by civilians about 70,000 times a year. That's mostly defending against property crimes, and assaults that would otherwise not likely be fatal. 

 This is a complicated question and I don't want to be glib about it, but even though I can't put a solid number on it if you have a firearm in the house it's vastly more likely to end up being used in a suicide than defending against potentially serious or fatal violence. But people don't perceive it that way because again, they're in control of the weapon. It's a bit more likely that you might use it to scare off a burglar but whether you think that's worth it for the risk of suicide is up to you. And as you know if you've been reading the news lately, there have been a lot of killings of innocent people who a homeowner perceived as a threat. That turns out to be murder and people have paid the price for it.

Now, all of these traumatic forms of death are relatively uncommon compared with the inevitable ravages of aging -- heart disease, cancer, dementia. (Infectious disease such as influenza may ultimately carry off people with these conditions but it's misleading to call infectious disease the cause of death in such cases.) We have in fact brought down the rate of traffic fatalities over the years, partly by measures many people object to, though we haven't done so well with firearms. 

Obviously modern society is totally dependent on motor vehicles, and we certainly aren't going to get rid of guns either. The question I'm raising is how we can find ways of living with these dangerous technologies more safely. This requires that people clearly understand the facts and don't get caught up in knee-jerk ideological responses. Oh, by the way: Do not talk on the phone while driving! If it rings, don't answer it!


Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Wednesday Bible Study: How to say nothing in 554 words

Literally. Chapter 8 asserts that wisdom is good and we ought to be wise. That's it. Of what does wisdom consist? No clue.  This is just utter, meaningless bullshit. I'll leave it at that.


Does not wisdom call out?
    Does not understanding raise her voice?
At the highest point along the way,
    where the paths meet, she takes her stand;
beside the gate leading into the city,
    at the entrance, she cries aloud:
“To you, O people, I call out;
    I raise my voice to all mankind.
You who are simple, gain prudence;
    you who are foolish, set your hearts on it.[a]
Listen, for I have trustworthy things to say;
    I open my lips to speak what is right.
My mouth speaks what is true,
    for my lips detest wickedness.
All the words of my mouth are just;
    none of them is crooked or perverse.
To the discerning all of them are right;
    they are upright to those who have found knowledge.
10 Choose my instruction instead of silver,
    knowledge rather than choice gold,
11 for wisdom is more precious than rubies,
    and nothing you desire can compare with her.

12 “I, wisdom, dwell together with prudence;
    I possess knowledge and discretion.
13 To fear the Lord is to hate evil;
    I hate pride and arrogance,
    evil behavior and perverse speech.
14 Counsel and sound judgment are mine;
    I have insight, I have power.
15 By me kings reign
    and rulers issue decrees that are just;
16 by me princes govern,
    and nobles—all who rule on earth.[b]
17 I love those who love me,
    and those who seek me find me.
18 With me are riches and honor,
    enduring wealth and prosperity.
19 My fruit is better than fine gold;
    what I yield surpasses choice silver.
20 I walk in the way of righteousness,
    along the paths of justice,
21 bestowing a rich inheritance on those who love me
    and making their treasuries full.

22 “The Lord brought me forth as the first of his works,[c][d]
    before his deeds of old;
23 I was formed long ages ago,
    at the very beginning, when the world came to be.
24 When there were no watery depths, I was given birth,
    when there were no springs overflowing with water;
25 before the mountains were settled in place,
    before the hills, I was given birth,
26 before he made the world or its fields
    or any of the dust of the earth.
27 I was there when he set the heavens in place,
    when he marked out the horizon on the face of the deep,
28 when he established the clouds above
    and fixed securely the fountains of the deep,
29 when he gave the sea its boundary
    so the waters would not overstep his command,
and when he marked out the foundations of the earth.
30     Then I was constantly[e] at his side.
I was filled with delight day after day,
    rejoicing always in his presence,
31 rejoicing in his whole world
    and delighting in mankind.

32 “Now then, my children, listen to me;
    blessed are those who keep my ways.
33 Listen to my instruction and be wise;
    do not disregard it.
34 Blessed are those who listen to me,
    watching daily at my doors,
    waiting at my doorway.
35 For those who find me find life
    and receive favor from the Lord.
36 But those who fail to find me harm themselves;
    all who hate me love death.”

Monday, July 15, 2024

Political Irrationality

When Ronald Reagan had the good fortune to be shot by John Hinckley Jr., his presidency was headed for failure. He was widely unpopular, and his policy initiatives were failing in congress. Then, all of a sudden, the corporate media were fawning over him for the "grace" with which he responded to the event, he was  a national hero, and he went on to dominate politics for seven more years. 


Hinckley had no political motive for trying to kill Reagan. He had schizophrenia, and he had the delusion that he could impress Jodie Foster by trying to assassinate a politician, because he was living inside a distorted version of the movie Taxi Driver. We don't know what was going on with the guy who tried to shoot Trump, but he evidently has no connections with any political movement or organization and no prior indication of any strong interest in politics. I'm guessing -- could be wrong, and we may never find out for sure -- that he just wanted to make a name for himself. If it happened to have been a Biden rally that came to town, he would have taken a shot at Biden.


In any case, that somebody took a shot at Trump should not logically influence anybody's choice about who to vote for. It was a purely random event that means next to nothing, except maybe that the competency of the Secret Service is in question. 

 

And as for some of the mean things people have been saying about Trump, they are all true and need to be said. He is a malignant narcissist, a pathological liar, and he has tried to overturn the results of an election using violence, and he has repeatedly threatened and called for violence against his own opponents, quite openly. He is an ignorant idiot. He has promised to institute an authoritarian regime and to put an end to democracy in America. 

 

That is all true. It does not, however, mean that there is any benefit to trying to kill him. It is Trump and the Republicans, not their opponents, who incite violence. That is what should determine your vote.


Oh, and by the way, here is a non-exhaustive list of occasions when Donald J. Trump has publicly and explicitly called for politically motivated violence.

Sunday, July 14, 2024

Stochastic History

It seems my recent post on the randomness and contingency of history was well-timed. Some moron tried to kill Orange Julius and missed by an inch and a half. Just as John Hinckley Jr. was the best friend Ronald Reagan ever had,* this guy has done the Dumpster a huge favor. (At least he didn't turn out to be a transgender illegal immigrant.)


But consider the alternate reality in which he had judged the wind correctly. I won't actually speculate about what would have happened, because there are too many other contingencies that would arise. But the point is, an inch and a half to the right and we'd be in a completely different timeline. Don't expect events to make sense.

 


*Also, Osama bin Laden was the best friend George W. Bush ever had.

Sunday Sermonette: Puritan Pornography

I'll step on this shortly with another post but I wanted to get it out of the way.

 

The author of the book that became the first part of Proverbs obviously has an obsession with adultery. One guesses that somebody boinked his own wife and he's bitter about it, although it's also possible that he was the transgressor and got into trouble for it, since a lot of this consists of threatening bad consequences. 


In any case, he purports in Chapter 7 to have observed events on the street outside his house, apparently with the benefit of a high quality directional microphone. This makes even less sense because according to the Book of Kings (ch. 7), Solomon's house was 5,000 square cubits, that is about 1,040 square meters, and it had a porch  that was about 20 by 30 meters, and it had a second house on the grounds for Pharaoh's daughter, so it would have been pretty hard for him to get a good look at the street from his window. This whole thing is ridiculous anyway.

 

My son, keep my words
    and store up my commands within you.
Keep my commands and you will live;
    guard my teachings as the apple of your eye.
Bind them on your fingers;
    write them on the tablet of your heart.
Say to wisdom, “You are my sister,”
    and to insight, “You are my relative.”
They will keep you from the adulterous woman,
    from the wayward woman with her seductive words.

At the window of my house
    I looked down through the lattice.
I saw among the simple,
    I noticed among the young men,
    a youth who had no sense.
He was going down the street near her corner,
    walking along in the direction of her house
at twilight, as the day was fading,
    as the dark of night set in.

10 Then out came a woman to meet him,
    dressed like a prostitute and with crafty intent.
11 (She is unruly and defiant,
    her feet never stay at home;
12 now in the street, now in the squares,
    at every corner she lurks.)
13 She took hold of him and kissed him
    and with a brazen face she said:

14 “Today I fulfilled my vows,
    and I have food from my fellowship offering at home.
15 So I came out to meet you;
    I looked for you and have found you!
16 I have covered my bed
    with colored linens from Egypt.
17 I have perfumed my bed
    with myrrh, aloes and cinnamon.
18 Come, let’s drink deeply of love till morning;
    let’s enjoy ourselves with love!
19 My husband is not at home;
    he has gone on a long journey.
20 He took his purse filled with money
    and will not be home till full moon.”

21 With persuasive words she led him astray;
    she seduced him with her smooth talk.
22 All at once he followed her
    like an ox going to the slaughter,
like a deer[a] stepping into a noose[b]
23     till an arrow pierces his liver,
like a bird darting into a snare,
    little knowing it will cost him his life.

24 Now then, my sons, listen to me;
    pay attention to what I say.
25 Do not let your heart turn to her ways
    or stray into her paths.
26 Many are the victims she has brought down;
    her slain are a mighty throng.
27 Her house is a highway to the grave,
    leading down to the chambers of death.

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 7:22 Syriac (see also Septuagint); Hebrew fool
  2. Proverbs 7:22 The meaning of the Hebrew for this line is uncertain.