Public Stream

girlofthesea@diasporasocial.net

#mywriting #family #traditions

Grandmother Epsie
I can only speak of what I know of some Southern US traditions. In the rural areas it was the mother who did a lot of the teaching of her
large number of children. The schools were at a distance from where the farming families lived. Teaching materials and books were limited. It was mostly the Holy Bible that was used to teach reading, and writing.

When I was a young girl I occasionally lived with my Grandmother Epsie in a small, one room apartment in Pensacola, Florida. (Grandmother was out of the rural Alabama woods. All of her children were grown.) In the room there was her bed, a night table, a stove and a round wooden dining table in the center of the room with several chairs. She also had an old Singer Sewing Machine.
It was at the table in the center of the room where I would sit in a chair, and my Grandmother would sit beside me with a Bible. She was teaching me how to read and write, just as she had done with her children, including my mother, who was the youngest of her eleven children. I was about five years old, and due to start 1st Grade when I was six. She was a serious woman, and serious about her teaching. She smiled, but I never remembered her laughing. That is one reason the event that took place during one of our reading lessons was so memorable.
She read.
Jeremiah 1:17
17 Thou therefore gird up thy loins, and arise, and speak unto them all that I command thee: be not dismayed at their faces, lest I confound thee before them.
Then Grandmother pointed to the same verse I was to read.
I read: “Thou therefore grind up thy lions, and arise…”

Suddenly, a shocked look spread across her face, and then she started laughing…uncontrollable, joyous laughter, almost howling. I was stunned. I wondered what I had said to cause such laughter. She finally calmed down, and wiped laughing tears from her eyes with a little handkerchief. She could hardly stop smiling at me, and assured me that I had done nothing wrong. We read the verse together. “Grid up thy loins.” I had no idea what loins could be. She knew I didn’t know, and she wasn’t about to explain what loins were. The subject wasn’t about sex, but it was too close to that general area.

strangerthanfiction@diaspora.glasswings.com

ok this is getting to be like biblical plagues

North Carolina is distributing Benadryl and EpiPens as yellow jackets swarm from Helene flooding

Deadly flooding from Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina has also disrupted the underground nests of yellow jackets, bees and other insects, causing them to swarm and sting people struggling to recover from the storm.

https://www.clickorlando.com/health/2024/10/04/north-carolina-is-distributing-benadryl-and-epipens-as-yellow-jackets-swarm-from-helene-flooding/

psychmesu@diaspora.glasswings.com
strangerthanfiction@diaspora.glasswings.com

RCFP secures ruling blocking Indiana's police 'buffer zone' law

A federal district court in Indiana has blocked the state from enforcing a law that makes it a crime to approach within 25 feet of a law enforcement officer after being told to stop, finding the law unconstitutionally vague.

In an opinion issued on Sept. 27, the court sided with arguments made by attorneys from the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press in a lawsuit filed last year on behalf of a coalition of journalism and news organizations. The court concluded that the police “buffer zone” law violates the Fourteenth Amendment because it fails to specify what kinds of behavior by a journalist or other member of the public might prompt an officer to issue an order to stay back.

“This ruling is a huge win for press freedom,” said Katie Townsend, the Reporters Committee’s deputy executive director and legal director. “Police buffer zone laws like the one in Indiana are clearly unconstitutional, and we are glad that the district court has agreed to block its enforcement. The government cannot be permitted to criminalize newsgathering and prevent journalists from informing the public.”

https://signup.rcfp.org/webmail/886423/737462872/eed959d2c522facf78461a4879f936db0be2ba6b2f9fc0d8df5ccbc0dcc6dc86

psychmesu@diaspora.glasswings.com

https://mastodon.online/@globalmuseum/113252358001827378 globalmuseum@mastodon.online - Henry O. Studley, a piano and organ maker from Quincy, Massachusetts, crafted this extraordinary tool chest in the late 19th century. The chest is a masterpiece of organization and efficiency, designed to hold a vast array of tools in a compact and visually stunning manner.
The #toolchest measures approximately 39 inches tall, 18 inches wide, and 9 inches deep when closed. It is made primarily of mahogany, with intricate inlays of ebony, ivory, mother-of-pearl, and various other exotic #woods.

fediverseobserver@fediverse.one

Found 74 new servers and 26 servers died off since 3 hours ago.

22,869 servers checked. 13,966,128 Total Users with 1,043,098 Active Users today. Check out the stats!

New #fediverse servers found:

fed.interfree.ca a #iceshrimpnet server from Canada
feds.praxor.wtf a #gotosocial server from Russia
pixelfed.librehki.eus a #pixelfed server from France
fedi.neurario.com a #iceshrimp server from Australia
high-school.band a #mastodon server from Private
social.undersea.org.uk a #mastodon server from France
social.chrisbd.online a #mastodon server from France
leszackardises.com a #wordpress server from United States
soc.kazachstan.biz a #pleroma server from The Netherlands
www.dailynewsglobal24.com a #wordpress server from United States
g2s.jyrgi.de a #gotosocial server from Germany
social.particle-summary.pt a #mastodon server from Germany
social.kloen-cafe.de a #mastodon server from France
app.southampton.social a #sharkey server from United States
kiel.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
stpauli.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
bochum.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
mainz.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
hoffenheim.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
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union.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
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leipzig.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
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napoli.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
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psv.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
feyenoord.collabfc.com a #pleroma server from Private
miuchusen.xsns.jp a #misskey server from Japan
gts.plexwave.org a #gotosocial server from United States
mypod.store a #activitypods server from Germany

Help others find a home, send them to fediverse.observer

strangerthanfiction@diaspora.glasswings.com

RCFP secures ruling blocking Indiana's police 'buffer zone' law

A federal district court in Indiana has blocked the state from enforcing a law that makes it a crime to approach within 25 feet of a law enforcement officer after being told to stop, finding the law unconstitutionally vague.

In an opinion issued on Sept. 27, the court sided with arguments made by attorneys from the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press in a lawsuit filed last year on behalf of a coalition of journalism and news organizations. The court concluded that the police “buffer zone” law violates the Fourteenth Amendment because it fails to specify what kinds of behavior by a journalist or other member of the public might prompt an officer to issue an order to stay back.

“This ruling is a huge win for press freedom,” said Katie Townsend, the Reporters Committee’s deputy executive director and legal director. “Police buffer zone laws like the one in Indiana are clearly unconstitutional, and we are glad that the district court has agreed to block its enforcement. The government cannot be permitted to criminalize newsgathering and prevent journalists from informing the public.”

https://signup.rcfp.org/webmail/886423/737462872/eed959d2c522facf78461a4879f936db0be2ba6b2f9fc0d8df5ccbc0dcc6dc86

strangerthanfiction@diaspora.glasswings.com

Maryland cancels millions in unpaid parole debt as state moves forward on waiving fees

Gov. Wes Moore on Friday announced that the state corrections department is forgiving about $13 million in unpaid parole debts owed by more than 6,700 formerly incarcerated people.

The move coincides with a new law that took effect at the beginning of the month, House Bill 531, which eliminates the $40 to $50 monthly “supervision fees” and associated drug-testing fees paid by people released on parole from Maryland prisons.

Del. Elizabeth Embry, who co-sponsored the bill, cited research showing that the fees are being levied against people who cannot afford to pay them, hindering their ability to find and hold employment after release from prison.

https://www.thebaltimorebanner.com/community/criminal-justice/parole-fee-debt-forgiveness-4DOLAH2WSJAJTDVA2FH4DE3YV4/

backup: https://archive.ph/Ll7qW

waynerad@diasp.org

"The riddle of the Amish."

"The Amish have much to teach us. It may seem strange, even surreal, to turn to one of America's most traditional groups for lessons about living in a hyper-tech world -- especially a horse-driving people who have resisted 'progress' by snubbing cars, public grid power, and even high school education. Nonetheless, the Amish deserve a hearing."

"The key to unlock the riddle, in Donald Kraybill's view, is to realize that the Amish are negotiating with modernity in three ways: they accept, they reject, they bargain. They might reject 'radios, televisions, high school, church buildings, and salaried ministers,' Kraybill notes, but accept 'small electronic calculators and artificial insemination of cows. And more recently...LED lights on buggies, and battery-powered hand tools'. Then, there also is bargaining. One way they bargain with modernity is by 'Amishizing' certain technologies or techniques, for example 'neutering' computers (stripping WiFi, video games, internet access, etc.), or creating a school curriculum that reflects Amish values and traditions. Another form of bargaining is found in the Amish distinction between access and ownership of certain technologies. An Amish person may pay someone for a car-ride to work, but may not own a car."

"The Amish, arguably more than any other group in America, have tried to domesticate technology so that its potent force does not overwhelm or cripple their culture."

"The Amish aren't anti-technology; they are pro-community."

Towards the end of the article, it mentions fertility rates.

"Amish population continues to grow (a 116% increase since the year 2000) and communities are spreading into new states (including Colorado, Nebraska, New Mexico, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming). Since the Amish don't tend to proselytize, this growth is in large part organic and natural, through new births and an extremely high retention rate that has increased to around 90% at a time when other Christian denominations are shedding members at record numbers."

To get a sense of what that means, I looked up the fertility rate of the US as a whole and found 1.84 children per woman. I tried looking it up for the Amish, but most people just said something like 6-8 or 6-9. I found two websites that said 7, so I decided to just plug in 7.0 and run with it.

If we start with a society that's 50% regular Americans and 50% Amish, after 1 generation it'll be 29% regular Americans and 71% Amish, after 2 generations it'l be 19% regular Americans, 81% Amish, and ...

At this point I decided to plug in the actual population numbers. For the US, I got 307.205 million, and for the Amish... again accurate numbers were difficult to come by but I found someone who said 350,000, so I decided to run with that number.

After 1 generation: 99.6% non-Amish, 0.4% Amish
After 2 generations: 98.8% non-Amish, 1.2% Amish
After 3 generations: 96.0% non-Amish, 4.0% Amish
After 4 generations: 87.8% non-Amish, 12.2% Amish
After 5 generations: 68.8% non-Amish, 31.2% Amish
After 6 generations: 43.0% non-Amish, 57.0% Amish
After 7 generations: 24.9% non-Amish, 75.1% Amish
After 8 generations: 17.2% non-Amish, 82.8% Amish
After 9 generations: 14.7% non-Amish, 85.3% Amish
After 10 generations: 13.9% non-Amish, 86.1% Amish
After 11 generations: 13.7% non-Amish, 86.3% Amish
After 12 generations: 13.6% non-Amish, 86.4% Amish

If we assume a "generation" is about 25 years, then what this means is that in 300 years, the population of the US will be 86.4% Amish.

If you're wondering what happens after generation 12, the simulation stabilizes on 13.6% regular non-Amish Americans and 86.4% Amish. It doesn't go up to 99% Amish because of the 10% defection rate per generation. But you'll note that most non-Amish Americans in that time frame will be Amish defectors, not descendants of people who today are non-Amish.

In reality, it could happen faster than in my simulation because generation times for the non-Amish are actually longer than 25 years, and generation times for the Amish are about 20 years.

Another implication of this model is that the shift to "progressive" or "left" values that we are seeing in the upcoming generations ("gen Z" and "gen alpha") are probably not going to last more than 3 generations (about 75 years). After that, we'll see a shift towards conservative, or more precisely Amish, values.

Another thing that might make the model different from reality is that we don't account for other high-fertility groups, in particular the Muslims. Muslims have a lower fertility rate than the Amish but they have the advantage of in-migration from the outside world, where the global Muslim population also has a high fertility rate.

This brings me to my central thesis in all this: What is the ultimate cause of low fertility rates? Those of you who've been hanging around me for any length of time probably have some idea what my answer is. My answer is: It's technology, or more specifically, when technology maximally complements humans, fertility rates are maximized, and when technology maximally competes against humans, fertility rates are minimized.

This underlying driver is, in my view, obscured by many things: people point out how cities have lower fertility rates than rural areas and attribute low fertility rates to "urbanization"; people argue about the role of the feminism movement, birth control, porn, social media, dating apps, and so on; people looking for competition against humans by machines focus on unemployment numbers instead of fertility numbers -- but people don't react to competition from machines by increasing the unemployment numbers, they do it by spending more time in school (which accounts for the declines we've seen in total labor force participation) and delaying marriage and childbirth.

If you look at the long arc of human history, humans spent 95+% of our existence as a species as hunter/gatherers. During this time, the human population barely increased.

We didn't see substantial increases in the human population until the agricultural revolution. The agricultural revolution started more or less immediately after the end of the last ice age, 11,600 years ago, but took a long time to get started -- what we think of as the "agricultural revolution" didn't really get going until around 5,000 years ago. Even then, the rate of human population growth was modest.

Eventually, what really got the human population growing fast was inventions that dramatically increased agricultural production. Heavy plows, like the wheeled moldboard plow, allowing for deeper plowing, turning over more soil, improved scythes, iron tools replacing wooden tools, horse collars, horse harnesses, and horseshoes, watermills and windmills, crop rotation, rotating grains with legumes, etc, and 3-field systems, with spring planting, autumn planting, and fallow, drainage and irrigation techniques, composting techniques, and selective breeding of both plants and animals.

Eventually, the industrial revolution happened. Human, ox, and horse power got replaced with steam power and gasoline. The Haber-Bosch process of industrial-scale nitrogen fixation and fertilizer production was invented. Industrial-scale production of fertilizer with phosphorus, sulfur, electrolytes (sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium), and micronutrients were invented. Industrial-scale pesticide production began. Genetically engineered crops supplemented selective breeding for high-yielding crops. All these industrial-scale developments taken together brought us the "green revolution", and this is when you really saw the human population explode -- from under 1 billion to more than 8 billion today.

The thing that first clued me in that machines were a life form that competed against humans was a book called "Cosmic Evolution by Eric Chaisson. It showed how a measurement in physics, free energy rate density, correlated with subjective "complexity" or "structure" or "negative entropy". More complex animals have higher free energy rate density than less complex animals, and within human beings, human brain turns out to have the highest free energy rate density of any part of any animal. But the interesting thing is that CPUs surpassed the human brain on this measure around 2005 or so. So by this measure, the smartest "species" on the planet is actually computers, and actually has been since about 2005.

The interesting thing about that is that in 2005, computers were sort of idiot savants. They could do billions of arithmetic calculations per second -- more than any human -- and without any mistakes, too. But they couldn't see or understand language or manipulate objects in the physical world. Now computers are starting to take on these "human" non-idiot-savant abilities -- computers have vision and can generate images, can understand and generate language, and, well, still can't manipulate objects in the physical world. But those abilities are increasing. We don't know when but they'll be on par with humans at some point.

If we imagine a future where computers have completely taken over the job market, does that mean humans are just going to die off? All but the rich, who can survive on their investment incomes? No, there is another option -- subsistence farming. And that's what the Amish are doing. The world a hundred years into the future will consist of machines who run the world economy -- creating goods and services for other machines to purchase, with humans largely out of the market due to lack of labor income, but some will have lots of income from their investments -- and humans who survive outside the labor market through subsistence farming.

The key to becoming the latter group is the ability to resist technology. Worldwide we see the groups with the highest fertility rates are religious fundamentalists. And they don't need to be Christian -- the Heredim, also know as Ultra-Orthodox Jews, have high fertility rates. Within Islam, the most fundamentalist groups, like the Salafis in Egypt, have the highest fertility rates. What I find interesting about the Amish is that they are not fundamentalists. Rather than resisting technology as a side-effect of extreme adherence to a fundamentalist belief system, they resist technology deliberately, as an objective in and of itself. And they prove it can be done. And since they have proven it can be done, it seems reasonable to assume high fertility rates will continue into the future -- or will drop only modestly. In my model I assumed no change in fertility rates, but it seems to be the fertility rates of the non-Amish population is actually likely to continue dropping. Fertility rates for the US population as a whole have dropped faster than anyone expected and there doesn't seem to be any floor. If we look around the world we can see countries like South Korea with even lower fertility rates like South Korea (1.12 children per woman) and they seem to just continue going down.

So, I think the world we have to look forward to in a couple hundred years is: machines are the dominant species and control the world economically and militarily, humans survive within that world as subsistence farmers, mostly Amish and fundamentalist Muslims and fundamentalist sects of other religions.

This is the point where people usually chime in and say, there's going to be universal basic income. The thing is, I have the research paper from the UBI study funded by Sam Altman, and it's 147 pages, and I'm only a few pages in. So I really can't comment on it right now -- that will have to wait until another time.

My feeling for a long time has been that UBI is politically unfeasible, but people have told me, it will become politically feasible once a large enough percentage of the population is affected, and affected severely enough. If that's your view, then you can consider my projection to be what the world of the future will look like in the absence of UBI.

Steel-manning the Amish: The wisdom of communal discernment - Front Porch Republic

#solidstatelife #ai #demographics #fertility #amish