Topics

A variety of maps, writings, and photos on a various topics that can’t easily be categorized into a county or place.

Show Only ...
Maps - Photos - Videos

Deleting public data πŸ’Ύ

One of the things that annoys me the most about the Trump 2.0 Adminstration is the disappearing pubic data from the Internet. It seems they have an ability not just to disrupt data collection but also remove any data they find not politically expedient from the internet.

Rent a duck πŸ¦†

Ducks spend a lot of time in water, nibbling at plants, bugs, and other shoreline inhabitants, If you let them wander in your vegetable garden or flower bed, they will help control garden pests, although you have to take care they don’t run out of other things to cat and start in on your pea vines or pansies. Muscovies in particular relish slugs, snails, and other crawly things. In fact, the San Francisco area once had a rent-a-duck service that loaned out Muscovies to local gardeners. Ducks also enjoy chasing flies, in the process offering not only fly control but also a great deal of entertainment, Ducks also keep mosquitoes from getting beyond the larval stage. Unfortunately, tadpoles will suffer the same fate.

From Gail Damerrow’s Barnyard in your Backyard.

Put down that pipe with cat 😺

I have to admit that I use cat with a pipe more then I should in shell scripting. Normally it’s not a terrible thing, though with big files, like the State Voter Database, it can be slow and wasteful of memory. In general, you should NOT use cat with program that can read file itself.

This is generally bad though it works most of the time:

cat file.txt | grep 'dog'

While this is much better:

grep 'dog' file.txt

Why Are So Many Mega-Suburbs to be Home to Mass Murders?

Lately there has been a fair bit of discussion about the mass-murder shootings, that usually occur in large suburbs, with populations greater then 100,000, located outside of large cities. Not only do these happen in large suburbs, but often the outer rim of the suburbs, towards the rural fringe, where some of the newest suburban housing is located.

Much of the discussion has been over gun control and accessibility of guns in many households. Yet, if gun ownership was the problem, then most mass murders would come from rural households where gun ownership and hunting is far more common on the farm and forest lands. Yet, that’s not where the majority of mass murders come from.

It’s the suburbs. Usually the outer suburbs, usually home to the most politically, and especially socially conservative Americans. The outer suburbs tend to be not only very white and wealthy, but also outspoken on issues of prohibiting gay marriage and abortion. Mega-churches preaching gospel from Walmart sized and styled cathedrals dot the landscape.

Yet, being a social conservative is not what makes one a killer. Plenty of rural folks are conservative after all, yet they don’t kill. Rural churches often preach very conservative views too. Those folks don’t kill much besides deer and turkeys. What does make a killer is living in vast spiritual wasteland known as the mega-suburbs.

The Mega-Suburban Environment.

Mega-suburbs are basically a mid-size city scaled up to the automobile-size, with private detached houses with yards, on endless sets of cul de sacs and parking lots. Land use is strictly segregated, with housing in one location, retail outlets in another, and office parks in finally another. Everything is massive to accommodate a large population, yet isolating and impersonal.

Life has no style or passion in such locations. It’s all about Keeping Up with the Jones, having the new big house, the new big car, and all things else built with plywood and vinyl siding. It’s about the good paying job to pay for all these expensive things, and try to provide your kids with a “better life” in the suburbs. Life is boring and repulsive.

In these mega-suburbs, typically everything is connected by massive connector roads with 6-8 lanes with endless stoplights, bordered by retail, and often overcrowded but underbuilt 2-lane secondary roads. Folks drive everywhere, greatly cutting down on interaction with one and another. People spend multiple hours a day stuck in traffic and fighting for a parking spot at the shopping center. Never meeting another person through much of days activities, it’s easy to develop hostile feelings towards others you don’t interact with except from within the confines of an automobile.

The Mega-Suburban Fascist Police State.

At same time, mega-suburbs tend be governed draconian governments that try to regulate every part of one’s lives, to keep the “quality” of the community up. Every mega-suburb has very detailed zoning codes that try to keep up appearances of endless vinyl siding houses, and strip malls, over the pretend value that it increases neighbors property values.

With the masses of faceless people driving on crowded but large highways, strict anti-road rage and speeding laws must be strictly enforced by the police. Bored teenagers, wandering the streets, must be strictly disciplined by the police, because there are no parents or neighbors outside to watch out for the kids. Cameras dot the streets of the mega-suburbs, because people are afraid of crime, real or imagined. The police presence is always very noticeable in mega-suburbs.

Life in mega-suburb is a life of government fascism. People in mega-suburbs often have no interaction with their legislative bodies, except maybe to vote to pro-business and pro-growth conservatives in the fall. They feel they need the security provided by an overbearing police force, and complicated home security systems. People are paranoid and scared living in the mega-suburbs, fearing others will take all that they’ve worked so hard to obtain.

The Mega-Suburban Nature Deficit.

Mega-suburbs, while often close to corn fields, farms, and rural areas, have little contact with areas beyond the urban-rural interface. Most suburbanites never go past it, and if anything view the rural folks beyond the urban-rural interface to be little more then under-educated rural idiots.

Mega-suburbs have parks, but they are usually just highly developed recreational areas for use solely by paying and structured High School football and softballs teams. They are not for relaxation or nature enjoyment β€” but always developed and highly controlled activities. There is no getting away from it all β€” except in one’s own home β€” where the stresses of home and feelings of isolation creep in.

The Mega-Suburbs Are Scary Places With Scary People.

Folks who live in mega-suburbs rarely get out of highly controlled environments, where informal interactions are rare. In the mega-suburbs, people don’t pass each other on streets without 2-tons of steel wrapped around them. They don’t interact with people except in office complexes, or at Credit Card checkout lines at mega-Walmarts.

In cities, folks walk down streets, ride public transit, and interact with people at small bodegas and shops. In rural areas, people attend small personable churches, know their neighbors, and shop at places with familiar faces. In contrast, the mega-suburbs lack any kind of personal interaction, without highly regimented rules and government controls.

… we need to ban mega-suburbs to save human life.

Well I can ride in if I want 🚲

Patched the leak on the rear tire once again with some rubber cement and old bike tube, told myself I am going to get new tires for my bike soon, remounted things and I’m ready to go. The morning commute doesn’t look that awful, I could listen to more of Edward Abbey’s the Fools Progress, as I ride my bike to work like, well, Doc Sarvis. And Pete Buttieg apparently. Yes, somebody should blow up Glen Canyon dam, but I’m more interested in making fucking money so I can have that off-grid cabin with ATVs, guns, hogs, and of course a burn barrel out and watch the plastic melt and burn. But don’t tell a liberal that.

The thing that gives me pause about riding in today is not the morning commute, 🚲 as much as the wind that is expected by mid-afternoon. Temperatures in the 20s and a wind higher then that from the west could make Erie Boulevard not only very dark but also very cold. And it’s still thte same late local bus home if I ride in or take the yokel local bus to work. 🚍 I don’t know, I’ll think about it but the bike tire is re-inflated. There is too much snow and probably ice on the Rail Trail to ride that, but I can either do Corning’s Hill or Delaware down to Morton. They did recently repave South Pearl so that shouldn’t be a bad ride plus they have the stop light at the bottom of the hill. But also it’s going to be so cold by evening. And who knows how well that patch will hold.

Actually, I will bus it in. 🚌It’s not that bad riding the local, and it’s not like I can’t ride home in the dark beyond downtown and it will be same local bus. Maybe I’ll get lucky and earlier local will be running late and I’ll get home early. 🚢 Otherwise I’ll walk laps in the Plaza, where it’s warm and all the homeless people hang out. πŸ‘Š And then I can read some more E-Books on the bus ride home, heat up more of the 16-bean soup and bread. 🍞 Kind of wnat to make more bread up tonight, not because I actually need bread but it would be nice with tomorrow’s morning being so cold, having the oven on. And maybe some spaghetti squash, the last I got from Shauls in November. Although, when it’s so cold the heat runs more in my apartment and tends to be warmer then in mild weather. The nice thing is if I do that and get my steps in after work on the Plaza, πŸ‘£ once I get home, I can have dinner 🍲 and then head to bed and eiher watch a Youtube or read an e-book. πŸ“– Assuming the patch holds good on the bike tire, then I’ll be good to ride on Saturday out to Five Rivers or wherever I choose – I think Friday will be kind of cold and not great for riding.

Saturday might be good enough for riding out to Five Rivers, 🐦 but other then that I’ll probably stay home and read. πŸ“š There are just so many good books I’m discovering at the library, and I just want to learn as much as I can over the winter and take in as much as I can imagination. Maybe make split pea soup. 🍲 I think for now I’m good on groceries and supplies, next week one of days I can drive to work.