Politics

I didn’t think 2020 was all that bad of a year

I didn’t think 2020 was all that bad of a year … I thought it it was kind of fun ! πŸ˜€

Everywhere you go, you here people moaning about how awful 2020 was as a year. They didn’t like the decisive election, the shutdowns of community programs and businesses due to the COVID-19. We lost some great people this year from the virus, and it forced us to rethink how did businesses and lived our lives.

Remote work was kind of an experience, especially not having Internet at home. While I did eventually a week ago get hotspot service for my phone, I spent a lot of the summer and autumn working at various free-wifi locations, and also using my phone and occasionally using the work hotspot a fair amount. It really taught me how to use the internet efficiently and liberated me from my bedroom.

With tonight, it work out to 63 nights in 2020 that I wilderness camped. One night I did camp at the Cherry Ridge Camping Area in Brookfield and three nights at Stony Pond in Madison County, but those forest camping areas are still pretty dispersed. It was fun, although sometimes a bit crazy trying to plan my day around work, making sure I had good cell service and enough power in my battery bank.

I will forever remember those days sitting at Lake Pleasant, with my feet in the sand and the laptop in my lap, running out to the lake to go for a swim. Those hot summer days working in my truck, sitting next to fan, trying my best to stay cool, or shivering come late autumn. Those nice spring days working out back. That week I worked from deep in Green Mountains, and managed to burn a hole in my brand new screen tent when I had that grease fire. Well, that wasn’t so pleasant, but I got it patched.

It was an incredibly busy year with work, some late evenings, and some crazy days working into the weekend, fielding client calls including once when I was out hiking to the Pig Rock on NY 30 through the Speculator Tree Farm. It had it’s share of hot and buggy days, and then before you know it days got short and cold.

Honestly, it looks like a while before things get back to normal. Remote work will continue through the end of January, at least, and while it will be difficult to do much camping in January due to cold and road closures, it will still be kind of nice working from home. But I do look forward to a more normal year next year — I kind of miss my colleagues at work, I miss the time to myself taking the bus back and forth to work, and I miss going down to the library and being able to work inside until closing time at 9 PM. But I do think  those days will be back again, just like those lazy, crazy days of summer.

Remote work

‘Bonkers’ What Americans Believe : NPR

QAnon Conspiracy Theories And Misinformation: ‘Bonkers’ What Americans Believe : NPR

A significant number of Americans believe misinformation about the origins of the coronavirus and the recent presidential election, as well as conspiracy theories like QAnon, according to a new NPR/Ipsos poll.

orty percent of respondents said they believe the coronavirus was made in a lab in China even though there is no evidence for this. Scientists say the virus was transmitted to humans from another species.

And one-third of Americans believe that voter fraud helped Joe Biden win the 2020 election, despite the fact that courts, election officials and the Justice epartment have found no evidence of widespread fraud that could have changed the outcome.

The poll results add to mounting evidence that misinformation is gaining a foothold in American society and that conspiracy theories are going mainstream, especially during the coronavirus pandemic. This has raised concerns about how to get people to believe in a "baseline reality," said Chris Jackson, a pollster with Ipsos.

Trump’s Fraud Claims Died in Court, but the Myth of Stolen Elections Lives On – The New York Times

Trump’s Fraud Claims Died in Court, but the Myth of Stolen Elections Lives On – The New York Times

After bringing some 60 lawsuits, and even offering financial incentive for information about fraud, Mr. Trump and his allies have failed to prove definitively any case of illegal voting on behalf of their opponent in court — not a single case of an undocumented immigrant casting a ballot, a citizen double voting, nor any credible evidence that legions of the voting dead gave Mr. Biden a victory that wasn’t his.

The stupidity of labeling Trump’s tweets

The stupidity of labeling Trump’s tweets

  1. The President tweets something stupid about the election being stolen and people are being lied to by the “lamestream media”.
  2. Twitter suffixes the tweet with the claim that the “facts of the tweet are disputed”
  3. And links to a series of “mainstream media” articles that show why the tweet is wrong

Does this offer anything beyond what one could get by Googling the tweet? It seems like it’s just reinforcing the message of the troll, as anybody who believes what the President says about the election, is certainly not going to believe the fact checks of the media.

William Magee, who served in NY Assembly for 28 years, dies on Christmas Eve – syracuse.com

William Magee, who served in NY Assembly for 28 years, dies on Christmas Eve – syracuse.com

Former state Assemblyman William “Bill Magee, who served in the New York State Assembly for nearly three decades, died on Christmas Eve, his niece confirmed today. He was 81.

rom 1990 to 2018, Magee represented a district that included Madison, Otsego and Oneida counties. He also was an auctioneer, running Magee Auction Service for decades.

“My uncle truly, truly, truly cared about his constituents, Robin Blazer Commins said this morning. “Especially the farmers. He truly knew what the farmers needed.