Slouching Towards Oblivion

Monday, November 04, 2019

Today I Learned



The mating process of bees is interesting and a little shocking.

First of all, candidates for Queen Bee are selected and worker bees feed them a special jelly concoction, and the virgin Queen Bee which survives to adulthood without being killed by her rivals will take a mating flight with a dozen or so male drones, selected from the tens of thousands of eligible bachelor bees in the colony.

The drones which do mate with the queen bee are not the lucky ones because during sex when the male bee reaches climax its testicles explode and it dies.

And his genitals remain inside the Queen.

Sunday, November 03, 2019

Today's Beau

For every problem that's complicated and difficult and confusing, there's a solution that's simple and elegant and wrong.

For 30 or 40 years, it seems Republicans have been propagating ignorance in order to exploit it in service of their political ambitions, while Democrats have been making an effort to educate in order to help us overcome the problems caused by ignorance.

Justin King, Beau Of The Fifth Column:


There are differences - big ones.

Today's Tweet



The whole thing is weird and complicated and it has a lot of moving parts, but the basic principle is actually fairly simple, and it's almost perfectly illustrated by "The Phone Call".

Friday, November 01, 2019

Some Numbers

It's Not Prophesy

...it's called S-C-I-E-N-C-E.

Bitch.

The Guardian:

The Silent Spring prophecy that pesticides could “still the leaping of fish” has been confirmed, according to scientists investigating the collapse of fisheries in Japan. They say similar impacts are likely to have occurred around the world.

The long-term study showed an immediate plunge in insect and plankton numbers in a large lake after the introduction of neonicotinoid pesticides to rice paddies. This was rapidly followed by the collapse of smelt and eel populations, which had been stable for decades but rely on the tiny creatures for food.

The analysis shows a strong correlation but cannot prove a causal link between the insecticides and the collapse. However, independent scientists said other possibilities had been ruled out and that the work provided “compelling evidence”.

The research is the first to reveal the knock-on effects of insecticides on fish. Harm to bees is well known, but previous studies in Europe have linked neonicotinoids to die-offs in other freshwater species including mayflies, dragonflies and snails and also to falling populations of farmland bird that feed on insects, including starlings and swallows. The insecticide has also been shown to make migrating songbirds lose their way.

Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring, her seminal book on the dangers of pesticides in 1962. In their report, the Japanese researchers said: “She wrote: ‘These sprays, dusts and aerosols are now applied almost universally to farms, gardens, forests and homes – nonselective chemicals that have the power to kill every insect, the ‘good’ and the ‘bad’, to still the song of birds and the leaping of fish in the streams.’ The ecological and economic impact of neonicotinoids on the inland waters of Japan confirms Carson’s prophecy.”


We're fouling the nest.

And that doesn't just mean we're increasing the dangers to our own health and lowering our odds of survival. We're also raising the probability that every child will be born with a physical or mental anomaly that's easily preventable if we could just learn not to shit where we eat.