Life: Writing Amid Too Much Real News

Tiny clip from the reliable https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/ site

I’ve been quiet here, because there is a lot happening. A LOT. I’m not good at pretending otherwise.

I don’t want force false cheer or deny current events in my posting, because then it will read as, “A dangerous pandemic is raging out of control around the globe, my home state is on fire, my lungs are filled with smoke, my country is sliding into fascism, and HERE IS A NEW RECIPE FOR PICKLED BEETS!”

–me, just now

I’m having two kinds of interactions with people about the current state of affairs.

People who are cautious and have changed their lives since the pandemic became widespread are easy to chat with about our condensed, indoor lives. We’re trying to stay healthy and almost sane. We exchange recipes, movie recommendations, tell each other stories, share links, have video calls, compare masks, and discuss ways to solve pandemic-related logistical problems. (I want some of that fancy, vacated office space to be made available to schools which can no longer safely accommodate all of the students. Some of those offices (the ones that won’t have elevator lobby traffic jams) have VAST amounts of floor space, decent ventilation, zippy fast internet, and natural light. At even 30% occupancy per floor, they could support a lot of students! And yes, we’ll need to hire more teachers and support staff to make that work, and that would be worth it and potentially good for the recovery! And and and and…) My friends who are cautious may need to visit ailing relatives, and plan long, arduous car trips that may not involve stopping. They run errands, but do so cautiously and efficiently while masked. They avoid non-cautious people. If I have seen them within the last six months, I socialized with them outdoors and while wearing a mask.

People who are not cautious are living very different lives, and I can’t entirely relate to them. They are flying in airplanes. They are going on vacations and drinking in bars. They might as well tell me they are from Alpha Centauri. They aren’t appearing in Karens-gone-wild videos, thankfully, but I’m still judging them the way I judge people who don’t stop at stop signs. It’s not that I don’t understand taking risks to oneself: it’s putting others at risk that really bothers me.

These events are also changing what I read, and my reading has become GEEKY IN NEW WAYS. I have waaaay too many conversations about virology, antibodies, vaccine development, how clinical trials are supposed to be done (no, not all the researchers who don’t have the illness injecting themselves – THAT is just a bad version of Phase 1, people!); I’ve given two brief informal gushing chats on angiotensin-converting enzymes 2 (ACE2); I’ve translated acronyms for cardiac conditions potentially aggravated by COVID-19 to my father; I’ve started “liking” too many posts from UCSF about their nanobody-based potential treatment, AeroNabs; and I am constantly frustrated that I’ve got a lung health issue that is holding me back from going out to show up in person for the biggest civil rights mass movement of my adult life, Black Lives Matter.

I am NOT sending Twitter invitations to that asteroid that everyone is writing about, either.

null

Will #asteroid 2011 ES4 hit Earth? 🌎 No! 2011 ES4’s close approach is “close” on an astronomical scale but poses no danger of actually hitting Earth. #PlanetaryDefense experts expect it to safely pass by at least 45,000 miles (792,000 football fields) away on Tuesday Sept. 1.

I’m sure I’ll find a way to write, perhaps even as if there isn’t ash in my hair from taking my compost bin out, but my brain is full, I’m tired, I’m discouraged at the state of my country, and I have not done anything to get the abs I was convinced (half-heartedly) that I could have had by now. This will all inevitably seep into my writing, and that is okay.

News: California is on fire

Wildfire information from CalFire, shared from their Twitter feed.

Last weekend there was a thunderstorm, a PROPER one, the first we’ve had in more than a decade, easily. It impressed me. I thought it was novel.

It started more than 600 fires here in California.

Stepping outside when the smoke moves in midday is like standing over a campfire. Directly over a campfire.

This is… distracting. I know several people living near-ish to the fire; the two that are closest are the most modest about it, but are quite vigilant and have their things packed if they need to evacuate.

It’s a distraction from constantly read about the pandemic to constantly read about the fires, but another disaster was not exactly the distraction I was hoping for.

Here are some favorite resources for fire monitoring, in the order I rely on them:

National Weather Service Bay Area on Twitter (twitter.com/NWSBayArea): red flag warnings, photos, video links

CalFire on Twitter (twitter.com/CAL_FIRE/): includes posted reports, evacuation orders, and information sharing across federal, state, and local fire authorities. If you don’t like Twitter, you can also go to https://www.fire.ca.gov/ instead.

Fire and Smoke Map from fire.airnow.gov: the source of the graphic below, filled with primary-colored geometric shapes indicating sensors and smoke readings. It’s also worth noting that airnow.gov is great for air quality information generally.

SUBSCRIPTION TEXT ALERT TOOLS: I receive text alerts from my city & county emergency services organizations (alertsf.org (Everbridge) and SF72.org), which are timely and useful, if frequent. If you don’t know your county emergency text alerts agency and you are here in California, you can look it up at calalerts.org (though the Stanislaus County link is wrong, so click here instead).

What a week. Image from fire.airnow.gov during a relatively good air quality moment in the evening for my region. I did say relatively!

News: Writing during a global pandemic

The numbers from Johns Hopkins (https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/ ) as of 10:11 this morning,

If the US was doing well, the current coronavirus numbers would be shouted from rooftops; instead, they are dire, and are noted quietly, without fanfare, and set aside. Or denied by partisans or by people who can’t manage bad news.

*

I was reading an interview with William Gibson, one of my favorite fiction authors (possibly this one in the UK Guardian from January of this year), and was really struck by how he had to rewrite his novel then in progress, because the 2016 elections in the United States made the story he was telling unmoored from the reality that was unfolding.

The COVID-19 pandemic currently spreading around the world, and in particular spreading in an uncontrolled fashion throughout the US, is a similar, world-changing, culture-changing experience. This is evident to the point that people watching films that were made prior to the pandemic are uncomfortable with how close people are standing together, and how many things the characters touch, because we are looking at these interactions in the context of a new risk profile. These scenes of people in crowds, or in enclosed spaces with strangers, or speaking close to the faces of people they barely know, have a new meaning. They are no longer of our time – they feel out of place. So clearly from Before.

This is an unevenly distributed problem: in New Zealand, people are living reasonably normal lives; in the city in China where the virus was first recognized as a problem, life has moved on and people are attending outdoor pool-party concerts with no real fear. (This contrasts with people who are oblivious to the risks, and are spreading the infection actively in countries where infections are still rising, in part due to this obliviousness: their very obliviousness is creating dread – and danger – for others.)

Everything has context. I’m wrestling with the conceptual changes to my own right now, after 24 weeks of adjustment and precautions. There is a lot to process.

*

Depending on how long getting this under control takes, there are lots of adjustments that will need to be made: many people who will need to be tasked with providing support, current under-utilized (abandoned in favor of working from home) office space could be safely set up for students who need zippy internet and lots of space (especially for those whose parents are essential workers and need a place to be, but also because our schools aren’t set up for this, nor is everyone’s home set up for remote lessons; supervision and appropriately staggered arrival and departure times are required). We’ll need lots of workers to renovate ventilation systems, very large service centers for the unhoused (more dining rooms, more places to stay, more services generally)… There is so much to be done. There are SO MANY KINDS of emergencies that we prepare for, but the pandemic is messing up THOSE plans also (fire shelters don’t have capacity for crowds during a pandemic), and those plans also need to be revised.

None of which is my job, but somehow a lot of it is on my mind. I mean, this likely isn’t the only pandemic we’ll have. And, we can’t keep stumbling around like this, hoping it will pass while not changing things up. A lot of people are available who could be put to work if we have new plans. And… my optimism is breaking out of it’s tiny container again, but it’s still there…

*

Will this have an impact on my writing and vision of the future, to the extent there is a future with the climate crisis in full effect? Yes. I’m adjusting it now, as if my one dystopian novella wasn’t dystopian enough…

News: UN has concerns on US Human Rights

As they should.

It’s good when international bodies – and people from around the globe – ‘see something and say something.’

U.N. human rights office calls on U.S. police to limit use of force

The United Nations human rights office on Friday called on U.S. security forces to limit their use of force against peaceful protesters and journalists, as clashes between federal agents and demonstrators continue in Portland, Ore. “Peaceful demonstrations that have been taking place in cities in the U.S.

News: AOC Speaks Eloquently on Casual Misogyny

I was sincerely moved by the speech representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez made in the legislature today on men behaving with casual hatred toward women, and then rushing to hide behind their own wives and daughters.

As with so many of AOC’s speeches, it is really thoughtful. When she tells you she’s had to throw men out of bars for behaving with this sort of hatred displayed by another elected official, the pattern she is observing is clear.

We women already KNOW about this – we’ve lived it. But we’ve been told to suffer in silence for the comfort of men. So I appreciate casual misogyny being addressed in this simultaneously high-minded and down-to-earth fashion.

Perspective | AOC’s speech about Ted Yoho’s ‘apology’ was a comeback for the ages

If you click on only one thing today, let it be Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Thursday morning speech, delivered from the House floor and directed to a fellow member of Congress, but really to us all. “You can be a powerful man and accost women,” said the New York Democrat.

News: US Passes Four Million Coronavirus Cases

That… didn’t take long.

U.S. passes 4 million coronavirus cases as pace of new infections roughly doubles

The United States on Thursday passed the grim milestone of 4 million confirmed coronavirus infections, and President Trump announced he was canceling the public celebration of his nomination for a second term, as institutions from schools to airlines to Major League Baseball wrestled with the consequences of a pandemic still far from under control.

Here in California, where we took precautions, but also had rebels unwilling to prolong the quarantine-style precautions. We’ve just topped New York in the number of cases, and jumped up more than TWELVE THOUSAND CASES IN A SINGLE DAY. We’re twice as big as NY, so we’ll still try to make bold claims of superiority, but… still. STILL.

California surpasses New York as state with most coronavirus cases after record day

California has recorded its highest number of new Covid-19 cases in a single day, as the state surpassed New York for the most total cases in the country. The state saw 12,807 confirmed cases on Tuesday, the governor, Gavin Newsom, announced on Wednesday.

Other countries got this under control, but due to a lack of risk comprehension (being geographically far from all but two countries really messes up the perspective), widespread belief that the illness is a hoax, and the extended childhood that constitutes adult life for many Americans, we have to suffer EVEN MORE before coming to our collective senses.

I do want to note that griping about “Americans” is unfair: it’s like lumping all of Europe together, as if there is no difference between the UK and Germany, for example. THERE IS A DIFFERENCE. There are regional pockets of science-based precautions and good behavior. That’s a thing! But there are also many individual failures within those good pockets, which is why I can live in one of the FIRST COUNTIES IN THE US to issue a health order, yet still had to have a conversation with a neighbor who doesn’t think COVID-19 is real, or even if it is real that the news is just exaggeration and hysteria. (He is being yelled at by family friends; I get the easy task of merely agreeing with this friends enthusiastically!)

Years of pretending that everyone’s opinion is equally valuable, and that even basic facts have at least two “both sides” elements, have taken a toll on the critical thinking of many of our citizens. And here we are. Together. Depending on the most foolish of us to keep our communities safe.

Supreme Court: McGirt v. Oklahoma

The Supreme Court’s decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma is 86 pages of WOW, I didn’t have honoring our original treaties with the Muskogee/Creek on my 2020 Bingo Card!!

Wow. This was the concise summary. You don’t really need to read beyond this.

OPINION by GORSUCH: a, 1832 Treaty guaranteed land to the Creek, and promised that no US State or Territory would ever pass laws that would apply to the Creek people on that land. “[W]e hold the government to its word.” McGirt was convicted in Oklahoma State Court; he claims the state has no authority under the Federal Major Crimes act, which makes certain crimes committed by “Indians” on “Indian land” exclusively federal. Oklahoma claims that the land no longer belongs to the Creeks. OK state courts and the Tenth Circuit came to conflicting conclusions, so here we are.

States can’t change reservations (those are between the Tribes and the Feds). Allotment tried to break up the holdings, but the language permits private land within reservations, the Creek Reservation was never lawfully terminated, and Congress has explained that allotments don’t dissolve reservations anyway. (Likewise, land patents to homesteaders elsewhere didn’t dissolve the US’ sovereignty.) Congress may have hoped to dissolve the reservations by allotment, but didn’t get there.

OK points to other interference in the Tribe’s affairs, but those don’t change the law. OK notes that some of the region “has lost its Indian character,” but that doesn’t change the law. OK suggests that its disregard for federal law and habit of pulling the Creek into state courts proves something, but no. “Things only get worse from there.” Collected commentary from Tribal individuals and others does not change the law. The arrival of many white settlers (actually used by OK as evidence?) DOES NOT CHANGE THE LAW. OK’s efforts to get more of the Creek land through sketchy means once oil was discovered there… you know where this is going right? – STILL DOES NOT CHANGE THE LAW. “That would be the rule of the strong, not the rule of law.”

OK then suggests the reservation doesn’t exist, that Congress never made it, and I’m not even going to bother summarizing that – it’s too cray. Also, OK is trying to distinguish between a reservation and a “dependent Indian community” in a way that doesn’t help it legally, because OK lacks jurisdiction in both types of classifications. And then there is an argument that the treaty gave the Tribe fee title to the land, which they are pretending is bad. The Court isn’t having it, and hasn’t since 1900 or so.

OK then tries to argue that the merger of Oklahoma Territory and Indian Territory means that it is special and different from other states, but law on the books in 1885 says otherwise. So they tried the Enabling Act for OK statehood, but even that had federal court exceptions. (Why are they trying this on legal scholars?) OK took Creek people to state court anyway, but (say it with me) THAT DOES NOT CHANGE THE LAWS.

OK says that finding the Creek Reservations still exists would be complex, because it would mean up to half of OK still belongs to the Creek. To which the Court says, “And?”

OooooooOOOOooooooOOOOoooooooooo! Opinion runs through p. 45 of the PDF.

(It’s hard to fairly summarize the dissent, because it feels too much like ‘possession is 9/10ths of the law.” I’m serious. Especially since it emphasizes intent, and says that you should respect the intended destruction of a tribe as law, even if that destruction was never completed explicitly, and even though Congress did things to RESTORE the Tribe’s sovereignty, too. It’s… weird.

It also comes so closely on the heels of the Bostick case (on transgender rights, among other things), where the conservatives insisted that you go back to the oldest law you can find and take it at its word UNTIL IT IS CHANGED EXPLICITLY: when their preferred approach was applied here, the conservatives suddenly switched standards. )

DISSENT by ROBERTS (with ALITO, KAVANAUGH, and THOMAS except for part): but! but! but! WHO COULD HAVE KNOWN that the laws are still on the books! How can the State do STATE THINGS if federal laws still apply! This is DESTABILIZING! And there was the Civil War! And there were SO MANY SETTLERS. And we will refer to reports about Congress’ intentions selectively. The population of Creek has been outnumbered. (WE WILL NOT USE MANY CITATIONS FOR THIS PART OF THE DISSENT!)

Intent, intent, intent, intent, intent. Everyone knew where this was going. Why did Congress have to be explicit? Laws were passed taking things away from the Creek; even if new laws were passed giving them those things back, that just proves that they were previously taken away (and what was our point again?). Any references to “former” lands mean ALL THE LANDS (notwithstanding all the transfers and changes of borders, which somehow couldn’t possibly be in this discussion?)(?!). If anyone among the Creek referred to the land as something other a reservation, that also means the treaty (which still exists legally) is gone because of the intent to dissolve everything through constant micro- and macro-aggressions. (p 46 – 82)

DISSENT by THOMAS: This Court lacks jurisdiction because of State law. Oklahoma deserves more respect. (p. 83 – 86).

‘If the state does you wrong for long enough, federal law doesn’t apply’ is kind of wild as an argument. I get the, ‘facts on the ground look bad,’ I get the complexity of forming new states and repeatedly dividing up jurisdictions between the feds and the states, but in nearly any other situation, the remedy for the state mistreating people because it was closer and the feds were far away would be a federal intervention. I mean, states the American South failed to guarantee lots of federal laws, and the Feds sometimes stepped in, which was the right thing to do. So. Gosh.

News: US Achieves Three Million COVID-19 Cases; World Achieves Twelve Million

US reaches 3m confirmed Covid-19 cases as Pence pushes for schools to reopen – as it happened

Johns Hopkins tracker confirms US has hit 3m mark, representing about a quarter of the world’s total cases

That was fast.

Also, it occurs to me that “pandemic” might be the wrong tag for this in the long term. Because, you know. This might not be the only one during the running cycle of this blog. (Yikes.) (No, really, it is OPTIMISM, because I think I’ll be able to live through it to write about the next one!)

The Johns Hopkins Corona Virus resource page shows there are over Twelve Million cases globally, While that also seems fast, you have to realize that my own, very large country is going up 60,000 CASES PER DAY.

Supreme Court: DREAMers decision podcast from reWire

Oh, I saved this to publish before/after my hobbyist summary of Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of the University of California! These law geeks do this so well.

Rapid Reaction – Supreme Court Protects DREAMers – Rewire.News

DACA recipients and their supporters rally outside the Supreme Court, which denied the Trump administration’s attempt to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Drew Angerer/Getty Images For the second time in a week, the Supreme Court came down on the side of justice!

Supreme Court: Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of the University of California

Is it wrong for me to be happy this is only 74 pdf pages long? Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of the University of California came out on June 18th, and I’ve been so swamped with Supreme Court news – and general surprise – that I haven’t done my new-tradition of reading and annotating as I go.

This one is tricky for me, because the Administrative Procedures Act is its own WORLD. I try not to know too much about this. But it can’t be helped, really.

Okay, the main summary is this:

The gist, from page 14 of the main opinion.

That’s the most important point: the Deferred Actions for Childhood Arrivals program can be shut down; it just has to be done so according to LAWS AND RULES AND ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES.

The Court says the government canceled DACA in an “arbitrary and capricious” manner.

OPINION BY ROBERTS: the government characterizes the DACA program as a discretionary agency decision not to institute deportation proceedings, which can’t be reviewed under current law. The Court disagrees, saying it the program’s scope far exceeds that AND includes benefits which are normal for the Court to review. The same goes for the gov’t INA claims, which are also about removals: DACA isn’t just about removals, so no dice. (pages of the court website PDF p 6- 18)

The government’s original explanation for why it wanted to rescind the policy is the natural one under administrative law, and [the Court gives a rousing defensive of administrative procedure so the public has a right to know and can comment.] The follow-on retro-justifications are irrelevant. (p18 – 22)

The AG said one part of the law was potentially illegal, and tried to throw it all out, forgetting the State Farm case (my summary: don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater), which said that an agency can’t use one problem justify dumping many discrete activities in a program, especially if there is legitimate reliance upon them. (through p. 34)

CONCURRENCE/CONCURRENCE/DISSENT by SOTOMAYOR: The Court ruled out Equal Protection Clause challenges, but the respondents should develop those. There IS plausible animus! Especially from Trump, and specifically in this context! (p. 35 – 38)

CONCURRENCE/DISSENT by THOMAS with ALITO AND GORSUCH: This whole policy exists because one president issued a memo; it was rescinded the same way; fair’s fair. Also, if the AG says it is illegal, we shouldn’t even be talking about it. Illegal memos should not burden subsequent administrations. (p. 39 – 64)

CONCURRENCE/DISSENT by ALITO: DACA is illegal; if its creation was legal, its cancellation through a similar process was lawful discretion and so is unreviewable anway. And it’s NOT arbitrary and capricious. (p. 65 – 66)

CONCURRENCE/DISSENT by KAVANAUGH: The agency’s second try at justifying rescinding DACA is fine. The fact that it came later was only supposed to disqualify it if it was in litigation (which this doesn’t count as?) by lawyers (ah), rather than by agency decision makers. The program inappropriately addresses problems that should have been solved by the legislature; but at least the rejection of the Equal Protection Act claim is OK. (p67 – 74)

So the DREAMers aren’t safe, but have some more time while this goes back through more courts. But that’s all it really is – a bit more time. Because of that main first point – live by the memo, die by the memo (plus administrative procedures – this case provides an unsettled feeling.

I’ve had friends tell me it took a ton of money and more than a decade for them to be allowed to be citizens, even with one American parent; we could do better by people who want to be here.