Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Speech Therapist

I went to a speech therapist today. As you know since my stroke (or actually a couple years after it), i have battled with twi seemingly related problems: a swallowing issue that feels like something stuck on the right of my throat, and difficulty speaking as loudly and clearly as I used to be able to do. The more tired I get, the worse it gets.  This is most apparent in a six hour long deposition.

The speech therapist started by running a camera through my nose to inspect my vocal chords. She pointed to the muscles immediately adjacent to my vocal chords being red and enlarged.  She said these muscles are working too hard because of stress. These muscles are adjacent to the muscles that shut the breathing passage from the esophagus and this likely explains the globus sensation. Fixing one by exercise may fix both, perhaps in just a few weeks.  These are the only areas of my health that are a source of frustration. 

This Should Reduce Victim Studies a Lot

4/19/26 University Herald:

The U.S. Department of Education published a sweeping Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on April 17 that would — for the first time in the history of federal higher education policy — hold every postsecondary program at every type of institution to a single earnings-based accountability standard, with the loss of federal student loan eligibility as the consequence for programs that fail.

The proposed rule, the third and final of three rules the Department has issued to implement the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed July 4, 2025, is now open for public comment through May 20, 2026 at regulations.gov. The Department may modify the rule in response to comments before publishing a final rule, which is expected to take effect July 1, 2026.


This is one of the most consequential higher education policy proposals in decades. Students, faculty, and anyone considering enrolling in a college or university program should understand what it proposes — and what it does not.
The Core Mechanism: The Earnings Premium Test

Under the proposed rule, every postsecondary program — from an eight-week culinary certificate to a doctoral program — must pass what the Department calls an "earnings premium test." The test compares the median earnings of a program's graduates against a benchmark based on the education level of typical workers in the broader labor market.

For undergraduate degree programs, the median earnings of graduates must exceed the median earnings of working adults aged 25 to 34 with only a high school diploma. For graduate programs, graduates' median earnings must exceed those of working adults aged 25 to 34 with only a bachelor's degree.

If a program fails this test in two of three consecutive years, it loses eligibility for federal Direct Loans — meaning students enrolling in that program can no longer borrow federal money to pay for it. Programs that fail cannot simply restart under a new name; the rule includes provisions preventing institutions from enrolling new students in "substantially similar" programs for at least two award years following closure.

Is there value in programs that do not contribute to a decent paycheck?  Certainly. But the government need not subsidize a program that satisfies your desire to learn about Victim Studies.

Herostratic Murder

4/22/26 KOMO:

The gunman who opened fire atop one of the historic Teotihuacán pyramids in Mexico on Monday carried notes and materials related to past mass shootings in the United States, officials said Tuesday.

Julio César Jasso Ramírez, 27, shot into a crowd of tourists, killing a Canadian woman and injuring 13 others. Interior Secretary Rosa Icela Rodríguez said six of the injured have since been discharged, while seven remain hospitalized.

When security forces responded to emergency calls at the Pyramid of the Moon, Ramírez climbed higher up the structure before being shot in the leg by a National Guardsman. He then used a .38-caliber revolver to take his own life, officials said.

If "herostratic" is not in your vocabulary. Herostratus destroyed one of the Wonders of the Ancient World, the Temple of Artemis in Ephesus:

Herostratus, who by pure coincidence destroyed the world wonder on the same night Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great was born [not correct], is a man about whom nothing is known. His social status was likely poor because he was either a former slave or the son of a slave, according to historians. The arsonist, who upon his arrest stated that he committed this unimaginable crime because he was seeking kleos: infamy, reputation, may have been best described by the Russian poet Semyon Nadson. Nadson hypothesizes that Herostratus' determination to destroy the Temple of Artemis was motivated by the sobering understanding that he was but a "maggot squashed by destiny, in the midst of the countless hordes," and that doing so was the only way for him to make his mark on history.

The Ephesian authorities believed that the death penalty did not adequately reflect the seriousness of the offense. Herostratus was sentenced to death as well as damnatio memoriae, which forbade mentioning his name in writing or conversation moving forward. This was done in order to severely punish the fame-seeking criminal.

See how well it worked? You have no idea who he was. This is not the first mass murder seeking kleos. My first peer-reviewed journal article discusses another such case and how news coverage encourages this, especially with guns. The 2019 El Paso mass murderer  consciously modeled himself after a Christchurch mass murder. 9/5/19 AP:

The El Paso massacre is the latest attack in which the gunman appears to have praised the March 15 shootings in Christchurch, where an Australian white supremacist is charged with killing 51 worshippers at two mosques.

Authorities are investigating the possibility that Saturday’s shooting in El Paso was a hate crime, and are working to determine whether a racist, anti-immigrant screed posted to the 8chan board shortly beforehand was written by the man arrested in the attack. Though he was targeting Latinos rather than Muslims, the first sentence of the online rant expressed support for the Christchurch shooter.

While the El Paso murderer seemed driven by hatred of Hispanics, the Christchurch murderer:

The attacks were mainly motivated by white nationalismanti-immigrant sentiment, and white supremacist beliefs. [monster name redacted] described himself as an ecofascist and professed belief in the far-right "Great Replacement" conspiracy theory in the context of a "white genocide". 

Curiously he was an Australian immigrant to New Zealand. The news media's pursuit of clicks makes these monsters famous. If you are a sad little person who feels that your passing will leave no mark on the world, chasing your "everyone will be famous for 15 minutes" may make twisted sense.

Tobacco is a Vile Habit

 Nonetheless, this is the sort of nanny state behavior that shows a complete lack of trust in education of people to look out for their own good. I can also see how this is going to lead to a business opportunity for those born before 2008. 4/21/26 Guardian:

A bill banning anyone born after 2008 from buying tobacco in the UK has completed its progress through parliament in a move that ministers hope will create a “smoke-free generation”.

Under the tobacco and vapes bill anyone born on or after 1 January 2009 will never be able to be legally sold tobacco across the UK, in an effort to save lives and reduce the burden on the NHS.

The bill will become legislation when it receives royal assent next week. Its long journey through both houses of parliament began when it was introduced on 5 November 2024 and ended on Tuesday, when the House of Lords approved amendments made by MPs in House of Commons.

Ministers hope it will end the sale of tobacco products altogether over time and break the cycle of addiction and the disadvantages associated with tobacco.

Smoking leads to 400,000 hospital admissions and 64,000 deaths a year in England alone and costs the NHS £3bn in treatments for tobacco-related illnesses such as cancer and heart disease. It is estimated to involve total costs to society of between £21.3bn and £27.6bn a year in England, mainly through lost productivity.

The more the government does for you, the more excuses they have for telling you what to do. Can a ban on red meat or even meat in general be far off.

When I was young, outside liquor stores, young women would approach me to buy them beer. I never did it, but I can see how a greedy person or of low morals could have taken advantage of this. Tobacco is the same problem.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

More Evidence That There Is So Little Racism in America That it Needs Subsidies

4/21/26 NPR:

 WASHINGTON — The Southern Poverty Law Center was indicted Tuesday on federal fraud charges alleging it improperly raised millions of dollars to secretly pay leaders of the Ku Klux Klan and other hate groups for inside information, acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said.

The Justice Department alleges the civil rights group defrauded donors by using their money to fund the very extremism it claimed to be fighting, with more than $3 million paid to informants through a now-defunct program to infiltrate white supremacist and other extremist groups. Prosecutors allege some of the money was used by extremists to carry out other crimes, but court papers did not include specific examples.

SPLC claims they were just getting information. Racism is so rare compared to my youth that this looks like funding groups that might otherwise wither on the vine. Remember the racist rally in Charlottesville in 2017? Guess who helped fund it,

PM Starmer is in Trouble

 When even the Guardian goes after him. 4/21/26 Guardian:

Well, what would you do? You’re a top civil servant with more than 25 years of government service. You’ve worked for Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, David Cameron and Theresa May. You went through Brexit hell as a lead negotiator. You were sacked by Boris Johnson and were then brought back by Keir Starmer.

You land a plum job as permanent undersecretary in the Foreign Office and do your boss a favour by appointing his man as ambassador to the US. You’ve already got a knighthood; that peerage is only a matter of time away. Then it all blows up in your face and the prime minister sacks you and trashes your reputation in parliament.

Call it the revenge of the nerd. On Monday we had the case for the prosecution during Keir Starmer’s statement to the Commons. On Tuesday, we got Olly Robbins giving his defence before the foreign affairs select committee. And, in its way, it was quietly damning. Mostly of the government, occasionally – if inadvertently – of himself.

Throughout, Robbins presented himself as a fundamentally decent man. Someone who lived and breathed public service. The sort of man Starmer believes himself to be yet somehow isn’t. An ingenu for whom process is everything. A man governed by ritual. You would guess his sock drawer is pristine and numbered. Someone crushed by his recent sacking. Heartbroken at losing a job he loved.

At one point, he insisted that the two books he knew by heart were the civil service manual and the Book of Common Prayer. Blessed are the geeks. For they shall inherit the Earth. Just a shame that Olly never got to the bit in the prayer book about anything to do with Peter Mandelson always ending in a vale of tears. A shadow of darkness. And unlike previous misdemeanours, this time there shall be no resurrection for him. Possibly not even for Olly or Keir.