Batfort

Style reveals substance

Month: August 2018 (page 3 of 4)

Decisions

Last time I looked at apartments, I created a heuristic that if you have to make a pro and con list, the answer is “no.”

Last night I looked at a place that I wanted to like. It’s nestled into a farm. But I’m debating.

(The shower is in the middle of the bedroom. That feels weird to me.)

By my heuristic, debate means no.

That makes me sad.

I feel like I’m not giving it a chance.

Yet I also know that no matter how great a space may be, a few bad aspects could ruin the whole experience.

As an introvert who values a peaceful living situation, this is important.

#decisions

Social Media Giants

It was a big week for social media.

Everything I can think of to say sounds histrionic.

They banned Alex Jones.

This is a real fight, and yet “our side” just sits back and takes it – every single time.

How much longer can we go on like this?

Hello, it’s hot

Today is supposed to be the hottest day of the summer. I believe it.

It’s so hot, I’m uncomfortable.

You know what also makes me uncomfortable? This passage right here:

Submit yourself for the Lord’s sake to every human institution, whether to a king as the one in authority, or to governors as sent by him for the punishment of evildoers and the praise of those who do right. For such is the will of God that by doing right you may silence the ignorance of foolish men. Act as free men, and do not use your freedom as a covering for evil, but use it as bondslaves of God. Honor all men; love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the king.

I Peter 2:13-17

Sometimes our own little hopes and dreams are a biiiiit too big for what a human being can handle. Sometimes I dream about being free of all the arbitrary restrictions of the government.

But then I read exhortations like this.

Submit. For the Lord’s sake.

Sigh.

 

A Meditation: The Lamb of God

Not the metal band. Jesus Christ himself.

The phrase “Lamb of God” brings up images of sacrifice, of innocence, of docile purity.

It’s a true thing–Jesus Christ was indeed the perfectly innocent sacrifice for our sins–but like many sides of the story, it’s missing something.

The lamb symbolism very much fits the “gentle Jesus, meek and mild” imagery that is heavily pushed by cat ladies and people who desperately want Jesus to be a socialist.

But think about lambs a minute.

Lambs are not just gentle and mild and whatever.

Lambs are cheeky.

 

 

Lambs like to frolic and play.

(Mute this if you value your ears.)

Lambs jump and play and headbutt and generally don’t pay attention to rules.

Kind of like Sassy Jesus as depicted in the Book of Luke.

So next time you think of Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God, don’t just think about how sad it is that we sacrificed an innocent being as atonement for our sins.

Consider also how you might defy gravity out of sheer joy.

It’s a review of Alt-Hero #3: Reprisal

First things first: the pink rifle makes me laugh. This is a really chill issue, so if you’re hoping that Rebel will use that rifle in fray…calm down.

Alt-Hero #3 picks up where issue #2 left off. We learn more about the American crew of — what are they? Heroes? Mutants? I’m unsure of what they’re called or what to call them.

Our ragtag band of misfit heroes, if you will, find themselves in a position to make Moves (yes, with a capital M) against the trained, financed, coordinated global force we met in issue #1.

While less action-centered (and the action that did happen was more cloak-and-dagger stuff than hand grenades and explosions), this issue focused more on setting the plot pieces in place, and developed more of the characters. We visit more places, meet a few more people, and get to know more of the characters that we’ve met before, like Soulsight and Michael Martel.

The focus hovers primarily on Rebel, pulling in her family and looking at what makes her tick (but not how she got her powers). Rebel and her family exude all the positive characteristics of a Southern family–gentility, that put-togetherness that Southern women have, a love for Johnny Walker and football, and a deep hatred of those damnYankees.

I like the art a lot more in this issue. You can really tell it’s improving–like 2 months in to a diet plan when you suddenly realize that your pants are loose. I really like the cross-hatching and inking on the panel above. The artist used a lot of silhouettes and shadows in this issue, which helped keep the visuals dynamic. And I was not even once confused about the correct order of the speech bubbles and panels. Miles ahead of issue #1!

And you know what caught my eye? The coloring. It’s not Dave Stewart of Dark Horse levels of greatness (not that I’m biased) (I am), but it’s really nice in this issue. Bright, but not garish. It has that masculine “I don’t care about colors” attitude, but with enough polish that the pages look cohesive. There’s some nuance and gradient, which takes off just enough edge.

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again. Aside from a handful of favorites, I’m really not a comics person. I don’t plow through series and I find that the art style is really, really important to me. (And I like a more stylized art style than most superhero comics.) But I’m enjoying Alt-Hero. It’s fun. The issues are packed with interesting stories and characters. I’m never bored. The plotlines are relevant to real life, on a 1:1 level (fighting Antifa in the streets) but also on a symbolic level (we must use our unique strengths in the battle against evil).

It’s refreshing to finally (FINALLY!) have an entertainment venue that shares my values in the comics of Arkhaven and the books from Castalia House. The authors don’t go around covertly insulting me in the very show or movie or comic or book that I’m trying to like. I don’t have to sigh and look past Trump Derangement Syndrome. I can relax and enjoy, which is a lot of what I want from escapist entertainment.

I’m also inspired. I like this issue. It’s quiet, but it reminds us why we fight. Why we care. Why it’s important to do something to stand up against the evil in this world.

Easier said than done, but it’s a little bit easier with examples like Alt-Hero.

 


FYI I’m an Alt-Hero backer

Red Velvet conquers the summer mini-album with Summer Magic

Gosh, you guys. I was already a Red Velvet fan but this mini-album takes the cake.

“Power Up” is the best iteration of the Red Velvet summer sound so far.

With the exception of “Ice Cream Cake” and “Dumb Dumb,” I’ve never been overly fond of Red Velvet’s red tracks (the pop-influenced ones typically released in the summer). I find “Red Flavor” to be a cringey, “Rookie” is unfinished (but somewhat redeemed in “Cookie Jar“), “Happiness” is meh, and “Russian Roulette” doesn’t do their vocals justice.

That stops with “Power Up.” The video features their typical bright, pop-art aesthetic mixed with weird, disquieting effects (another reason I love RV). It’s supposed to be a video game, but I’m intrigued by the decision to go with claymation-style augmentation instead of 8-bit.

I like how RV often builds and expands on their own concepts, especially with the continuation of weird fruits from the “Red Flavor” video last summer.

But what I really appreciate about “Power Up” is the chord progression and the harmonies. Red Velvet always brings it with the vocals, but the chord progression on this one goes to such unexpected places that I can’t help but love it. A little bit frantic and melancholic, yet with great energy and optimism.  My kind of girls.

The rest of the mini-album is also quite lovely.

“Mr. E” is an expanded version of “Zoo” that I like much better. It’s a more complex, subtle song. (Which, when I put it like that, OF COURSE I like it better. I’m not a huge fan of blatant and bold.)

“Mosquito” is really fun, and the vocals on “Blue Lemonade” are fantastic.

I’m not a huge fan of the English version of “Bad Boy,” although I can appreciate why they recorded one. The rhythm of the lyrics worked so well in Korean that I hate to see that change. But so it goes, and SM is feeling out the American market.

Overall it’s a fun album to listen to. It’s upbeat without being overly peppy. Red Velvet’s creepy and/or dangerous side prevents the summer pop from listing over into anything to saccharine. That’s where last summer’s release failed, in my ears, so I’m glad that they’ve corrected to a happy balance this summer.

 


Edit: I listened to the English version of “Bad Boy” a few more times today, and I’ve revised my opinion. What the English version lacks in rhythm, it makes up for in wordplay.

Batfort Reader: Week of August 5, 2018

Hey! I like sharing fun stuff, and my browser’s getting too full to function. Here are some of the interesting things that I’ve considered this week.

Reading

The Curse of Work (and the double curse of working for the university)

Starbuck’s “Third Place” policy (I’m thinking about what a medical third place might look like)

Myth of the Week: White People Have No Culture

Ben Shapiro’s Pedo Pal Problem

Crohn’s disease successfully treated with the paleolithic ketogenic diet (this is one of the articles that convinced me to try life as a Carnivore)

Did a Russian Tsar fake his own death and become a monk? I loves me a good conspiracy theory.

Nikola Tesla’s connection to Donald Trump

A copywritten letter on how to learn copywriting

A K-pop stylist explains her thought process (More of this, please.)

 

Things other than Reading

Book of Hours digital collections (surprise~~)

Pewdiepie has merch out and I’m considering this white long-sleeve tee

How to fight desertification and reverse climate change (hint: it’s not what you think)

GaryVee’s Clouds and Dirt sneakers (probably sold out by now) (yup)

Architecture MMXII

What? Another side project?

 

YouTube

What is a Book of Hours?

If I’m gonna poast more about Books of Hours, it’ll be good to know more about what they actually are.

Fast facts:

  • Popular from c. 1250 to c. 1550 and the most-survived of all Medieval manuscripts
  • Often (but not always) written in Latin
  • Every one is unique, and often customized even further throughout its life
  • Can range from basic (plain paper with illumination) to super-luxe (parchment, bejeweled bindings, and real gold)

Contents may include:

  • The Divine Office, which is a series of prayers said at steady intervals throughout the day
  • Calendar with feast days
  • Illustrations of scenes from the Bible, such as the Gospels
  • Psalms
  • Suffrages or petitions to specific saints that were important to the BoH’s owner
  • Major family milestones, especially if the BoH was a gift to a wife of am important family

These were clearly books to be used. The contained important information, and pulled you through the day. Some of these books were even used to teach kids how to read.

What I find especially interesting about this is how it shows how daily life can be structured around Scripture. Not even daily life–the whole year! Between feast days and the daily prayers, everyday life was permeated with focus on God. My modern self finds that strange, but a little fascinating.

We are so used to a secular structure. Our days are dictated by our employers, and the public transit schedules, or by television. What would it be like to build our lives around the church? With the freedom given to us by the internet (I can watch a YouTube show any time I want), how could we now structure our lives in a way that is more helpful to our spiritual development?

It’s very interesting to think about these in a post-Protestant era, where we no longer accept without question the authority of the church. How could a Book of Hours be used in a setting with a “church” as a body of people and not an administrative structure?

I like how these books were very personal–some even put the person’s name directly into the prayers–and contained family milestones in addition to church-level milestones. I think one of the greatest evils of our time is the dehumanization of everyday life, and so I’m drawn to the idea that people just made these their own.

Their lives were more precious than the book. They didn’t necessarily regard the book as having the authority.

(Maybe I’m revealing too much of my own bias here.)

I’m serious about wanting to explore more about how a Book of Hours idea might work in today’s world, and what might happen if we change the basis of the structure for our lives. If I make some other schedule the highest priority in my life–over commute times and work meetings and my desire for weekend naps–what would happen? I would have to completely reorient myself.

And isn’t that what God asks of us, anyway?

 


Extras for Experts

I am fascinated by Books of Hours

There is something absolutely intriguing to me about Medieval Books of Hours.

They have their own aesthetic. It is clear that the craftsmen worked hard to create something beautiful, but it is not the same thing that we might consider beautiful in the modern era. It’s like a different visual language. There are a lot of quirks left behind by the makers–marginalia and funny little drawings. Things that would never make it past the “professionalism” filters of our modern marketplace.

Everything is a little bit ramshackle, but obviously made with care and with love.

I love how the text is secondary. This is a book that can be read whether or not you’re actually literate.

I feel like more than ever before, this dualistic text/images way of communicating is relevant, and I want to explore more behind why this type of book worked so well and what it all means. And possibly how to harness this power for the modern era.

When I realized that Orthodox icons are merely memes, my conception of their use changed. Memes have power, but the power is in the idea–not in any particular expression of the idea. Nobody who kisses an icon thinks that they’re literally kissing the person that’s depicted–it’s what that person stands for, what they did. Their meme.

Books of Hours aren’t icons, but they share a lot of commonalities in a visual language and symbolic representation.

Anyway, I don’t know a whole lot about Books of Hours yet. This post is me setting the intention of learning more, and sharing what I learn.

I want to explore Books of Hours in how they were used, and how the shape and reflect the corporate view of time. How they conveyed memetic concepts but maybe also facts. How we might use some of these ideas in the current year.

I don’t really know where this might go, and I like it that way.

There’s a vague idea of where I’d like to end up, but I see the beginnings of a trail in the underbrush.

Let’s go exploring.

They’re trying to scare you away from the carnivore diet

There’s a saying around my parts of the internet: “If you’re taking flak, you know you’re over the target.”

Well.

A spurt of articles cropped up this week warning us all of the dangers of only eating meat. At one point I would have said it was a conspiracy, but at this point I think it’s just a knee-jerk reaction from the parts of the universe that are a) just now hearing about carnivory and b) no conception of living a life that isn’t what they’re told to live.

Here is a good place to remind you that carnivores tend to have a higher-than-average tolerance for risk.

Here is also a good place to remind you that I have yet to find an instance of a carnivore with scurvy. At this point, if somebody had the balls to stick with this diet long enough to get scurvy at all, they’d surely post about it. (If only for the clicks.)

Now I wish that a media figure would do it: quit plans out of spite to give himself scurvy and prove us all wrong, only to find out 12 months later that he’s healthy, happier than ever, and in possession of a spine for the first time in his life.

Anyway.

I’m not interested in debunking the nutrition science of the articles–that’s not my jam. There are plenty of other blogs that cover the nutrition stuff.

I’m much more interested in the rhetoric and mindset techniques. Once you see how they do it in one article, you start seeing it everywhere.

Jordan Peterson Says Meat Cured His Depression. Now His Daughter Will Tell You How It Healed Her Too — For A Fee.

You don’t even have to get past the headline on this one to run into a fallacy:

  • Capitalism is bad and anybody who is trying to sell you something is lying

What’s going on is Mikhaila Peterson is now offering online consultations, and expecting to be compensated for her time. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this, especially when a lot of people want to talk to you, and you have to figure out some way of mediating that.

The same people will tell you to go see a therapist. But it’s ok to pay a therapist because they’ll keep you within the medical system.

Sentence number one: “Mikhaila Peterson eats beef three times a day. She fries or roasts it, adds some salt, and washes it down with sparkling water — and that’s it. No fruits or vegetables. Just meat.”

Notice the word choice. FRIES.

Sure, if you’re putting a steak into a frying pan, you’re frying it. But does anybody really refer to cooking a steak as frying? No. “Frying” conjures up associations with deep frying: lots of grease and heavy, unhealthy food. (Which in itself is a slander of a good deep fry.)

Most carnivore steaks are cooked up in a cast-iron skillet with some butter. If you want to call that frying, whatever.

Then we launch into more attacks on making money: “She said she simply can’t afford to blog all the time, while raising a child, for free. (Her husband is a business consultant.)”

Why, exactly, is her husband’s profession relevant to this conversation? Unless you’re trying to imply that her husband is pushing her to make money like the dirty capitalist shark he is. Mikhaila is very up front about her intention with the consultations, and it’s definitely not along the lines of “snake oil salesman take your money and run.”

Now it’s time for battle of the inane expert quotes from people who are 200% vested in keeping their spot in the top of the expertise hierarchy.

“I don’t see any health benefits of a diet focused primarily on red meat,” said Kristen Smith, a registered dietitian nutritionist with the Academy of Nutritionists and Dietetics, who said she’s seen the carnivore diet’s popularity grow on social media. “There’s currently no research to support that this type of diet has favorable long-term health outcomes.”

vs

“Especially for somebody who’s untrained and not very knowledgeable, I think it’s dangerous for her to be pushing this as a lifestyle,” said Ethan Weiss, a cardiologist at the University of California, San Francisco. “People are very impressionable, especially people who are sick and they want to be better, and they’ll try anything. I worry that this kind of thing is taking advantage of some people who are really struggling.”

There’s that word again. Dangerous. I think I’ve heard that word spoken about her family before….

Anyway, we have two arguments from medical authority that warn us to pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. We also have a lot of unspoken assumptions:

  1. I can’t see the benefits so obviously they don’t exist
  2. Only peer reviewed research is valid and you should never listen to anybody’s story, especially not when the stories repeat themselves
  3. Only approved authorities are allowed to push things as a lifestyle
  4. You’re not smart enough to think for yourself
  5. Someone selling a $75/hour consultation is totally taking advantage of people

I’m getting tired of this article. It’s not all bad–a pretty good primer of carnivory if you overlook all of the DON’T GO OFF THE PATH messaging.

 

Please do not try to survive on an all-meat diet

This next article is funny in the pity-laugh kind of way. The author either cannot fathom the idea of doing something out of the norm, or is heavily handedly trying to scare you away from doing it, too. Or maybe both.

First of all, we have to revoke all shreds of authority from the people on Team Carnivore. The standard arguments: Shawn Baker’s medical license was revoked (he was reinstated), neither is Mikahila Peterson isn’t a real doctor (she never said she was), and psychologists like Jordan Peterson have no training in nutrition (neither do doctors, FYI).

This line kills it:

  • Mikhaila Peterson reportedly had arthritis—now she doesn’t (or at least, she thinks she doesn’t, and that’s really what counts when it comes to pain management).

No, hun. Not just arthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis–an autoimmune condition that caused her joints to deteriorate so badly she had two joint replacements by the age of 20. For those of you out there who are unfamiliar with the relentless darkness that comes with having an incurable illness, it has a HUGE impact on daily life. This isn’t just “tee hee I stubbed my toe,” this is life-altering levels of pain.

The article goes on to “debunk” in nutritional terms why the carnivore diet is totally bad for you.

I’m just gonna list my favorite words and phrases.

  • totally forego flora
  • your microbiome seems to impact everything
  • most of which fad-dieters are not consuming
  • Red meat is problematic
  • Nutritionists like Teresa Fung, who also served on a panel of experts evaluating diets for U.S. News & World Report, are scared
  • which can be especially problematic
  • seem to generally be better for you
  • could get pretty monotonous
  • make it hard to find random things to snack on throughout the day
  • Pretty much any extreme diet is going to be problematic

Except for this paragraph. This one is my favorite.

You could, arguably, take supplements for all of the deficiencies that eating only farm-raised animals brings on. Many of the diet proponents, including all of the people mentioned earlier in this article, do not promote taking supplements because they believe that meat is nutritionally complete. But if you were being smart about it you could certainly improve the diet by adding vitamin pills and fiber powder. Neither of these is as good as getting those nutrients from real, whole foods, but it’s better than nothing.

I do get my nutrients from real, whole foods.

Those foods are meat and eggs.

What are you gonna do about it?

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