Kevin Drum (1958-2025)

I am sad to report that Kevin Drum’s wife Marian posted on his blog that he had died on Friday, March 7th. In 2014, he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, the severity of which fluctuated with the various treatments that he underwent. He wrote openly about his travails with the disease but was never self-pitying or maudlin.

I was a regular reader of his blog starting from the days when he started out as a private blogger Calpundit in 2003 and then moving on to start the blog Political Animal at the Washington Monthly magazine, then to blogging at Mother Jones, before going back to a personal blog again, now called Jabberwocking, in 2021.

While I did not always agree with his politics (he was a little too mainstream liberal, centrist Democrat for my taste), I respected him for his data-driven approach to the news. He wrote well and would take news items and subject them to rigorous fact-checking and often present the results in the form of easy-to-understand charts. He was a big advocate of the idea that lead was a major cause of aggressive behavior in people and I found his arguments and the data he presented in support of it persuasive.

He was a sane, positive, stabilizing presence in the chaotic world of internet punditry and he will be missed.

Insulting federal workers

My earlier post about how some of the people getting fired by Musk-Trump are also getting abuse from their friends and relatives showed how those people seemed to view the fired federal workers as somehow parasites, enjoying a life of luxury off the backs of hardworking taxpayers and doing little to earn their keep, just goofing off while drawing a paycheck.

This misunderstands the nature of work. I suspect that most people, whether in the public or private sector, take pride in doing a good job. It is part of one’s sense of self-worth to know that one is pulling one’s weight and not dragging other people down. It is usually just those who have been treated badly by their employers who try to get away with doing nothing, perhaps out of a sense of grievance or getting revenge. Some of course are incorrigibly lazy but I doubt that they constitute more than a tiny fraction.
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Canadians are mad at Trump and the US

Of all the fights that Trump has instigated, the most pointless seems to be the one with Canada. For a country that has been a good neighbor, a loyal ally, and with a great deal in common linguistically and culturally, Trump’s insulting attitude towards them is mystifying. And it looks like they have had enough.

President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods, coming on the heels of his taunting threats to make the country the 51st U.S. state, are eroding the inherent politeness of Americans’ northern neighbors and rallying them around their own flag.

Canadians are removing American liquor and California wines from their store shelves. They’re pulling back on future visits to the U.S. They’re pushing “Buy Canadian” to counter higher costs and spite Trump. And they are uncharacteristically brandishing unvarnished anger over what they see as a betrayal by a longtime friend.

“I will never visit America again,” Angela Qin, a university student, told NBC News as she exited an ice rink in downtown Toronto. “You don’t stab the back of your friend.”

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Fear of spiders

At my university, the secretary in my office was a woman who had previously served in the army. She was young, strong, and tough but let her find a spider, however small, anywhere in the office and she would freak out, rushing to my office to tell me to get rid of it while she stayed as far away as possible. It was no use my saying that spiders are harmless and that they are actually helpful in getting rid of other insects that are actually harmful, like mosquitoes. She didn’t want to hear it. She wanted it gone and I had no choice but to comply.

But spiders are ubiquitous so arachnophobes have a tough time because there is no habitable place on Earth where you are free of them. This article in the February 17 & 24, 2025 edition of The New Yorker by Katheryn Schulz, a self-described arachnophobe, reviews a lavishly illustrated book The Lives of Spiders by Ximena Nelson that takes a comprehensive look at the immense variety of spiders who occupy pretty much the entire world. The statistics are staggering.
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Musk family values

(Doonesbury)

Even cartoonist Garry Trudeau, who is usually up-do-date on his references, cannot keep up. Musk just announced the birth of his 14th child.

But even that might be understating the number. As Gideon Lewis-Kraus writes:

He has sired, at least in a technical sense, thirteenish known children, and has reportedly offered the dispensation of his sperm to friends, employees, and people he met once at a dinner party. (Musk denies this. Skeptics of the strategy, though, might recall that Genghis Khan, according to legend, had more than a thousand offspring.)

News you can’t use?

A new study finds that the ‘quality’ of a man’s sperm correlates with their longevity.

Sperm may be the canaries in the coalmine for male health, according to research that reveals men with higher-quality semen live longer.

Danish scientists analysed samples from nearly 80,000 men and found that those who produced more than 120 million swimming sperm per ejaculate lived two to three years longer than those who produced fewer than 5 million.

The men with the highest-quality sperm lived to 80.3 years old on average, compared with 77.6 for those with the poorest-quality sperm, the researchers report in Human Reproduction.

“It really seems to be that the better the semen quality, the longer the survival,” said Dr Lærke Priskorn, an epidemiologist at Copenhagen university hospital, who led the study with Dr Niels Jørgensen, an andrologist at the hospital.

This is a major longitudinal study with a large sample of 60,000 people done over 30 years. I hesitate to critique scientific research based on newspaper reports but what one is to do with this information beats me, and the report’s only statement about possible benefits is rather weak.

The researchers now want to find out which diseases are more common in men with poor semen quality. If particular conditions are identified, doctors could ultimately advise men on preventive action should sperm analysis show they are at risk.

You. can read more here.

Women have long complained that much more time and money and effort is spent on research on even relatively minor aspects of men’s health while research on women’s health is underserved. This kind of news will lend support to that belief.

Film review: Around the World in 80 Days (1956)

I posted recently about how the 1956 film Around the World in 80 Days played a role in explaining the sudden popping into my mind of the actor-singer Gracie Fields. As a boy I had read and enjoyed Jules Verne’s 1873 book of the same name on which the film is based but had not seen the film when it came out, presumably because I was too young. In those days in Sri Lanka, if you did not see a film during its first run release, it was pretty much gone forever.

So I decided to watch it now. It is a long and extravagant film done on a large scale, lasting about three hours. David Niven is perfect in the role of the fastidious and punctilious Phileas Fogg who makes a bet for £20,000 with four members of his stuffy mens-only London club that he can go around the world in 80 days. Cantinflas plays his valet Passepartout and provides most of the comedy. He actually dominates the film, seemingly having more screen time than Niven. He has the dress, stature, and some of the mannerisms of Charlie Chaplin and the facial expressions of Chico Marx. There are about 40 famous international actors making cameo appearances and about 70,000 extras from around the world. It was done in a widescreen format.
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