Sunday, November 30, 2025

Sunday Funday: Brittlestar, The Beaverton, I know you are but what am I, Amazing stuff, Comments on the passing scene, TrumpWatch, and Animal Crackers


Hey, I'm in a better mood tonight -- it was a beautiful sunny day here today, so that was great!
Anyway, here's some funny stuff and interesting stuff I found this week.

Brittlestar to start things off:
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The Beaverton strikes again!
Time magazine did an article mentioning Pete Hoekstra and included a quote about him threatening Canada with a Patriot missile - which he didn't actually do. It was a satirical post by The Beaverton.
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Courtesy of the Beaverton…satire alert.

- #Francesk🇨🇦

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I know you are but what am I?

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Amazing stuff:

This is quite a story about how a fake AI freelance writer scams magazines all over. 
First, here is Nicholas Hune-Brown's original piece about her:

"Every media era gets the fabulists it deserves." Brilliant essay/investigation by @nickhunebrown.bsky.social into journalism scammers in the age of AI. thelocal.to/investigatin...

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— Harley Rustad (@harleyrustad.com) November 19, 2025 at 8:00 AM
Next, here is The Walrus article about the scammer:

For @cstarnino.bsky.social, @nickhunebrown.bsky.social's investigation into phantom writer “Victoria Goldiee” is the must-read piece of this closing year. The pair chat about what the Goldiee-ization of journalism signals for the industry: thewalrus.ca/the-phantom-writ...

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— The Walrus (@thewalrus.ca) November 26, 2025 at 3:01 PM

What a photo!

New goal @banditelli.org, we'll get butterflies one way or another!

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— Glen Dunlap (@glendunlap.bsky.social) November 27, 2025 at 9:33 PM

Joseph Farquharson wasn’t just one of the great winter painters. He was an extraordinary painter of light…

- The Culturist

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Past societies produced so much beauty because they knew that math and beauty are deeply connected. It all started when Pythagoras discovered something mind-blowing about reality: The universe is not made of matter, but music... When walking past a blacksmith’s forge over 2,500 years ago, Pythagoras noticed a strange harmony in the clanging of hammers. He realized that two hammers make a harmonious sound if one is exactly twice as heavy as the other. He worked out that this 2:1 weight ratio produces an octave (notes separated by an octave sound alike). Likewise, a 3:2 ratio creates a perfect fifth, and 4:3 a perfect fourth. This evolved into our musical scale of today. But it wasn't just weight — a note's pitch is also inversely proportional to the length of the string that produces it. Pythagoras had discovered that sounds can be harmonious together because of a mathematical relationship between them. This got him thinking: if music is essentially math, perhaps the universe itself is also governed by mathematical patterns? Eventually, Pythagoras came to the idea that the universe and everything in it could be understood in those same terms. As math and music are interconnected, the universe too is musical, and physical matter is merely music solidified. He developed a theory called the "music of spheres," intuiting that celestial bodies "hum" a kind of music as they move, unheard by human ears: There is geometry in the humming of the strings, there is music in the spacing of the spheres. Followers of Pythagoras mapped the sun and planets, assigning each a unique tone based on their orbits and distances from Earth. We cannot hear this music with our ears, but it's heard by the soul. Pythagorean thinking carried into the Middle Ages, with Boethius explaining the 3 kinds of music: Musica mundana: unheard music of the cosmos Musica humana: harmony between body and soul Musica instrumentalis: audible music of instruments and voices These weren't just radical, isolated theories. This worldview permeated society for centuries. People believed the universe was bound by a mathematical, musical harmony. For example, if you went to university in the Middle Ages, you learned music as one of four sciences of the quadrivium: arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy. The idea was that music, math, and the cosmos were inextricably linked. The universe was deeply mathematical and God must himself be a divine geometer. So, if the universe is one great musical composition, how do you live your life to be in tune with it? Well, by making music that connects you to that divine order for one; but you can do it in visual art, too. Art from antiquity to the Renaissance and beyond tapped into that mathematical order. The Golden Ratio fascinated artists from Da Vinci to William Blake, who knew mathematical harmony touches us with a sense of otherworldly calm. In architecture, cathedral builders wove Gothic facades with immensely complex geometry. As Pythagoras had found harmony in the mathematical order of music, geometry could produce visual harmony. Music and visual beauty were bound by the same divine forces — notice the similarity of vibrations of musical notes in water and rose windows, for example. In the words of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Music is liquid architecture; architecture is frozen music. Medieval people's obsession with math might seem strange or unnecessary to the modern-day architect — but the results speak for themselves…

- The Culturist

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Wouldn't it be marvelous to get to this event some day?
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Comments on the passing scene:

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OMG yes please

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— Manyakitty (@manyakitty.bsky.social) November 24, 2025 at 11:06 AM

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- Kat Rigel

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I found arguments about this post in the comments -- but in my mother's generation, even women pre-1950 who would have described themselves as "housewives" often had some paying work (taking in boarders, selling eggs, etc):
28 years ago and still hilarious:
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Not all rich people are assholes:

"Perhaps not coincidentally, Steve Wozniak is -- unlike Musk, Thiel, Zuckerberg, Altman, and the vast, vast majority of Silicon Valley celebrity CEOs -- an actual, genuine, no-bullshit tech genius and innovator."

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— Sister Golden Bear (@sistergoldenbear.bsky.social) November 24, 2025 at 12:11 AM

TrumpWatch - posts about the world's most wished-for event
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Shot: Chaser:
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Animal Crackers
What a story this is -- thanks to Ghost Warrior for alerting me to it on Bluesky:

During the evacuation of animals in Kostiantynivka, Donetsk region, volunteers of the Animal Rescue Kharkiv organization became a 'taxi service' for Ukrainian Defenders. One of the soldiers jokingly said he'll be an air defense, and that's what actually happened -

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— Anton Gerashchenko (@antongerashchenko.bsky.social) November 27, 2025 at 2:51 PM

Nate Bargatze on Saturday Night Live:
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a short story about decisions..

- Nenad Georgievski

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comfortable

- Carlita Shaw

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And I might have posted this or something similar about cats a couple of weeks ago, but if so, its still worth repeating:
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