Categories
Seasons

Remembering Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Last Saturday, I woke up to a text that our beloved Supreme Court Justice and equal rights warrior had passed on the eve of Rosh Hashanah, September 18th, 2020. This NPR news story confirmed the bad news. The supreme court blog has a detailed post honoring her life. This video is a quick summary of her in her own words, something she was passionate about using.

Like so many that have admired her work, I have been struggling to mourn her loss and make sense of what her absence might mean. For me, that means reading the words she leaves behind.

Some favorite quotes:

“My mother was very strong about my doing well in school and living up to my potential. Two things were important to her and she repeated them endlessly. One was to ‘be a lady,’ and that meant conduct yourself civilly, don’t let emotions like anger or envy get in your way. And the other was to be independent, which was an unusual message for mothers of that time to be giving their daughters.”
― Ruth Bader Ginsburg, My Own Words

“I tell law students… if you are going to be a lawyer and just practice your profession, you have a skill—very much like a plumber. But if you want to be a true professional, you will do something outside yourself… something that makes life a little better for people less fortunate than you.The Mercury News, February 6, 2017

“So often in life, things that you regard as an impediment turn out to be great, good fortune.”

“Women belong in all places where decisions are being made. It shouldn’t be that women are the exception.”

“Fight for the things that you care about, but do it in a way that will lead others to join you.”

“When I’m sometimes asked when will there be enough [women on the Supreme Court] and I say, ‘When there are nine,’ people are shocked. But there’d been nine men, and nobody’s ever raised a question about that.”

“I don’t say women’s rights—I say the constitutional principle of the equal citizenship stature of men and women.”
“Women will have achieved true equality when men share with them the responsibility of bringing up the next generation.”

“Reliance on overbroad generalizations … estimates about the way most men or most women are, will not suffice to deny opportunity to women whose talent and capacity place them outside the average description,” said Ruth Bader Ginsburg in a majority opinion that allowed women into a military academy, frequently using examples of how discrimination based on sex hurts men too. But “Some of my favorite opinions are dissenting opinions,” Ginsburg told NPR. “I will not live to see what becomes of them, but I remain hopeful.”

In 1979, she shared Some Thoughts on Judicial Authority to Repair Unconstitutional Legislation. She introduced the topic with, “Among governing institutions, the judiciary has been described as”the least dangerous branch.”‘ Courts in our system have the awesome power to declare laws unconstitutional, but judges command no troops, and are said to lack the power of the purse. My remarks address a facet of the purse power supposition: When a legislative product is constitutionally infirm because it is under-inclusive, what remedies lie within the judicial province? Discussion will focus on the question whether a court may order inclusion of a category of persons left out by the legislature, a question particularly pointed when the court’s inclusion order would mandate increased government spending.”

In 2010, she shared The Role of Dissenting Opinions, opened saying “It is a subject I have had to think about more than occasionally in recent terms.” and closed with, “although I appreciate the value of unanimous opinions, I will continue to speak in dissent when important matters are at stake.”

May her memory be a blessing.

Categories
Seasons

Shana Tovah!

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Let’s borrow from our Jewish brothers and sisters today and take this opportunity to think about the wrongs we are responsible for and how we can make amends. It’s a beautiful fall day. Why carry hurt with us into the next season of our lives? Probably because it is easier to hide and ignore our shadow sides. But remember: it takes a lot of compost to grow a beautiful garden.

Categories
Seasons

Light and Shadow

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“When you light a candle, you also cast a shadow.” ― Ursula K. Le Guin

Notice the contrast between light and shadows today. Play with the contrast. Sunlight has already completed a long journey to reach you. This is mindbogglingly more true for other star light. Light reflected from the moon reminds us that not all journeys are a neat path from A to B.

Watch dust trace out the fractals of Brownian motion. So much is going on all around us, with or without our attention, but waiting there for us when we tune into it.

Categories
Natural Seasons

Happy Autumnal Equinox!


This video from NASA shows how the Earth was illuminated between 9/19/2010 and 9/19/2011 from the vantage point of a geosynchronous satellite.

Groups of people have long celebrated this day marking the beginning of fall for us norther hemisphere dwellers. The equal hours of day and night for which the day is named is slightly dependent on latitude because of how sunrise and sunset are defined (the edge of the sun passing the horizon vs. the center of the sun). For all of us, today is the day that the tilt of the Earth points neither toward nor away from the sun. We pass through this balance point as the sun’s most direct rays pass from the northern to the southern hemisphere. Instead of the moon rising 50 minutes later than the day before, there is a period around the equinox that it only rises 30 or 40 minutes later, leading to more light earlier in the night, traditionally good for harvests.

The equinox is the harbinger of change, as days shorten and nights lengthen and warm seasons become cool. Now is the time for harvest, reaping the rewards of the seeds you planted earlier, for deciding what is important enough to you to protect for the coming winter, and cutting away the things that won’t weather. Let us honor this day by choosing a recent victory or achievement to celebrate and finding one thing to donate, throw away, stop doing or otherwise choose to let fall away. It takes a lot of compost to grow a beautiful garden.

Categories
Seasons

Hello world!

Welcome to my blog. Since this blog is a collection of my research and thoughts about petroleum and potential plant-based replacements for both petroleum-derived fuels and chemicals, let’s start with petroleum. Most Americans have a vague sense of what it is. Petroleum is the liquified left overs of biological materials from the time of the dinosaurs that has been transformed by the heat and pressure inside the earth into a dark, gooey crude oil that is pumped out of the Earth and refined to make modern societies go. As such, it is worth a lot of money, and therefore people fight over it. Wikipedia has a lovingly maintained, much longer summary here for the curious.