simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2025-01-06 08:24 pm

checkpoint, jan 6 2025

Feels worth writing something today.

The prior five presidential elections have seen dramatic swings in the number of people voting for Democrats. 59 million for Kerry, 69 million for Obama, almost 66 million for both Obama's reelection and for Clinton, 81 million for Biden, and 75 million for Harris. In the same elections, 62 million people voted for Bush, 60 million for McCain, 61 million for Romney, 62 million for Trump, 74 million for Trump, 77 million for Trump. (Not quite a majority of voters, in the end. Effectively half.)

I am completely uninterested in backseat driving whether Harris should have run a different campaign. There was a strategy, it was executed. It is my opinion that the strategy was executed reasonably well. A major part of that strategy was to appeal to people like Liz Cheney and those she might convince — Republicans shocked and scandalized by the blatant corruption at home and abroad, straightforward attempts to shake down allies for political gain as exemplified by the attempted arms-for-claiming-that-biden-is-corrupt deal with Ukraine that led to the first impeachment, and unambiguous attempts to subvert bedrock parts of the institutions and traditions that make our country meaningfully a democracy as exemplified by the fake elector slates, pressure campaign on Pence, and the violence of January 6 2021 that led to the second impeachment.

To a rounding error, the scandalized republicans don't exist. The number of people that are interested in the anti-abortion, anti-trans, anti-immigrant, anti-tax, anti-welfare milieu that makes up the modern right — folks like Liz Cheney, in other words — and who care about the rule of law, about fair political play, about existing in a nation of laws — they might as well be a rounding error. They could probably fill a pretty good stadium, and they will never, ever, be able to swing an election. Harris and her campaign did an absolutely stellar job of trying to reach those people. The choice laid out was between belief in the rule of law and the preservation of our system of government on one hand, and vengeance against immigrants and, I guess, the price of eggs? The rule of law argument convinced, effectively, nobody. Individuals, sure. But for all it mattered for the election: no one. That's my one clear takeaway from the peaceful transfer of power that happened today. I don't know what to do, I have no positive suggestions, but I will move forward under the well-tested assumption that nobody on the right is persuadable by an argument that having rules that generally apply to everyone is good, and that folks ought not to be above the law.

simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2020-05-31 09:21 am

(no subject)

Reports in Raleigh that there were Proud Boys instigating violence against property are extremely credible.

At Wilmington and Davie last night, I saw a group of primarily quite young, primarily Black people surround a cop car and realize that they had power and control when they acted together. The mood was tense and joyous; I felt much safer near that crowd than I did anywhere near areas where police were asserting control.

Online, I saw protest organizers focus on the first narrative and deny the second one, because it was not their narrative. Frankly, people who claimed "the escalation was only police" lost a lot of credibility in my eyes. (The police escalated further, and more broadly.)

At the same time, most of those leaders that lost credibility were reasonably upset and reacting to having attached their names to an event that they wanted to be gentler.

There may not be enough shared trust for a Hong Kong like strategy where different groups of "brave fighter" and "non-violent peaceful" protesters are able to coordinate, support each other, and (when desired) stay out of each other's way.

simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2018-08-14 09:32 pm

An ending

Kallisti, Chris's dear cat and mine as well by way of marriage and adoption, died at 2:15am on Monday morning.

This is a very long and explicit discussion of the death of a cat. )
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2017-12-03 10:16 am
Entry tags:

What a card

We're sending out $HOLIDAY cards this year, if you'd like to receive one leave your address as a comment (all comments will be screened, I'll delete your comment once I've recorded your address).
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2017-10-08 01:41 pm

(no subject)

So you know that thing where your friend posts a hilarious review of a Frobbles Bar Deluxe on Amazon, you click on it to look, and for the next week, all across the web, you're getting ads for Frobble Pro, Frobbles Foo Bazzes, and Frobbles Unlimited everywhere on the web?

I always assumed this was because I'd tripped some Mysterious Neural Network thing somewhere Deep In The Algorithm, but it's actually a lot simpler: "remarketing" is an option that a lot of web-advertising companies support, and it basically just means that rather than targeting by location or demographic, you say you want to try to show your ads to people who have been to your website or viewed your product lately.

That's both creepier AND less creepy than I assumed. Creepier because of the tracking it implies, but less creepy because - an advertiser wanting to remind me of a thing I did actually did before makes a lot of sense and is kind of something I almost want, being-advertised-to-person-wise.

simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2017-02-01 11:22 am
Entry tags:

Five days of dissent

Friday: went to a refugees-are-welcome in Durham. Listened to a lot of refugee stories. Glad I went, especially given that we didn't really understood the magnitude of the atrocity that was going off in Washington DC at the time. Need to stop going to things in other places, the driving 30minutes both ways combined with the protest combined with needing to find parking and food in an unfamiliar place and I was basically shot for the whole afternoon.

Saturday: ended up being a day off, I tried to go to a organizing thing but couldn't find it. Made up for it by doing two things Monday. >.<

Sunday: went to RDU. It was a pretty beautiful thing, especially the large numbers of (apparently by dress) Muslim participants, especially teenagers and kids. Then the permit got revoked and the police broke it up without contest, and while the overall action got good reviews (the crowd had grown to 10x the permit) it reminds me that I haven't really been to a protest, yet and I don't know how much stomach I or others have for actually standing up.

Monday: went to Thom Tillis's local office, a first. There was a woman ahead of me in line, we were told they were talking to one person at a time. But we were both invited back. The woman wrote down her concerns on the sign in and then said she'd come to pray for the lives of the innocent refugee children we were sending to their deaths. The local office is tiny and she lost her nerve a bit: she said she'd go outside the door into the hallway to pray. I asked if I could join her. She tentatively asked about my religion, and I got to use the "oh I'm Unitarian, so I'm up for whatever" line. And this is how I ended up kneeling in front of Thom Tillis's office doing ten hail marys on my Monday lunch break. She indicated that this was her first political action ever (hence the nervousness), and I thanked her for giving me the opportunity to pray with her. I wish I'd asked her to join me back there same time tomorrow. I wish I'd brought her back into the office with me and we'd figured out when we could both meet with the Senator in person. So, some missed opportunities there, but not an experience I'll forget. (Same story on Twitter thread.)

Also Monday: went to my usual death penalty protest, stood in the cold for an hour by the jail. A new math grad student at State came by and stood with us. I joked with the regulars that, extrapolating from when I showed up, our average age was going down so quickly that we'd all be high schoolers by fall.

Tuesday: went to the state house and followed through on this tweet. Introduced myself to the assistant for my representative and senator; both were on my side, appreciative, told me this stuff mattered, and generally gave me civic warm fuzzies. For the house speaker and senate president, both Republicans, I just said "I wanted to give this message about how HB-2 has affected me and my career" and scrammed.
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2017-01-23 08:20 pm
Entry tags:

Raleigh Activism

This is a post collects information I wish I'd had upon moving to Raleigh, because a friend asked for it and I thought it might be worth collecting in a blog post. It only refers to the limited set of organizations I've had specific interaction with, it's snarky about the things I love, retweets are not endorsements.

Blog Content! )
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2017-01-09 05:04 pm
Entry tags:

Political carbon offsets

If I end up paying TurboTax again, effectively rewarding them for their continued lobbying to make taxes painful to do, is there an organization effectively fighting their existence that I can give twice as much money to?
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2016-12-26 02:23 pm
Entry tags:

North Carolina

In the past two weeks I've spent a lot of time either at the NC State legislature (2 blocks from where I work, conveniently) or following the various clusterfucks there. This is just my own personal recollections of what happened, and it may not be interesting to others.

first clusterfuck )

second clusterfuck )

simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2014-04-20 09:13 am

How many repetitions does it take before there's an available domain name?

2 - zonezone.zone
2 - academyacademy.academy
2 - buildersbuilders.builders
3 - guruguruguru.guru
4 - bikebikebikebike.bike
5 - ususususus.us
5 - orgorgorgorgorg.org
6 - netnetnetnetnetnet.net
8 - comcomcomcomcomcomcomcom.com

2017 Update:
4 - zonezonezonezone.zone
3 - academyacademyacademy.academy
2 - buildersbuilders.builders
3 - guruguruguru.guru
4 - bikebikebikebike.bike
7 - ususususususus.us
6 - orgorgorgorgorgorg.org
∞ - all repeated .nets from 1-21 are taken!
21 - comcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcom.com

As of 2017, five-coms dot com is available through GoDaddy if you have a couple thousand dollars to spare, and two-academy dot academy is a premium domain available for $20.
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2011-12-12 09:27 pm

Fun fun fun 'til her daddy takes the S-box away

One of the most fun non-research things I've had the opportunity to do in graduate school is interview people with interesting backgrounds doing extraordinary things with computer science and then write about them for a computer science audience. All these are available from here.

My most recent profile, of the outgoing technical director of the NSA's Information Assurance Directorate, is twice as long as my previous ones, because, damn, it's the outgoing technical director of the NSA's Information Assurance Directorate. This felt a lot like Real Journalism, what with the interviews, synthesis of various first-person and second-person sources, and combing through IBM technical reports and recently declassified (through FOIA) internal histories of the National Security Agency.

There were two great tidbits I couldn't figure out how to include even given twice my normal wordcount, from little lines about life at the NSA like "People come in and they do miraculous things every day" to the line "There are not enough women in this field right now, and we really need to address this problem...We’re certainly not going to out-people them if half the people aren’t getting into the game" which is awesome both because it presents the fact that women are discouraged from involvement in computer science as a medium-term threat to national security - that's a new framing - while simultaneously showing George's cold-war origins by falling into the trope of the enemy-as-unspecified-they.

2017 Update: Wow, a lot of this reads differently in the year of our Luigi twenty seventeen, huh.

In March 2012, George wrote me back to complement the article. I particularly like that he said "I sent the article to NSA's public affairs Office and they thought it was great - fair, well written, even interesting."
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2011-08-02 01:53 pm
Entry tags:

The View From My Window

I read Andrew Sullivan's blog, where one of the features is "The View From Your Window", where people take pictures from their windows. Simple enough.

While I was in Nancy for CLMPS, the only conference I've ever attended with a chemistry track, I took a picture from the dorm room where I was staying and it was published on the blog. So that's my most widely-seen publication for the last three years, easily, at least until my video lectures on Constructive Provability Logic go viral, Rebecca-Black style ;-).
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2011-05-25 11:56 am
Entry tags:

Focus

Used a not-terrifically-worded question on MathOverflow and the fact that I had two hours to kill as an excuse to finally write out the cut-and-identity-based proof of the completeness of (weak) focusing for the negative fragment, where you don't have to admit that it's only weak focusing. I wrote out all the details in the Weak Focusing for Ordered Linear Logic tech report, but that TR has way the hell too much other stuff going on.