The Messengers of Yesh Web Address

Friday, March 26, 2021

Tired

I'm a little too worn out to do a blog post today. In fact, I'm taking the rest of the month off.

Have a great weekend.

Friday, March 19, 2021

Oh, Canada

Last week I neglected to mention a video I watched on https://apprendre.tv5monde.com/. It was about secessionist sentiments and talked about some region in Italy that wanted more autonomy, etc. The woman in the video lives in Italy but was originally from Quebec, Canada. It's hard to describe, but she sounded like a country bumpkin/hillbilly/redneck. Imagine a French person speaking with a Hollywood fake Southern accent. It was a lot like that. TV5Monde's videos have speakers from various French-speaking countries. The difficulty of understanding them varies. The Canadian woman was understandable, but she sounded so weird.

Fun fact: As of the end of 2020, Canada had an estimated population of 38 million people. In comparison, California in 2020 had an estimated population of 40 million. Isn't the mind blowing? Canada is smaller than California. Canada is so big on the map, I've always assumed it had a lot of people living there. I was so wrong. Even small Mexico has about 128 million people.

I think California should secede and become its own country. If it wanted to take Oregon, Washington and Nevada with it, that would be perfectly okay. If Canada can make it in the world and stand on its own two feet, so can those western states. They should secede right now.

A few years ago, I thought of something to tell children like my niece and perhaps certain adults about Canada. It goes like this. Canada is so far north and is so close to the North Pole that the cities there are actually under ice that's a kilometer thick. (You have to say kilometer.) The ice slowly melts on the underside of what are essentially giant domes and drips down to form the rivers there, but the continual snowfall keeps the ice layer above the cities from ever melting. It's so dense that the bubbles that normally make ice cloudy get forced out. That's why pictures from Canadian cities have the sun in them. It's shining through the clear ice. After every snow the Canadian Department of Transportation sends out Zambonis to melt/refreeze the top layer to keep the ice clear enough for the sun to be seen. Airports have special corridors in the ice that planes have to fly through to get in and out. A lot of highways run through huge ice tunnels. The ice layer in Canada is so clear that you don't notice it in pictures, but once you're there in person, it's obvious that the pictures rely on an optical illusion.

Have a great weekend.

Friday, March 12, 2021

Homework

Instead of a blog this week, I want you to imagine a topic you really enjoy reading about. If I had blogged about that, what would I have said? Reach deep inside yourself and create a first, second and third paragraph. Include juicy tidbits and interesting facts. Think of a web site you would want to link to that topic. What draws you to that topic? Include little details that would make the blog fascinating and really hold your interest.

As part of my quest for a B2 or C1 certificate in French, I've been doing B2 French exercises on https://apprendre.tv5monde.com/. You watch a video and then do exercises. At first it was a chore, but as I got used to it, it became okay. I'm learning stuff American news doesn't cover. Last night I watched two videos in particular that I completely bombed the test on. Instead of answers, the answers were questions. It felt so abstract, especially the one for which I didn't know the topic. Sometimes, it doesn't matter how well I understand the video. The test part can be tricky with its synonyms and cultural obscurities.

Last night I also started a new book in French after finishing the absolutely dismal John Grisham book that made me quit John Grisham novels. It was The Chamber. The French title would be translated as Death Row. It was a piece of crap. At one point I set it aside and read an Isaac Asimov novel then later started it up again. It was about a lawyer trying to save a man on death row. He engages in unethical behavior, etc. At the end the man dies anyway. The whole thing was an ultra-liberal, bleeding heart liberal attack on the death penalty while almost completely ignoring the victims. As I read it, I kept asking, What about the victims?! The murderer was portrayed as noble, heroic and courageous. The attitude was that it's a darn shame about those victims, but the death penalty is the "real crime". Uh, no. We actually need to expand the death penalty to include child molesters. Well, that's it. I'm done with Grisham. I never read him back in the day anyway. The Firm and the Pelican Brief weren't bad, but I want politics out of my educational entertainment. I tried Grisham because I've been trying to read things I don't normally read. Maybe my horizons are broad enough already.

The new book I started is much better. Except for the onslaught of vocabulary and unusual expressions, that is. I'm having to constantly look things up and puzzle out the meanings of odd expressions. Combine that with the two failed video exercises, and it was almost a double whammy last night. But every new author brings a new set of vocabulary. If I can get up to speed on that, it should be much smoother sailing. The expressions I'm not sure about. I may have to learn to live with those. Maybe that's okay. It's enough of a page-turner to keep going to find out what happens next. One thing that disturbed me was having to look up a word that wasn't in my French dictionary or translatable by Google. https://www.le-dictionnaire.com/ told me it was a rare word. In YA? No, don't do that to me.

Have a great weekend.

Friday, March 5, 2021

Another Longevity Article

I posted an article the other day titled Human ageing process biologically reversed in world first. The treatment, which was putting a person in a hyperbaric chamber for 90 minutes a day for five days a week for three months while breathing 100% oxygen, increased telomere length and decreased senescent cell count. I was recommended another article called End of Ageing and Cancer? Scientists Unveil Structure of the 'Immortality' Enzyme Telomerase. Though the recommendation was new, this one dates to 2018 and relates how scientists were able to image telomerase as it was working. It was a breakthrough that should lead to more anti-ageing treatments. The article is a bit sciencey but not overwhelmingly so. The final paragraph is an important one to read.

The challenge today is to live long enough to live forever. But hang on. We see the word immortality thrown around a lot. My opinion is that that's nonsense. It's not just possible but inevitable that, short of divine intervention, we're going to cure ageing and all diseases. I concede that willingly. However, just because people won't die of old age or disease does not mean we'll be immortal. Healthy people will still die from accidents, murder, etc. We'll even be able to change our bodies to be highly resistant to injuries. Fall off a five-story building? No problem. Breathe underwater? No problem. Etc. That's still not immortality. No matter what we do, people will still be able to die.

Here's my test of immortality. If a person's body cannot survive being thrown into the sun, that person is not immortal. No matter how many times people use the word immortal, if it doesn't pass the sun test, it's not immorality.

Still. The possibility of being able to live indefinitely is awesome. Indefinitely is a long, long time.

Have a great weekend.