clickbait

The CNN site is always full of trashy clickbait headings. Today, “The princess who could be PM”, “Delta and Coke thought these flirtatious napkins were clever”, “Scary video shows bus flip hitting ice”, “Why Ariana Grande won’t be at the Grammy Awards”. Even when the story might actually be worth looking at, they sometimes use these titles.

Thoughts about immigration and adopted identities

Having lived most of my life outside the country of my birth I often have thoughts about this.  For many people, group identity is a matter of importance.  Here in Israel/Palestine I have seen many newcomers go to great lengths to integrate into one or the other society.  Some people also seem to see a deficiency in their original identity, and try to adopt a new identity even without really needing to on a practical level. For example, they have converted to Judaism, taken on something of the national ethos, but then gone back to their own countries.  Or they have taken up the Palestinian cause, and sometimes converted to Islam, and continued in this while living elsewhere.

Different types of newcomers:

There are some immigrants who spend long years painstakingly adopting and perfecting a new national, linguistic, tribal or religious identity (these sometimes go together).

There are some who are natural chamelions and quickly adjust; without necessarily taking any new group identity to heart.  They would just as easily adapt to living in a third country.

There are some who live in a new country but staunchly resist its influence, asserting their foreigness and maintaining their love for their former country (sometimes without realizing that they have been subtly changed by their adopted country, and probably would not be able to live again easily “back home”.  I think this has been true of my parents.

There are some who live a double life – pretending to “belong” when they are dealing with citizens of the new country, but privately living and keeping up the attitudes and prejudices of the former country.

There are some for whom group identities are unimportant.  They take the trouble to understand the outlook of people in their adopted country: their red lines, hangups, prejudices, and the things that make them happy, proud, or provoke favourable responses.  But they don’t go out of their way to change themselves.  They don’t feel a need to take on a new identity package because of this, or feel any need to abandon a former national, linguistic, tribal or religious identity.

I think  I am closest to the last category.  Group identities or membership in them are not so important to me.  I have no doubt gradually accrued certain traits from the places I have lived.  This is not so much a conscious process, but happens all the same.  There is no particular country where I feel entirely at home, and whereever I go I feel something of a foreigner.  But this doesn’t really affect me.

The Uninhabitable Earth

audio – Guardian interview with the writer, David Wallace-Wells
https://www.theguardian.com/news/audio/2019/feb/05/is-climate-change-way-worse-than-we-realise-today-in-focus-podcast
He expanded the original NY magazine article into a book

GIMP works again

Success! Spent an hour hunting down the culprit – a rogue libbabl version – but GIMP now works again.

Lost Crown

By chance I wandered last week into the Jerusalem cinematheque for a screening, in the presence of the director, of “The Lost Crown“. It’s a doco-detective story about the fate of the Aleppo Codex, a thousand year old medieval manuscript now in the Israel Museum, but minus hundreds of missing pages. Over the years a couple of these have turned up, but when a dealer tried to offer another 30 pages he was found dead, in mysterious circumstances. The film debates whether the theft of the missing pages could have been an inside job and if so, by whom? A former Israeli president? A deputy? an archivist? There’s a dedicated website inviting viewers to help solve the mystery.

G-Suite on Linux

Because the current iteration of Google Drive works painfully slowly in Mozilla based browsers, I tried installing Chrome. Drive works a little faster, but it won’t let me share folders – I’ve tried in two different computers. In my desktop computer, Gmail now won’t open at all in Chrome.

Of course, Linux has no native support for Drive Stream, and I once had a bad experience once with InSync – it moved a lot of personal files into the office folders. I also tried Gnome accounts, but couldn’t get that to work. There’s ocamlfuse, but reading about the set up makes me feel weary. I need G-Suite only for my office job, but it’s becoming increasingly difficult.