It's only been a couple weeks since I decided to do all of my blogging/writing from One Big Text File and I love it. There is zero friction. All of my posts are in one file along with my daily interstitial notes. I'm using Textastic to do the writing though the file is in my Obsidian folder so I can easily jump back to Obsidian as desired. The method is incredibly simple, quick and easy.

Any new draft post goes to the top of the file and is tagged as a draft. I currently have three. The current day's notes are just below it. This means I can easily jump to current, in-process posts when I've got time or the desire to write.

A screenshot of the Textastic App on an iPad showing the Symbols List dropdown feature

When a post gets published I replace the draft tag with published along with any other keyword tags and move it under the current day's notes. It could not be easier to manage. Referencing old posts is also easier as posts are neatly filed under the dated notes for each day. I can keyword search or use Textastic's "Symbol List" which is a handy little dropdown list in the toolbar that lets me see Markdown header items such as the date for each day's notes as well as any hashtags which break out the various posts. I can scroll down with a flick to quickly navigate the document. It almost seems too easy.

And the file is only 78 KB. Basic txt files for the win!


A brief exploration of alternative browsers on iPad

A few months ago I started encountering a bit of bugginess with Safari on the iPad. Nothing major but annoying enough that I thought I’d look around at the various browser options. With Safari as the standard here’s a short summary what I’ve found thus far. I’ll note, there are other browsers not listed here but I’ve not used them enough to form an opinion.

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The 70,000 workers showing the world another way to earn a living | The Guardian

As a fully signed-up member, Fernández co-owns part of the supermarket chain that also employs her. “It feels like mine,” she says. “We work hard, but it’s a totally different feeling from working for someone else.”

That sentiment is echoed by Mondragón’s 70,000 other workers. Made up of 81 autonomous co-operatives, the corporation has grown since its creation in 1956 to become a leading force in the Basque economy.


I’m guessing White House statements on the recent crackdown on-campus protests against Israel and Biden’s support of the TikTok ban are going over really well with the younger folk that he’s so popular with.


Excellent commentary on recent White House statements on anti-semitism and the current protests against Israel. Just as Judaism is not Zionism, protests of Israel are not anti-semitism.

Manufactured Panic Over Peaceful Campus Protests Used To Distract From Genocide In Gaza - YouTube:

The White House Deputy press secretary putting out that particular statement once again makes it seem as though these protests are anti-semitic in nature against Jewish people broadly, it furthers a culture of violence toward Jewish people by continuing to conflate Zionism with Judaism…


Klein is lighting the way forward.

Naomi Klein: Jews Must Raise Their Voices for Palestine, Oppose the “False Idol of Zionism” | Democracy Now!

Thousands of Jewish Americans and allies gathered in Brooklyn on Tuesday for a “Seder in the Streets to Stop Arming Israel” on the second night of Passover…

“Too many of our people are worshiping a false idol, they are enraptured by it. They are drunk on it. They are profaned by it. And that false idol is called Zionism.” - Naomi Klein


Human solidarity.

“Seder in the Streets to Stop Arming Israel” | Democracy Now!

Hundreds of protesters were arrested in Brooklyn on Tuesday when Jewish New Yorkers and allies gathered for what they called a “Seder in the Streets to Stop Arming Israel” on the second night of Passover…

“At the core of the Passover story is that we cannot be free until all people are free… The Israeli government and the United States government are carrying out a genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, over 34,000 people killed in six months in the name of Jewish safety, in the false name of Jewish freedom.”


I first watched Koyaanisqatsi sometime around 1990 and I was left speechless. I cried while I watched it and after.

Without words it tells the story of modern industrial human societies, particularly those of the Global North. A story of alienation, cruelty and destruction that was well underway at the time it was filmed and which we’ve seen continue at increased pace in the 40 years since. And, in 2024, it would seem that it is a story we will not deviate from.

Five translations of the Hopi word koyaanisqatsi:

“crazy life"“life in turmoil"“life out of balance"“life disintegrating"“a state of life that calls for another way of living”

In the years since I’ve watched it again several times as a kind of ongoing acknowledgement meditation. We are racing into oblivion.

According to the director:

“These films have never been about the effect of technology, of industry on people. It’s been that everyone: politics, education, things of the financial structure, the nation state structure, language, the culture, religion, all of that exists within the host of technology. So it’s not the effect of, it’s that everything exists within [technology]. It’s not that we use technology, we live technology. Technology has become as ubiquitous as the air we breathe …”

The trailer.


Pro-Palestinian Campus Encampments Spread Nationwide Amid Mass Arrests at Columbia, NYU & Yale | Democracy Now!

Palestinian solidarity protests and encampments are appearing on college campuses from Massachusetts to California to protest Israel’s attacks on Gaza and to call for divestment from Israeli apartheid. This week, police have raided encampments and arrested students at Yale and New York University….

Uptown in New York City, the encampment at Columbia University is entering its seventh day despite mass arrests of protesters last week.


Great to see these protests gaining momentum.

CrimethInc. : Report from within the Cal Poly Humboldt Building Occupation : The Occupation of Siemens Hall

On April 22, 2024, inspired by the resilience of the Gaza solidarity encampment at Columbia University and other demonstrations around the country, students at Cal Poly Humboldt campus in Arcata, California occupied a building in solidarity with Palestinians, precipitating a showdown with police from throughout the region. In the following report, participants in the occupation describe what took place and what they learned.


According to a UN report published in September 2023 settler violence against Palestinians has been increasing for years. Of course the settlements are land theft and are illegal under international law.

Settler violence against Palestinians in the West Bank – visualized | The Guardian

Settlers are Israeli citizens who live on Palestinian land. In most cases, this happens because Palestinians are prevented from accessing their land and are physically attacked by settlers. In a third of cases, Palestinian property is damaged by settlers.


‘Children won’t be able to survive’: inter-American court to hear from climate victims | The Guardian

The inquiry was instigated by Colombia and Chile, which together asked the court to set out what legal responsibilities states have to tackle climate change and to stop it breaching people’s human rights.


Religious extremists do not accept or respect boundaries. They want to control it all and this is just a taste of what they want.

With This Week’s Abortion Case, Supreme Court Faces Grim Reality of Overturning Roe – Mother Jones

Just weeks after the Supreme Court ended the Constitutional right to an abortion in the summer of 2022, Mylissa Farmer arrived at a hospital in Joplin, Missouri after her water broke at about 18 weeks pregnant. The doctors agreed that the fetus had no chance of survival and that she needed to end her pregnancy to avoid sepsis, hemorrhage, or even death. But instead of helping to induce labor or perform an abortion, they urged her to go to another state for care: Under Missouri’s just-triggered abortion ban,they couldn’t provide the care she needed until she was in labor or her health deteriorated and her life was in peril.


Most nations have resumed funding to UNRWA which is the main channel of humanitarian support to Palestinians in Gaza as well as Palestinian refugees across the region. But with no evidence the US Congress permanently banned funding to UNRWA agency.

The US and Israel: Genocide, war crimes, apartheid.

Israel “has yet to provide supporting evidence” of its claims that employees of the UN relief agency UNRWA are members of terrorist organisations, an independent review led by the former French foreign minister | The Guardian


Alt headline: Israel expects the US to indefinitely and unconditionally support its war crimes, genocide, land theft and apartheid state.

Israel presses the U.S. to reconsider sanctions against IDF battalion

The Israeli government called on the Biden administration on Sunday in public and in private to reconsider its expected decision to sanction the Israel Defense Forces' “Netzah Yehuda” battalion for human rights violations in the occupied West Bank.


I never noticed that when magnified some of the Calyptra (oval ends of sporophytes) look a little bit like long sharp teeth!

A new-to-me moss, Plagiomnium cuspidatum. Very pretty with smooth, thin leaves.

A mound of various species of vibrant green mosses. Thirty to forty orange sporophytes grow from the center. These are thin tendrils with hollow, oval shaped ends that disperse seeds.
A mound of various species of vibrant green mosses. Orange sporophytes grow from the center. Close up these are thin tendrils with hollow, oval shaped ends that have a perforated end that has the appearance of sharp teeth..
A close-up photo of vibrant green moss with tiny, thin, semi-translucent leaves.

I posted earlier today that I’d seen a drop off in reporting on the famine in Gaza. The April 9 article from Human Rights Watch that I linked was reporting famine stats from April 2. I’ve not seen any more recent stats. We’re now at April 20 and articles like the following from the Guardian today continue to describe the famine as looming with little to no new information. Is this just the result of journalists being restricted from the area?

Gaza death toll passes 34,000 as Israel and Iran missile strikes grab global attention | The Guardian

Famine looms, made worse by acute shortages of shelter, medicine and clean water. Almost everyone in the enclave now depends on donated food, after more than six months of war has destroyed homes and decimated Gaza’s economy.

Daily aid shipments are still not even half the minimum levels the UN says are needed to keep more than two million people alive.

Israeli authorities, the US and humanitarian organisations have all said that deliveries should return to prewar levels of about 500 truckloads of aid a day. On Friday, only 250 trucks entered the enclave, UN figures showed, and that was the highest in April.


After more looking I’m still finding little in the way of recent updates. Suddenly intentional famine as a weapon doesn’t matter? Or is everyone in Gaza getting food?

Gaza: Israel’s Imposed Starvation Deadly for Children | Human Rights Watch

Gaza’s Health Ministry reported as of April 1, that 32 people, including 28 children, had died of malnutrition and dehydration at hospitals in northern Gaza. Save the Children confirmed on April 2 the deaths from starvation and disease of 27 children.


Media reports of famine in Gaza have dropped to near zero in the past 5 days. So is the food suddenly flowing in or is it just the attention span of the media shifting to the Iran story? I did find this:

Netanyahu, Germany’s Baerbock said to have clashed over Gaza images showing famine conditions – Middle East Monitor

Germany and Israel argued heatedly over images from Gaza during their meeting in Jerusalem earlier this week, with Germany’s Foreign Minister contending the images fail to show the reality of famine in the enclave, Israeli media reports said Friday.


Earth’s record hot streak might be a sign of a new climate era - The Washington Post

The heat fell upon Mali’s capital like a thick, smothering blanket — chasing people from the streets, stifling them inside their homes. For nearly a week at the beginning of April, the temperature in Bamako hovered above 110 degrees Fahrenheit. The cost of ice spiked to ten times its normal price, an overtaxed electrical grid sputtered and shut down.

With much of the majority-Muslim country fasting for the holy month of Ramadan, dehydration and heat stroke became epidemic. As their body temperatures climbed, people’s blood pressure lowered. Their vision went fuzzy, their kidneys and livers malfunctioned, their brains began to swell. At the city’s main hospital, doctors recorded a month’s worth of deaths in just four days. Local cemeteries were overwhelmed.