Saturday, November 8, 2025

We need Remembrance Day

I put myself through university working as a nurse.  I worked at Shaughnessy Hospital, back when there *was* a Shaughnessy Hospital.  It was a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital.  So I was working with veterans.

One day, as I was getting one of the old guys up, he mentioned that he was a veteran of two wars.  In the full flush of my youthful ignorance, I replied, "Oh, the first world war and the second world war?"  No, he replied, the Boer war and the first world war.

So, I knew veterans of the Boer War.  I even knew a veteran who had received one of Queen Victoria's scarves, and it was only much, much later in life that I realized the significance of that, and I rather suspect that almost none of you who will read this will, in fact, understand what that was.

But the point that I'm trying to make is that I have known veterans from the Boer War, and the First World War, and the Second World War, and the Korean War.  And I knew actual deserters from the American military, and the war in Vietnam.  (Yes, there were a lot of draft dodgers who came from the United States to Canada during the time of the Vietnam war, but there were deserters as well.)

And I have known veterans from wars and conflicts since.  The list goes on, and the names of conflicts and wars are not less important, but grow too many to list.  Although the reasons for remembering the wars do not change, and do not grow any less important, but rather more important.

The veterans from wars that are older and fading into history are dying off.  Gloria and I attended one particular Remembrance Day service for twenty-five years.  It, like the wars that people might consider less significant, was not a particularly notable service.  It was in an old folks home (or "care facility," if you will), and Gloria sang at the service.  For twenty-five years.  We saw veterans from different wars dying off, over the years.  It affected me deeply, because we knew these people (and also because the memories involve Gloria).  So much so that, these days, I have difficulty attending Remembrance Day services that are simply pro forma political appearances, rather than services.

I have known these people.  They are different people, because people are all different.  They had their own reasons for going.  Sometimes to save comrades, sometimes to protect family, or communities, or their country.  They had different experiences.  They had different attitudes to what Remembrance Day was all about.

And as the veterans from different wars, and particular to the First World War, where the whole Armistice Day, or Remembrance Day, or Veteran's Day thing started, people start to wonder what is the point of Remembrance Day.

One thing that we are remembering is that war is hell.  War doesn't just affect those who go to fight in it.  It does not just affect those from the armed forces, of the various countries involved, and who are actual combatants.  War is terrible.  It hurts a lot of people.  It destroys lives.  It leaves injuries on veterans, it leaves injuries on civilians, and in many cases it actually leaves injuries on the land itself.  (I have been to the Vimy Memorial, on the crest of Vimy Ridge.  Signage warns you to stay on the paths.  Sheep graze on the grass.  The sheep leave behind droppings that might make walking on the grass a bit messy, but that is the least danger that you face by walking on the grass.  The sheep are there because that is the safest way to keep the grass trimmed.  [Well, maybe not for the sheep.]  The battle of Vimy Ridge started on my birthday in 1917, more than a hundred years ago, and there is still ordinance there that makes it too dangerous to run a tractor lawn mower over the grass, let alone allow tourists to wander on it.)  War is terrible, and we should always remember that we should take every effort to avoid war.

We also need to remember those who go to war.  We need to remember, with gratitude, the thin Blue line, or the thin Red line, or the thin camouflage line, or whatever color we use and choose to represent those who, for whatever reason, go to stand in the gap on our behalf.

We need to remember those who went, and did not return, and made the ultimate sacrifice on our behalf.  We need to remember those who went, and who did return.  All of those made a sacrifice.  Sometimes the sacrifice was time.  Sometimes the sacrifice was friendship, with their comrades who made the ultimate sacrifice.  Sometimes their sacrifice was injuries and disabilities, and losses of others sorts.

We need to remember that a sacrifice is a sacrifice, in the same way that, in regard to grief, a loss is a loss.  After Gloria died, I was having coffee, on a fairly regular basis, with a fellow whose wife was still alive.  He didn't understand the grief of the loss of his spouse.  He kept on asking me what it was like.  I would try to explain what grief was like.  He never did understand, but he did keep on asking, and it was kind of him to keep on asking, and to try to understand, in opposition to the great many people who did not understand, and who tried, sometimes rather desperately, to avoid the subject or any thought of that kind of loss and grief.  He never did understand.  I hope he never does understand.  Grief is an awful thing, in the same way that war is an awful thing.  And we who have not gone to war need to understand that we never will understand.  But we need to remember that there are those who do, all too well.

We need to remember that war is awful, and is to be avoided.  We need to understand that we do not understand the experience of those who went, and we need to be grateful and thankful for their service.

We need Remembrance Day.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Will genAI stifle *all* creativity?

Innovation has always had a problem with acceptance.  It's always been difficult to convince people to try something new.  But our newest innovation may make it even harder.

I just came across a piece where someone is noting that a certain type of innovation may suffer because genAI tools will not have enough data on novel approaches to accept them.

The thing is, that concern is not limited to the one specific area the piece covers.  The AI industry has been pushing all kinds of tools to make "suggestions" about creative work, such as research.  Or to do a "first pass" elimination of ideas that might not bear fruit.  We use AI tools to relieve ourselves of the tedium of paring down a pile of applications for a job.  The AI tools do statistical matches to patterns that have been found in data that they have been fed.  But if the data that they have been fed hasn't been extremely carefully curated in the first place, it won't return the best results.

And if anything is truly novel, it won't appear in the old data at all.  And so anything truly innovative will be rejected out of hand.

I am fond of the quote that creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes, but that art is knowing which ones to keep.  Large language models make mistakes.  Some of the mistakes are so truly awful that they are actually kind of amusing.  But those error instances are exceptional and rare.  It is not for nothing that AI generated content is coming to be universally referred to as "slop."  And, even so, "amusing" can be a far cry from "useful."

But my concern is not just that genAI produces much that is useless.  It is that in using AI to prune, pare, correct, and edit our *own* creative work, we may be allowing AI to restrict us to what has gone before, and has been fed into the large language model.

If we do that, we may well ensure that there is nothing new under the artificially intelligent sun.

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Review of "Sketch"

Since "Sketch" is from Angel, I was wondering what a studio known for (almost toxically) positive, uplifting, and usually religious movies was doing making a monster movie, even if a somewhat comic one.

It's not about horror.  It's about grief.

The points aren't exactly surprising, and mostly get buried.  But the movie should probably get more attention than it has.

Friday, October 24, 2025

Faith is good.

Hard to hug, though ...



Signed, Sealed, Delivered: The Vows We Have Made

Friday, October 10, 2025

Psalm 142:4

Look and see, there is no one at my right hand;

    no one is concerned for me.

I have no refuge;

    no one cares for my life. 

Thursday, October 9, 2025

The final lines of "Sorry, Baby"

When you grow up, you can tell me whatever.  Like, if you have a thought, and you're like, that's a bad thought, I probably had that same thought.  But, like, ten times worse.  So you can just tell me.  I'll never be scared by that.

If someone does something bad to you, if someone says something scary, if you want to kill yourself with like a pencil or a knife or whatever, you can just tell me.  I'll never tell you you're scaring me.  I'll just say yeah.  I know.  It's just like that sometimes.  Yeah.  I'm sorry that bad things are going to happen to you.  I hope they don't.  If I can ever stop anything from being bad let me know.

But sometimes bad stuff just happens.

That's why I feel bad for you.  In a way.  That you're alive and you don't know that yet.  But I can still listen and not be scared.  So that's good.  Or that's something, at least.

******

I'm not a fan of art films.  I'm not a fan of "relationship" films, where the characters stumble around, not really understanding their own feelings.

Even so, you have to see this film all the way through to get the real power of the final scene.  Even though it is turgidly slow, and you don't see how carefully it is done until the end.

But the final lines are an incredibly powerful statement about loss, and the inability of our society to accept the pain of those who have suffered a major trauma or distress.

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Black Heart

Elon (or Grok: it's hard to tell the difference) has created a little video valentine for us.


But I wonder how many people realize that the "heart," in the video, starts out as a black hole ...

Resistance is futile.  You will be absorbed ...