Saturday, October 9, 2010

Philippa Foot dies at 90

Philippa Foot, Renowned Philosopher, Dies at 90 (New York Times)

Philippa Foot, a philosopher who argued that moral judgments have a rational basis, and who introduced the renowned ethical thought experiment known as the Trolley Problem, died at her home in Oxford, England, on Oct. 3, her 90th birthday….

Enormous Irvine Valley College sinkhole reveals “startling” 25-year-old pancake “tall stack”

"It seemed to appear overnight."
     Some are calling it a miracle.
     Others are calling it a stunt.
     Only two days after Irvine Valley College administrators announced an Oct. 19 pancake breakfast in honor of the college’s 25th anniversary, a massive sinkhole seemed suddenly to appear on the south-east end of campus, perilously close to the campus police facility, revealing what some observers are calling a “25-year-old stack of flapjacks, with butter.”
     “Back a quarter-century ago, people celebrated important occasions at the college with ‘pancake breakfasts,'” explained IVC President Glenn Roquemore.
Roquemore
     “When this college established itself as an independent campus from Saddleback College (the other campus of the South Orange County Community College District), a breakfast was held, and it featured pancakes,” said the administrator, who first arrived at IVC four or five years after its 1985 founding.
     On Thursday, several senior faculty were asked to describe the momentous meal, but none could recall pancakes or even a breakfast.
     “I think they’re just making this shit up,” said one long-time English instructor. "We were a real college back then, and real colleges don't have stupid pancake breakfasts" she said.
     “The ‘pancake’ business didn’t start until that idiot Steve Frogue became trustee,” she said. “He not only invited Nazis to speak; he insisted on prayer breakfasts. It was unbelievable. That’s why we tried to get rid of the bastard.”
     Frogue, a controversial history high school teacher, served as a SOCCCD trustee from the end of 1992 until the summer of 2000, when he resigned, in part because of a public outcry in response to his proposed "forum" on the Warren Commission. He had invited four speakers to the forum, some or all of whom were associated with Liberty Lobby, an anti-Semitic organization in Washington, D.C. founded by notorious racist and conspiracy theorist Willis Carto.
Bauer
     “Yeah, back then, Frogue’s biggest supporter, besides the faculty union leadership, was trustee John Williams, who was told about the unsavory nature of these (forum) speakers and who voted to invite them anyway,” said philosophy professor Roy Bauer, long-time critic of the board and district administrators. "John has never been the brightest bulb on the frickin' tree," added Bauer.
     “I showed up around here in 1986, and I sure don’t remember any pancake breakfasts back then,” said Bauer.
     “That sort of infantile stuff didn’t start in this district until a bunch of pious assholes took it over, starting with Williams and Frogue in 1992 and then especially after the election of 1996. Then came (Don) Wagner in 1998 and, worst of all, Tom Fuentes in 2000, when Frogue bailed. All those Republicans on the board were anxious to snag Fuentes to help them with their political ambitions. This board is pretty much an annex of the County GOP,” stated Bauer. "It's sickening."
     But what about the sinkhole and those pancakes?
     “I dunno,” said Bauer. “But it's a sure bet that some fucking pancake house owned by some bigshot Republican is raking in the dough."
     "And I wouldn't be surprised if Fuentes got a cut, too.”

Tom Fuentes at 34: "consultant"

Part 1:




Caspers: disappeared in 1974

Moth (Red Emma)

     Recently, I perused Trustee Tom Fuentes’ Form 700s—documents revealing the breadth and depth of The Great Republican’s income. The experience proved wacky and puzzling.
     Among the more peculiar elements of this documentation was Mr. Fuentes’ mysterious status as advisor to the “Silvaard Institute of Natural History”—in, of all places, Coto de Caza, a gated and hated community.
     I Googled the Institute. I found that it was associated with a Mr. Terry Singer, some kind of entomologist—a bug man—with a lurid interest in moths.
     Eventually, I discovered that Silvaard was a corporation registered in California—and that its rights and privileges have been suspended.
     I found another corporation associated with Mr. Singer, this one called Chameleon Corporation. I found that Chameleon’s rights and privileges in the State of California have also been suspended.
     What does it all mean? Dunno.
     Red Emma caught wind of Silvaard Institute and Fuentes’ advisory status there. He was overcome with imagination. He sent me the following.

A Night at the Museum

     Eager to pursue your sudden if mysterious interest in Lepidoptery you are chagrined to discover that courses in same are not offered by either of the district’s two colleges. If one wants to learn of butterflies and moths, a journey will be required. But where? Time spent late at night contemplating the SOCCCD itself soon reveals, not Lepidoptery, but, hark!, the fair and gentle figure of Serendipity. The newspaper story arrives, the fired official sings his lament on the AM talk radio program, copies of IRS declarations appear. It is late, but it is time to act!  
     Getting in the car, jumping on the toll road, finding your way through the misty darkness as if guided by instinct, hope, luck – all comely half-sisters of joyous Serendipity – holding a form in one hand and the steering wheel in your other, you arrive at a modest domicile in Coto de Caza, at 15 Oak Knoll, home (as it were) of something called the Silvaard Institute of Natural History where, indeed, the voice on the radio, that civil servant turned oracle, has promised you that you will find a trustee, an advisor, a former chairman, a board member.  
     Approaching the destination, the night sky is suddenly illuminated.  You are nearly blinded by the light from a very, very large bulb on the roof of the house, an otherwise unremarkable South County mini-mansion but with a tiny Homeowner’s Association-approved banner hung outside its modest Ionian (or are they Doric?) columns reading “Welcome to the Moth Museum.”          
     And, yes, all variety of moths, attracted by the enormous bulb, flit and fly above the suburban home. You are no expert, but this is an impressive sight, and you recognize among the excited insects that most exotic of species, the Emperor Gum Moth, Opodiphthera eucalyupti, with its distinctive oval lower wing markings resembling the eyes of the very man you are here to see, one Thomas Fuentes, “consultant.” How odd, yet poetic, you think, that this self-disguising pattern on the back of the Emperor Gum Moth, developed out of evolutionary wit and necessity, should have formed, as if a mini-Shroud of Turin-style image, a perfect copy of the face of the elected official himself.


     A figure steps from the shadows. Your docent, who resembles, eerily, the docent from other recent midnight visits – to the Claremont Institute, Pacific States University, Stanbridge College, the South County GOP Table Tennis Club and the Steven Frogue Society for the Preservation of Historical Accuracy – welcomes you. You cannot make out his face, hidden under the cowl of his dark robe. He stands holding a sheaf of papers which, on closer inspection, appear to be completed Schedule C, “Income, Loans & Business Positions California Form 700,” each bearing the address of this very locale, and the word “advisor” typed in the box titled: “Your Business Position,” and each form bearing the name of that very trustee of the South Orange County Community College District whose face appears on the moth, in the papers, and whose name you have heard spoken by the oracle.
     “Thank you for coming,” says the man, hiding the papers in the sleeve of his impressive robe. “We have arranged for you tonight a remarkable show.” And, as if on cue, a swarm of even more of the amazing flying creatures arrives, circling and dodging around the museum’s rooftop, an awesome and inspiring sight. 
     Your docent points to the individual creatures as if, indeed, they are performing for him, for you, for all in the neighborhood, for the world and for all made credulous by such spectacle, as if, somehow the entire moment has been staged, with the cooperation of these unsentient, blind and eerily, elegantly clumsy creatures and the bright, bright light. 
     “There,” says your guide to you, and to this world of wonder, “is the White Witch moth, the Lepidopteran with the biggest wingspan in the world.”  
     And again, as if on cue, as if in a prearranged choreography constructed just for you, the giant moth swoops and dives. And as if that were still not enough, in seconds, arrives the Madagascan Sunset moth, considered to be one of the most impressive and beautiful Lepidoptera.
     It is indeed a breathtaking sight, and you are impressed, amazed, stunned even to find not only a Museum of Moths here, of all places, in Coto de Caza, but a docent who has committed to volunteer his own time, indeed his night, his eye, his life, all in order to deliver to you this incredible sight. And, of course, it is always just fun to hear anybody, anywhere say “Lepidoptera.” 
     The show continues as a Death’s-head hawkmoth, associated with the supernatural, appears, soon followed by the Peppered moth, subject of a well-known study. The Luna moth. The Grease moth.  There, out on the lawn, you see a display of God’s creatures, all drawn to the giant light bulb and, it seems, the soothing and confident summoning of the docent.


     And you have not yet even been inside this amazing place, the Silvaard Institute of Natural History of Coto de Caza, South Orange County, California, USA, home of  Orange County’s very own Moth Museum when you turn to find you are surrounded by others, a dozen companions similarly mesmerized, their eyes on the bulb. Alas, you find everyone is also covered in a fine dust, the wing-powder of the magnificent creatures’ flitting and flapping and consulting about between shadow and distance in the deep and dark sky.
     Here, you think, dwells magic indeed. The docent, clutching again his sheaf of Forms 700, beams ecstatic. He pulls back his cowl, revealing himself at last.  His own pale, round face, a wide smile, itself illuminating the scene, risks attracting the attention of the gentle giant insects, who will see themselves, their wings, in those eyes. The man’s face is brightness and clarity against the hollow dark. 
     “Step inside,” he says. And so, following him in, you pass through the columns, under the portico, and into the open doorway of this magnificent, holy and tax-deductible sanctuary.  You wonder what fantastical and unbelievable revelations await. The heavy door slams behind you and, naturally, you awake from your dream.   

Coda (de Caza)

     A single moth flies, casting its shadow against the bare bulb of your decrepit office, its broken, lost journey to doom nearly ended.  A stack of student papers remains, still on your desk, the hopeful if flawed record of a pedagogical journey to critical thinking and skepticism, intellectual curiosity and, you think, truth. Ah, you realize ruefully, it was only a dream. You pick up the essay resting on top and run a finger across its title page, tracing a line through the thin film of residue, detritus of what will soon be the creature’s demise. “T.F.,” you find yourself writing in the powder.  You cannot help it. You have been, after all, to the Museum of Moths. –Red Emma

NOTES:

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...