The Daily Escape:
Sunset, Cathedral Spires, Black Hills SD – 2020 photo by Max Foster
Weâre stumbling into another December weekend without a bailout package for those who are still unemployed in the pandemic. The WaPoâs headline says it all: âMore Americans are shoplifting food as aid runs out during the pandemic.â This is caused at least in part, by people going without jobs or unemployment insurance while waiting for the Senate and Mitch McConnell to come up with a bill that provides Americans the aid they need.
But the biggest news of the week was that the Supreme Court declined to hear the case brought by Texas asking the Court to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and declare Trump to be the winner. The Supreme Court wrote:
“The State of Texasâs motion for leave to file a bill of complaint is denied for lack of standing under Article III of the Constitution. Texas has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another State conducts its elections. All other pending motions are dismissed as moot,”
In case youâre wondering, Trumpâs three new appointments didnât support hearing the case. Whoever talked Trump out of appointing his kids, Eric, Ivanka and Junior to the Court had better lay low for the next few days. The Supreme Court deserves credit for rejecting an attempt to destroy American democracy, but many of those Republicans who joined the lawsuit, deserve our harshest judgment.
Adam Sewer of The Atlantic tweeted:
People have argued that because Trump hasnât overturned an election, that we can now relax: The âsystem workedâ, there were no tanks in the streets. But Republicans chose sides this week. More than half (126) of the Republicans in the House of Representatives signed onto Texasâs failed lawsuit, along with 17 Republican attorneys-general. Republicans must own up to their anti-democratic actions.
Once this is over, and Trump is living in Florida and is acting as president-in-exile, weâll need to hold all of his seditious minions accountable. Unsurprisingly, this failed lawsuit came from the Party that claims to oppose âjudicial activism.â
But enough of all of this big news, Wrongo was attracted to an Ars Technica story that reported on researchers teaching lab rats to drive little electric cars. The research was aimed at learning what effect the environment a rat was raised in had on its ability to learn new tasks. The team, led by Richmond University professor Kelly Lambert, decided to teach them to drive not just navigate another maze.
But if you’re going to teach rats to drive, first you need to build them a car (an ROV or, Rat Operated Vehicle). The chassis and powertrain came from a robot car kit, and a transparent plastic food container provided the body:
The controls were three copper wires stretched across an opening cut out of the front, with an aluminum plate on the floor. When a rat stood on the plate and gripped a copper bar, a circuit was completed, and the motors engaged: one bar made the car turn to the left, one made it turn to the right, and the third made it go straight ahead. Sounds hard, but it didnât take long for the rats to learn how to drive. Their goal was to drive the car to a food treat.
The rats had three five-minute training sessions a week for eight weeks, and they learned to drive!
The placement of the treat and the starting position and orientation of the car varied, so the rats had a different challenge each time. At the end of the experiment, each rat went through a series of trials, conducted a few days apart, where they were allowed to drive around the arena. One experiment had them driving without food treats, to see if they were only doing driving to get food.
Some who were quicker to start driving continued to be more interested in driving, even when there was no reward beyond the feel of moving without using their feet.
Uber is excited by this news and may try to replace human drivers. Itâs their Holy Grail: drivers that do it for the love of driving and donât ask for pay, benefits, or even treats.
On to the weekend! Weâre finishing up the Christmas decorations in the Mansion of Wrong, although there will be very few visitors this time. So grab an ornament, and listen to the Dave Brubeck Quartet play âTake Fiveâ from their 1959 ground-breaking album, âTime Outâ. The tune was written by Paul Desmond, here on alto saxophone, Brubeck on piano, Teo Macero, drums and Eugene Wright on bass. Have a martini on the house:
I can foresee Republican legislatures changing the rules in electoral recounts such that the recounts become more protracted and then passing the ball to the state legislature who can appoint any electors they choose. An election is like a massive inventory. Anyone who has been involved in a large scale inventory knows that there are always small discrepancies – they are resolved by taking the best number when the inventory is ended. But with an election, again it would be easy to force manual recounts, with each ballot witnessed etc till every election needs to be resolved by the legislature – and voting becomes irrelevant.