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Mumbai Bombed Again

There’s a very high probability that all of you who read this blog know about the IED blasts across Mumbai yesterday that claimed 18 lives, injured many others and has understandably increased the stress levels of an already put-upon city. Just imagining a surviving Mumbaikar thinking “It could have been me or someone I love” and “When will it happen again?” makes me want to turn off this computer and go hide in a cellar for the rest of my days. They’ve been through five bombings in the last fifteen years and could just as easily flip out like we have and would. But, the resilience and the way they’ve come together in the last 24 hours. It’s humbling.

I am so glad my fellow Vatul, Harini, and hers are safe. She writes:

Near my house a little shop open. Most businesses were. Even those that didn“t need to be. When terror strikes and I have been back in Mumbai since 1994 and have lived through quite a few there is this really inexplicable sentiment that kicks in I won’t let the Bastards cow me down. It is not just me every one I knew was out and about. And not strangely, not many of us got too much work done. The turning up was the symbolic F*** U both to the terrorists and the system.

Sepia Mutiny has a collection of reactions to the blasts. Here are some that stand out and give Americans perspective, especially considering that happenings east of here are more crucial to our future than our all-Casey-Anthony-all-the-time “news” cycle provides. Some of it also sounds remarkably familiar in terms of how the government-public safety apparatus of some American cities work.

… Now that the USA and the west have come to their senses with regard to the reality of Pakistan, now that the USA will not pour more and more billions into Pakistan, now that the USA will no longer cover Pakistan“s back at the United Nations, now there is hope that slowly but surely the world, and India, can take action against Pakistan without having to worry about the reaction of the USA, the great protector of Pakistan for the last 50 years and more. The pusher to Pakistan the addict.

… Please remember that India has more than 140 million Muslims. For a Muslim population of that size, India is remarkably free of terrorist attacks.

… A lot of it has to do with the underworld take-over of Mumbai politics and even the police … Summary: a non-functional police and intelligence operation, mostly focused on extracting rent from real estate transactions, which are otherwise all “illegal” due to various bizarre rules and laws.

… the point is unless people get to know that region better, they are in no position to judge our 2012 [candidates’] readiness in combating foreign problems.

Also read: The online samaritan who tried to help Mumbai

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Today’s Philanthroper deal hosts Project Gutenberg: $1 shares 36,000 free books with the world.

Paper books may not need batteries and you can curl up with one on a rainy day, but this is an attitude of first-world luxury. Paper books can burn, flood and not be replicated for millions of people all over the world without a printing press. Thanks to the ubiquity of cellphone technology, even a poor kid in an Indian fishing village can read the collected works of Shakespeare. It’s all about access. Project Gutenberg and hundreds of mirror sites the world over make this happen based on one simple philosophy: As many books as possible to as many people as possible. Let’s help keep it going.

Please find out more about Project Gutenberg, download some free eBooks for your library, share them, give back and spread the word. You can also help by being a proofreader yourself.

“The greatly increased availability of virtually anything to virtually anybody is a great thing.” – Chef Craig Giesecke

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“Boudinage” and “transtensional” are #1 in my geo-lexicon, but Callan Bentley took boudinage and I’ll leave “transtensional” for another day as it was the topic of my first graduate thesis. “Crenulation” it is for Accretionary Wedge Episode 35: What’s Your Favorite Geology Word? This comes from my fascination with polyphase deformation, or multiple episodes of deformation, leaving their imprints on rocks in the form of cross-cutting fabric.

I used to explain crenulation to my students with their own palms, as shown in the image below. Start out with your palm facing up. Then, cup your palm until you see creases (folds) in it. Following that, take your other palm and push your folded palm in a direction roughly perpendicular to the folded palm’s fingers. See the interference pattern as new folds (D2) overprint the old ones (D1).

1. Flat open palm 2. Folds (indicated by blue lines) form perpendicular to fingers when hand is curled 3. Palm is folded again in direction perpendicular to previous curling. New folds (red lines) form; note deformation of previous folds.

No demonstration of deformation is complete without Play-Doh, which is luckily available from VatulBlog HQ’s always freshly-stocked shelves. (Gotta love the warning: Fun to play with, but not to eat. NOTICE TO PARENTS: CONTAINS WHEAT.)

Left: Folds form in Play-Doh roughly perpendicular to direction of squishing (yes, that's a technical term, and indicated by the black arrow; black lines are fold axes). Right: Second episode of deformation (indicated by red arrows and red fold axes) overprint previous folds (note that black fold axes are now folded themselves).

Now, my hands smell like Mmmm Play-Doh. Is there anything it cannot do?

Earlier, I mentioned the term “fabric.” Rock is not a homogeneous, isotropic substance like Play-Doh, but instead a collection of minerals that have different physical and chemical characteristics and geometrically rearrange themselves differently under varying stress-time/pressure-temperature conditions. Therefore, crenulation is best viewed at the microscopic level. At this scale, we can see what really happens to the rock’s constituent minerals when they undergo successive episodes of deformation.

Metamorphic thin sections in the next exciting installment of CRENULATION!

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Katrina’s Secrets. It’s a new book by Ray Nagin, the ex-former-gone-but-comes-back-like-exzcema mayor of New Orleans. Self-published. Mmmm hmmm. Barely ridiculed on The Daily Show. The title reminiscent of a discount lingerie store where, as I said on the twubes, there is always a “50% off sale on purple-green-gold thongs, misspelled tourist tees & adult diapers embroidered with family values and laced with eau d’oil spill.”

This is my favorite Nagin line from a presser that The Gambit attended: “There were recovery strategies put in place early that are now paying dividends” By the way, El Gambito reads the book so we don’t have to … just yet.

Politicians have gone beyond lying. They are now shamelessly turning lies into the truth. Right is wrong, who controls the present controls the past, ignorance is fraking strength. What you see is not what you see.

bry4n sent me a video on “diminished reality.” Amazing how you can alter reality with a bit of upscaling. Just because you’re looking at something doesn’t mean you see things as they are.

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Once Upon A Wall

Through, from the Once Upon A Wall series by artist Aakash Nihalani. (more at Sepia Mutiny)

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