Stephan: Boy did the picture of Jesus story I ran on Christmas stir up a lot of emails. A reader who is an internationally recognized professor of religious studies sent me this, and said it is generally recognized amongst scholars as the most accurate likely representation of Jesus. It certainly accords with my research and thinking.
He also recommended, as does this article, for those who are interested in more scholarship on this issue, Joan Taylor's book, What Did Jesus Look Like?
Bas Uterwijk, Dutch artist, did something remarkable. He took a variety of artistic renditions of people who lived before the era of photography, including paintings, status, icons, and whatever else happens to be available. He fed those to an artificial intelligence program to see what emerged out of the combination and commonalities among them. The results are very striking. No one will be surprised that, however interesting the rendering of Vincent van Gogh might be, I was far more captivated by the way Jesus is depicted. You can see that image above.
Someone who shared the image on Facebook wondered whether the icon Christ Pantocrator of St. Catherine’s Monastery at Sinai was the or a main image used. When I saw it my first instinct was to wonder what the influences were, since I saw the image before I read about the artist’s method. Once I understood it, I too immediately began thinking of particular depictions of Jesus.
I am struck by the fact that, by allowing artificial intelligence to create a realistic human face based on some of our oldest […]
Stephan: Here is the latest on plastic pollution and it is horrifying. Babies are being born with their bodies already polluted by microplastics in the womb. The implications of this trend seem to grow worse with each passing year, and yet few politicians seem willing to take on the corporations that make these plastics. I wonder what it will take to create the public pressure needed to force politicians to deal with this threat to the wellbeing of humans and other beings?
Microplastic particles have been revealed in the placentas of unborn babies for the first time, which the researchers said was “a matter of great concern”.
The health impact of microplastics in the body is as yet unknown. But the scientists said they could carry chemicals that could cause long-term damage or upset the foetus’s developing immune system. The particles are likely to have been consumed or breathed in by the mothers.
The particles were found in the placentas from four healthy women who had normal pregnancies and births. Microplastics were detected on both the foetal and maternal sides of the placenta and in the membrane within which the foetus develops.
A dozen plastic particles were found. Only about 4% of each placenta was analysed, however, suggesting the total number of microplastics was much higher. All the particles analysed were plastics that had been dyed blue, red, orange or pink and may have originally come from packaging, paints or cosmetics and personal care products.
The microplastics were mostly 10 microns in size (0.01mm), meaning they are small […]
Stephan: Lindsey Graham and Ted Cruz, two Republican senators, and prominent Trump orcs are doing everything they can to keep the United States from addressing climate change, or creating a proper relationship between the U.S. and Iran. Thanks, Texas and South Carolina voters you are doing everything you can to degrade America's standing in the world, and cripple our nation's response to climate change. Have you no shame?
In an early example of the opposition and obstruction that President-elect Joe Biden is expected to face from right-wingers in Congress, Sens. Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham are already hard at work attempting to ensure that he cannot deliver on his campaign promises to return the United States to the Paris climate accord and Iran nuclear deal.
President Donald Trump made a big deal of ditching both international agreements that were finalized under the Obama administration, for which Biden served as vice president. Trump left the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), as the Iran deal is officially known, in May 2018, ignoring concerns that doing so could increase the chances of war — and despite the climate emergency, the U.S. formally exited Paris just after Election Day last month.
RealClear Politics revealed Tuesday the Cruz, R-Texas, who has acted as an ally to Trump during his presidency after intensely criticizing him ahead of the 2016 presidential election, is pushing the outgoing president and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to submit both deals […]
Stephan: Many people disgusted by the rampant police brutality are lobbying to cut the budget of the police and sheriff departments. I strongly disagree. In my opinion the current probems all stem from the kind of people hired, and the way they are trained. What I think needs to happen is that there has to be a very different approach to who departments hire, and those hired need to undergo a very different kind of training. Norway would be the model I would look at.
Until Earl McGhee was hired in 2018, Dodge County, Wisconsin, had never had a Black sheriff’s deputy, so when the county sent him to a police academy at a local technical college, McGhee wasn’t all that surprised to be the only Black cadet in the class.
But a few weeks into the course, McGhee was stunned when the instructor used the N-word during a lecture. “Out of nowhere he looks me in the eyes and points his index finger directly at me” while uttering the slur, McGhee wrote in a statement to the school, the Madison Area Technical College, shortly after the Jan. 25, 2019, incident. “The entire class was looking at me.”
The instructor apologized the next day, but only after McGhee spoke […]
Stephan: There is something seriously wrong with the way law enforcement officers are hired and trained. The rate of thuggery and murder under color of authority in the United States is greater than all the countries of Europe combined. Yet it seems almost impossible to have a rational national conversation about this trend.
A Black woman received $150,000 after alleging a police officer yanked her from a public restroom and forced her onto the sidewalk in handcuffs while investigating a reported theft.
A computer engineer, who is also Black, got $192,000 after officers — mistaking him for a robbery suspect — beat him so severely on his front lawn that he was hospitalized.
Five other Black men collecteda total of $116,000 after suing the same officer for assault and violating their civil rights as he cleared sidewalks in a gentrifying neighborhood. In one case, a video showed the officer sitting on a man’s chest and showering him with pepper spray after punching him in the face six times.
Over the past five years, the D.C. government has spent millions of dollars settling dozens of police misconduct lawsuits — settlements that, even as officers acknowledge no wrongdoing, documenta trail of […]