Not for the faint of art. |
Complex Numbers A complex number is expressed in the standard form a + bi, where a and b are real numbers and i is defined by i^2 = -1 (that is, i is the square root of -1). For example, 3 + 2i is a complex number. The bi term is often referred to as an imaginary number (though this may be misleading, as it is no more "imaginary" than the symbolic abstractions we know as the "real" numbers). Thus, every complex number has a real part, a, and an imaginary part, bi. Complex numbers are often represented on a graph known as the "complex plane," where the horizontal axis represents the infinity of real numbers, and the vertical axis represents the infinity of imaginary numbers. Thus, each complex number has a unique representation on the complex plane: some closer to real; others, more imaginary. If a = b, the number is equal parts real and imaginary. Very simple transformations applied to numbers in the complex plane can lead to fractal structures of enormous intricacy and astonishing beauty. |
A little bit more serious than usual today. Just the way the dice fall. The article is from way back in the Before Time, December of 2017. Something might have changed since then, what with travel restrictions for the pandemic. But it's still a good read. Quinn Raber arrived at a San Francisco bus station lugging a canvas bag containing all of his belongings: jeans, socks, underwear, pajamas. Pajamas? Luxury! Cities have been offering homeless people free bus tickets to relocate elsewhere for at least three decades. In recent years, homeless relocation programs have become more common, sprouting up in new cities across the country and costing the public millions of dollars. If only there were another way to use those millions to help the homeless. Gosh. I don't know. The answer eludes me. But until now there has never been a systematic, nationwide assessment of the consequences. Where are these people being moved to? What impact are these programs having on the cities that send and the cities that receive them? And what happens to these homeless people after they reach their destination? My guesses: 1) Anywhere else; 2) They're probably swapping so it's a wash; 3) They're still homeless. In an 18-month investigation, the Guardian has conducted the first detailed analysis of America’s homeless relocation programs, compiling a database of around 34,240 journeys and analyzing their effect on cities and people. That's a lot of work. Glad I didn't do it. Some of these journeys provide a route out of homelessness, and many recipients of free tickets said they are grateful for the opportunity for a fresh start. Well. Again, it pays to be pessimistic. That's pleasantly surprising. While the stated goal of San Francisco’s Homeward Bound and similar programs is helping people, the schemes also serve the interests of cities, which view free bus tickets as a cheap and effective way of cutting their homeless populations. I haven't been to SF since the Before Time, but spoiler: it's not working (sort of; you'll see later in the article). Also the font from the linked story is pretty small on my screen, so at first I thought that word was "culling." Jeff Weinberger, co-founder of the Florida Homelessness Action Coalition, a not-for-profit that operates in a state with four bus programs, said the schemes are a “smoke-and-mirrors ruse tantamount to shifting around the deck chairs on the Titanic rather than reducing homelessness”. You know, the "rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic" phrase is clichéd, but dammit, it's descriptive. I'm skipping a bunch here. The good news is there's more nuance than I expected. The bad news is it's still not a comprehensive solution. The interviews the Guardian has conducted with recipients of bus tickets indicate the outcome of their journeys can vary hugely. Yes, better than I expected, but it sounds like some of the outcomes were even worse: Last year Fort Lauderdale sent Fran Luciano, 49, back to her native New York to stay with her ex-husband, according to program records. Lots of people get along with their exes. I do. But living with one? Fuck that. But the money spent on bus tickets does not necessarily address the root causes of homelessness. “There may be cases where you have good intentions of trying to return that person back to that family”, but the family is “why they were homeless in the first place”, said Bob Erlenbusch, a longtime advocate based in Sacramento, California. There's still this pervasive mythology about family here in the US (and elsewhere). The myth goes that family is better for you than friends, acquaintances or strangers. Obviously, this is not always the case. The article ends, as is appropriate, by revisiting the Raber story it started with. Basically, he ended up going back to SF and: Today his circumstances are almost exactly the same as they were before he left. He spends part of the month crashing in a friend’s room in a rundown residential hotel, and the rest bedding down on the sidewalk with a blanket and pillow in the gritty Tenderloin neighborhood, where many other homeless people congregate. He drags his belongings around in a suitcase with broken wheels, and hopes to move into a discarded tent that he found recently. Discarded, I'm betting, by someone else who got bussed out of San Francisco. Now, I've noticed that whenever some bleeding-heart suggests actually housing the homeless, the response from some asshole on the other side is always "start with your house." Let me nip that one right in the bud, if any of that type are still reading this: I own two houses. One of them is occupied by a husband and wife who are both disabled and would otherwise have no place to stay. So I do that. I say that not to virtue-signal, which I hate doing, but only to keep that comment from happening here. I can only help a limited number of people myself. That's why we need to acknowledge that we live in a society, and it's everyone's responsibility. After all, you may think it won't happen to you. But it could. |