Hey, Mom! The Explanation.

Here's the permanent dedicated link to my first Hey, Mom! post and the explanation of the feature it contains.

Tuesday, March 31, 2020

A Sense of Doubt blog post #1869 - Hulu has ordered a pilot for Binti


A Sense of Doubt blog post #1869 - Hulu has ordered a pilot for Binti

This material was not going to be the post for today, but then material presents itself, even though the news broke back in January, and I just seeing it now. Hey, I am busy!

I teach Binti at all of my schools. I love this book, and Nnedi Okorafor has become one of my very favourite writers. And so, this news is thrilling, along with the news that her novel Who Fears Death is under development and she is developing Octavia Butler's Wild Seed.

SF (science fiction) news gets better all the time!!

If you have not read Binti and you are sheltering in place, GET ON THAT. It's among the very best things you can read.




https://www.tor.com/2020/01/14/hulu-nnedi-okorafor-binti-tv-series-development/

Hulu Has Ordered a Pilot for Nnedi Okorafor’s Binti Series, Penned by the Author





Hulu has ordered an adaptation of Nnedi Okorafor’s Hugo and Nebula Award-winning Binti trilogy, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Okorafor will pen the pilot episode along with Stacy Osei-Kuffour, who wrote for HBO’s Watchmen and Hulu’s PEN15.
Okorafor first published Binti in 2015 through Tor.com Publishing. The novella follows a young Himba woman who is accepted into an interstellar university, Oomza Uni. While traveling to the university, her ship is attacked by a jellyfish-like alien called the Meduse, and Binti is forced to try and broker a truce with them in order to survive.




Binti earned considerable acclaim after its release, earning Okorafor the 2016 Hugo and Nebula awards for Best Novella, as well as the British Fantasy and Locus awards. In 2017, she published a sequel, Binti: Home, and in 2018, Binti: The Night Masquerade, which won the 2019 Hugo for Best Novella. Okorafor has since published an omnibus edition that includes all three novellas, as well as a new story, Binti: Sacred Fire.
Media Res, the production company launched by HBO executive Michael Ellenberg, optioned the title. The book is the latest of Okorafor’s that’s set to be adapted for television: she’s working with HBO to develop a series based on her novel Who Fears Death. She’s also writing the script for a series based on Octavia Butler’s novel Wild Seed for Amazon Prime Video.

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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2003.31 - 10:10

- Days ago = 1732 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I plan to continue Hey Mom posts at least twice per week but will continue to post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.

Monday, March 30, 2020

A Sense of Doubt blog post #1868 - "What the World Needs Now" is love... or ... TOILET PAPER - Virtually - Musical Monday 2003.30

Virtual Choir — Twenty Thousand Hertz
https://www.20k.org/episodes/virtualchoir
A Sense of Doubt blog post #1868 - "What the World Needs Now" is love... or ... TOILET PAPER - Virtually - Musical Monday 2003.30

Hey, this is a good idea. Virtual choirs! I didn't know that this was a thing until the other day. A friend shared this first video with me, and then I found others. See below.

I added a recent LILY LINES newsletter link, a feature of the Washington Post of news about women written and compiled by women.

I also added two blog posts from BRANE SPACE about toilet paper. The first speaks to the hoarding panic, and the second the scary possibility that companies will stop producing toilet paper, which means those of us who did not hoard will run out and not be able to get any???

It made me re-think this song (just below). What the world needs now is love or toilet paper?

BRANE SPACE rightly contends that people see toilet paper as a sign of civilization, of the benefits of the first world economy, and as an essential ingredient of the lifestyle of the first world. And yet, is is it really so essential? My wife just bought us a bidet. Have to hook it up.

And now some music...




1.13K subscribers

Just a little something to brighten your day. What started as an idea on my flight home from college ended in a collaboration with some of the most incredible people. I couldn't be more grateful. Please share to help us promote positivity and optimism while we need it most. 💜 "What the World Needs Now" Music by Burt Bacharach, Lyrics by Hal David for Virtual Orchestra featuring Annika Reece, Bailey Chastain, Blake Dylan Pilger, Brielle Paige, Carlos Cordova, Carlyn Barenholtz, Cheyenne Bates, Chris Janson, Christina Jones, Clara Mazo, Dean Scarlett, Deniz Demirkurt, Dylan Quick, Eevie Perez, Eli Schildkraut, Emery Henderson, Emily Chiang, Emma O’Loughlin, Emma Rose Bauman, Erika Lopez, Fausto Capelluto, Freddy Renaud, Gabby Paige, Gioia Gedicks, Hagar Adam, Jacob Kent, Jacqueleen Schweighardt, Jennifer Molsen, Jeremy Tolsky, Jesse Howard Timm, Jiayi Wang, Jin-yeong So, John Fulton, Joshua Jowdy, Justin Veira, Kailey Fretwell, Karen Rassler, Kelsey Macdonald, Kevin Sells, Kris Leslie, Lilly Gitlitz, Lily James, Lindsey Faber, Liv Nurmi, Mae Hurtig, Maeve Reilly, Matt Henegan, Matt McDonnell, Meagan Nagy, Meghan Marshall, Melissa Zeller, Mia Goodman, Michael Mastroianni, Michael Valladares, Mikayla Cohen, Morgan Cohen, Nick Preziosi, Paul Lutty, Peli Woods, Peri Elizabeth Rutkovitz, Peyton Cook, Philomena Gildea, Rachel Tata, Robbie Shields, Robert Newman, Ryan Fogal, Ryan Scott Fossier, Sage Jepson, Samuel Kelly-Cohen, Sarah Nichols, Shelbie Rassler, Shelby Tudor, Skylar Jepson Produced, arranged and edited by Shelbie Rassler Mix Engineer Dan Santiago


The HOARDING IDIOCY.

PLEASE STOP HOARDING.



http://brane-space.blogspot.com/2020/03/can-we-please-finally-stop-toilet-paper.html

Monday, March 23, 2020


What's Really Behind The Toilet Paper Panic Buying?

View image on Twitter
Scene in one supermarket and the panic buying person isn't even aware he stands out like a half-baked  moron.

"People should worry about the supply of ventilators, breathing masks and protective gear for health care workers, but should relax about TP."   (The Wall Street Journal today, 'The Great Toilet Paper Scare' , p. A16.

There is no doubt the frenzied stockpiling of "bathroom tissue" (aka toilet paper) has become a source of amusement for some.  Hysterical shoppers racing into stores desperate to find the 3- or 4-ply tissue so they are not reduced to using leaves- or worse alternatives for modern plumbing systems - e.g.  paper napkins or Kleenex tissues.  As  I checked out of the Safeway three days ago the cashier related how she was the receiving end of yelling and abuse from at least two unhinged female shoppers:

"Where is it? Where?  Why aren't you stocked? Why?" 

They shouted at the poor cashier as if she had total control of all shipping manifests from here to L.A. and back and wouldn't accept the answer that the restocking only fills one third of shelves at most and then the few items are snapped up in a minute or less when the store opens. (A slight advantage to older folks is the store opens early on two weekdays when only those over 65 are allowed, or other vulnerable, e.g. disabled, people.

What gives? Why have people gone bonkers with this toilet paper stockpiling?  Why have  (generally) sane and rational shoppers so often descended to performing cringe worthy scenes such as that shown above ?  One reason is sheer fear manifested as an "excretory and fecal phobia" as my now tenure- track psychology niece Shayle puts it.

"People in the first world see toilet paper as a proxy for civilization.  Not to have it means they descend into a proto-primitive state in which they are in closer proximity to their primary excretions. It's appalling for them to even consider other practical options - like washcloths- which do not eliminate the sight and smell so easily."

Another professor, Rohan Miller from the University of Sydney, believes it is a reflection of an urbanized society and lifestyle where modern convenience reigns supreme.  (A point with which Shayle also concurs.)  As Prof. Miller puts it:

"We're not used to shortages and scarcity, we're used to being able to pick and choose what we want, when we want. So the rush to get toilet paper is just this sheep mentality to maintain that status,"

Adding:

"I think people want to make sure they have some comforts in their lives if they're going to be shacked up with their family for a long time," 

Maybe  Prof. Miller and Shayle have a point. In any event she has no issues nor have my other nieces who all use portable bidets. No need for paper at all.  As Shayle notes "The stuff is toxic to the environment."  See e,g.

Excerpt from a quote by Sue Mcmillin:

"Millions of trees in virgin forests are being logged every year and turned into pulp for toilet paper, tissues... that we use only once and  flush or throw away. Boreal forests in Canada are being destroyed for our tushes."

Meanwhile, many news columnists and online commentators are flummoxed over the need for an item which, were it to run out, does have rougher substitutes.  On the prostate cancer survivors' (Team Inspire) Group one whole thread was devoted to Pandemic-Toilet Paper?  This is a rational concern for many especially who have had any kind of radiation therapy, especially brachytherapy. (Notably the type for which "seeds" are implanted into the gland).  The usual complaint is frequent bowel movements from the radiation's effect.  Hence, if a patient who's just had brachy has to run to the toilet 10-15 times a day it can be serious. The general tenor of questions ran long the lines of: "What can we do instead if there is NO toilet paper?"

The most immediate responses to come back were "You can always use a washcloth (or washcloths) then soak them in a bleach solution."

But then again, there may be no chlorine bleach to be had. In The Denver Post Saturday, under one particular piece ('Toilet Paper Shortage: Plumbing Pros Warn Against Clogging Pipes', p. 7A), one of Denver's Roto Rooter experts (Kyle Ray)  offered this advice (clipped from article and scanned):

Image may contain: possible text that says 'What can the pa- perless do to clean up and protect their pipes? Ray of- fered a simple solution. "Hop in the shower," he said. "That's what they should do."'
Mr. Ray before delivering this stellar and common sense advice, also imparted the No-No's that those caught without T.P. should never ever do. These include:

- Use of paper towels, napkins and other "atypical wiping material"

- Faial tissue "is another bad idea can be used in place of toilet paper in small amounts, if flushed frequently"  How much? No more than 1-2 sheets, preferably 1 per flus.

- Flushable wipes - even if they say "flushable" - "Are just too thick and don't break down".  So if you use them you risk a toilet backing up.

Consumer psychology experts - in a "duh!' demonstration - mostly agree the behavior is "obviously irrational".  It's also a clear example of herd mentality whipped up by  news coverage of empty shelves, and social media  hysteria (Some of it fueled by wacko conspiracy ideations.)  Part of it is also driven by the ubiquitous FOMO syndrome - or Fear Of Missing Out.  The pictures of bare aisles haven't helped.  This entices other (once sane) shoppers to then go nuts and also grab multiple huge packs if they are available.  All of which makes life hard for those who may really need the stuff, say like prostate cancer radiation therapy patients.

Of course, supermarkets and box warehouse stores (like Costco, Big Lots etc.) could easily put the kibosh on this nonsense by simply limiting each customer to one purchase of a large multi-pack at one time. This is already being done in Barbados, as well as a supermarket chain in Dallas (according to The Dallas Morning News).  Also, this a.m. at our Safeway, toilet paper was in stock (Viva, Aisle 4) and the cashier told me the store had a one 8-pack limit per customer.  About time!

One thing we know, according to multiple pieces in the WSJ, is the warehouses of the manufacturers are laden with product. The only problem, if there is one, is getting the supply chains to run more expeditiously - and again, this could be helped if people were more rational in their purchases - and weren't seized by the stockpile syndrome, almost always driven by fear.  Look, in a worst case scenario - presented in this report, released last Monday by an epidemic modeling group at Imperial College London -  we could be in lockdown mode for 18 months or until a vaccine is widely available.  That doesn't mean we run out of T..P. only that people purchase it and other items (e.g. hand sanitizer) in a judicious and rational manner.  It means a sense of self-rationing of supplies, even if the state or federal gov't won't or stores are too timid. It means, in essence, the cooperative attitude of Americans during World War II.

Prof. Miller's final  point is one well worth considering:

"Toilet paper doesn't really matter - it's just so far down the survival list compared to other things like food or water - but it's just something many people in the developed world need to preserve at least the veneer of civilization....and creature comforts!"

See also:





And:




And:


And:


http://brane-space.blogspot.com/2020/03/could-toilet-paper-manufacturing-come.html

Monday, March 30, 2020


Could Toilet Paper Manufacturing Come to Halt In Two Months? It's Possible If People Don't Stop Panic Buying


The toilet paper shelves were nearly empty in this Miami store last week as people stocked up during the coronavirus crisis. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
No photo description available.

Graph showing level of demand on toilet paper.


According to a recent WSJ piece:

https://www.wsj.com/articles/relax-america-the-u-s-has-plenty-of-toilet-paper-11584388168


Toilet paper production could conceivably come to a full stop in 2 months if people fail to come to their senses and cease panic buying. Why?   The mass stockpiling of toilet paper is now forecast to cut  manufacturers' sales down the road, or even destroy their profit margins.    In the words of one manufacturer of a popular brand:

"We've all seen photos of people carrying shopping carts filled with toilet paper out of stores. They probably won't buy more for three to four months. " 

The last sentence portends what the companies all fear is a  "demand shock"  which will strain the system, and indeed could send it off the tracks.   Think of it, the plants and mills are cranking this stuff out 24/7 to try to meet a truly aberrational demand not based on reason or need (i.e. the average couple needs only 2 rolls per week, so 144 rolls in multiple large packages would last them 72 weeks or nearly  1 1/2 YEARS.)

According to the one CEO:

"We purchase large rolls from mills and our equipment cuts and packages them into the designated end product like toilet paper or kitchen towels, depending on the quality of the paper.  

Most mills are operating 24 hours, 7 days a week operations already. They are running on fixed capacity.  It's not like there's an idle machine that can be cranked up to increase production." 

The last point is the most critical for consumers to grasp.   In addition, that this fixed production capacity for the paper plants is offset by a different fixed capacity for retailers like Krogers, King  Soopers or Safeway.  The latter is spelled s-p-a-c-e.  Toilet paper takes up a lot of space, and there is only so much space even in a large supermarket or wholesale operation like Costco.  If these retailers allow all the toilet paper that can be delivered to sit there taking up hundreds of cubic feet of space, there won't be room to store other products people also need.   This is especially given toilet paper is relatively low cost compared to other products that can be stored like toiletries, or meats (in cold storage). 
This condition of limited space for the retail outlets means they can only afford to keep a set amount of inventory on hand. Even if all the toilet paper made by the all  companies could be delivered to retailers  who might need the added amount there's no way they'd be able to find the space to put it.   The backlog has meant manufacturers are no longer dispatching as many trucks with the products to the stores, at least until they clear their own inventory.

This has led the same CEO quoted earlier to conjecture:

"What I suspect is happening right now is retailers are tapping into toilet paper inventory that's sitting in their warehouses until they get more shipment from producers."

 But the producers don't want to send any more until the retailers clear their own warehouses out, so companies aren't stuck storing the surplus indefinitely. Or hiring more truckers to deliver it.   That means loss of profits including having to hire more warehouse workers. 

Basically, here's what has happened: The stores had stored TP like many other items according to a "just in time" model. In this frame, the given industry - whether for TP, cold drinks, meats, milk or whatnot - adopts a strategy that aims to produce, ship and stock as few goods as needed, to meet current demand.   Thus, by decreasing the capacity of their distribution centers they were able to save on rent, utilities as well as labor.  Meanwhile, distributors saved on fuel and wages.   Manufacturers also gained by cutting down on capital locked  up in unsold inventory.

The more unsold inventory, the more capital lost.  Again, if people no longer purchase toilet paper after the pandemic ends, because they have so much of it, the manufacturers will be in a world of hurt via lost capital. 

Basically then, the hysterical run on stores for toilet paper has capsized every aspect of the just in time model.   As one Walmart exec put it to a WSJ reporter (March 24, p. B4, 'Grocers Revamp Inventory Strategies'):

"We had sold three months of supplies in 10 days. Nobody keeps three months worth of anything anymore."

To adjust to the increase in demand grocers have had to make more space for certain inventory and manufacturers have had to maximize output.  This has assured more than enough toilet paper technically, if people would just back off and cease the hysterical buying of so much.  (Grocers could help here by limiting purchases to one package per customer)

In the meantime, the manufacturers are repurposing production, for example to make  less bathroom paper towels and more toilet paper.  But there are ongoing worries of a supply chain breakdown and the weak link in the chain appears to be truckers who have to be the main ones delivering it to the retail stores.  To those who may not realize it, truckers are now seeing hell having to meet this punishing demand, often remaining in their trucks with no restroom stops (having to us diapers) and also no more truck stops to feed them. (One New Orleans trucker admitted to the Times Picayune his wife makes him a large 'vat' of hot gumbo for each trip which he eats in the cab.)

Consumer products company Kimberly-Clark (KMB), whose retail toilet paper brands include Scott and Cottonelle, said it is taking steps to accelerate production and reallocating inventory to meet current demand.   In a statement to CNN Business, the KMB CEO said:

"We want to assure consumers that we are doing our best to ensure a steady supply of product to stores, and will continue to make adjustments to our plans as necessary,

Another way suppliers are responding to the toilet paper craze: Some are cutting out distribution centers, sending trucks directly to and from paper factories to get product onto shelves more quickly, said Scott Luton, founder and CEO of Supply Chain Now Radio, a digital media company focused on supply chain management.
But less said now,  except in only certain business pages - like in the WSJ-  is that some companies are considering halting their production, certainly by the end of May.  They simply don't trust Americans - stacked to the brim with hundreds of rolls - will go on buying it when the COVID-19 plague ends.

And they don't want to deal with the demand shock of thousands of cubic feet of toilet paper stuck in their warehouses representing millions of bucks in lost capital.

So get a grip, people, and no more toilet paper hysteria.
And so apparently this virtual choir or symphony thing is A THING, here's some more...
And, now, more music...













Lily Lines newsletter March 30, 2020

This newsletter was made while listening to:

“Stay Flo” by Solange 



  Listen to everything we’ve recommended here.

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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2003.30 - 10:10

- Days ago = 1731 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I plan to continue Hey Mom posts at least twice per week but will continue to post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.

Sunday, March 29, 2020

A Sense of Doubt blog post #1867 - Stay in, Read Comics, Support Local Comic Shops: Comic book production suspended

Proprietrix - Books With Pictures - Portland
 A Sense of Doubt blog post #1867 - Stay in, Read Comics, Support Local Comic Shops: Comic book production suspended

I am going to stay in today and read a lot of comic books!! :-)

It's not unlike me to do something like that, but I have not done it in  some time. I have a serious back log to get through.

Here's a post dedicated to whats going on in the comic industry and the outpouring of love from comic fans (and for perspective, a little hate, from the assholes behind #Comicgate).

For now, comic production has halted because of the pandemic.

But there are so many comics to enjoy.

Many local shops will ship comics.

Stay home; read comics.

Thanks for checking out my massive love of comic books post.
















From BOOKS WITH PICTURES:


WHAT'S GOING ON WITH COMICS?

We've got our new arrivals in for this Wednesday... and we don't know when new periodical comics are going to start coming in again. Diamond Comic Distributors, the company that distributes comic books from Marvel, DC, Image, and virtually every other publisher, has put new comics delivery on pause because of the coronavirus crisis, Free Comic Book Day has been pushed to "sometime in the summer," and the printer that handles DC and Dark Horse's comics temporarily shut down today. What's going to happen next? Friends, we have no idea--the news changes every day, and we're just trying to roll with it.




Books with Pictures is a comics shop in southeast Portland, OR. We carry a wide range of books, including super hero comics, indie comics, kids’ picture books, all-ages comics, LGBT comics, and small-run handmade comics.

Our mission is explicitly inclusive; we are a space that is welcoming to people who love good stories without regard to age, race, sexual orientation, gender expression, or disability status. We believe that representation of diverse perspectives is crucial to our mission, and stock content reflecting that belief.



















Um... You might think it's funny. but I LOVE IT.




https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comicsgate

Comicsgate is a campaign in opposition to perceived "forced diversity" and progressivism in the content of North American superhero comic books and the kinds of creators who work in the industry. The name is derived from Gamergate, a similar movement related to video games.[1][2] Participants argue that "forced diversity" occurs in both hiring and comics content, and that this has led to a decline in sales.[3][4][5]
The movement has been described as part of the alt-right movement,[6] and as a harassment campaign[7][8] which "targets women, people of color, and LGBT folk in the comic book industry".[9] It has faced blame for the vandalism of a store that did not stock comics created by its members, and for threats of violence against others.[5][10]











































A Sense of Doubt blog post #1439 - "Comics Are Going Downhill" - NOT!






And let's not forget comic book podcasts!!



https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/comic-reglections/comic-reflections









The Peerless Power of Comics!


New (to me) cool comic site - http://peerlesspower.blogspot.com/

http://peerlesspower.blogspot.com/2020/03/six-against-skrulls.html


Since the Kree-Skrull War has recently been a focus of the PPC, we'd be remiss if we failed to note a group of individuals who formed a coterie as a result of that event:



Yes, the Illuminati, who met at the request of Iron Man following the Avengers' confrontation of the Skrulls in space during that race's hostilities with the Kree (and vice versa). War was averted during that encounter, thanks in part to the machinations of the Kree Supreme Intelligence which unleashed the power of none other than Rick Jones--but soon after his return to Earth, Stark initiated a meeting in Wakanda and proposed to Reed Richards, Stephen Strange and the others that the six of them meet on a regular basis to keep each other apprised of anything and/or anyone that might pose a threat at some point to Earth--"warning signs," if you will, that would allow them to pool their resources and avert disaster.


Since the Kree-Skrull War has recently been a focus of the PPC, we'd be remiss if we failed to note a group of individuals who formed a coterie as a result of that event:



Yes, the Illuminati, who met at the request of Iron Man following the Avengers' confrontation of the Skrulls in space during that race's hostilities with the Kree (and vice versa). War was averted during that encounter, thanks in part to the machinations of the Kree Supreme Intelligence which unleashed the power of none other than Rick Jones--but soon after his return to Earth, Stark initiated a meeting in Wakanda and proposed to Reed Richards, Stephen Strange and the others that the six of them meet on a regular basis to keep each other apprised of anything and/or anyone that might pose a threat at some point to Earth--"warning signs," if you will, that would allow them to pool their resources and avert disaster.

And yet, the group resolved to keep their meetings and even their existence secret, perhaps so as not to alert those who aroused their suspicions--even failing to notify the National Security Council of their activities, the very agency which shares vital and classified information with the Avengers as part of a special arrangement with the team and which would likely take issue with the covert nature of this group in acting outside of its auspices.

And act they do--nor does it comes as much of a surprise, then, when we discover what threat (if dormant for the time being) they've decided to proactively deal with first.







Given the audacity of the group's threat here, it's easy to understand why the practice of "shooting the messenger" caught on in ancient times. As it is, you can almost hear the collective palms of the N.S.C. hitting their foreheads in exasperation, had its members been made aware of the Illuminati's plan to take this approach with an advanced, warlike alien race. No doubt Reed Richards and the others must have known how the Skrulls would react to such an affront; but did it occur to at least Iron Man that their actions here would likely reignite hostilities with the Skrulls and place the Earth, rather than the Kree, directly in their sights?

Imagine, then, how the Skrulls, who are already outraged by this intrusion and being dictated to by a handful of Earthlings, would react to a show of strength (courtesy of Black Bolt) which is obviously meant to deter such action, but which you and I and practically any other sane observer would regard as an act of war.





We can probably think of any number of ways the group could have left things with the Skrulls. Resolve can be conveyed with little more than a bold statement where a further response is implied--for instance, calmly reminding the Skrulls of what just one human was able to accomplish in regard to incapacitating the military might of both the Skrulls and the Kree would have arguably made more of an impact than what amounts to a slap in the face.

But unfortunately, what's done is done, and the Illuminati will have to own their actions this day. But what's truly disturbing here is that it doesn't appear to occur to any of them that they might have ended up committing a blunder that will escalate the situation they wished to curtail--and part of that blunder entails underestimating those they sought to intimidate.




The shoe is now on the other foot. With the Illuminati at their mercy, the Skrulls proceed to experiment on this valuable cross-sampling of super-beings from the planet they've vowed to conquer, which will doubtless yield a wealth of physical and technological data (as well as aiding them in the infiltration approach we know in hindsight they'll take when they're ready to proceed). Things don't look too good for our oh-so-cocky heroes who had this in-and-out operation all planned out.




Stark, of course, represents to the Skrulls a great deal of intel as both an Avenger and an engineer whose work has provided weaponry for both S.H.I.E.L.D. and the military in general. And so the shape-changing Skrulls have something different in mind for gaining his secrets--an approach that backfires when dealing with one they'd considered helpless.





The scene is jumping the gun a bit, since this would be well before Stark would request and receive hand-to-hand combat training from Captain America--and how he's managed to fight off eight Skrulls without doubling over in cardiac arrest is anyone's guess.

From that point, Stark moves to free the others one by one, starting with Charles Xavier. It's not clear what type of suffering the Skrulls inflicted on Xavier to keep him helpless*--but while he stops short of killing his captors**, from the look of his reprisal they would likely welcome the release of death.




*Apparently neither Xavier nor Strange were able to release their astral forms to facilitate their escape.

**A curious choice on Xavier's part, considering Black Bolt's strike must have killed countless Skrulls on a vessel that size, in addition to the casualties in the buildings below.


From there, it's a touch-and-go escape for the group--and an improbable one, considering the odds as well as the fact that they're carrying wounded and all of them have been weakened by their ordeal, nor is Stark's armor available to him. We also have to believe that the Skrulls are either overconfident in their detention methods or completely incompetent, given the progress this group makes in making it out of the complex alive and being able to commandeer and launch a ship. The natural assumption to make would be that the Skrulls have allowed their escape, while putting on a good show to make it look otherwise--but while that's not at all clear, the end result will render the question moot.






Stark's complacency is nothing short of astonishing, given the fact that the Illuminati have made Earth's situation with the Skrulls far worse than it was before they issued their demand to back off or else. Even more curious is that thereafter, they appear to put the Skrulls on the back burner and take no discernible preventive measures in anticipation of a Skrull response to their incursion, even though they formed their cabal with the intent of being forewarned of and getting a handle on potential threats.

It's fairly clear the Skrulls have their priorities in order.


The New Avengers: Illuminati #1

Script: Brian Bendis & Brian Reed
Pencils: Jim Cheung
Inks: Mark Morales
Letterer: Cory Petit

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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2003.29 - 10:10

- Days ago = 1730 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I plan to continue Hey Mom posts at least twice per week but will continue to post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.