Aug. 12th, 2021

canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
A few days ago I posted How Often Do You Shower? about the recent social media blowup involving celebrities who don't shower or bathe, or don't wash their kids, every day. Like some of those celebrities I don't shower every day. Though unlike a few of them I don't take it quite as far as "Wait until you can see and smell the dirt." I shower most days, and I definitely shower— even if it's in the afternoon or evening or it's my second shower of the day— to freshen up after I've done something that makes me really dirty or sweaty. But here's the other thing.... I don't always use soap!

Soap has a scientific purpose. Its molecules bond with water on one end and oils and fats on the other. Using soap with water helps water wash away certain categories of crud on the skin. Again, though, my lifestyle seldom entails getting really cruddy. I find that a simple shower with warm running water gets me clean— especially when I shower most days.

Oh, I use soap and other cleansers now and then. I use soap on my legs when I've gotten really dirty, e.g., from hiking on a dusty trail and dirt is stuck in my pores. I use shampoo in my hair 2 to 3 times a week. My hair is short and fine so water alone generally gets it clean. I use cleanser and scrub on my face once or twice a week. This is enough to keep pimples and roughness away while being infrequent enough that it doesn't overly dry out or abrade my skin— which would then require another cleaning regimen to fix.

It's that cycle of cleaning then having to fix what the cleaning did, that I see a lot of people get trapped in. IMO that's where a lot of shaming like, "OMG! If you don't do this, this, this, and that every day you're gross!" comes from. And of course what starts that cycle is cosmetics. When you cover your face with crud every day in the name of fashion you then have to clean all that crud off, then have to recondition all the damage the crud and the crud cleaners caused. Just say no. Everything's a lot easier when you say no.


canyonwalker: Sullivan, a male golden eagle at UC Davis Raptor Center (Golden Eagle)
The US Census Bureau has been gradually publishing results from the decennial 2020 Census. Back in April they released preliminary data showing which states would gain or lose a seat in the House of Representatives, and thus gain or lose votes in the Electoral College, based on population. Today they published data with rich demographics about the people who make up the United States.

The 2020 US Census (image from US Dept. of Commerce)The lead story that many media sources are running today is that the White majority in the US is shrinking as the country becomes more racially diverse. Non-Hispanic Whites now make up 57.8% of the population, down from 63.7% in 2010 (source: America Counts Stories, US Census Bureau, 12 Aug 2021[1]). The multiracial category grew the most since 2010, its population more than tripling. The number of states where White people are less than 50% of the population increased from 4 to 6. Nevada and Maryland joined Hawaii, California, Texas, and New Mexico.

Cities Grew, Rural Areas Lost

Another headline about today's data you see as you scan news feeds is that America's largest cities all grew in size. The top 10 cities— New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Phoenix, Philadelphia, San Antonio, San Diego, Dallas and San Jose— are now all over 1,000,000 population. And Phoenix grew enough to overtake Philadelphia for the #5 spot. Sorry, Philly. (Example coverage: The Hill article, 12 Aug 2021)

More broadly, 4 out of 5 metropolitan areas grew in population. And non-metro areas, which is to say rural areas not economically connected to a larger city, mostly lost population. This infographic from a CNN.com article published 12 Aug 2021 is insightful:

The population shrank in more than half of US counties from 2010 to 2020 (graphic from CNN)

You can see that geographic areas that lost population are quite widespread. These are mostly the big sparse areas of the US. It's also interesting to see that even in states like Texas, which overall gained population— Texas growing enough to gain 2 seats in the House of Representatives— the gains are all in big metropolitan areas. Rural America is shrinking.


[1] Yes I cited a primary source document in my blog. Again.

Profile

canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
canyonwalker

June 2025

S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 67
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 7th, 2025 01:37 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios