From Jon Gertner’s excellent New York Times Magazine article about the burgeoning lithium-battery market and the future of manufacturing in America:

“On both sides of the world, the fundamental appeal of expanding manufacturing is jobs. It is a curiosity of modern life that information companies can create extraordinary social disruptions and vast shareholder wealth but relatively few jobs. Facebook has about 2,000 employees worldwide. Google has about 29,000. Even in its new, slimmed-down state, General Motors, a decidedly less valuable company, has about 200,000 employees. What’s more, that number represents only a fraction of the people behind the production of a G.M. car. ‘When you’re manufacturing anything, even if the work is done by robots and machines, there’s an incredible value chain involved,’ Susan Hockfield, the president of M.I.T., says. ‘Manufacturing is simply this huge engine of job creation.’ For batteries, that value chain would include scientists researching improved materials to companies mining ores for metals; contractors building machines for factory work; and designers, engineers and machine operators doing the actual plant work. By some estimates, manufacturing employs about 65 percent of America’s scientists and engineers.”

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Quite a time warp. I hate Star Wars with a passion, but, still, interesting.

 

Some search-engine keyphrases bringing traffic to Afflictor this week:

But still no asteroids.

Afflictor: Giving pretty dollies to deserving children, since 2009.

 

  • Joe Biden may have doomed Obamacare back in 1991.
  • Social etiquette, as practiced by simians.
  • Rob Walker looks at the consumer desire for planned obsolescence.

"I was intoxicated, but not pissing."

DNA-Pro Bono

I was taken into custody because a cop thought I was pissing. I was intoxicated, but not pissing. They scanned my thumb with a portable device and took my photo right on the street. I am a professional, white male with no record. I was released and not charged with anything. They put me through the ringer. I didn’t even go to central booking. They held me for 5 hours. Honestly, I don’t recall, but I think I gave them a DNA swab as a bargain to get released. Do they have the right to do that if not arrested? Can they store my DNA? This is bs. I am open to any legal advice from an attorney. Thank you. 

In 1959, Hugh Hefner talks with Lenny Bruce, who had not yet been consumed by heroin and legal troubles.

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From a page of obituaries about electrical genius Nikola Tesla, who died alone and in modest means in 1943 at the New Yorker Hotel:

“Tesla’s ideas bordered increasingly on what some considered the fantastic as he advanced in years. On his seventy-eighth birthday he announced in an interview that he had invented a ‘death beam’ powerful enough to destroy 10,000 airplanes at a distance of 250 miles and annihilate an army of 1,000,000 soldiers instantaneously.

On his eighty-fourth birthday he declared he stood ready to divulge to the United States Government the secret of the ‘death beam’ that, he said, would build an invisible Chinese Wall of defense around the country against any attempted attack by an enemy air force, no matter how large.”

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David Bowie as Tesla, in The Prestige:

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Up next: plague of frogs.

Dick Cavett interviews Evel Knievel, 1971.

Another Evel Knievel post:

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"Like Denzer he was a hopeless lunatic." (Image by Klaus with K.)

The Lunacy Commission of 19th-century New York had its hands full with the Ward’s Island Insane Asylum, since the guards were especially brutal and the patients exceedingly troubled, as evidenced by the following stories about the facility which were published in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle.

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“A Greenpoint Man Says Rag Soup Was Served To The Inmates” (June 26, 1894): “The state lunacy commission resumed its investigations into the condition of the insane poor on Ward’s and Blackwell’s Islands this morning in the Park Avenue Hotel, New York.

Henry P. Bradley of 1,544 Broadway, manager of a grocery firm, who spent several months in 1891 in Ward’s Island Asylum, testified to repeated acts of cruelty on the part of the attendants. John McSweeney, a resident of Greenpoint and an attendant at Ward’s Island in 1891 and 1892, testified to irregularities in the asylum, such as allowing patients to bathe in the same water and to the serving of soup which contained pieces of muslin and clothing to the patients.”

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"...and to the serving of soup which contained pieces of muslin and clothing to the patients."

“One Ward’s Island Inmate Brains Another” (April 26, 1880): “Charles Denzer, an inmate of the Ward’s Island Lunatic Asylum, murdered Terrence Shields, another patient, on Friday, in a fit of sudden violence. Denzer is a miner. In 1971, immediately after his arrival in this country he was sent to the emigrant asylum, and in 1874 was transferred at Ward’s Island, where he has remained since. Shields was by trade a plasterer. Like Denzer he was a hopeless lunatic. Previous to 1865 he lived at  No. 850 Washington St, New York. In that year he was sent to Blackwell’s Island Insane Asylum, and in the fifteen years he has spent there and on Ward’s Island his friends have gradually lost sight of him and left him to his fate. Both men were considered quiet and harmless. Though Denzer had twice attempted to take his own life, he never made any demonstrations of hostility toward other patients.

On Friday morning, as the men were about to begin the day’s work, Keeper Thomas Keenan called Denzer and asked him to take from a closet next to the pantry a long and heavy window stick, which he wanted to use. Denzer went to obey the order. Shields sat by the door of the closet reading, and held it open until Denzer came out. His head was bent, and he did not observe Denzer, who, without a word, lifted the heavy stick and brought it down upon his head with great force.”

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“An Inventor Goes Insane” (December 8, 1895): “George E. Fleet, an inventor, of 77 Roosevelt Street, New York, was sent to Ward’s Island Insane Asylum yesterday. Fleet went crazy trying to invent a patent bottle which, when emptied of its contents, could not be refilled.”

"I'm guessing Russian women are a bit out of my price range." (Image by Hamed Saber.)

Where can I buy a hot mailorder bride?

I’m pushing close to 40 and seriously thinking about settling down with a wife and kids. I’ve been living with my parents as a way to save money and feel the real need to get out on my own. I’d love to meet a hot woman who will be my wife and take care of me and my kids if I decide to have any. I’ve had a couple of relationships in my life but none of them worked out on the account that women in this country are too selfish and independent. It’s all about me me me and what you can you buy me with them. I’m more into traditional women the way they were before all this women’s lib stuff. I’m seriously thinking about getting a mail order bride as I see that as the simplest route and the least costly. I’m looking to settle down with a woman from either south America or Asia as I’m guessing Russian women are a bit out of my price range. Anybody had expereince with a respectable agency? I’m looking to start my new life as soon as I can. I’d like a woman who wouldn’t mind doing her womenly duties like cooking, taking care of me when I get back from work and taking care of the kids.

Speaking of The Day of the Locust

  • Rep. Joe Wilson: “You lie!”

  • Town Hall, WI: “Congressman Steve Kagen…found out the rough way.”

  • Casey Anthony trial: “Calm down! Calm down!”

  • Candlestick Park shooting: “Both inside the stadium and out, it was chaotic.”

I’d read somewhere that Nathanael West had written at least parts of his two devastating short novels, Miss Lonleyhearts and The Day of the Locust, while working the graveyeard shift at Manhattan hotels in the 1920s. From a 1970 Time article about the author called, “A Great Despiser”:

“Early in 1927, West found himself working as night manager in a seedy little Manhattan hotel on 23rd Street called Kenmore Hall; later, he moved uptown as manager of the shabby-genteel Sutton Club Hotel.

In disaster, it would seem, West found his will to write. In the hotels, he found his subject. He saw them as zoos of failure, terminal wards filled with ‘dismantled innocents’ who had lost the battle for survival in a machine civilization. With the skinned eyes of poverty, he saw that he too might someday lose the battle and wind up on the other side of the desk. Horrified, fascinated, wrung with love, he watched his tenants like a man watching himself die in a mirror. He chatted with them endlessly: he steamed open their letters and read their secrets; and through long, lonely nights in hotel offices, he braided their stories into books.”

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The original Homer Simpson on screen, 1975:

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Dogged reporting by Shane Ryan on Grantland about Richard Fliehr, better known as professional wrestling legend Rc Flair, who is closing in on senior-citizen status and faltering badly into his dotage. Nixon didn’t get this level of scrutiny from Woodward and Bernstein. The sad story is obviously reminiscent of the great Darren Aronofsky-Mickey Rourke collaboration, The Wrestler. The opening:

“Ric Flair has been physically attacked by at least three of his four wives.

In a 2005 divorce case with Elizabeth Harrell — wife no. 2 — Flair’s lawyers detailed their accusations. “On more than one occasion,” they wrote, “Plaintiff (Beth) has assaulted the Defendant (Flair), striking him about the head and body in an effort to provoke him into a physical confrontation.”

In 2009, Flair filed a criminal complaint against Tiffany Vandemark — wife no. 3 — whom he accused of ‘hitting him in the face with a phone charger.’

And in 2010, Flair and his current wife, Jacqueline Beams, returned to their Charlotte, N.C., home after dinner at the Lodge Restaurant. There, for reasons never made explicit, Jacqueline punched him repeatedly in the face. She was arrested.

The story of Ric Flair was once about a college dropout who rose through the ranks of professional wrestling to become a legend. It was about his nickname, ‘The Nature Boy,’ and his signature figure four leglock, both lifted from an older wrestler named Buddy Rogers. It was about his multiple championships, his bleach-blond hair, his fast-talking patter (by his own reckoning, Flair was a ‘stylin’, profilin’, limousine-riding, jet-flying, kiss-stealing, wheelin’-n’-dealin’ son of a gun!’), and his signature, trademarked cry: ‘WOOO!’

Today the story is about a man known in the court system as Richard Morgan Fliehr, 62, born in 1949 and adopted by parents who raised him in Minnesota. That’s what he was called this past April, when a judge ejected Fliehr from his Charlotte home because he couldn’t pay his rent. That’s what he was called in May, when he faced an arrest order for an unpaid $35,000 loan. That’s what he’s called on the paychecks from Total Nonstop Action, a second-tier outfit where he’s still compelled to perform despite suffering from alcoholic cardiomyopathy, and where almost everything he earns goes toward old debts: lawyers, ex-wives, the IRS, former business partners, and anyone who made the mistake of lending him money.”

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“Wherever I go, I never leave a lady without a smile on her face.”

“I’m an old broken down piece of meat”:

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Google Books putting millions of searchable volumes online has opened possibilities for scholars of all sorts, including psychologists interested in analyzing the predictive nature of language. James Pennebaker, chair of the department of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin, has done such a study resulting in the book, The Secret Life of Pronouns. It’s not the point of Pennebaker’s study, but I’ve often wondered if the type of language we use changes if we are developing a serious illness but not yet aware of it. It’s really easy to read signifiers in retrospect, but perhaps they can be deciphered to predict likelihood of sickness, at least until we have a foolproof biological means of predetermining such things. From a Scientific American interview with Pennebaker conducted by Garreth Cook:

COOK: How did you become interested in pronouns?

PENNEBAKER: A complete and total accident. Until recently, I never thought about parts of speech. However, about ten years ago I stumbled on some findings that caught my attention. In the 1980s, my students and I discovered that if people were asked to write about emotional upheavals, their physical health improved. Apparently, putting emotional experiences into language changed the ways people thought about their upheavals. In an attempt to better understand the power of writing, we developed a computerized text analysis program to determine how language use might predict later health improvements. In other words, I wanted to find if there was a healthy way to write.

Much to my surprise, I soon discovered that the ways people used pronouns in their essays predicted whose health would improve the most. Specifically, those people who benefited the most from writing changed in their pronoun use from one essay to another. Pronouns were reflecting people’’s abilities to change perspective.

As I pondered these findings, I started looking at how people used pronouns in other texts — blogs, emails, speeches, class writing assignments, and natural conversation. Remarkably, how people used pronouns was correlated with almost everything I studied. For example, use of  first-person singular pronouns (I, me, my) was consistently related to gender, age, social class, honesty, status, personality, and much more. Although the findings were often robust, people in daily life were unable to pick them up when reading or listening to others. It was almost as if there was a secret world of pronouns that existed outside our awareness.”

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Dr. Pennebaker on the psychological benefits of writing:

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I hope this Scientology video isn’t real.

Sad if inevitable news that Steve Jobs is stepping down as CEO of Apple due to health concerns. I have major misgivings about the treatment of workers in Apple’s factories in Asia and the company’s light regard for consumer privacy, but Steve Jobs is one of the most singular Americans of his time. An artist as businessperson, a visionary who not only saw the future of tech but made it, Jobs brought big ideas to the marketplace and delivered on them, more often than not, sensationally. His latter stint at Apple was more spectacular than his first, giving lie to F. Scott Fitgerald’s famous line that there are no second acts in America, which is oft-quoted and has always been untrue. But never more so than in the case of Jobs.

More Steve Jobs posts:

 

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Joe Biden famously christened health-care reform as a “Big Fucking Deal,” but there is another BFD in his past, an inexplicable one, which may be health-care reform’s undoing when lawsuits go before the Supreme Court next year. An excerpt from Jeffrey Toobin’s excellent new New Yorker profile about Justice Clarence Thomas and his equally conservative wife, Virginia:

“Thomas was confirmed in the Senate by a vote of fifty-two to forty-eight, and neither the Judiciary Committee nor any other part of the government has since seen fit to reëxamine the Thomas-Hill controversy. Still, a good deal of evidence has since emerged about the protagonists and their testimony. Even near the end of the hearings, several other women who had worked for Thomas were prepared to testify and corroborate Hill’s testimony that Thomas had a history of making female subordinates uncomfortable with personal and sexual talk. The group included Angela Wright, Rose Jourdain, and Sukari Hardnett; other associates of Thomas, among them Kaye Savage and Fred Cooke, would have testified about the nominee’s long-standing interest in pornography, which would have corroborated Hill’s account. But Joseph Biden, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee at the time, decided not to call these witnesses. This year, Lillian McEwen, a Washington lawyer who had a long-term romantic relationship with Thomas before he met Ginni, published a memoir, D.C. Unmasked & Undressed. She, too, remarked on the Justice’s ‘strong interest in pornography,’ and she also said that Thomas scrutinized his work colleagues as prospective sexual partners. In short, virtually all the evidence that has emerged since the hearings corroborates Hill’s version of events.”

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Anita Hill, October 11, 1991:

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Much as I’ve tried to feel differently, I’ve always liked the idea of Borges much more than the actual writings of Borges. But on this, his 112th birthday, I came across “Borges, a Blind Writer With Insight,” a 1971 New York Times interview with the Argentine writer, who apparently appeared on the Today show right around that time. An excerpt:

“Today his short stories — some hardly dawdle past a paragraph — appear in The New Yorker, and they are collected in books. Essences of essences. Labyrinths within mazes within mirrors.
When he comes to this country — he is here on a visit now — he has an utterly respectful audience. How many Latin-American authors are so well translated? He is naturally taken as a candidate for elevation to the Nobel Prize.
Beware! Who knows what this Imaginary Being will say next? On the Today show on television he invoked the name of Gustave Flaubert, and actually whispered a book’s title in excellent French. The effect could not have been more startling had he changed into a Hippogriff and pecked at the startled interviewer.
Replying to questions, he draws from the cadences of memory. Borges says, ‘At my age [71], what can I do but plagiarize what I’ve already said, no?’
What shall a writer be in the glare of glosses on glosses and endless honors? Scholars consecrate volumes to his carefully turned ironies. Is he a Domesticated Industry?
Borges lives on the north side of Buenos Aires. Recently he took a taxi to the National Library on the south side. The taxi driver said, ‘Are you by any chance Borges?’
Borges said ‘Well, more or less’ or ‘I think so.'”

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"You evil, sorry sack of horse shit." (Image by christiandemiegeville.)

YOU WANTED TO STEAL WHAT WASNT YOURS! (THIEF you are cursed 10 fold)

What goes around comes around 10 times. You stole what wasnt yours. The last laugh will not be yours. Before the night is over, before the day is through, whatever you have to done to others will come right back to you. You will have bad luck and karma 10 fold. Everything you touch will turn to shit. You will loose everything. Money will go through your cursed hands like water. You will never find happiness. You will have to crawl on the ground like the thieving worm you are. Your mouth is going to dry up. The roads will not be safe for you when you drive. Your sleep patterns will be disturbed. You will emit a foul stench every where you go. People will hate you and cause problems for you. Cursed is YOU and everyone around you who knew and did nothing who does not continue in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them; are going to have a string of bad luck. You will get what you deserve. You have been thrown to the wind, you evil sorry sack of horse shit. You and yours will be blown to dust. You are nothing but satans imp. 

Swedish Prime Minister Tage Erlander, videoconferencing, 1960.

This classic photo shows videoconferening in the days of rotary phones, which was possible in analog form right around the time of TV’s introduction, but it wasn’t available to consumers for several decades and Skype was a mere pipe dream at the time. Copy from a 1969 Bell Systems publication about the introduction of the “Picturephone”:

“THE TELEPHONE brought a new dimension to human communications. Where previously men had been able to send written messages over wires as electrical signals, the telephone made it possible for the human voice to span the miles. Now, almost a hundred years later, the telephone is commonplace and another dimension is being added-that of sight. And just as the telephone has revolutionized human habits of communicating and made a major contribution to the quality of modern life, many of us at Bell Labs believe that PICTUREPHONE® service, the service that lets people see as well as hear each other, offers potential benefits to mankind of the same magnitude. It is a tribute to the flexibility and versatility of the existing telephone network that Picturephone service, now being readied for introduction as a regular Bell System offering, can be added as an integral part of telephone service. What is Picturephone service like? Most important, of course, the user sees the person with whom he is talking. People today are so accustomed to using the telephone and to its usefulness as an instrument of communication, that they sometimes overlook the importance of vision in communication. But think, do you telephone the person in the next office or go to see him? Most people sense a more complete and satisfying exchange when they can both see and talk to each other. Thus, the advantage of more complete communication with Picturephone service is readily apparent.

Picturephone service is useful in other ways too. Graphic material, such as drawings, photographs, and physical objects, can be viewed with the Picturephone set. The equipment can also be used to communicate with a computer. The customer ‘talks’ to the computer via TOUCH-TONE@ dialing buttons, and the computer’s responses are displayed on the picture tube.”

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Below is amazing footage of computer pioneer Douglas Carl Engelbert‘s 1968 demo of videoconferecning (and other tech stuff, including the mouse) , which was aimed at the business market: “You as an intellectual worker, supplied with a computer display, backed up with a computer that was alive for you all day, and was instantly responsive to every action you had. How much value could you derive from that?”

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Trump, that fucking idiot. (Thanks Atlantic.)

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In 1977, while subbing for Johnny Carson. As Denver says, “Far out!”

Related posts:

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Harvard evolutionary biologist Daniel Lieberman is decribed wryly as a “hoof-and-foot man” because he studies the extreme ends of the human body–head and feet. In a smart interview in the New York Times conducted by Claudia Dreifus, Lieberman discusses how the bodies we’ve inherited are mismatched for the modern world we’ve created:

“For example, impacted wisdom teeth and malocclusions are very recent problems. They arise because we now process our food so much that we chew with little force. These interactions affect how our faces grow, which causes previously unknown dental problems. Hunter-gatherers — who live in ways similar to our ancestors — don’t have impacted wisdom teeth or cavities. There are many other conditions rooted in the mismatch — fallen arches, osteoporosis, cancer, myopia, diabetes and back trouble. So understanding evolutionary biology will definitely help my students when they become orthopedists, orthodontists and craniofacial surgeons.”

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A face growing in Brazil:

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