Shared posts

01 Nov 23:30

Foie Gras banned in New York City

by Rob Beschizza
wskent

untitled goose content AND does anyone know if you can make foie gras any other way? does it have involve overfeeding?

Foie Gras, a fatty dish created by force-feeding ducks and geese through tubes, will soon no longer be served in the thousand-or-so NYC restaurants that have it on their menus. Chefs are saying "what next, veal?" fearing other ostentatiously cruel delicacies (as opposed to the mundanely cruel ones) will be next.

CNN:

Foie gras has long been a point of debate.
In 2012, California's foie gras ban went into effect, only to have the ban overturned in 2015. Then, in 2017, the ban was upheld by a circuit court judge -- a decision that was backed by the Supreme Court in January of 2019. Chicago's history with the ban is almost equally as tumultuous. The Chicago City Council passed the ban in 2006, only to lift it two years later. What makes foie gras so contentious is the method of preparation. Foie gras is made of fattened duck or goose liver, and it has long been considered a French delicacy -- so much that the country has protected it as part of France's cultural heritage. But the product is made by force-feeding ducks, an practice that many people, like councilwoman Rivera, have found troubling

01 Nov 17:17

Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner, David Chang’s new Netflix series

by Jason Kottke
wskent

obviously we would build TORchella around food and warm fuzzies, right?

Despite some reservations (a little too bro-y for one thing), I really enjoyed David Chang’s Netflix series Ugly Delicious. So I’m happy to see that he’s got a new series coming out called Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner. The trailer:

In this one, he’s traveling the world with some non-food celebs: he hits Los Angeles with Lena Waithe, Marrakesh with Chrissy Teigen, Phnom Penh with Kate McKinnon, and Vancouver with Seth Rogen. Will watch.

Tags: David Chang   food   trailers   travel   TV   video
21 Oct 19:48

Rep Katie Porter: an Elizabeth Warren protege and single mom who destroys bumbling, mediocre rich guys in Congressional hearings

by Cory Doctorow
wskent

these clips are all awesome. i hadn't heard of her until just now and i'm so happy to know that she's in congress doing this all so well.

In 2018, Katie Porter flipped a Republican safe seat -- it had literally never been held by a Democrat-- in California's 45th District, and since then, she has been a delightful, brilliant terror of a lawmaker, using her deep background in finance law (she's a tenured finance law prof at UC Irvine who literally wrote the textbook on consumer finance law in the wake of Dodd-Frank and Elizabeth Warren's establishment of the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau).

Porter's got an amazing background: she went magna cum laude at Harvard Law (Elizabeth Warren was one of her profs), and she's also a single mom of 3 and domestic abuse survivor. She's got an amazing, prosecutorial questioning style that is an absolute breath of fresh air in Congressional hearings, where the median lawmaker is barely capable of asking a coherent question.

In her short time in Congress, Porter has blazed through a series of hearings in which she systematically exposed the dire incompetence of both Trump appointees and the captains of industry they serve, pursuing them relentlessly.

For example, Porter's pursuit of JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon, a principle villain of the financial crisis, about the inability of someone working the jobs his company advertises in her district to make ends meet, which the CEO -- who makes $31m/year in salary alone -- is completely flummoxed by trying to figure out how his employees might possibly solve their monthly shortfall (needless to say, it does not occur to him to suggest that he give them a raise).

Then there's her work on Ben Carson, who literally thought that "REO" (real-estate owned, the term for a foreclosure that results in repossession by HUD, the agency Carson oversees) was "Oreo" and asked bewildered questions about cookies before being given several, relentless lessons on the subject, along with a wicked tongue-lashing on the subject of the disproportionately high levels of REOs from his agency, and the American lives these actions destroy.

It was a distinct pleasure to watch her destroy Steve Mnuchin, another great, guillotine-inspiring finance villain, who tries -- and fails -- to bullshit his way through her questioning, as she chases him from corner to corner.

It's not all dudes, either: when Porter took on Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Kathy Kraninger, she conducted a masterclass in financial literacy, demonstrating Kraninger's monumental unfitness for her job -- and her malpractice in regulating the predatory lenders whose rules she was dismantling.

Porter is even teaching her colleagues to ask good questions, and even keeps a literal bingo card for evasive witness testimony.

Porter's basically the less-flashy, but even brainier and more tactically brilliant member of "the squad," who attained her historic victory even while she refused to take corporate or PAC money. Her Youtube channel is solid gold.

It’s also why her videos keep going viral; her ability to demystify technical, often esoteric financial concepts is a boon to those who understand that nitty-gritty details, all the minutiae of government work, are important, but aren’t sure how to connect the dots. It’s not all that different from what she used to do as a professor, and as a textbook author; now, she just has a much larger audience.

When she isn’t skewering witnesses before the Financial Services Committee, Porter focuses on health care and childcare legislation. As a single mother, she receives a scant $345 per month in child support from her former partner, whom she divorced in 2013. (The $5,000 limit for workers using fixed savings accounts to pay for childcare hasn’t been updated since 1986.) A survivor of domestic abuse, she is intent on improving access to psychiatrists, whom she struggled to find for her family. Years later, a provision to guarantee better care found its way into her bill on mental health parity.

Porter is open about the physical and emotional toll the job takes on her and her colleagues, mentioning a day when, following a contentious few hours on the House floor, she needed to go sit in the bathroom and collect herself before a big hearing. Even as a member of Congress, she has had to swallow her anger when legislation on even the most pressing issues moves at a glacial pace. “I want to scream in frustration that we have not tackled prescription drug pricing, and you can put that in print,” she said, her voice tinged with steel. But “I can’t just wave a wand and bring the bill to the House floor.”

The Freshman Democrat Who’s Making Conservatives Squirm [Kim Kelly/New Republic]

(via Mitch Wagner)

20 Oct 15:59

#RedForEd rebooted: Chicago's teachers are back on strike

by Cory Doctorow
wskent

my brother is a CPS teacher. strikes are so hard because students need to learn. if teachers can't do their job effectively then at the end of the day students aren't being given a fair chance either. they're striking for the right reasons and i hope they get the support they need! union's are important. read the jungle. end rant.

The #RedForEd movement swept America in 2018 and 2019 as teachers in both "red states" and "blue states" staged massive -- sometimes illegal -- strikes, demanding a fair deal for themselves, their students, and their colleagues who drive buses, clean classrooms, and do other related work.

The incredible, hard-won victories of the teachers' strikes are a harbringer of a profound shift in the American view of public services, after 40 years of Reagan-derived, neoliberal contempt of any state-provided service and a concerted effort by billionaires dilettantes to hollow out the public education system and replace it with underperforming charter schools that allow for public money to be funneled into the pockets of educational charlatans and religious maniacs.

Chicago's teachers have struck before, fighting pitched battles against austerity in a notionally Democratic stronghold that is dominated by a neoliberal, scheming, corrupt establishment epitomized by Rahm Emmanuel and Rod Blagojevich.

Now, Chicago's teachers are back on the line, 26,000 of them, striking alongside "special-ed classroom assistants, security guards, bus aides, custodians, and parent workers" and 2,500 parks workers -- 45,000 workers in all.

Their demands: help housing 20,000 homeless students, a nurse in every school, smaller class sizes, fully staffed schools, better pay and benefits, and restorative justice.

“We feel it is our responsibility to figure out how to get the nearly 20,000 homeless students in our schools housed,” says Stacy Davis Gates, a high school social studies teacher and the current vice president of the union. “There is no way in the world you can expect the students to keep it together in a classroom, to take a test in a classroom, to complete homework in a classroom, if they don’t have what they need in terms of a stable home environment.” Although Lightfoot likes to point out she’s “not Rahm,” she’s actually retained the same chief contract negotiator as Rahm and many mayors before him. In fact, the current chief negotiator for the Chicago Public Schools, Jim Franczek (of the private law firm Franczek P.C.) has been the lead negotiator against front-line educators for decades. “I understood from an early age that it is management that makes things happen,” Franczek said in a 2015 interview, “and I wanted to make things happen.” Which just underlines the fact that it will be the mayor whose actions will ultimately determine whether the strike happens on the 17th.

Fighting for the Contract Chicago Deserves [Chicago Teachers Union]

Chicago’s Teachers Are Making History. Again. [Jane McAlevey/The Nation]

17 Oct 17:14

Jim Meskimen, deepfake face dancer

by Rob Beschizza
wskent

good to great content

If you've been enjoying those videos where Bill Hader's face morphs uncannily into whoever he's impersonating, this one from Jim Meskimen is the overwhelming overdose. It's a perfect intentional demonstration of the special effect, generated by adversarial networks, an enchanted warning.

Actor/impressionist Jim Meskimen (Parks & Recreation, Whose Line?, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel) recites "Pity the Poor Impressionist" poem in 20 celebrity voices, with the help of SHAM00K.

12 Oct 18:10

Wisconsin's Penzey Spices spent $92,000 on Facebook #Impeachment ads in just one week

by Xeni Jardin

A Wisconsin-based company that sells herbs and spices for home gourmands spent more on impeachment-related Facebook ads than any entity besides Donald Trump, who is of course the impeachment target.

Penzey Spices, a family-owned company in Wauwatosa, WI, spent $92,000 in a single week on pro-impeachment (anti-Trump) Facebook ads, reports the New York Times late Friday.

From Sept. 29 to Oct. 5, Penzey Spices is reported to have spent about $92,000 in Facebook ads supporting the impeachment and removal of “President” Trump.

Trump's campaign, by comparison, spent over $700,000 on *anti* impeachment ads during that same period.

Excerpt:

Bill Penzey, the company’s owner, could not immediately be reached on Friday. But he told The Chicago Tribune that his wife “just about spit out her coffee laughing” when she heard that the company had spent more on Facebook impeachment ads than everyone but the president.

He added that though he had received some criticism from conservative clients, it was worth it to make a stand.

“I think the luxury of not being on a side is something of the past,” he said. “You lose some customers, you gain more customers. I think we’ve gained a lot more than we’ve lost.”

Here's a snip from the original Axios report that broke the news, with other big spenders shown for comparison:

Source: AXIOS

READ MORE:
A Wisconsin-based spice-seller is second only to Trump in spending on impeachment ads [chicagotribune.com]

The Trump campaign's massive Facebook impeachment ad buy [axios.com]

11 Oct 17:25

Fun Facts About James Buchanan

wskent

steve. was this you?

HELP I ACCIDENTALLY STARTED A PRESIDENTIAL CONSPIRACY

image

I MADE THIS WEBSITE LIKE 6 YEARS AGO ITS FAKE

EVERYTHING ON IT IS FAKE

I MADE IT ALL UP

AND NOW??????? 

image

I DID THIS????? THIS VERIFIED FB WOMAN WANTED TO BELIEVE JAMES BUCHANAN THE 15TH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES REALLY RAISED PYGMY GOATS IN THE WHITE HOUSE ROSE GARDEN??????

AND NOW??????????

image

SOMEONE HAS PUBLISHED IT?????????????????????? IT COSTS REAL MONEY???????????? NONE OF THE FACTS ARE REAL SOMEONE HELP ME

someone made a prezi

image

someone informed a classroom that James Buchanan was first choice over Sacagawea

I know it’s so bad like how did this happen I just cannot believe

All I can say is that I couldn’t ask for a better representation of the American education system tbh

Okay but like…Gail Collins is not just a “verified Facebook woman”. She’s a columnist for the New York Times.

You literally trolled over a million people.

10 Oct 15:39

Clickhole spent a day slandering Cap'n Crunch

by John Struan
wskent

the right kind of news.

Follow your muse where it takes you, even if it leads to a day's worth of articles trashing Cap'n Crunch in outlandish and disturbing ways.

(H/T Ben Collins.)

09 Oct 19:36

Kids Today

wskent

haha YOU'RE SO OLD, OLD MAN. this clip is ridiculous in too many directions. extreme normalization, weird references, and then just giving up at the end? hoo-boy.

"If I'm so average-American, how come that i've never heard of most of the musical groups that millions of other Americans apparently are listening to?"
08 Oct 14:58

I can’t watch this enough times.

wskent

be your best cowboy



I can’t watch this enough times.

08 Oct 02:28

The Lost Man - The Tamám Shud Mystery

wskent

***IDEAL WEEKEND MYSTERY READ***

there's no way not to get sucked into this.

05 Oct 15:59

Google finally gives Reader the respect it deserves with an actual gravestone

by Jay Peters
wskent

a good reminder: FUCK YOU, GOOGLE.

Image: @leftoblique

Google Reader has been dead for over six years, and the internet hasn’t been the same since. I still haven’t found a replacement that I enjoy quite as much as my memories of Reader, and I mourn its death every day. But now, we may finally have a place where we can pay respects to the beloved RSS app.

Dana Fried, a Google employee, posted this photo of a graveyard, with headstones for Reader and many other now-dead Google services, which is apparently set up in the main lobby of the company’s Seattle campus in honor of spooky season:

There are also gravestones for Picasa, Google Buzz, Orkut, Google Wave, and...

Continue reading…

04 Oct 15:37

Dungeons and Dragons stats for the Goose from Untitled Goose Game

by John Struan
wskent

annoying goose content

A Redditor created stats for the Goose from Untitled Goose Game. Naturally, its actions include an enraging honk:

The creator got some pushback for giving the Goose a chaotic neutral designation. His analysis:

I mean, even though the Goose is unnaturally intelligent, evasive and mean, it never really does anything of real threat to the village. My take on it is to be the subject of a wild goose chase, being maddeningly difficult to pin down, or to be an incredibly annoying support NPC for a damage dealing fiend who keeps it as a pet/associate.

Speaking of Untitled Goose Game, Tiny, who has a Patreon focusing on custom made keycaps for mechanical keyboards, sculpted this goose keycap with polymer clay:

03 Oct 15:02

JOHN WILCOCK: Establishing The Underground Press Syndicate (1966)

by Persoff and Marshall
wskent

i never knew this story. it's very cool. my job deals with open licensing every day and this is another beautiful example of what can happen when you keep information free and open.

The Underground Press Syndicate (UPS)

A relieving of tensions between John and the East Village Other leads to the development of the UPS.

From John Wilcock, New York Years, by Ethan Persoff and Scott Marshall.

(See all Boing Boing installments)

03 Oct 03:59

Trump Drags Nickelback Into His Bizarre Feud With The Bidens

by Stereogum
wskent

every time i think i definitively understand just how terrible he is, he outdoes himself and gets worse.

Nickelback & TrumpCanadian rockers Nickelback are the latest casualty in President Donald Trump’s war with his 2020 challenger, Joe Biden and the former veep’s adult failson, Hunter Biden. After seemingly getting caught red-handed trying to extort the president of Ukraine into investigating Hunter’s tenure on the board of a Ukrainian energy company, the president chose … More »
02 Oct 17:22

This cereal sippy cup mixes in the milk as you drink it

by Rusty Blazenhoff
wskent

let's group this with the KFC cheetos sandwich

Finally, an invention worth its weight in gold. The CrunchCup is a to-go cup for your cereal and milk.

It's comprised of two cups; one for the cereal and the other for the milk. Each cup has it's own hole so that the cereal and milk don't meet until they hit your mouth.

Pre-order it now for $25. (It reminds me a little of those "magic" milk bottles for dolls.)

Watch and learn:

(Geekologie)

27 Sep 17:48

Do Not Erase: Jessica Wynne's beautiful photos of mathematicians' chalkboards

by Cory Doctorow
wskent

sharing b/c 1) they're beautiful 2) for this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhNUjg9X4g8

Fashion Institute of Technology photographer Jessica Wynne's "Don Not Erase" project documents the beautiful chalkboards of mathematicians, which will be collected in a book from Princeton University Press in 2020 (Christmas 2020 will be a lot simpler for me as a result).

In a NYT profile of her series by Dennis Overbye, Wynne has lots of interesting things to say about the process of photographing mathematicians' working notes (her discussion reminded me of an article I wrote about the "Nutty Professor" reboot, where the director hired a chemist to write plausible equations on the chalkboard).

I habitually write "do not erase" on blank chalkboards and whiteboards. It's a terrible habit, but I can't seem to break it.

“I am attracted to the timeless beauty and physicality of the mathematicians’ chalkboard, and to their higher aspiration to uncover the truth and solve a problem,” Ms. Wynne said in an email. “Their imagination guides them and they see images first, not words. They see pictures before meaning.”

She added: “I am also fascinated by the process of working on the chalkboard. Despite technological advances, and the creation of computers, this is how the masters choose to work.”

Where Theory Meets Chalk, Dust Flies [Dennis Overbye/New York Times]

(via Kottke)

27 Sep 16:23

What the ‘Crane Index’ Says About Your Changing City

by Sarah Holder
wskent

sharing for the video of the crane building itself, which answers that question i've always been wondering about.


Loyal readers of CityLab, we need your help: We are looking to gather feedback on articles like these—what you like, what stands out, what you want more of. If you are interested in participating in upcoming research, please answer a few brief questions—and thank you!


Cranes should be pretty hard to miss. They reach hundreds of feet into the sky, often dangling precariously over city streets. But in a forest of high-rise buildings, spotting a crane in its native habitat is not entirely unlike spotting its avian homonym. You have to watch the skies.

“There,” said Shreya Sant.

I leaned my neck out of the car window and looked up. Above the San Francisco streets, a mass of steel hugged a skyscraper under construction a few blocks away. We wound through the streets, following the Google Maps directions that would bring us to our next mark. “It may not be the one we want,” Sant said. “But it’s still a crane.”

We’d been en route to check out another crane entirely when we happened upon this one, the kind of low-key serendipity that comes with the territory when you’re on a mission to count all the cranes in a city. This was the third time Sant had embarked on such a journey since moving to San Francisco last year. Usually, she brings her dog. This time, she brought me.

Sant works for Rider Levett Bucknall, a construction project management company and the purveyors of a bi-annual international Crane Count. The firm started conducting its counts in 2012, at first focusing only on Australia. In 2015, they expanded the process to include the 13 cities in North America where they operate. In each location, they tally tower cranes—the big ones used to build high-rises that are 10 to 80 stories tall—and note each development’s eventual use.

RLB crunches numbers all year on construction costs within the cities where it operates, which is useful for people in the development trade, and few others. But counting the tower cranes that rise above each city’s skyline turns out to be a topic of broader interest, too.

Like the Big Mac Index, which uses the price of a McDonalds hamburger to compare international exchange rates, The New York Times considers the crane count a way of taking the economy’s temperature. The last count before my and Sant’s, conducted in fall 2018, marked the third consecutive increase in North America’s total, RLB found.

But in high-cost cities like Seattle and San Francisco, which have seen income inequality rise along with new development, residents study the cranes like tea leaves.

“You know your neighborhood is being gentrified when … the only thing that outnumbers the construction cranes dotting the skyline are think pieces on where the old San Francisco went,” reads a 2014 SFGate post. San Francisco’s Anti-Eviction Mapping Project’s oral history of Bay Area change, “Narratives of Displacement,” opens with an image of a city besieged by construction equipment: “Today … cranes litter the horizon as the city gains international attention for skyrocketing rents and exponentially growing income inequality.”

As dots on a map, all cranes may look the same. But their impact isn’t indiscriminate. Even more than a construction tool, elegant wetland bird, and/or healing origami shape, cranes have become a synecdoche for transformation—telegraphing evolutions both personal and physical, wanted and unwanted.

It’s the tangled symbolism described by Solange Knowles in “Cranes in the Sky,” a song she wrote about returning to Miami—a place that once felt like home—after having a baby and signing a record deal, only to find the city covered in “metal clouds.” In an Interview magazine cover story, the singer explained her song’s genesis. “I remember looking up and seeing all of these cranes in the sky. They were so heavy and such an eyesore, and not what I identified with peace and refuge,” she told her sister, Beyonce. “I remember thinking of it as an analogy for my transition—this idea of building up, up, up that was going on in our country at the time, all of this excessive building, and not really dealing with what was in front of us.”

Cranes of S.F. (Sarah Holder/CityLab)

But what “excessive building” means depends on who’s watching it get built—and what’s being constructed. San Francisco has a severe housing shortage. An Apartment List analysis found that the metro added 3.45 jobs to every one housing unit permitted, giving it the worst housing-to-jobs ratio in the country; in 2018, the pace of housing construction in the city dropped 41 percent, despite more ambitious goals. But it also has a glut of offices and luxury high-rises: More than three-quarters of the new stock added in 2018 wasn’t considered “affordable,” according to the San Francisco Planning Department.

When Alexandra Lacey, an artist and activist with the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project and longtime San Francisco resident, looks at cranes looming overhead, she sees the places she knows and loves—favorite restaurants and neighborhood haunts—at risk. “People often say, ‘Things change; cities change,’” she said. “But there’s a kind of callousness to this idea.”

As Sant and I sat in traffic, I wondered about the cranes we’d be chasing across the city. Were they harbingers of displacement, or agents of much-needed supply? What, exactly, do cranes mean, and how many should San Francisco have?

***

To prep for my crane-hunt, I did a little background research.

There are a confident few who believe that aliens built Stonehenge, and the pyramids, and Macchu Picchu. It’s hardly fathomable that early humans, without the aid of powered machinery, were able to hoist tons of rocks into the air to build these sophisticated structures. But historians and archeologists have evidence that it was indeed humans (some of them likely forced laborers) that did it—with help from ropes and pulleys.

These mechanisms were the earliest versions of cranes, says Henry M. Koffman, a civil engineering professor at the University of Southern California. To lift 100 pounds using ropes and pulleys, he says, it would take humans just the equivalent of a five-pound tug.

Today’s steel-bodied cranes in the sky didn’t emerge until the Industrial Revolution, when steam could provide the lugging power. In the 1900s, gasoline and diesel engines took over.

Now, at least one crane is behind the construction of all of the urban structures you see. Tower cranes—the ones RLB counts—are used to construct the tallest buildings because they “will often give the best combination of height and lifting capacity”: Each can carry up to 18 metric tons, and reach up to 265 feet above ground (and even higher when affixed to the side of buildings). To keep the mega-cranes from tipping over, they’re often planted to the ground with concrete pads, which, according to Coast Crane Company approximations, can reach up to 30 by 30 feet, four feet deep, and 400,000 pounds. Everything about them is monumental.

“We can’t build skyscrapers without tower cranes—it’s really that simple,” said Koffman.

You also can’t build tower cranes without other cranes. “Mobile cranes”—the standard, medium-sized, truck-mounted ones, synonymous with “construction cranes”—are responsible for putting the jib (horizontal parts) on the tower crane’s mast (vertical part). Then, to rise to its maximum height, according to a breathless How Stuff Works explanation, “the crane grows itself one mast section at a time!”

Once the crane finishes auto-building, the human operator intervenes. “It’s like playing a big Donkey Kong game,” explained one crane operator in a History Channel documentary feature.

If you want to build tall, Koffman says, cranes remains the best technology we’ve got; he is unabashedly pro-crane. “Even when we colonize space, the moon, and Mars, we’ll be using cranes,” he said.

When I asked him about what the cranes currently operating on Earth mean, symbolically speaking, he got excited. “It’s funny you say that, because when I travel, usually downtown, I gauge the development by the number of tower cranes I counted,” he said. “In downtown L.A., where I’m from, I think a year ago I counted something like 13 or 14 tower cranes downtown … so that means that we’re in a big building boom.”

Apparently, counting cranes is a thing people do. I wanted to do it, too, which is how I found myself sitting across from Sant at a San Francisco Starbucks this summer, talking through the crane-count game plan.

She’d printed out a list of approved projects from the city’s construction permitting database, and cross-referenced it with a list of cranes she’d counted last fall. Then, she created a Google Maps route that would take her to each potential mark, grouping them by neighborhood. For the past few days, she’d been systematically driving through cluster by cluster, and checking off the cranes she found. (To stay as accurate as possible, Sant won’t count a crane until she sees the construction site from which it stems.)

The crane-count game plan. (Sarah Holder/CityLab)

This afternoon, we’d be covering the second cluster: About 10 locations around Van Ness Avenue, splayed between Uber’s HQ and the Tenderloin district, home to many of San Francisco’s unhoused residents. I could probably leave after an hour or so of this, she said. Anything longer, and I’d get bored.

“You have to drive and look out the window and say, ‘There’s a crane,’” said Shreya. “That’s all it is.”

This point-in-time count technique has its drawbacks. The exact number of cranes on the ground fluctuates, and can be influenced by a number of factors: If a bundle of permits have just been approved, cranes may not have appeared yet, but development is still on its way. Similarly, if a project has just been completed, cranes may just have been lowered, but in their place is a new building with units to fill. RLB counts twice each year to help balance this out—it takes far longer than six months to complete any one project, so most cranes will likely be captured at some point. In addition to counting, the company uses permits to categorize buildings by their use category, to find out whether projects are commercial or residential, civil or educational.

“It’s not perfect,” says James Casey, an associate at RLB’s San Francisco office. “But it’s an easy, quick, visual barometer of how it’s going.”

Crane counts like this are also ultimately flawed measures of “neighborhood change.” Despite the fact that high housing costs have been pushing people out of the city (recent Census data revealed that, between 2013 and 2017, the wider Bay Area lost a net of 35,400 people, not counting new births or immigration), San Francisco’s position on the crane spectrum has not surged relative to its peers.

In its first count in July 2015, RLB counted 23 cranes in San Francisco, putting it on par with Los Angeles at the time. While Los Angeles’ crane count reached 44 this January, San Francisco’s grew to 29, marking its highest count yet, but fewer than Calgary, Seattle, and Portland. Washington, D.C., and New York City were right on its tail, with 28 each.

When I told Lacey this, she believed me, but said it didn’t square with what she and the peers who grew up with her in San Francisco have been seeing—or what they’ve been feeling. “There’s a normal rate of urban change, and this is not that,” she said. “And it’s not happening in an organic fashion, but in a top-down fashion.”

San Francisco’s modest ranking on the crane scale can partly be explained by high construction labor costs in California: One pro-union nonprofit estimates that the state would need to hire 200,000 new construction workers to keep pace with ambitious building goals set by Governor Gavin Newsom. That shortage, too, can be traced back to the housing crisis, as construction workers struggle to find affordable homes in-state.

It is also a reminder that two things can be true: San Francisco’s crane count is almost half that of Seattle, and its affordability crisis is more severe. The average rent for a Golden Gate one-bedroom reached $3,700 this year, while in Seattle that figure is $2,130, and housing costs in Seattle have cooled off recently, thanks in part to a major construction boom. According to RLB, 78 percent of Seattle cranes were building mixed-use and residential projects in January, while in San Francisco, only 35 percent were involved in housing.

The company doesn’t factor affordability into their analysis, but most of the luxury housing being sold on the San Francisco market is part of existing housing stock, not new apartments, according to a 2017 analysis by the Urban Institute. At least some of this crane-related activity is easing, not exacerbating, the city’s housing crisis. And some YIMBYs argue that cash-strapped San Franciscans who want to stay in their city should be yearning for more cranes, and the housing they build.

But no matter what the statistics say, a downtown skyline full of cranes remains a visceral visual symbol of change-in-progress, like the dark gray rehabbed houses in the Mission district or the woolly Allbirds on the toes of tech workers.

From her office in SOMA, Lacey often stares out at the cranes punctuating the skyline. “It feels like something you don’t have any power over,” she said. “It feels like they loom over you, and loom over the city, and that there’s nothing you can do to bring them down.”

***

As Sant and I roamed around Van Ness, the cranes we did see said as much as the cranes we didn’t. Last count, Sant found cranes concentrated in the South of Market (Soma) and Portrero Hill neighborhoods, where multifamily projects have been rising. Construction was also active in Parnassus Heights, where UCSF’s Medical Center was growing after receiving a $500 million renovation grant last year.

This month, our route took us through downtown, where we seemed to find cranes everywhere: Above scaffolding that advertised an upcoming Four Seasons on Mission Street. Helping construct a San Francisco Conservatory of Music expansion. Putting the finishing touches on a new Trinity Place apartment complex, which rents one-bed, one-bath apartments for $3,299 a month.

When the final crane count, which included the fruits of Sant’s labor, was released in July, North America’s overall crane count had jumped yet again, for the fourth consecutive year. Together, Seattle, Los Angeles, and Toronto made up over half the total count, RLB found.

But San Francisco’s count had again decreased, one of only three cities to see slumps. Sant counted 23 total cranes, down six from January’s peak. The decrease was probably due to the completion of two major projects, the new Chase Arena and the UCSF medical center. RLB wrote that the city’s “construction market continues to be busy, with high-rise developments in SOMA and residential and commercial developments in Potrero Hill continuing.”

The tone seemed to be one of reassurance, as other cities gripped by the housing crisis seemed to be building more aggressively: Los Angeles’ 11 percent leap in crane activity was expected to grow even more next year, RLB wrote, as the city continues proposed housing projects “concentrated around public transportation nodes.”

Counting tower cranes might not be the best way to track the real momentum of a city’s construction scene: Sorely needed missing-middle housing, like duplexes and fourplexes and “five-over-one” apartment complexes, don’t require the same construction gear, for example.

But for now, it’s the best RLB’s got. In November, Sant will hit the streets again and, again, report on San Francisco’s highest peaks. Really, she’s always counting. Once you start looking, she says, you see the cranes everywhere. “It’s always in my mind now.”

24 Sep 02:59

The Tree and Other Natural Climate Solutions

by Jason Kottke
wskent

this video is so well-made. share it with your world. and go greta, go!

"There is a magic machine that sucks carbon out of the air, costs very little, and builds itself. It’s called a tree."

A short and compelling video from Greta Thunberg and George Monbiot about how we can harness nature to help repair our broken climate.

There is a magic machine that sucks carbon out of the air, costs very little, and builds itself. It’s called a tree.

Their approach to how we can do that is “protect, restore, and fund”.

That means protecting tropical forests that are being cut down at the rate of 30 football pitches a minute, she said, restoring the large areas of the planet that have been damaged and stopping the funding of things that destroy nature and instead paying for activities that help it.

You can find out more about natural climate solutions here. From an open letter signed by Thunberg, Monbiot, Margaret Atwood, Michael Mann, Bill McKibben, Brian Eno, and others:

By defending, restoring and re-establishing forests, peatlands, mangroves, salt marshes, natural seabeds and other crucial ecosystems, very large amounts of carbon can be removed from the air and stored. At the same time, the protection and restoration of these ecosystems can help to minimise a sixth great extinction, while enhancing local people’s resilience against climate disaster. Defending the living world and defending the climate are, in many cases, one and the same.

(via the kid should see this)

Tags: George Monbiot   global warming   Greta Thunberg   trees
23 Sep 15:58

Enjoy being an unpleasant goose in Untitled Goose Game

by Rob Beschizza
wskent

for your all your horrible, suppressed tendencies: an outlet.

In Untitled Goose Game, you are the goose: an irascible, annoying, hostile bird waddling around the environs of your pond, attacking children and ruining things.

It's a lovely morning in the village, and you are a horrible goose.

Makes me think of a cross between Katamari Damacy and Postal. It's made by Aussie developer House House -- Jacob Strasser, Nico Disseldorp, Michael McMaster and Stuart Gillespie-Cook--and published by Panic.

21 Sep 20:59

Say Sue Me – “Your Book”

by Stereogum
wskent

weekend vibe. (new music recommended by friends)

Say Sue Me - "Your Book"South Korean surf-rockers Say Sue Me have been on quite a roll the past two years. Last year, they released their sophomore album Where We Were Together, and just a week later followed it up with an exclusive Record Store Day covers EP called It’s Just A Short Walk! This year, the Busan-based band were … More »
18 Sep 18:24

Highlights from In the Garden of Beasts by Erik Larson

by Jason Kottke
wskent

***HEAVY POLITICS WARNING***

“We must keep in mind, I believe, that when Hitler says anything he for the moment convinces himself that it is true. He is basically sincere; but he is at the same time a fanatic.”

these comparisons hit especially hard after the "send her home" chants from this week. complacency on the moderate right is maddening. i'd love to read more about the regret, remorse, shock, and guilt those complacent or mildly supportive of the nazi movement felt. it seems pretty important for all of us (but especially moderate righties) to remember that so many people didn't do things when they could have/should have.

You may know of Erik Larson from his excellent book on the 1893 World’s Fair, The Devil in the White City. Larson’s In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin was published in 2011 and tells the story of William Dodd, America’s first ambassador to Nazi Germany, roughly from the time of his appointment in 1933 to the events of the Night of the Long Knives, the July 1934 purge that consolidated Adolf Hitler’s power.

Reading it, I couldn’t help but notice several parallels between what was happening in 1933 & 1934 as Hitler worked to establish an authoritarian government in Germany and some of the actions of our current government and its President here in the US. If you think that sort of statement is hyperbolic, I urge you to read on and remember that there was a time when Nazi Germany and its rulers seemed to its citizenry and to the world to be, sure, a little extreme in their methods, fiery in their rhetoric, and engaged in some small actions against certain groups of people, but ultimately harmless…until they weren’t and then it was too late to do anything.

Here’s everything I highlighted on my Kindle presented with some light commentary…much of it speaks for itself and the parallels are obvious. I apologize (slightly) for the length, but this book provided a very interesting look at the Nazi regime before they became the world’s canonical example of evil.

Page 19 (The practiced good cop/bad cop of the tyrant.):

And Hitler himself had begun to seem like a more temperate actor than might have been predicted given the violence that had swept Germany earlier in the year. On May 10, 1933, the Nazi Party burned unwelcome books — Einstein, Freud, the brothers Mann, and many others — in great pyres throughout Germany, but seven days later Hitler declared himself committed to peace and went so far as to pledge complete disarmament if other countries followed suit. The world swooned with relief.

Page 28 (There is much in the book about anti-Semitic attitudes in the US in the 1930s and the indifference to what was happening to the Jews in Germany.):

But Roosevelt understood that the political costs of any public condemnation of Nazi persecution or any obvious effort to ease the entry of Jews into America were likely to be immense, because American political discourse had framed the Jewish problem as an immigration problem. Germany’s persecution of Jews raised the specter of a vast influx of Jewish refugees at a time when America was reeling from the Depression. The isolationists added another dimension to the debate by insisting, as did Hitler’s government, that Nazi oppression of Germany’s Jews was a domestic German affair and thus none of America’s business.

Page 29 (After reading the book, I couldn’t help but think that if Japan had not bombed Pearl Harbor in late 1941, the US might not have entered the war against Germany and may have gone down an isolationist path that led towards fascism.):

Indeed, anti-immigration sentiment in America would remain strong into 1938, when a Fortune poll reported that some two-thirds of those surveyed favored keeping refugees out of the country.

Page 38:

When the conversation turned to Germany’s persecution of Jews, Colonel House urged Dodd to do all he could “to ameliorate Jewish sufferings” but added a caveat: “the Jews should not be allowed to dominate economic or intellectual life in Berlin as they have done for a long time. “In this, Colonel House expressed a sentiment pervasive in America, that Germany’s Jews were at least partly responsible for their own troubles.

Page 40 (This is in reference to Dodd’s daughter Martha, who was 24 when he was named ambassador and accompanied him to Berlin.):

She knew little of international politics and by her own admission did not appreciate the gravity of what was occurring in Germany. She saw Hitler as “a clown who looked like Charlie Chaplin.” Like many others in America at this time and elsewhere in the world, she could not imagine him lasting very long or being taken seriously.

Page 41:

In this she reflected the attitude of a surprising proportion of other Americans, as captured in the 1930s by practitioners of the then-emerging art of public-opinion polling. One poll found that 41 percent of those contacted believed Jews had “too much power in the United States”; another found that one-fifth wanted to “drive Jews out of the United States.” (A poll taken decades in the future, in 2009, would find that the total of Americans who believed Jews had too much power had shrunk to 13 percent.)

Page 54 (The “if it’s not happening to me, it must not be happening” response to injustice.):

When Martha left her hotel she witnessed no violence, saw no one cowering in fear, felt no oppression. The city was a delight.

Page 56 (Read more about Coordination):

Beneath the surface, however, Germany had undergone a rapid and sweeping revolution that reached deep into the fabric of daily life. It had occurred quietly and largely out of easy view. At its core was a government campaign called Gleichschaltung — meaning “Coordination” — to bring citizens, government ministries, universities, and cultural and social institutions in line with National Socialist beliefs and attitudes.

Page 56 (This paragraph, and the one that follows below, about “self-coordination” was one of the most chilling I read…I had to put the book down for a bit after this.):

“Coordination” occurred with astonishing speed, even in sectors of life not directly targeted by specific laws, as Germans willingly placed themselves under the sway of Nazi rule, a phenomenon that became known as Selbstgleichschaltung, or “self-coordination.” Change came to Germany so quickly and across such a wide front that German citizens who left the country for business or travel returned to find everything around them altered, as if they were characters in a horror movie who come back to find that people who once were their friends, clients, patients, and customers have become different in ways hard to discern.

Page 57:

The Gestapo’s reputation for omniscience and malevolence arose from a confluence of two phenomena: first, a political climate in which merely criticizing the government could get one arrested, and second, the existence of a populace eager not just to step in line and become coordinated but also to use Nazi sensitivities to satisfy individual needs and salve jealousies. One study of Nazi records found that of a sample of 213 denunciations, 37 percent arose not from heartfelt political belief but from private conflicts, with the trigger often breathtakingly trivial. In October 1933, for example, the clerk at a grocery store turned in a cranky customer who had stubbornly insisted on receiving three pfennigs in change. The clerk accused her of failure to pay taxes. Germans denounced one another with such gusto that senior Nazi officials urged the populace to be more discriminating as to what circumstances might justify a report to the police. Hitler himself acknowledged, in a remark to his minister of justice, “we are living at present in a sea of denunciations and human meanness.”

Page 58:

“Hardly anyone thought that the threats against the Jews were meant seriously,” wrote Carl Zuckmayer, a Jewish writer. “Even many Jews considered the savage anti-Semitic rantings of the Nazis merely a propaganda device, a line the Nazis would drop as soon as they won governmental power and were entrusted with public responsibilities.” Although a song popular among Storm Troopers bore the title “When Jewish Blood Spurts from My Knife,” by the time of the Dodds’ arrival violence against Jews had begun to wane. Incidents were sporadic, isolated. “It was easy to be reassured,” wrote historian John Dippel in a study of why many Jews decided to stay in Germany. “On the surface, much of daily life remained as it had been before Hitler came to power. Nazi attacks on the Jews were like summer thunderstorms that came and went quickly, leaving an eerie calm.”

Page 66 (LOL, a “moderate nationalist regime”):

Neurath saw himself as a sobering force in the government and believed he could help control Hitler and his party. As one peer put it, “He was trying to train the Nazis and turn them into really serviceable partners in a moderate nationalist regime.”

Page 68:

It was a problem Messersmith had noticed time and again. Those who lived in Germany and who paid attention understood that something fundamental had changed and that a darkness had settled over the landscape. Visitors failed to see it.

Page 81:

Dodd reinterated his commitment to objectivity and understanding in an August 12 letter to Roosevelt, in which he wrote that while he did not approve of Germany’s treatment of Jews or Hitler’s drive to restore the country’s military power, “fundamentally, I believe a people has a right to govern itself and that other peoples must exercise patience even when cruelties and injustices are done. Give men a chance to try their schemes.”

Page 84 (Yeah, where did all those nice houses come from?):

The Dodds found many properties to choose from, though at first they failed to ask themselves why so many grand old mansions were available for lease so fully and luxuriously furnished, with ornate tables and chairs, gleaming pianos, and rare vases, maps, and books still in place.

Page 85 (Dodd’s Jewish landlord, who lived in the attic, rented his house to Dodd at a significant discount to gain protection from state persecution of Jews.):

Panofsky was sufficiently wealthy that he did not need the income from the lease, but he had seen enough since Hitler’s appointment as chancellor to know that no Jew, no matter how prominent, was safe from Nazi persecution. He offered 27a to the new ambassador with the express intention of gaining for himself and his mother an enhanced level of physical protection, calculating that surely even the Storm Troopers would not risk the international outcry likely to arise from an attack on the house shared by the American ambassador.

Page 94 (Nazi forces would often beat people who failed to “Heil Hitler!”, even non-Germans. This order did not stop the beatings.):

The next day, Saturday, August 19, a senior government official notified Vice Consul Raymond Geist that an order had been issued to the SA and SS stating that foreigners were not expected to give or return the Hitler salute.

Page 97:

She too had been shaken by the episode, but she did not let it tarnish her overall view of the country and the revival of spirit caused by the Nazi revolution. “I tried in a self-conscious way to justify the action of the Nazis, to insist that we should not condemn without knowing the whole story.”

Page 105:

Messersmith met with Dodd and asked whether the time had come for the State Department to issue a definitive warning against travel in Germany. Such a warning, both men knew, would have a devastating effect on Nazi prestige. Dodd favored restraint. From the perspective of his role as ambassador, he found these attacks more nuisance than dire emergency and in fact tried whenever possible to limit press attention.

Page 108:

Göring too seemed a relatively benign character, at least as compared with Hitler. Sigrid Schultz found him the most tolerable of the senior Nazis because at least “you felt you could be in the same room with the man,” whereas Hitler, she said, “kind of turned my stomach.” One of the American embassy’s officers, John C. White, said years later, “I was always rather favorably impressed by Göring. … If any Nazi was likeable, I suppose he came nearest to it.”

Page 115:

Martha’s love life took a dark turn when she was introduced to Rudolf Diels, the young chief of the Gestapo. He moved with ease and confidence, yet unlike Putzi Hanfstaengl, who invaded a room, he entered unobtrusively, seeping in like a malevolent fog.

Page 117:

Yet under Diels the Gestapo played a complex role. In the weeks following Hitler’s appointment as chancellor, Diels’s Gestapo acted as a curb against a wave of violence by the SA, during which Storm Troopers dragged thousands of victims to their makeshift prisons. Diels led raids to close them and found prisoners in appalling conditions, beaten and garishly bruised, limbs broken, near starvation, “like a mass of inanimate clay,” he wrote, “absurd puppets with lifeless eyes, burning with fever, their bodies sagging.”

Page 118:

During a gathering of foreign correspondents at Putzi Hanfstaengl’s home, Diels told the reporters, “The value of the SA and the SS, seen from my viewpoint of inspector-general responsible for the suppression of subversive tendencies and activities, lies in the fact that they spread terror. That is a wholesome thing.”

Page 130 (“When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.” -Maya Angelou):

Dodd said, “You cannot expect world opinion of your conduct to moderate so long as eminent leaders like Hitler and Goebbels announce from platforms, as in Nuremberg, that all Jews must be wiped off the earth.”

Page 134 (“A kind of daily suspense” is definitely a tool in the political toolbox today. The news media practices this as well.):

Klemperer detected a certain “hysteria of language” in the new flood of decrees, alarms, and intimidation — “This perpetual threatening with the death penalty!” — and in strange, inexplicable episodes of paranoid excess, like the recent nationwide search. In all this Klemperer saw a deliberate effort to generate a kind of daily suspense, “copied from American cinema and thrillers,” that helped keep people in line. He also gauged it to be a manifestation of insecurity among those in power.

Page 135:

Persecution of Jews continued in ever more subtle and wide-ranging form as the process of Gleichschaltung advanced. In September the government established the Reich Chamber of Culture, under the control of Goebbels, to bring musicians, actors, painters, writers, reporters, and filmmakers into ideological and, especially, racial alignment. In early October the government enacted the Editorial Law, which banned Jews from employment by newspapers and publishers and was to take effect on January 1, 1934. No realm was too petty: The Ministry of Posts ruled that henceforth when trying to spell a word over the telephone a caller could no longer say “D as in David,” because “David” was a Jewish name. The caller had to use “Dora.” “Samuel” became “Siegfried.” And so forth.

Page 136 (George Messersmith was the head of the US Consulate in Germany from 1930 to 1934 and was one of the few people at the time who properly diagnosed the Nazi threat. In a 1933 letter to the US State Department, he called Hitler and his cronies “psychopathic cases” that would “ordinarily be receiving treatment somewhere”.):

Messersmith proposed that one solution might be “forcible intervention from the outside.” But he warned that such an action would have to come soon. “If there were intervention by other powers now, probably about half of the population would still look upon it as deliverance,” he wrote. “If it is delayed too long, such intervention might meet a practically united Germany.” One fact was certain, Messersmith believed: Germany now posed a real and grave threat to the world. He called it “the sore spot which may disturb our peace for years to come.”

Page 148 (On a speech Dodd gave in Berlin in October 1933 in front of an audience that included Joseph Goebbels.):

He gave the talk the innocuous title “Economic Nationalism.” By citing the rise and fall of Caesar and episodes from French, English, and U.S. history, Dodd sought to warn of the dangers “of arbitrary and minority” government without ever actually mentioning contemporary Germany. It was not the kind of thing a traditional diplomat might have undertaken, but Dodd saw it as simply fulfilling Roosevelt’s original mandate.

Page 149 (The reaction to Dodd’s speech):

“When the thing was over about every German present showed and expressed a kind of approval which revealed the thought: ‘You have said what all of us have been denied the right to say.’” An official of the Deutsche Bank called to express his own agreement. He told Dodd, “Silent, but anxious Germany, above all the business and University Germany, is entirely with you and most thankful that you are here and can say what we can not say.”

Page 154 (Hanfstaengl, a confidant of Hitler, tried to set up Hitler with Martha Dodd as a moderating influence.):

Putzi Hanfstaengl knew of Martha’s various romantic relationships, but by the fall of 1933 he had begun to imagine for her a new partner. Having come to feel that Hitler would be a much more reasonable leader if only he fell in love, Hanfstaengl appointed himself matchmaker.

Page 154 (Shocker that Hitler was controlling and abusive when it came to women.):

Hitler liked women, but more as stage decoration than as sources of intimacy and love. There had been talk of numerous liaisons, typically with women much younger than he — in one case a sixteen-year-old named Maria Reiter. One woman, Eva Braun, was twenty-three years his junior and had been an intermittent companion since 1929. So far, however, Hitler’s only all-consuming affair had been with his young niece, Geli Raubal. She was found shot to death in Hitler’s apartment, his revolver nearby. The most likely explanation was suicide, her means of escaping Hitler’s jealous and oppressive affection — his “clammy possessiveness, “as historian Ian Kershaw put it.

Page 157 (The banality of evil…):

Apart from his mustache and his eyes, the features of his face were indistinct and unimpressive, as if begun in clay but never fired. Recalling his first impression of Hitler, Hanfstaengl wrote, “Hitler looked like a suburban hairdresser on his day off.”

Page 159 (On Dodd’s meeting with Hitler):

Though the session had been difficult and strange, Dodd nonetheless left the chancellery feeling convinced that Hitler was sincere about wanting peace.

Page 159:

“We must keep in mind, I believe, that when Hitler says anything he for the moment convinces himself that it is true. He is basically sincere; but he is at the same time a fanatic.”

Page 161 (Martha Dodd met Hitler once briefly):

At this vantage, she wrote, the mustache “didn’t seem as ridiculous as it appeared in pictures — in fact, I scarcely noticed it.” What she did notice were his eyes. She had heard elsewhere that there was something piercing and intense about his gaze, and now, immediately, she understood. “Hitler’s eyes,” she wrote, “were startling and unforgettable — they seemed pale blue in color, were intense, unwavering, hypnotic.”

Page 165 (I didn’t highlight this, but at several points in the book, officials from the US and other countries acknowledged that they also had a “Jewish problem”, i.e. the Jews had too much power, money, and influence.):

Dodd believed that one artifact of past excess — “another curious hangover,” he told Phillips — was that his embassy had too many personnel, in particular, too many who were Jewish. “We have six or eight members of the ‘chosen race’ here who serve in most useful but conspicuous positions,” he wrote. Several were his best workers, he acknowledged, but he feared that their presence on his staff impaired the embassy’s relationship with Hitler’s government and thus impeded the day-to-day operation of the embassy.

Page 186 (Again with the belief that you can control an irrational & psychopathic nationalist.):

Papen was a protege of President Hindenburg, who affectionately called him Franzchen, or Little Franz. With Hindenburg in his camp, Papen and fellow intriguers had imagined they could control Hitler. “I have Hindenburg’s confidence,” Papen once crowed. “Within two months we will have pushed Hitler so far into a corner that he’ll squeak.” It was possibly the greatest miscalculation of the twentieth century. As historian John Wheeler-Bennett put it, “Not until they had riveted the fetters upon their own wrists did they realize who indeed was captive and who captor.”

Page 189 (Relevant to this are Hannah Arendt’s thoughts on lies. See also Donald Trump’s “fanciful thinking” about 9/11 and his continuing condemnation of the Central Park Five.):

An odd kind of fanciful thinking seemed to have bedazzled Germany, to the highest levels of government. Earlier in the year, for example, Göring had claimed with utter sobriety that three hundred German Americans had been murdered in front of Independence Hall in Philadelphia at the start of the past world war.

Page 213 (Subtle oppression is still oppression and sets the stage for the later acceptance of overt & violent oppression.):

But Schweitzer understood this was in large part an illusion. Overt violence against Jews did appear to have receded, but a more subtle oppression had settled in its place. “What our friend had failed to see from outward appearances is the tragedy that is befalling daily the job holders who are gradually losing their positions,” Schweitzer wrote. He gave the example of Berlin’s department stores, typically owned and staffed by Jews. “While on the one hand one can observe a Jewish department store crowded as usual with non-Jews and Jews alike, one can observe in the very next department store the total absence of a single Jewish employee.”

Page 223 (Even rumors are enough to change behavior when dealing with an authoritarian regime.):

A common story had begun to circulate: One man telephones another and in the course of their conversation happens to ask, “How is Uncle Adolf?” Soon afterward the secret police appear at his door and insist that he prove that he really does have an Uncle Adolf and that the question was not in fact a coded reference to Hitler. Germans grew reluctant to stay in communal ski lodges, fearing they might talk in their sleep. They postponed surgeries because of the lip-loosening effects of anesthetic.

Page 225:

You lingered at street corners a beat or two longer to see if the faces you saw at the last corner had now turned up at this one. In the most casual of circumstances you spoke carefully and paid attention to those around you in a way you never had before. Berliners came to practice what became known as “the German glance” — der deutsche Blick — a quick look in all directions when encountering a friend or acquaintance on the street.

Page 226:

An American professor who was a friend of the Dodds, Peter Olden, wrote to Dodd on January 30, 1934, to tell him he had received a message from his brother-in-law in Germany in which the man described a code he planned to use in all further correspondence. The word “rain,” in any context, would mean he had been placed in a concentration camp. The word “snow” would mean he was being tortured. “It seems absolutely unbelievable,” Olden told Dodd. “If you think that this is really something in the nature of a bad joke, I wonder if you could mention so in a letter to me.”

Page 229 (Hitler had been saying this shit since the 1920s and no one took him seriously.):

First Hitler spoke of broader matters. Germany, he declared, needed more room in which to expand, “more living space for our surplus population. “And Germany, he said, must be ready to take it. “The Western powers will never yield this vital space to us, “Hitler said.”That is why a series of decisive blows may become necessary - first in the West, and then in the East.”

Page 241 (A reminder that the US was also treating millions of people as second-class citizens at this time.):

After studying the resolution, Judge Moore concluded that it could only put Roosevelt “in an embarrassing position.” Moore explained: “If he declined to comply with the request, he would be subjected to considerable criticism. On the other hand, if he complied with it he would not only incur the resentment of the German Government, but might be involved in a very acrimonious discussion with that Government which conceivably might, for example, ask him to explain why the negroes of this country do not fully enjoy the right of suffrage; why the lynching of negroes in Senator Tydings’ State and other States is not prevented or severely punished; and how the anti-Semitic feeling in the United States, which unfortunately seems to be growing, is not checked.”

Page 265:

He reached into his pocket, and pulled out a small bag of candy fruit drops. Lutschbonbons. Bella had loved them as a child.” Have one,” Hanfstaengl said. “They are made especially for the Führer.” She chose one. Just before she popped it into her mouth she saw that it was embossed with a swastika. Even fruit drops had been “coordinated.”

Page 270 (Wow, “inner emigration”.):

In the months following Hitler’s ascension to chancellor, the German writers who were not outright Nazis had quickly divided into two camps — those who believed it was immoral to remain in Germany and those who felt the best strategy was to stay put, recede as much as possible from the world, and wait for the collapse of the Hitler regime. The latter approach became known as “inner emigration,” and was the path Fallada had chosen.

Page 273:

Even so, Fallada made more and more concessions, eventually allowing Goebbels to script the ending of his next novel, Iron Gustav, which depicted the hardships of life during the past world war. Fallada saw this as a prudent concession. “I do not like grand gestures,” he wrote; “being slaughtered before the tyrant’s throne, senselessly, to the benefit of no one and to the detriment of my children, that is not my way.” He recognized, however, that his various capitulations took a toll on his writing. He wrote to his mother that he was not satisfied with his work. “I cannot act as I want to — if I want to stay alive. And so a fool gives less than he has.” Other writers, in exile, watched with disdain as Fallada and his fellow inner emigrants surrendered to government tastes and demands. Thomas Mann, who lived abroad throughout the Hitler years, later wrote their epitaph: “It may be superstitious belief, but in my eyes, any books which could be printed at all in Germany between 1933 and 1945 are worse than worthless and not objects one wishes to touch. A stench of blood and shame attaches to them. They should all be pulped.”

Page 279 (Nazi leaders had already begun using their power to amass opulent wealth.):

“Ladies and gentlemen,” Göring said, “in a few minutes you will witness a unique display of nature at work.” He gestured toward an iron cage. “In this cage is a powerful male bison, an animal almost unheard of on the Continent. … He will meet here, before your very eyes, the female of his species. Please be quiet and don’t be afraid.” Göring’s keepers opened the cage. “Ivan the Terrible,” Göring commanded, “I order you to leave the cage.” The bull did not move. Göring repeated his command. Once again the bull ignored him. The keepers now attempted to prod Ivan into action. The photographers readied themselves for the lustful charge certain to ensue. Britain’s Ambassador Phipps wrote in his diary that the bull emerged from the cage “with the utmost reluctance, and, after eyeing the cows somewhat sadly, tried to return to it.” Phipps also described the affair in a later memorandum to London that became famous within the British foreign office as “the bison dispatch.”

Page 282:

The next day Phipps wrote about Göring’s open house in his diary. “The whole proceedings were so strange as at times to convey a feeling of unreality,” he wrote, but the episode had provided him a valuable if unsettling insight into the nature of Nazi rule. “The chief impression was that of the most pathetic naivete of General Göring, who showed us his toys like a big, fat, spoilt child: his primeval woods, his bison and birds, his shooting-box and lake and bathing beach, his blond ‘private secretary,’ his wife’s mausoleum and swans and sarsen stones. … And then I remembered there were other toys, less innocent though winged, and these might some day be launched on their murderous mission in the same childlike spirit and with the same childlike glee.”

Page 306 (during the aforementioned Night of the Long Knives purge):

In Munich, Hitler read through a list of the prisoners and marked an “X” next to six names. He ordered all six shot immediately. An SS squad did so, telling the men just before firing, “You have been condemned to death by the Führer! Heil Hitler.” The ever-obliging Rudolf Hess offered to shoot Röhm himself, but Hitler did not yet order his death. For the moment, even he found the idea of killing a longtime friend to be abhorrent.

Page 321 (in the aftermath of the purge):

As the weekend progressed, the Dodds learned that a new phrase was making the rounds in Berlin, to be deployed upon encountering a friend or acquaintance on the street, ideally with a sardonic lift of one eyebrow: “Lebst du noch?” Which meant, “Are you still among the living?”

Page 328:

Throughout that first year in Germany, Dodd had been struck again and again by the strange indifference to atrocity that had settled over the nation, the willingness of the populace and of the moderate elements in the government to accept each new oppressive decree, each new act of violence, without protest. It was as if he had entered the dark forest of a fairy tale where all the rules of right and wrong were upended.

Page 333:

Hitler’s purge would become known as “The Night of the Long Knives” and in time would be considered one of the most important episodes in his ascent, the first act in the great tragedy of appeasement. Initially, however, its significance was lost. No government recalled its ambassador or filed a protest; the populace did not rise in revulsion.

Page 334 (Hitler cracked down on the Storm Troopers because their leadership was against him, but their doing of bad deeds were soon replaced by the SS.):

The controlled press, not surprisingly, praised Hitler for his decisive behavior, and among the public his popularity soared. So weary had Germans become of the Storm Troopers’ intrusions in their lives that the purge seemed like a godsend. An intelligence report from the exiled Social Democrats found that many Germans were “extolling Hitler for his ruthless determination” and that many in the working class “have also become enslaved to the uncritical deification of Hitler.”

Page 336 (on the good treatment of horses in Germany):

“At a time when hundreds of men have been put to death without trial or any sort of evidence of guilt, and when the population literally trembles with fear, animals have rights guaranteed them which men and women cannot think of expecting.”

Page 340 (Dodd eventually came to see the danger of Nazi Germany):

He became one of the few voices in U.S. government to warn of the true ambitions of Hitler and the dangers of America’s isolationist stance. He told Secretary Hull in a letter dated August 30, 1934, “With Germany united as it has never before been, there is feverish arming and drilling of 1,500,000 men, all of whom are taught every day to believe that continental Europe must be subordinated to them.” He added, “I think we must abandon our so-called isolation.” He wrote to the army chief of staff, Douglas MacArthur, “In my judgment, the German authorities are preparing for a great continental struggle. There is ample evidence. It is only a question of time.”

Page 351:

Dodd’s sorrow and loneliness took a toll on his already fragile health, but still he pressed on and gave lectures around the country, in Texas, Kansas, Wisconsin, Illinois, Maryland, and Ohio, always reprising the same themes — that Hitler and Nazism posed a great risk to the world, that a European war was inevitable, and that once war began the United States would find it impossible to remain aloof. One lecture drew an audience of seven thousand people. In a June 10, 1938, speech in Boston, at the Harvard Club — that den of privilege — Dodd talked of Hitler’s hatred of Jews and warned that his true intent was “to kill them all.”

Dodd died in February 1940. He lived long enough to witness the start of Hitler’s war on Europe but not long enough to see America’s isolationist come to an end or Hitler’s attempt to kill all the Jews.

Tags: Adolf Hitler   books   Erik Larson   In the Garden of Beasts   Nazis   politics   William Dodd
17 Sep 14:32

What Myspace Lost

wskent

gizmodo is running a series about "alternative histories" of the internet and imaging what the internet could be. this article talks about the sheer magnitude of what was lost from myspace when they migrated servers in 2016 (and the universal music fire from 2008). i knew it was a lot, but this article does a much better job quantifying it (127 eiffel tower-sized stacks of CDs for starters). there's also some cool threads about internet archivists and the value of local, informal, and outsider art/culture.

Alternate InternetThis week, we look at the ways the internet could have been—and could be—different.  

As Leonardo da Vinci once said, “Myspace was never finished, only abandoned.” Not those words exactly, but if brainyquotes.com disappeared, and the Louvre burned down, and all libraries were defunded, and a solar flare wiped out all of Earth’s power, and a historian found this sole surviving blogpost 200 years from now, they might equally wonder what was Myspace, and who was Leonardo da Vinci, and did he know the great composer Alice Cooper, whose vinyl records were discovered in a basement in the underwater island of Manhattan? History exists only as long as our artifacts, which survive by miracle or by the tender care of centuries-old institutions that protect them from fire, war, disc rot, magnets, selfies, and Sunday painters.

And botched corporate server migrations, which supposedly caused the recent obliteration of 50 million songs by 14 million artists posted to Myspace between 2003 and 2016, the vast majority of its library. Archivists and Myspace diehards compared the loss to the burning of the Library of Alexandria; the jury of the internet (the sum total of commentary in blogs and threads and legacy publications) mostly feigned glee at cremating audio evidence of teen angst, a bonfire which, in physical form, would have amounted to 127 Eiffel Tower-high stacks of cased CDs. The majority of Myspace’s 100 million users had already packed up years ago, and if they didn’t grab their stuff on the way out, that’s too bad, because Myspace is not your mom.

History exists only as long as our artifacts, which survive by miracle or by the tender care of centuries-old institutions that protect them from fire, war, disc rot, magnets, selfies, and Sunday painters.

There’s some conspiratorial thinking about whether the loss was a “loss,” in the way that Myspace “lost” blog entries in a redesign in June 2013 and offered users the option to “vote” to have them back. Tweeted former Kickstarter CTO Andy Baio: “I’m deeply skeptical this was an accident. Flagrant incompetence may be bad PR, but it still sounds better than ‘we can’t be bothered with the effort and cost of migrating and hosting 50 million old MP3s.’”

Would Tom have let this happen???

Tom never would have let this happen! a redditor posted, meaning founder Tom Anderson, aka, “Tom.” But Tom did let this happen. Tom sold Myspace to NewsCorp for $580 million in 2005 and, as of this writing, Tom is in the Maldives living possibly the world’s most Instagram-worthy life, taking drone videos at resorts of a woman in a bikini and hopefully backing up his photos.

Tom was like all the other tech start-up guys who made a ton of money for their inventions–YouTube, Bebo, Friendfeed–and nobody knocked him for it. In fact he was applauded when he owned a Twitter troll with the comeback: “says the guy who sold myspace in 2005 for $580 million while you slave away hoping for a half-day off.”

Because Myspace isn’t Tom, or yourspace, or ourspace; Myspace is data residing in a rack of servers. We didn’t really have the vocabulary for that concept when Myspace came out in 2003, back when Geocities landing pages read like doormats, “welcoming” you to “come in” or “enter” the owner’s “palace,” “room,” or “castle.” But we’re all renters; your photos are on the wall, but the building is not yours and the landlord can evict you and also burn all your stuff.

Myspace is also a business, and it was first conceived as a Friendster copycat for a low-rent marketing company trying to sell diet pills, according to former marketing VP Sean Percival. In his telling, Myspace was enveloped in the slow-moving machinery of NewsCorp, which, in a post-Facebook identity crisis, bogged down the site with various ornaments like celebrity news and annoying ad pop-ups, while Facebook honed its simpler (non-customizable, regulation) interface which required users to give real-name formats over lowercase username pseudonyms. Plus, in the midst of a technopanic fanned by Dateline’s “Perverted Justice” vigilantes, Forbes writes that Facebook’s age minimum and early .edu email address verification made it a supposedly “safe” alternative to Myspace. In 2009 and 201, there were major rounds of layoffs. Myspace was sold, bought, sold, and bought for a massive discount. LinkedIn lists 393 current employees at the company, a shadow of the at least 1,300-strong staff of 2009. (As of this writing, Myspace has not returned request for comment.)

We’re all renters; your photos are on the wall, but the building is not yours and the landlord can evict you and also burn all your stuff.

A few weeks after the announcement, the Internet Archive uploaded 490,000 tracks from 2008-2010 that had been backed up by researchers for an independent project, representing less than one percent of the songs once on Myspace. They issued a PSA: “This is Facebook in a few years’ time. Don’t treat any of today’s popular services as a permanent archive. If Facebook thought that it could make more money out of you by throwing you in a garden shredder and turning you into fertiliser it would do so in half a heartbeat. They do not care about you or your stuff. Please keep local copies of your shit.”

To be sure, Myspace was never the Library of Alexandria. That library represented the bulk of recorded human knowledge spanning centuries, while a librarian given a Myspace catalogue would have to sift through terabytes of amateur mp3s from 2003-2016 to find our treasures (the dynasty of Billboard 100 chart toppers starting with Soulja Boy–Nicki Minaj, Drake, Janelle Monáe, Panic! At the Disco, Arctic Monkeys, Calvin Harris, Lily Allen...etc). The professional catalogues have been backed up, and as for the rest, the New York Public Library wouldn’t even keep most of that stuff.

“They do not care about you or your stuff. Please keep local copies of your shit.”

But knocking Myspace as a tomb for white emo high school souls seriously undermines its value; in 2009, a Pew study found that Myspace represented half of all social network users in the United States, who included more women and black and Latinx people than any other major network, and whose median age was 27. In a well-circulated study, social media scholar danah boyd analyzed over a hundred interviews with high school students who frequently used racist and classist language when explaining their reasons for leaving what one student called the “ghetto” of Myspace; boyd compared the abandonment to “white flight,” writing that Facebook’s “digital fences” of private profiles played to “wealthier” parents with “overblown fears” of sexual predators, nudes, and “urban black signals such as bling and hip-hop”–and ultimately to users who “had no interest in interacting with people who were different.” Primarily middle-class white biases, she writes, spun off into media coverage which could have accelerated a premature death, like a 2009 New York Times headline “Do You Know Anyone Still on MySpace?” Though at the time Facebook and Myspace usage was roughly equal, boyd concluded that “white middle-class journalists didn’t know anyone who still used Myspace.” Times commenters called Myspace “the other side of the tracks,” for “the riffraff” and the “proletariat” who “never go to college.”

At its peak in June 2006, Myspace reportedly surpassed Google.com as the most-visited website in the country. Emo and metal and witch house were there, but so was crunk, trap, drill, pop-rap, psychedelic soul. And new genres were invented with deconstructed video game consoles, and kids were forming bands they described as “technical/avant-garde instrumental metal,” and you could attach “-core” to anything and make it more intense than it was.

Mostly, Myspace probably contained content of little historical importance and even less importance to Myspace’s prospective ad revenue: the kinds of memories people leave around that don’t matter until they’re gone. A cacophony of voices mourned them in comment threads from around social media:

“Has anyone heard an update?! Will we be able to play this music ever again? My son recorded a song when he was 7 years old that his guitar instructor uploaded to his Myspace page. My son died 2 years ago, at the age of 20, and I would do anything to be able to hear it again.” [link]

“8 songs recorded from when I was 16-17 and no way to download or play them. I’m 30 now... would be pretty sweet to hear them again before I die.” [link]

“Wow :( there goes some pics of me and my sister who passed away that ill never get back” [link]

“That’s a shame,, I still visit friends accounts that are no longer earthside” [link]

“Wow actually lost like all the solo music i made from 2005 to 2009.....my harddrive broke in 2009 as well so its gone forever....” [link]

“i know more than a few tracks that will never be heard again bc of this and that really is sad... the members have died, the band has disbanded and now there is no record of their contribution” [link]

“I recently started training as a music teacher (26yo), and hearing the senior students made me want to go back and hear how I sounded at that age. I don’t even remember how the songs went” [link]

“Lost my first song I ever did when I was a ‘rapper’ I been trying to get it. No wonder it didn’t play on by [sic] music page anymore” [link]

“I logged in last year out of curiosity. I wrote a song in 9th grade and uploaded it to MySpace. It showed the file was still there but it would never play. Listen count was at like 200. But I really wanted to listen one last time.” [link]

“This is funny for some, but to me it is devastating. My father was tragically murdered around 12 years ago, before Facebook was really a popular thing. He instead had a MySpace, and keeping it alive in his memory meant everything to me. I’m devastated by the loss of his memories.” [Link]

“I don’t know if it’s necessarily the worst thing, and from a business perspective, I get why a company wouldn’t store your stuff forever,” Dave Sinneway, 30, Pittsburgh–whom I’d reached over phone after finding his post looking for music–spoke with the deliberate resignation of someone whose garage had burned down. He has as much to grieve as the next Myspace user, having lost the bulk of the music he and his now-deceased friend made early in high school. A few years ago, he thought to hold his laptop up to a speaker and record the few songs he considers solid (even in 2016, the Myspace player was garbage, and there’s no download function) and post them to YouTube for “posterity”–but mostly, for him. “We were just kids up in his bedroom making music. I think the person who was most nostalgic for it was me.”

The big-picture loss to Sinneway is more the elimination of hyper-local history. He would click through rabbit holes of connections, ending up in a circle of small metal bands from the outer suburbs of Chicago. “It was a snapshot–what music was on there when people decided to up and leave. It’s not even my own stuff; sometimes you just want to relive a point in time that you had in your life. There are the bands that broke up, and their music was left on Myspace.”

He relates the Myspace loss to the movie Yesterday, which neither of us has seen, but the premise (as advertised) sells a mass audience on the feeling of losing beloved music in a world that doesn’t care about it. “It’s about what would happen if everybody in the world forgets that the Beatles happened except for one guy. If you lost all the music you loved, you’d probably be looking for it, too.”

The New York Times recently revealed that “the biggest disaster in the history of the music business” already happened, and nobody knew; in 2008, a fire at Universal Studios claimed hundreds of thousands of master recordings, a vast anthology including Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Elton John, Sonic Youth, Eminem–just a drop in the bucket–and possibly worse, “tens of thousands of gospel, blues, jazz, country, soul, disco, pop, easy listening, classical, comedy and spoken-word records that may now exist only as written entries in discographies.” (Master recordings include far more vivid detail and recorded content than is translated onto lower-fi commercial releases–Times reporter Jody Rosen’s prime example is the 2017 box set of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, which, among other things, brought fans raw versions of songs like “Strawberry Fields” and “A Day in the Life.”) Consumers hoarding the lower-fi commercial releases end up with fucked CDs and warbly cassette tapes and neglected vinyl and dead flash drives, on top of forgotten Amazon Music passwords and all kinds of hardware problems, and will, by design, have to repurchase copies until the end up time or until companies stop releasing them.

The point is, Myspace fans could be the Beatles fans of tomorrow, if reduced to the most meager of scraps, and of scraps of scraps. In April, someone posted a video on YouTube captioned “Do you think this is the real Hayley Williams?” with tracks from around 2004-2005, and a whole thread says it’s not her. This person offered to send their backups to fellow fans referencing a national constellation of bands averaging around 10k connections on Myspace–a snazzpop/piconoise/tweegrind electronic band from New Jersey, a digital grind solo artist from the Midwest, a recently-disbanded cybergrind group from upstate New York, a solo electronic act described as “really confusing” from Columbus, Ohio...etc. At least two of the bands are defunct, and one artist is dead.

There’s some interesting stuff if you fish around in the Internet Archive’s trove, the “Myspace Dragon Hoard.” One music hoarder, who preferred to be known simply by Matt, found a bunch of morning talk show broadcasts; a Twitter account claimed to find early stuff by 2Chainz and Childish Gambino when they were “Tity Boi” and “mcDJ,” respectively. Mostly there’s a lot of unpolished music clearly not from a studio or autotuned but just people playing with the instruments available.

“You would have had to have had no one working there in order for this to happen,” Jason Scott, the software curator for the Internet Archive, told me over a video call.

There are people working there, but likely they’re not walking around in hazmat suits dusting off an arsenal of servers in an air conditioned airplane hangar. Computer scientist Ethan Miller, who directs the Center for Research in Storage Systems at UC Santa Cruz, helped me with a back-of-the-napkin calculation. These days, anybody with $6,000 and a closet could store 50 million songs–200 terabytes, assuming four megs per song–on about 20 hard drives, or, eight inches of shelf space on a server rack. But you still have to make sure the closet doesn’t burn down. Miller notes that Myspace would have had to have migrated servers at least two or three times over the past fifteen years to update its hardware, and they would have been running those disk drives hard (literally, down to the ball bearings) in order to copy millions if not billions of files; the annual disk failure rate is about one to four percent, but that rises the older the machines get older; on top of that, maybe you get 98 percent done with the data transfer, and the new server isn’t big enough to hold the extra two percent, but do you really want to bother getting a bigger server and doing the whole thing over?

It’s possible though unlikely that they could have left the hardware to degrade and die. Back when Myspace was founded, before most companies were using third-party cloud storage, companies would have had to hire expensive engineers to maintain data.

“Let’s say I’m in the process of cleaning out an old file cabinet,” Miller said. “And it’s easier for me to say, let’s go to Office Depot and buy a box for twelve bucks and stick it in the corner. If you said, by the way, that’s not twelve bucks, it’s 2,000, I might say, I don’t need this envelope of receipts from 2010. And then I throw it out and go, oops, that was a receipt I kinda needed, too bad for me. That’s the kind of thing companies will do, they’ll make copies, and the copies aren’t perfect, and it’s Myspace...and no offense, but it’s Myspace. Over time, everyone loses some data, especially if it’s not data you’re being paid to keep. And I don’t fault them for that! Because you weren’t paying them.”

Brian Wilson, the co-founder of the data storage provider Backblaze, thinks about it in terms of the 1977 Tenerife airport disaster, the deadliest-ever plane accident where two planes collided on a runway ostensibly because the captain skipped one step from the checklist–but only after a sequence of horribly-timed events including a terrorist attack at a separate airport, a traffic jam, fog, miscommunication by ground control, and radio interference at the fatal moment. The entire footage of Toy Story 2 was almost lost forever because someone accidentally deleted his files; one guy accidentally deleted his whole company once; a security guard cut the power to Backblaze’s data center when they pressed the big red power button (the data is fine). Wilson says that “at every company” he has ever worked for in his 30-year career, he’s seen some version of the scenarios where a technician wakes up groggy in the middle of the night and removes the wrong drive. Bugs. Etc. Shit happens.

“Over time, everyone loses some data, especially if it’s not data you’re being paid to keep.”

“My only thought is always, ‘There but for the grace of God go I,’” wrote internet critic and programmer Paul Ford in an email.

Over video conference on an mid-week summer afternoon, Jason Scott, software curator of the Internet Archive, turns his monitor to show me his mixtape crawler. Jittery lines of white-on-black code are ripping early-aughts hip hop mixtapes from torrent sites, filtering out the ones that haven’t been uploaded to the archive, and then populating before my eyes on the Internet Archive’s public-facing page with album covers and track lists, one after another. There’s no particular hierarchy in terms of commercial success–Migos is in the same bucket as DJ 837–butScott says history will decide their value.

Scott oversees the Archive Team, a group of over 100 volunteers who spend virtually all day rescuing as much endangered data as they can, from running the archive’s “warrior” app on their personal laptops to maintaining large server farms. You can see what they’re doing at any given time on archivebot.com (at the moment, they’re working on a forum for DIY computerized Christmas lighting and a memorial to gun violence deaths). They maintain “Deathwatch,” an extinct-and-endangered species list for 100+ large sites, representing losses for hundreds of millions of people. Eight million user-designed pages on Geocities, 15 years of encyclopedia Encarta, 115 million accounts on Friendster, to 134 million photos on Panoramio, over a million rare tracks on what.CD. “Young mothers are the biggest victims,” he says. People come to him all the time looking for baby photos.

While Scott runs the Internet Archive, legions of free-range hackers are stockpiling backups elsewhere. Reddit’s 3,000-strong “Music Hoarder” forum recently started a server on Discord to back up large at-risk music troves and grant random wishes from the internet. They field requests for things like a soundtrack for a 2003 Japanese manga series, or a 1976 album by an Italian jazz composer, or music by a now-defunct Myspace-only metal band.

“I have the time, and I love the search,” moderator Drake, 17, told me. He once offered a $300 bounty and to drive 43 hours to find the “Holy Grail” of music hoarding, a 1994 album by a Canadian experimental collective published only on 33 cassette tapes. (He subsidizes this by scooping ice cream at Ben & Jerry’s.)

“I have the time, and I love the search.”

His co-moderator Matt, 23, is coordinating an effort to re-label and tag the 490,000 Myspace tracks that the Internet Archive uploaded in April. (As it is, that collection is not very library-like; filenames are mostly a string of jumbled phrases, and users can’t browse, only search by the name of the artist or song. It’s not Google-friendly.) He hasn’t found anything exactly canonical; probably the most interesting thing he’s found is a parody video of Lil Wayne’s “Lollipop” about potato chips by a British guy–stuff you couldn’t unload in a free bin of vinyl records on the sidewalk. I wonder why Matt cares. He simply says: “Music is a passion of mine, and the music from Myspace is all pretty much gone now.” That may sound vague, but it’s not; admittedly, he could probably live without most individual songs from that repository, but together, as an immense collection, the culture of song-making is seismic. Reserving taste is a hoarder thing–he started archiving on a separate Discord server which focused on, among other stuff, saving the Nazi Tumblrs before Tumblr deleted them–not stuff he cares for himself, but sees value in the proof that they existed. Also admittedly, he’s way too young to have experienced Myspace. His own legacy is in the Discord channels. The hoarders are already archiving them.

13 Sep 21:28

This teacher had to tell her deaf students that people can hear farts. Their reaction was hilarious. 

by Tod Perry
wskent

this is very funny to think about.

Anna Trupiano is a first-grade teacher at a school that serves deaf, hard-of-hearing, and hearing students from birth through eighth grade.

In addition to teaching the usual subjects, Trupiano is charged with helping her students thrive in a society that doesn’t do enough to cater to the needs of the hard-of-hearing.

 

Recently, Trupiano had to teach her students about a rather personal topic: passing gas in public.

A six-year-old child farted so loud in class that some of their classmates began to laugh. The child was surprised by their reaction because they didn’t know farts make a sound. This created a wonderful and funny teaching moment for Trupiano.

Trupiano shared the conversation on Facebook.

   

While the discussion Tupiano had with her students was funny, it points to a serious problem faced by the deaf community. “I know it started with farts, but the real issue is that many of my students aren’t able to learn about these things at home or from their peers because they don’t have the same linguistic access,” she told GOOD.

“So many of my students don’t have families who can sign well enough to explain so many things it’s incredibly isolating for these kids,” she continued.

Tupiano hopes her funny story about bodily functions will inspire others to become more involved with the deaf community by learning sign language.

“I would love to see a world where my students can learn about anything from anyone they interact with during their day,” she told GOOD. “Whether that means learning about the solar system, the candy options at a store, or even farts, it would be so great for them to have that language access anywhere they go.”

Intersted in learning ASL? Here’s a great list of places you can start.

                     
05 Sep 14:57

Birdspotting, a forthcoming game about exploring the countryside in search of avian delights

by Rob Beschizza
wskent

sharing for this classic clip: https://vimeo.com/26772752

Birdspotting looks like the ne plus ultra of walkabout games, putting the player in a remote yet pleasant section of country and handing them a pair of binoculars. It's by Joram van Loenen and Khalil Arafan and they've been working on it since January 2018.

I especially like the implication in the trailer that it should be played at low resolution.

19 Aug 18:19

The 1619 Project

by Jason Kottke
wskent

i read this all day yesterday. it was really good. the opening essay by Nikole Hannah-Jones frames American history and economics as beginning in 1619 when the first slaves arrived in Virginia. It is compelling, sobering, and accurate.

The first Africans to be brought as slaves to British North America landed in Port Comfort, Virginia in 1619. Thus began America’s 400-year history with slavery and its effects, which continue to reverberate today. With The 1619 Project, the NY Times is exploring that legacy with a series of essays and other works that “aims to reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding, and placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are.” The Columbia Journalism Review explains:

Contributors consider various modern quandaries — rush hour traffic, mass incarceration, an inequitable healthcare system, even American overconsumption of sugar (the highest rate in the Western world) — and trace the origins back to slavery. Literary and visual artists drew from a timeline chronicling the past 400 years of Black history in America; their work is presented chronologically throughout the magazine. Taken together, the issue is an attempt to guide readers not just toward a richer understanding of today’s racial dilemmas, but to tell them the truth.

Nikole Hannah-Jones, who came up with the idea for the project, writes in an essay:

The United States is a nation founded on both an ideal and a lie. Our Declaration of Independence, signed on July 4, 1776, proclaims that “all men are created equal” and “endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.” But the white men who drafted those words did not believe them to be true for the hundreds of thousands of black people in their midst. “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness” did not apply to fully one-fifth of the country. Yet despite being violently denied the freedom and justice promised to all, black Americans believed fervently in the American creed. Through centuries of black resistance and protest, we have helped the country live up to its founding ideals. And not only for ourselves — black rights struggles paved the way for every other rights struggle, including women’s and gay rights, immigrant and disability rights.

Without the idealistic, strenuous and patriotic efforts of black Americans, our democracy today would most likely look very different — it might not be a democracy at all.

Bryan Stevenson writes about America’s criminal justice system:

The 13th Amendment is credited with ending slavery, but it stopped short of that: It made an exception for those convicted of crimes. After emancipation, black people, once seen as less than fully human “slaves,” were seen as less than fully human “criminals.” The provisional governor of South Carolina declared in 1865 that they had to be “restrained from theft, idleness, vagrancy and crime.” Laws governing slavery were replaced with Black Codes governing free black people — making the criminal-justice system central to new strategies of racial control.

These strategies intensified whenever black people asserted their independence or achieved any measure of success. During Reconstruction, the emergence of black elected officials and entrepreneurs was countered by convict leasing, a scheme in which white policymakers invented offenses used to target black people: vagrancy, loitering, being a group of black people out after dark, seeking employment without a note from a former enslaver. The imprisoned were then “leased” to businesses and farms, where they labored under brutal conditions.

And Jamelle Bouie on power in America:

There is a homegrown ideology of reaction in the United States, inextricably tied to our system of slavery. And while the racial content of that ideology has attenuated over time, the basic framework remains: fear of rival political majorities; of demographic “replacement”; of a government that threatens privilege and hierarchy.

The past 10 years of Republican extremism is emblematic. The Tea Party billed itself as a reaction to debt and spending, but a close look shows it was actually a reaction to an ascendant majority of black people, Latinos, Asian-Americans and liberal white people. In their survey-based study of the movement, the political scientists Christopher S. Parker and Matt A. Barreto show that Tea Party Republicans were motivated “by the fear and anxiety associated with the perception that ‘real’ Americans are losing their country.”

Update: The Pulitzer Center has a study guide to go with The 1619 Project, including a free download of the entire magazine issue (no subscription necessary).

Update: The 1619 Project is now a podcast series as well.

Tags: Bryan Stevenson   Jamelle Bouie   Nikole Hannah-Jones   racism   slavery   USA
14 Aug 20:52

Public library receipt shows how much money you saved by borrowing instead of buying books

by David Pescovitz
wskent

okay. i'm no economist, financialist or money doctor, but why aren't more prices/savings/amounts modeled this way? sharing is cool for a lot of reasons, but one of those is that you save money. highlighting this should be habit-forming. and when we do spend, the societal cost of things is usually *so* much more than the actual dollar amount. this approach would make some strong economic arguments for values. i'm thinking of climate change in particular where i've seen some models where folks put a value on wetlands or break it down to a tree and it completely dwarfs the amount any developer would make off of that property. does anyone know of any cool examples of this happening?

Reddit user penguinska9 posted that their library "keeps track of how much you save by not buying books and borrowing instead" and shows the dollar amount on the receipt when you check out a book. Genius! I don't know how common this practice is but the following is from a Wichita Public Library posting from last year:

“While libraries offer tremendous benefits to their communities, sometimes the benefits are more abstract or require long term studies to show the value of their programs,” said Jennifer Lane, communication manager, Wichita Public Library. “Including this information is a way to easily quantify one of the ways the Library is a value to its users...."

So far this year, the highest dollar amount saved by a customer's account is $64,734.12. And the highest dollar amount saved by a customer's account since this feature was implemented is $196,076.21.

09 Aug 05:42

Significant Digits For Thursday, Aug. 8, 2019

by Oliver Roeder
wskent

Origin story for aliens from an epic sci-fi movie: "The Israeli lander that crashed on the surface of the moon in April apparently spilled thousands of tardigrades — strange-looking microscopic “water bears” — onto the lunar surface. A harsh environment for life, to be sure, but tardigrades are known to survive just about anything, and indeed can survive for years in “dormant states in which all metabolic processes stop and the water in their cells is replaced by a protein that effectively turns the cells into glass.”

You’re reading Significant Digits, a daily digest of the numbers tucked inside the news.


75 percent favorable

In 2015, after the Supreme Court had upheld same-sex marriage and the Affordable Care Act, only 33 percent of Republicans viewed the court favorably. Now, after the confirmation of two justices nominated by President Trump, 75 percent of Republicans have a favorable view of the court. Its favorability among Democrats has fallen from a high of 72 percent in 2016 to 49 percent today. [Pew Research Center]


1.3 percent of revenue

As Amazon builds out its own delivery fleet — drones and robots included? — FedEx is severing its ground-delivery ties with the company, two months after it also ended its air-delivery contract. FedEx said Amazon accounted for 1.3 percent of its revenue last year, or some $850 million. [The Associated Press]


1,000s of tardigrades

The Israeli lander that crashed on the surface of the moon in April apparently spilled thousands of tardigrades — strange-looking microscopic “water bears” — onto the lunar surface. A harsh environment for life, to be sure, but tardigrades are known to survive just about anything, and indeed can survive for years in “dormant states in which all metabolic processes stop and the water in their cells is replaced by a protein that effectively turns the cells into glass.” Good luck up there, little guys. [Wired]


$572 million loss

Despite the fact that its revenues doubled, DeepMind, Google’s AI outfit that developed superhuman chess-playing programs, lost $572 million last year. DeepMind owes a debt of 1.04 billion pounds this year, which includes an 883 million pound loan from Google. The company has shifted to health care research and is working on an algorithm that can look at medical imagery to find head and neck cancer and can diagnose eye disease. [Bloomberg]


4.7 million subscribers

Shortly after it had taken sharp and widespread criticism for its headline about President Trump’s response to the mass shootings in Texas and Ohio, including from some who claimed they were canceling their subscriptions, The New York Times announced that it now has 4.7 million paid subscriptions, a high for the newspaper. The Times has a stated goal of 10 million subscriptions by 2025. [The New York Times]


61 percent of Americans

My colleague Nathaniel Rakich explored the shifting popular support for stricter guns laws over the past 30 years. The latest Gallup poll, for example, shows that 61 percent of Americans support stricter gun laws while 30 percent think the laws should remain as they are. Overall, support for stricter laws fell from highs of about 75 percent in the early 1990s to lows below 50 percent in the late 2000s, though it has risen again over the past few years. [FiveThirtyEight]


From ABC News:
SigDigs: Aug. 8, 2019


Love digits? Find even more in FiveThirtyEight’s book of math and logic puzzles, “The Riddler.”

If you see a significant digit in the wild, please send it to @ollie.


07 Aug 19:59

The Long and Surprising History of Roller Derby

wskent

roller derby is extremely cool. when i was living in chicago i was friends with a lot of derby women and their community was easily the closest and most fun i have encountered in my adult life. it was almost like a secret world of people looking out for you, supporting each other, and being so driven by their athletic talent. their derby names are also fucking incredible!

05 Aug 02:01

Serendipity v algorithmy

by Patrick Tanguay
wskent

i "quit" algorithmically-generated music recommendations (ie discover weekly or any radio function on spotify) and it's resulted in a lot more music-oriented conversations with friends, a deepening love of dj-driven radio, and the discovery of more music i really love. i get that a lot of my friends may recommend music to me that spotify or some other algorithm recommends, but there's also social capital generated in this approach, which really does mean something. so...if you are ever need some more serendipity in your life JUST ASK.

I’ve always liked the concept of serendipity, even more since being involved in the early days of coworking, where we used the term “accelerated serendipity” quite a bit. The idea that, through the creation of a welcoming space and a diversified and thriving community, you could accelerate (or concentrate) “the occurrence and development of events by chance in a happy or beneficial way.” (Oxford English Dictionary)

So it’s probably a mix of Baader-Meinhof effect and well, serendipity, that these two articles grabbed my attention. In The Serendipity Engine, Gianfranco Chicco explains that he quit his job and will use the time to purposefully built up serendipity, seek fields he knows little about, learn new things, read an eclectic mix of books, be open to meeting strangers, visit new cities, etc. “Slowing down and renewing the commitment to a series of personal rituals.”

The Serendipity Engine works just like an internal combustion engine and, like with a high performance muscle car, you need to feed it with the right kind of propellant. In this analogy, the fuel is made of different activities, skills, and conversations. In my case I select them so that they are deliberately out of or tangential to my current professional domain. The engine also requires maintenance and fine tuning via iterations and changes to the activities or skills I become involved with.

He also connects his engine vision with Steven B. Johnson’s use of the concept of the adjacent possible, describing how different elements and ideas can be combined in various ways to create new elements and ideas.

The Serendipity Engine operates in a similar way, adding new stimulus into my life allow new and unexpected things to emerge.

Dan Cohen on the other hand, realized that he’s missing serendipity in the redesign of The New York Times app. Between the algorithmic “For you” tab and the pseudo old-school but very siloed “Sections,” he feels that he can’t bump into something new, he’s either presented with typecasted suggestions or enclosed in sections that don’t flow together, drawing you in from one to the next, like actual old-school paper newspapers did. For the sake of engagement, the NYT forfeits serendipity.

The engagement of For You—which joins the countless For Yous that now dominate our online media landscape—is the enemy of serendipity, which is the chance encounter that leads to a longer, richer interaction with a topic or idea. […]

Engagement isn’t a form of serendipity through algorithmically personalized feeds; it’s the repeated satisfaction of Present You with your myopically current loves and interests, at the expense of Future You, who will want new curiosities, hobbies, and experiences.

In a related idea, Kyle Chayka mourns some cancelled Netflix shows which were never presented to him because viewers are only shown a supposedly algorithmic homepage on Netflix (and elsewhere). In reality, that selection is corrupted by the business incentives of the company, pushing some shows to us, independent of our interests.

Sometimes there’s an algorithmic mismatch: your recommendations don’t line up with your actual desires or they match them too late for you to participate in the Cultural Moment. It induces a dysphoria or a feeling of misunderstanding—you don’t see yourself in the mirror that Netflix shows you.

One way to interpret all of this is that, even though we are supposed to be well served by algorithms, we end up not only missing some randomness, but we even have to actively seek it, busting our bubbles and building our own versions of Chicco’s engine. Or, as Chayka says below—and likely one of the reasons you are reading this blog:

Often we have to turn to other sources to get a good enough guide, however. Journalists, critics, and human curators are still good at telling us what we like, and have less incentive to follow the finances of the company delivering the content to us.


Found in the engine article; did you know that the word serendipity comes from the the Persian story of The Three Princes of Serendip? And that Serendip is one of the old names of Sri Lanka?

Tags: algorithms   Netflix   serendipity