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A Tale of Two Cities

November 14, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

San Francisco Call, 21 November 1918 TWO CITIES Chester Rowell, Editor of the Fresno Republican, Praises Handling of Flu Problem Here; Shows Folly of Los Angeles Attitude The following editorial by Chester Rowell, editor of the Fresno Republican, appeared in the on November 18 edition of the Call, under the heading “Two Cities.” There is … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Faits Divers, Pandemic, Politics Tagged: 1918 Spanish Influeza, BOARD OF HEALTH, Dr. William C. Hassler, Dr. Woods Hutchison, Fresno, Fresno Republican, influenza, Los Angeles, Los Angeles Express, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco, San Francisco Call, San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Examiner, Spanish Influenza

Seacharger

November 13, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

I can’t believe I didn’t post about this back in 2016 when I was following it, getting updates often and hoping for the success of the voyage. http://www.seacharger.com/ SeaCharger completed its voyage from California to Hawaii on July 22, 2016! Distance: 2413 miles Time at sea: 41.4 days Average speed: 58.3 miles per day, 2.43 … [Read more…]

Posted in: Environment, Faits Divers, Science, Sea Stories Tagged: AUTONOMOUS, BOAT, Damon McMillan, JT Zemp, Matt Stowell, Ocean, oceangoing, sea, SEACHARGER, solar powered, Troy Arbuckle

Public Abuse

October 23, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

In the 1918 flu epidemic, one symptom of surviving the flu was severe depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts and actions, often termed ‘delirium’ in the papers of the day. Until it proves to be a futile battle, I want to start to track newspaper articles on the abuse endured by workers from the public. I’m … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Pandemic, Politics, Thinking about Tagged: abuse, aggression, assaults, behaviour, bullying, dehumanise, hostility, lash out, spat at, threatened, threats, verbal abuse, vexatious, violence

Do not forget: Angelo Codevilla, Whose Writings Anticipated Trumpism, Dies at 78

October 4, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

An obit in the NYT today concerning this “political analyst” who died in a car wreck last week. As a coincidence, this week I’m reading “The Free World, Art and Thought in the Cold War” by Louis Menand and am at the chapter on Hannah Arendt’s “Origins of Totalitarianism.” There she describes this, that during … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Thinking about Tagged: academia, American foreign policy, Angelo Codevilla, anti-establishment, Contemporary class, domestic politics, Government, groupthink, Hannah Arendt, liberal elite, Louis Menand, Media, Republican establishment, Rush Limbaugh, Tea Party, Trumpism

‘Mr Radio Philips’ helped thousands flee the Nazis

September 26, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the Guardian/Observer Sept. 26, 2021: Unsung hero: how ‘Mr Radio Philips’ helped thousands flee the Nazis In June 1940, a Dutch salesman, acting as a consul in Lithuania, issued Jewish refugees with pseudo visas to escape Europe. His remarkable story is only now being told.

Posted in: Antique Radio, Faits Divers, Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Thinking about Tagged: Chiune Sugihara, consul, Curaçao, Curaçao visa, diplomat, Dutch, Holocaust, Jan Zwartendijk, Jews, Kaunas, Lithuania, Nazi Germany, Philips, Red Army, Soviet Union, visas

A program tried to cut opioid addiction among veterans. Did it cause suicides?

September 1, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Behind the paywall on the Washington Post is this article from August 24,2021:A program tried to cut opioid addiction among veterans. Did it cause suicides? By Benjamin Cowan and Joshua Tibbitts Benjamin Cowan is associate professor of economics at Washington State University and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Joshua Tibbitts … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Politics, Thinking about Tagged: addiction, Opioid Safety Initiative, opioids, suicides, VA, veterans

Nadia Boulanger

August 30, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the New York Times: She Was Music’s Greatest Teacher. And Much More. A festival broadens our understanding of Nadia Boulanger, the pathbreaking composer, conductor and thinker. By William Robin July 30, 2021 Nadia Boulanger on Wikipedia

Posted in: Content, Faits Divers, Feminism Tagged: Aaron Copland, classical music, France, French, French composers, Lili Boulanger, Monteverdi, Nadia Boulanger, pedagogy, Philip Glass, Prix de Rome, Quincy Jones, Raoul Pugno, Villa Medici, Virgil Thomson

Will the U.S. Pass a Point of No Return?

August 16, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

In the Atlantic, James Fallows reports on the Ancient Rome and Modern American analogies. Now, chapter four: crossing the Rubicon. Schnurer argues that this is more than just a familiar phrase. And he says that a U.S. Rubicon moment is in view—which would be triggered by a possible indictment of Donald Trump. At the end … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Environment, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Obituaries, Pandemic, Politics, Racism, Sea Stories, Trump Tagged: Augustus, Catiline, Donald J. Trump, immunity, Julius Caesar, Marc Antony, Roman, Roman Empire, Roman Republic, Rome, Rubicon

The Black Reporter Who Exposed a Lie About the Atom Bomb

August 9, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Charles H. Loeb defied the American military’s denials and propaganda to show how deadly radiation from the strike on Hiroshima sickened and killed. In the New York Times today is an account of the work of Charles Loeb, an American war correspondent in the Pacific in World War II.

Posted in: Environment, Faits Divers, Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Science, the Anthropocene Tagged: Atom Bomb, atomic age, Black journalist, Charles H. Loeb, Hiroshima, Japan, Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves, Manhattan Project, Nagasaki, National Negro Publishers Association, Propaganda, radiation, The Atlanta Daily World, U.S. Army, war correspondent, World War II

Spain bans small boats from stretch of water after orca encounters

August 8, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

In today’s Guardian, an article about the recent spate of encounters between small sail boats and Orca’s off the coast of Spain.

Posted in: Climate Change, Environment, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Science, Sea Stories, the Anthropocene Tagged: Cape Trafalgar, cetaceans, ferries, fishing, Galicia, Gibraltar, Orca, sailboats, Spain, whale watching
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