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Aide-Memoire

Free Your Mind … And Your Ass Will Follow

July 24, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Over on the Atlantic, James Parker writes about The Funkadelic Album That Predicted the Future The legendary band could almost blend in with other acts during the counterculture of the ’70s. But today, the group looks like a pure phenomenon.

Posted in: Ethical and green living, Modern Music, Politics, Racism, Science, Thinking about Tagged: “Billy Bass” Nelson, Bernie Worrell, Black, counterculture, Detroit, Eddie Hazel, Funkadelic, George Clinton, Joe Meek, Lee Perry, LSD, Miles Davis, Motown, Parliament, Parliaments, Tawl Ross, Tiki Fulwood

La Monte Young

July 23, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

True BelieversThe Man Who Brian Eno Called ‘the Daddy of Us All’ La Monte Young, the composer who quietly shaped much of contemporary Western music, reaches his last act.

Posted in: Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Modern Music, Obituaries, Thinking about Tagged: Angus MacLise, Brian Eno, Charlie Parker, Day of Niagara, Dream Houses, Igor Stravinsky, Jung Hee Choi, Kirana gharana, La Monte Young, Lee Konitz, Lou Reed, Marian Zazeela, minimalist music, musicologist, Pandit Pran Nath, Robert Stevenson, Tony Conrad, Trio for Strings

BUSINESS HAS FELT THE PINCH

July 17, 2020 by sergneri 1 Comment

Stockton Independent 2 November 1918 Considerable Loss Due to the Closing Down During the Influenza Epidemic. Merchants and businessmen in all the towns and cities of the country where the Spanish influenza is raging have suffered from a depression of trade amounting, in some lines and in some places to almost a complete suspension. In … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Pandemic, Thinking about Tagged: business, businessmen, epidemic, health authorities, infection, influenza, Merchants, Spanish Influenza

SALOONS REFUSE TO OBEY ORDERS

July 13, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

More news from 1918 – a couple of telling articles: Red Bluff Daily News 29 October 1918 SALOONS REFUSE TO OBEY ORDERS BOARD OF HEALTH STOCKTON, October 26 —The saloon keepers of Tracy, backed up by the attitude of Mayor N. S. Dwelly, are keeping open today in defiance of the order of the city … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Faits Divers, Pandemic Tagged: 1918, BOARD OF HEALTH, gravedigger, obituaries, saloon keepers, Spanish Influenza

EPIDEMIC WELL UNDER CONTROL, IT IS REPORTED

July 12, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

The newspaper article below seems too familiar to our current state in July 2020: San Diego Union and Daily Bee 29 October 1918 EPIDEMIC WELL UNDER CONTROL, IT IS REPORTED Health Board Renews Request For Wearing Masks and Suggests Precautions. Two deaths and 40 new cases summed up the course of the Spanish influenza epidemic … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Pandemic Tagged: 1918, face masks, gauze masks, masks, Spanish Influenza, vaccination, vaccine

New York Review of Books Strikes Again

July 4, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

One scathing essay and one graphic strip in the New York Review Daily which need sharing: The first is an essay from David Rothkopf: ‘The Most Ignorant and Unfit’: What Made America’s Worst Ever Leader? “Being president,” former First Lady Michelle Obama has said, “doesn’t change who you are, it reveals who you are.” In … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Pandemic, Politics, Racism, Thinking about, Trump Tagged: American exceptionalism, Andrew Johnson, Chester Arthur, Donald Trump, Franklin Pierce, George W Bush, Herbert Hoover, James Buchanan, John Tyler, King George III, Martin Van Buren, Millard Fillmore, Thomas Paine, Warren G. Harding, William Henry Harrison

Slaughterhouse as Paradise for SARS-CoV-2

June 29, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Meat packing plants, transmission explained Date: Fri 26 Jun 2020 18:06 CEST Source: Spiegel International [edited] If there is a paradise for SARS-CoV-2, it would probably be a slaughterhouse. Work units in meat plants are cooled to under 12 degrees Celsius [53.6 degrees Fahrenheit]. Workers stand near one another and sweat as they labor under … [Read more…]

Posted in: Pandemic, Politics Tagged: Coronaviruses, COVID-19, hygiene, infected workers, meat plants, SARS-CoV-2, slaughterhouse, superspreading, virologist, viruses

Three Doctor visits

June 17, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

In the past week, I’ve been to three newly “reopened” medical offices for appointments, and all of them screened me with a COVID-19 questionnaire and temperature checks. None of them asked me my age nor any questions about any health risks such as diabetes, obesity, or the like. Because “this infection is a grave threat … [Read more…]

Posted in: Obituaries, Pandemic, Science, Thinking about Tagged: COVID-19, questionnaire

Republicans are hypocrites. They happily ‘de-funded’ the police we actually need

June 17, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

The Guardian, again, hits the nail on the head with this spot on essay “Republicans are hypocrites. They happily ‘de-funded’ the police we actually need” by David Sirota: After two weeks of police violence and protests, Republican politicians have been pretending to have a fainting spell over the phrase “defund the police.” “There won’t be … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, Feminism, Finanace, Future of Work, Nuclear Industry, Pandemic, Politics, Racism, Science, Thinking about, Trump Tagged: antitrust, Chemical Safety Board, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Consumer Products Safety Commission, Department of Labor, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Internal Revenue Service, Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, Securities and Exchange Commission

Advice from Surgeon General Blue

June 12, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the San Pedro Daily News 14 October 1918 UNCLE SAM’S ADVICE ON FLU “Cover up each cough and sneeze, If you don’t you’ll spread disease.” U. S. Public Health Service Issues Official Health Bulletin on Influenza. LATEST WORD ON SUBJECT. Epidemic Probably Not Spanish In Origin — Germ Still Unknown — People Should Guard … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Pandemic, Thinking about Tagged: California Digital Newspaper Collection, CDNC, cough, disease, epidemic, fever, germs, headache, influenza, King Alfonso of Spain, sneeze, Spanish Influenza, sputum, U. S. Public Health Service
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