The car RIAA

Iโ€™d read this before years ago, but I just re-realized that in England at least the car RIAA killed automobiles there for a long, long time.

The development of the steam car began in the late 1700s with the Industrial Revolution. By the mid-1800s people had invented practical steam-powered vehicles, but the automobile industry in England was abruptly hamstrung by the โ€œred flag lawโ€. Stage coach owners saw the writing on the wall with the invention of the automobile and took their case to Parliament. In 1831 Parliament passed a law that any automobile had to have a man walking in front of it waving a red flag. At night he had to carry a lantern. This ruined the English market for cars for the next 65 years because they were now too expensive to bother with.

The RIAA/MPAA have wished to do โ€“ and have effectively done this โ€“ with their copyright schemes and their suppression of free speech on the internet. Since the internet is completely new, itโ€™s hard to accurately assay what weโ€™ve lost, or rather not gained.

For somewhat-understandable reasons, people are spectacularly bad at gauging opportunity cost.

bons

Iโ€™m really not a fitness snob as I am no longer very fit myself, but when I hear people crowing about running an 11-minute mile or something like that, my brain goes, โ€œWhat? Surely thatโ€™s wrong.โ€

Back in my day (kids), I routinely ran 6 minute miles and I was considered one of the slower runners in my army unit. I used to run/fast walk a 9-minute mile in 65 pounds of gear. Routinely.

I am glad even very slow runners are doing something to get fit, but my views are certainly skewed by having been in an army unit that is considered elite. (I say โ€œconsidered eliteโ€ as this โ€œeliteโ€ thing means you get to do way more crazy, unnecessary bullshit.) An 11-minute mile? What? Did you crawl most of the way? An 11-minute mile was what they expected of us if a leg had just been amputated, pukes! Winking smile

Ausome

Yep.

The simple fact is that an Australian entry-level fast food worker makes more than the average American worker. An absolute majority of Americans would increase their income if they moved to Australia and got fast food jobs.

And yet America is supposed to be this paradisiac land of pure awesomeness. As the article also points out, everyone in Australia is covered by health insurance as well.

Sprong

I grew up in North Florida, near the Georgia border.

When I was a kid โ€“ 25 years ago โ€“ winters werenโ€™t brutally cold or anything like that, but it always got cold enough to cause all of the plants to go brown and dormant (except evergreens, of course). In other words, I never saw a flower between and including November and February.

I live in Florida once again as an adult, and we sometimes return to the north of the state to visit the beautiful natural sights in the area.

Now, itโ€™s different. I am able to easily find blooming flowers, sometimes in great quantity, throughout the winter. In addition and because of the availability of flowers, we also see butterflies all year long now in North Florida.

When I was a kid the last butterflies were usually gone by October, and didnโ€™t return in number until April. I never, ever saw a butterfly in December there; now I see them commonly.

I realize itโ€™s anecdotal, but I was a keen observer of nature when I was a kid. I spent most of nearly every day  outside, and was never that big into computer games or the like. (I played them when it was too hot or rainy or cold to be outside, but otherwise I was usually outdoors.)

Riding on the school bus, Iโ€™d literally count every flower or animal I saw on the way to school โ€“ so yep, pretty fucking sure I know what I am talking about here, climate change deniers.

So I donโ€™t think itโ€™s just my misperception.

North Florida is an ecotone, anyway โ€“ itโ€™s the last stand of the northern forests as they shade into the more subtropical climate region that is most of Florida. Itโ€™s not surprising that such an area has been more noticeably altered by climate change.

But when I can notice such a large change in my lifetime, thatโ€™s a sign. A sign that itโ€™s probably going to be worse than even our models predict.