- How much should Britons hold against the English for the Anglo-Saxon conquest of England?
- Should we still hold the modern Russians to account for the Ukraine famine?
- When can the citizens of Ireland decide that it is ok to forgive the era of British rule?
- Is Schleswig-Holstein something Denmark should still be bitter about?
- Are the war crimes of Julius Caesar in Gaul an issue for modern Italians?
Comments, observations and thoughts from two bloggers on applied statistics, higher education and epidemiology. Joseph is an associate professor. Mark is a professional statistician and former math teacher.
Friday, October 22, 2021
Moving on from historical grievances
Thursday, October 21, 2021
Thursday Tweets
Big money thought it was using G.O.P. extremists. But it was the other way around, writes @PaulKrugman. https://t.co/N5mXNJvDxd
— New York Times Opinion (@nytopinion) October 12, 2021
I dug through the original tweets to see if this was meant ironically but apparently no. It seems that movie star's son turned Twitter celebrity really does feel that lack of two-day delivery to Sun Valley represents societal failure.
Area Man Who Moved To Idaho Discovers He Now Lives In Idaho pic.twitter.com/AEFI9a9hoV
— Name Sounds Like 'Tod' But More Murdery (@RTodKelly) October 11, 2021
Another reminder that people who complain about being canceled really mean they're being criticized, having their points questioned, or just not being adequately praised.
“I’m being silenced by CNN,” she said during her interview on CNN. pic.twitter.com/Y4RofYY8JQ
— Brett Meiselas (@BMeiselas) October 18, 2021
It’s amazing how I am bombarded by people on multiple platforms claiming they don’t have a platform to get their message out.
— Dan Rather (@DanRather) October 18, 2021
I realize that the observation itself is fairly obvious, but something about the conciseness of this list brought home just how much this describes the guiding principles of conservative media.
Apropos of nothing, struck by this column two years ago from @ProfGalloway:https://t.co/WRscjQQteC pic.twitter.com/JII5VDJwcf
— James Fallows (@JamesFallows) October 18, 2021
Even more than the LA Times Russ Mitchell, E. W. Niedermeyer is the essential journalist on the Tesla beat.
The persistence of the "tech startup disruptors vs adapting legacy dinosaurs" narrative in EVs/AVs/mobility is a tribute to the enduring power of narrative, even in the total absence of supporting facts
— E.W. Niedermeyer (@Tweetermeyer) October 18, 2021
Just one lesson that I took to heart at the very start of my career, documenting/analyzing Detroit's ultimate downfall in 2008, was that a captured media enables cultural rot and decline. A tough, confrontational media fosters accountability and improvement.
— E.W. Niedermeyer (@Tweetermeyer) October 14, 2021
Let us not forget that the autos formed the Arsenal of Democracy (Ford featured in the book) and helped win WW2. Anxious to see what techs long-term contribution will be given recent history. https://t.co/JY8kD1lt8u
— Tony Posawatz (@TonyPosawatz) October 14, 2021
This one is especially important.
This thread hits so hard. Where's the DARPA Challenge/@NHTSA Inclusive Design Challenge for next-gen wheelchair designs? Having seen and discussed some of the recent design/manufacturing innovations around micromobility, there's no doubt that we could be doing soooo much better. https://t.co/qUsACl4xkK
— E.W. Niedermeyer (@Tweetermeyer) October 18, 2021
Autonomy tweets.
Important.Pass it around. https://t.co/ywPkArHkAr
— Russ Mitchell (@russ1mitchell) October 19, 2021
An underrated consequence of the commercial and military expansion of image recognition is how it has hit a ceiling on accuracy. Companies continue to try to boil the ocean with increasing volumes of image processing in pursuit of now marginal returns on a faulty technology.
— Scream Queen (@KateRoseBee) October 12, 2021
"How hated is Ted Cruz?" has become one of the great standbys of American political humor.
Everything that Ted Cruz says and does — absolutely everything — makes me think of Al Franken’s line: “Here's the thing you have to understand about Ted Cruz. I like Ted Cruz more than most of my other colleagues like Ted Cruz.
— Clyde Haberman (@ClydeHaberman) October 18, 2021
“And I hate Ted Cruz.” https://t.co/nuAWLBbcll
What's going on with the far right and the Catholic Church could well be the most interesting story in politics.
If you saw any Catholics freaking out about Pope Francis being on a roll yesterday, this is what they were referring to. pic.twitter.com/ufIVlpGNTq
— Kaya Oakes (@kayaoakes) October 17, 2021
There is nothing in any Catholic's faith that exempts them from taking a vaccine. There is nothing in the gospels. There is nothing in the New Testament anywhere. There is nothing in canon law. There is nothing from the Church Fathers, and no pronouncements from previous popes. https://t.co/x9hXxm79Fd
— Charles P. Pierce (@CharlesPPierce) October 20, 2021
1981 is not that long ago.
Thank you and congratulations to @sewellchan for leading the #LATimes editorial board and crafting this @lapressclub award-winning examination of the newspaper's fraught history with race. https://t.co/wTtxSSkmTq https://t.co/KdqsYQQBgm
— Robert Greene (@robrtgreene) October 17, 2021
A lot of people call this wage growth, but that's not important right now.
Goldman Sachs CEO getting multiple millions in bonuses is good for the economy, but working people getting a living wage is not. Hmmmm https://t.co/PhEebTeg7e
— Norman Ornstein (@NormOrnstein) October 16, 2021
Following the links in the first paragraph, the "critics" seem to be Trump and Fox News. Though they did single out conservative media, the authors probably should have mentioned that the NBC article cited ("'Not by accident': False 'thug' narratives have long been used to discredit civil rights movements") makes almost exactly the same point as the MC article, giving much of the WP piece a bit of a dog-bites-man vibe. The important story here (briefly mentioned) is how mainstream media sensationalism and conservative media disinformation. If you're interested, here are my real time notes.
Critics claim #BLM protests were more violent than 1960s civil rights ones. "Our research finds that on every measure available, last year’s BLM protests were more peaceful and less confrontational," John D. McCarthy and @kerbygoff write.https://t.co/ohjA2D06dd
— The Monkey Cage (TMC) (@monkeycageblog) October 14, 2021
One doesn't know where to start...
Best news for diphtheria in decades https://t.co/GUEV7m8fEs
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) October 11, 2021
Because polio was so much fun. https://t.co/kxfrYZmr5M
— Connie Schultz (@ConnieSchultz) October 12, 2021
But this is a good place to stop.A few years ago Kyrie Irving went through an extended phase where he insisted the earth is flat. One does not have to accept the spin that there's something deep or pioneering driving his rebellion against the vaccine. https://t.co/DrnAJjz8OM
— Sahil Kapur (@sahilkapur) October 13, 2021
I don’t know how to make it any simpler than this pic.twitter.com/MNFqtkLNuy
— Andrew Wortman 🏳️🌈 (@AmoneyResists) October 13, 2021
Peter Thiel is the primary funder of incipient fascism in the United States, the Sauron character in America's struggle to preserve civic democracy. https://t.co/ne5LUbbDD5 via @politico
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) October 13, 2021
There are surprisingly few tweets on survey design.
Does question order matter in polls?@YouGov says @JoeBiden approval rating collapsed from even (approve=disapprove) to -10 tween Oct 9 & 12.
— Mark Mellman (@MarkMellman) October 13, 2021
Seem impossible?
Likely culprit=Quest 2 when it was even
Q 61 when it was -10, after items on host of topics from masks to unemployment
But quite a few on gerrymandering...
This disenfranchises active duty military at one of the world’s largest Army bases. @GregAbbott_TX, @DanPatrick and @DadePhelan will push anyone (even our troops) aside for their own gain. #txlege https://t.co/mErNigxdAd
— Reed Galen (@reedgalen) October 12, 2021
And polarization.
This is what I was saying this morning - headline language keeps turning "thing that 1/3 of people are angry about" into "thing that has divided us just like the civil war." https://t.co/AvbSisYoPx
— David Weigel (@daveweigel) October 12, 2021
It's the expression that sells it.
𝘈𝘯𝘥 𝘈𝘭𝘦𝘹𝘢𝘯𝘥𝘦𝘳 𝘸𝘦𝘱𝘵, 𝘴𝘦𝘦𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘢𝘴 𝘩𝘦 𝘩𝘢𝘥 𝘯𝘰 𝘮𝘰𝘳𝘦 𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘭𝘥𝘴 𝘵𝘰 𝘤𝘰𝘯𝘲𝘶𝘦𝘳. pic.twitter.com/8q9MYzxR8M
— Thinkwert (@Thinkwert) October 12, 2021
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
I'm sure that Tesla fans will welcome having a leading AI researcher working with NHTSA...
Big news for NHTSA, Tesla, and autonomous vehicle regulation:
— David Zipper (@DavidZipper) October 19, 2021
"The White House plans to announce Duke University engineering & comp sci professor @missy_cummings as the new senior adviser for safety at NHTSA."https://t.co/BYOksybO4H
Here's Prof Cummings' full bio: https://t.co/J4rDmnDb8z
— David Zipper (@DavidZipper) October 19, 2021
She is a human factors expert and a former fighter pilot.
She has also been one of the most outspoken critics of Tesla Autopilot and Full-Self Driving-- and you can be sure that the Biden admin is fully aware of that. pic.twitter.com/fuwgEr47uT
Three...
Tuesday, October 19, 2021
The trouble with posting your review five years before the book comes out is that you tend to get left out of the conversation.
I know some of you are going to quibble about this not actually being a review of Bobby Duffy's The Generation Myth, arguing that this is just an old post pontificating on some topics vaguely related to the subject of the book, but isn't that pretty much the standard for reviews of these big think pieces?
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2016
Among living Americans, there are only two "generations"
First, there is the practice of making a sweeping statement about a "generation" when one is actually making a claim about a trend. This isn't just wrong; it is the opposite of right. The very concept of a generation implies a relatively stable state of affairs for a given group of people over an extended period of time. If people born in 1991 are more likely to do something that people born in 1992 and people born in 1992 are more likely to do it than people born in 1993 and so on, discussing the behavior in terms of a generation makes no sense whatsoever.
We see this constantly in articles about "the millennial generation" (and while we are on the subject, when you see "the millennial generation," you can replace "may be about to encounter serious bullshit" with "are almost certainly about to encounter serious bullshit"). Often these "What's wrong with millennial's?" think pieces manage multiple layers of crap, taking a trend that is not actually a trend and then mislabeling it as a trait of a generation that's not a generation.
How often does the very concept of a generation make sense? Think about what we're saying when we use the term. In order for it to be meaningful, people born in a given 10 to 20 year interval have to have more in common with each other than with people in the preceding and following generations, even in cases where the inter-generational age difference is less than the intra-generational age difference.
Consider the conditions where that would be a reasonable assumption. You would generally need society to be at one extreme for an extended period of time, then suddenly swing to another. You can certainly find big events that produce this kind of change. In Europe, for instance, the first world war marked a clear dividing line for the generations.
(It is important to note that the term "clear" is somewhat relative here. There is always going to be a certain fuzziness with cutoff points when talking about generations, even with the most abrupt shifts. Societies don't change overnight and individuals seldom fall into the groups. Nonetheless, there are cases where the idea of a dividing line is at least a useful fiction.)
In terms of living Americans, what periods can we meaningfully associate with distinct generations? I'd argue that there are only two: those who spent a significant portion of their formative years during the Depression and WWII; and those who came of age in the Post-War/Youth Movement/Vietnam era.
Obviously, there are all sorts of caveats that should be made here, but the idea that Americans born in the mid-20s and mid-30s would share some common framework is a justifiable assumption, as is the idea that those born in the mid-40s and mid-50s would as well. Perhaps more importantly, it is also reasonable to talk about the sharp differences between people born in the mid-30s and the mid-40s.
There are a lot of interesting insights you can derive from looking at these two generations, but, as far as I can see, attempts to arbitrarily group Americans born after, say, 1958 (which would have them turning 18 after the fall of Saigon) is largely a waste of time and is often profoundly misleading. The world continues to change rapidly, just not in a way that lends itself toward simple labels and categories.
Monday, October 18, 2021
Either this is interesting or I'm doing something wrong
This seems to be a good time to remind everyone following this thread that I have no expertise whatsoever here. I work with numbers for a living and I've lived in California for a while and I've made a real effort to explore the state, but other than that, my knowledge of this topic is limited to what I could glean from following the news and doing a few searches on Google, Wikipedia and Census.gov.
My lack of expertise makes me especially nervous when I come across something that is, for lack of a better word, interesting.
For instance, if I am looking at the right numbers, the vacancy rate for SF is and has long been much higher than San Jose or Oakland (or, while we're on the subject, LA or Fresno), despite having the highest housing prices.
Are these number the best way of tracking vacancy? Am I getting the math right? Take a look at the Census data for cities you're familiar with. Are they behaving the way you'd expect?
Friday, October 15, 2021
Weekend video miscellanea -- housing and transportation edition
If you can find a more concise, approachable way to understand critical concepts in driving automation then by all means, watch them. Thing is, I'm not sure that exists... so just watch Moody's videos! https://t.co/wuNn1ll7E9
— E.W. Niedermeyer (@Tweetermeyer) September 21, 2021
Thursday, October 14, 2021
What we were talking about in 2015 was the possibility of basically this...
Trump statement just now: "If we don’t solve the Presidential Election Fraud of 2020 (which we have thoroughly and conclusively documented), Republicans will not be voting in ‘22 or ‘24. It is the single most important thing for Republicans to do."
— Sam Stein (@samstein) October 13, 2021
Almost five years later, the situation is remarkably similar, but cranked up to the next level. Trump has essentially cinched the nomination three years before the election and is now explicitly calling for a vote boycott if the Republican establishment doesn't go to extreme lengths to defend him.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2015
Distracted by the large flock of black swans
In recent years, a large part of the foundation of the GOP strategy has been the assumption that, if you get base voters angry enough and frightened enough, they will show up to vote (even in off year elections) and they will never vote for the Democrat (even when they really dislike the Republican candidate).
Capitalizing on that assumption has always been something of a balancing act, particularly when you constantly attack the legitimacy of the electoral system ("The system is rigged!" "The last election was stolen!" "Make sure to vote!"). With the advent of the Tea Party movement, it's gotten even more difficult to maintain that balance.
I don't want to get sucked into trying to guess what constitute reasonable probabilities here – – I'm just throwing out scenarios – – but it certainly does seem likely that, if he doesn't get the nomination and does not choose to run as an independent, Trump will still make trouble and things will get ugly.
Keep in mind, Trump's base started out as the birther movement. They came into this primed to see conspiracies against them. Now the RNC has given them what appears to be an actual conspiracy to focus on.
I don't think we can entirely rule out the possibility of Trump calling for a boycott of the vote to protest his treatment but even if it doesn't come to that, it seems probable that, should we see a great deal of bitterness and paranoia after the convention, the result will not help Republican turnout.
What kind of magnitude would we be talking about? It's still too early to say and even if it weren't, I wouldn't feel qualified to speculate, but it would be an interesting conversation to follow among political scientists.
At the very least, the possibility of something big happening down-ballot, though perhaps still not likely, is more likely than it was in the days before Trump.
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Urbanism
Tuesday, October 12, 2021
Tuesday Tweets
Growing up in the Bible Belt, I was always struck by how much white evangelicals based their identity on feelings of persecution. https://t.co/5fGS0fvLYO
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) October 10, 2021
embarrassing thread https://t.co/STtStmJFoF
— John Harwood (@JohnJHarwood) October 11, 2021
Even if you've heard other versions, check this out. Some stories just have to be told by @CharlesPPierce https://t.co/9QYJaZxHZf
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) October 9, 2021
Every time someone from Berkeley wins a Nobel, I want to go on an extended rant about the California Master Plan, the UC System, and what it means to have built—and, latterly, criminally neglected—the greatest public university system on the face of the earth. pic.twitter.com/ghTnoKOTaM
— Kieran Healy (@kjhealy) October 12, 2021
Opinion: “High on the list of complicit business leaders is Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk, who announced this week that he would move Tesla’s headquarters to Austin.” https://t.co/CeEB551jRe
— Russ Mitchell (@russ1mitchell) October 10, 2021
it wld be one thing if he just happened on this idiocy: a super high-price drug cocktail to own phrma when the whole thing can be avoided w a $20 vax. But it's GOP wide. While DeSantis has railed agst the vax he's deployed teams to fan out across florida with antibody cocktail. https://t.co/5C5KxjUbdo
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) October 10, 2021
Monoclonal antibodies are, of course, hand-crafted in small batches by simple artisans who want nothing more than a smile in return. https://t.co/cmtLJOptjY
— Helen Kennedy (@HelenKennedy) October 10, 2021
Thing about popularism is that it used to be called 'Clintonism.' Thats not a dig. Contrary to much griping, Clintonism made a lot of sense in the political context of the 90s. Maybe it makes sense now too. But its a lot of brouhaha over rebranding what we were saying 30 yrs ago.
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) October 10, 2021
Remember when so many, including news organizations, took poll results that 40% said they would quit rather being forced to get vaccinated? https://t.co/BXkCdbiS6U
— Norman Ornstein (@NormOrnstein) October 5, 2021
Great read from @rodneyabrooks, who says #AI isn't quite ready to surpass human intelligence.
— Colin Angle (@colinangle) October 5, 2021
"Just about every successful deployment of AI has either one of two expedients: It has a person somewhere in the loop, or the cost of failure is very low." https://t.co/bGrdrEHms4
when yr newsroom announces DeSantis “won the pandemic” you get promoted to NYT https://t.co/wYikjbWULf
— Eric Boehlert (@EricBoehlert) October 5, 2021
The evolution of the bicycle in one gif pic.twitter.com/kb9XX8MOpm
— Joaquim Campa (@JoaquimCampa) October 9, 2021
"In his head, a plan of mathematical perfection." https://t.co/5qfzMJicqC
— EPD Total Landscaping (@EricPaulDennis) October 10, 2021
Monday, October 11, 2021
Eleven years ago at the blog -- on a completely unrelated note, I've been thinking about how the hyperloop will revolutionize commuting
Or maybe flying cars, but definitely one of the two.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2010
The cusp of coolness
Here's the latest entry:
Although it may sound more sci-fi than sci-fact, a commercially developed jetpack is actually being eyed for mass production, with plans to eventually release it to the public. Let that sink in for a second. Jetpacks are real, and you might be able to buy one someday soon. Or at least see them among the skies.I don't think we'll need the full second since jet packs have been around for between fifty and seventy years and you've been able to buy them for much of that time. The Germans had a prototype in WWII (Not surprisingly, Wikipedia has an excellent write-up on the subject). By the mid-Sixties they were flying over the World's Fair and showing up in Bond movies (yes, that was an actual Bell Rocket Belt).
But despite consuming countless man-hours and numerous fortunes (and prompting at least one kidnapping*) over what is now more than half a century, progress has been glacial. Jet packs are and will probably remain one of the worst under-performing technologies of the post-war era.
"Cusp of coolness" stories are annoying but they can also be dangerous. They give a distorted impression of how technological development works. Columnists and op-ed writers like John Tierney (whose grasp of science is not strong) come away with the idea that R&D is like a big vending machine -- deposit your money and promptly get what you asked for.
It's OK when this naive attitude convinces them to clear out space in their garages for jet packs. It's dangerous when it leads them to write editorials claiming that the easiest way to handle global warming is by building giant artificial volcanoes.
*from Wikipedia:
In 1992, one-time insurance salesman and entrepreneur Brad Barker formed a company to build a rockeltbelt with two partners: Joe Wright, a businessman based in Houston, and Larry Stanley, an engineer who owned an oil well in Texas. By 1994, they had a working prototype they called the Rocketbelt-2000, or RB-2000. They even asked [Bill] Suitor to fly it for them. But the partnership soon broke down. First Stanley accused Barker of defrauding the company. Then Barker attacked Stanley and went into hiding, taking the RB-2000 with him. Police investigators questioned Barker but released him after three days. The following year Stanley took Barker to court to recover lost earnings. The judge awarded Stanley sole ownership of the RB-2000 and over $10m in costs and damages. When Barker refused to pay up, Stanley kidnapped him, tied him up and held him captive in a box disguised as a SCUBA-tank container. After eight days Barker managed to escape. Police arrested Stanley and in 2002 he was sentenced to life in prison, since reduced to eight years. The rocketbelt has never been found.
Friday, October 8, 2021
Housing costs
This is Joseph.
It is without doubt that something is wrong with the housing market. The fundamentals do not change so rapidly over a short period. I think there are two dominant narratives.
One, is that something is wrong with supply. The sources of housing supply are complicated with issues ranging from zoning to cost of building materials. This source of housing shortage is ever popular to discuss, as everyone knows some municipal building or zoning rule that they consider daft. But supply can't be the only driver -- San Francisco has a 9.6% gross vacancy rate and 8,000 homeless persons (>5,000 unsheltered).
Two, is that there is demand caused by low interest rates/asset inflation. Like all forms of investment, it is vulnerable to bubbles, irrational exuberance, and the general problem of searching for yield that tend to become severe in times of high income inequality. Issues of affordability of land certainly go back to the Roman Republic and were a big factor in the rise of Caesar.
But the truth is all sorts of places (like London, Ontario or Fresno) are showing rapid cost increases in housing, both rent and purchase prices. These sustained increases seem to be require a fairly strong driver that explains why now and not before. These housing prices have led to an increases in unsheltered persons and a resulting crackdown on things like camps.
Sometimes the answer is the less complicated one. Real estate, via mechanisms like REITs mean that we are mixing a human necessity (shelter) with an investment class. The recent crisis accelerated income inequality, even overseas, which means that one obvious problem is that you have aligned incentives to make investors want yield. Some of this comes from the exceptionally low interest rates from the central banks but I wonder to what extent you have influential people making nudges in a thousand little ways to preserve asset values.
The bad news for this explanation is that there is no happy ending. An increase in interest rates would be a huge blow to leverage home owners whereas a drop in rates is a huge recession event (right after the stagnation in productivity caused by pandemic inefficiency).
Rome shattered and become an empire. France beheaded the rich. At best you have the consequences of a huge asset bubble popping, in an asset class that nearly everyone is highly exposed to.
We need somebody to prove me wrong.
Thursday, October 7, 2021
Does building where the prices are highest always reduce average commute times?
It's late and I don't have time to do this justice, but I do want to take a minute and get it in the housing thread, because it concerns a claim that shows up a lot, implicitly and explicitly.
Before the housing crisis reached a boil, the main argument offered by the NYT/Vox YIMBYs was based on the carbon footprint of people driving long distances to their jobs. We might push back on their estimates of the impact of the commuting (particularly in an age of remote work) compared to other green policy changes, but there's no question that having fewer cars on the road driving less would be an environmental win. Nor is there any question that far too many people are forced to make horrifying commutes because they can't find affordable housing closer to major employment centers.
But can we go further and treat housing choice as a simple, straightforward trade-off between commuting distance and affordability? Probably not. There's quite a bit of research around this question that I hopefully will have time to get into later, but for now I've got some interesting counter-examples that are especially relevant to our ongoing discussion.
From the American Community Survey, here are commute times for those who do not work from home. [quick caveat, I'm not familiar with ACS data so it's possible I'm missing something]:
Wednesday, October 6, 2021
Sure the money was small time by today's standards, but did Theranos have lions and tigers and iceless ice?
Surprised no one's made a movie of this fellow.
Keith Johnston writing for the LA Times.
Success came quickly for Bourgeois, who had a talent for donning new hats when opportunities arose. He had begun his career in Europe as a cinematographer for Pathé Frères, jumped in front of the camera when a production needed an actor willing to do a dangerous stunt and learned to train animals with the help of the nature documentarian who directed his first films. Bourgeois’ first picture for Universal was a riotous two-reel comedy, “Joe Martin Turns ’Em Loose.” A series of collaborations with Marstini followed, with Bourgeois credited as actor, writer or director and his wife as the star.
...
Yet no private correspondence survives that explains why Bourgeois turned away from filmmaking. Geoffrey Donaldson, a seminal Dutch film scholar, once asked Bourgeois’ second wife about it, but she was unable (or unwilling) to disclose more, other than to say he had “lost interest” in film, preferring to work in the steel business — go figure. All that’s known is that by spring 1916, a restless man with a gift for reinvention found himself working as one of many filmmakers at a large Hollywood studio, with a reputation for animal abuse, a history of injuries and, perhaps, a broken marriage.
...
On March 2, 1916, the fashionable Café Bristol, on the ground floor of the Hellman Building at 4th and Spring streets downtown, debuted a new attraction for Los Angeles: a skating rink. Skating was already enormously popular, and cafe rinks were a fad in New York and Chicago. But they were expensive. The Bristol’s 24-by-50-foot surface required a $10,000 ammonia refrigeration system.
Bourgeois, finger to the wind, sensed an opportunity. Among his many skill sets was some knowledge of chemistry. Though his education record is unclear, a 1907 document from a train crossing the U.S.-Canadian border indicated he worked as an electrician in Manitoba. He told acquaintances that he’d received a deferment from service in the Belgian army during World War I because the U.S. Navy was interested in an alloy of his invention, although no record of this exists. In April 1916, he claimed to have invented “iceless ice.”
“Mr. Bourgeois claims that this composition cannot break, unless deliberately chopped up, it cannot wear out and it cannot melt, unless put on a fire,” The Times reported. “The composition is laid down in liquid form and ‘freezes’ over, or hardens, in twenty-four hours.”
Bourgeois secured investment to convert a roller rink and car dealership at 1041 S. Broadway into the Palace Ice Rink. The grand opening was to be attended in July 1916 by the mayor and feature L.A.’s first game of ice hockey. The entrance was constructed to resemble a huge iceberg. Inside were shops that would sell candy, ice cream, cigars and soft drinks.
Vendors paid Bourgeois hefty deposits to secure places in the venture. Cashiers could get a job if they paid $100. Dozens of skating instructors lined up to offer lessons to wobbly Angelenos. Bourgeois needed $17 from each of them to purchase a uniform.
Contractors, still busy through the summer, were paid almost entirely with checks that bounced. The builders sought out Bourgeois to find out how his ice was supposed to work, but he couldn’t be reached. A vendor named Jacques Levi reported him to the authorities, and a warrant was issued for Bourgeois’ arrest on Aug. 4, by which time he, his stenographer and his investors’ money were on their way to Yuma.
Tuesday, October 5, 2021
Monday, October 4, 2021
Monday Tweets
If half the population thinks climate change is a hoax and the other half thinks it's an existential threat that can't be averted, on average we have a well informed public.
— Mark Palko (@MarkPalko1) October 3, 2021
Best letter to the editor I’ve seen lately. Via @nytimes pic.twitter.com/ME8qDC14kT
— David Wessel (@davidmwessel) September 21, 2021
Antivaxxers' affection for Regeneron is fascinating. It's under an EUA, and is not FDA-approved. It's a new technology. Its clinical trials started just before the trials for the vaxxes, so we have no idea what the long-term effects of taking it are. And yet antivaxxers love it.
— James Surowiecki (@JamesSurowiecki) September 17, 2021
I got a half a dozen jabs just to be embedded with US forces for the Iraq invasion, including for anthrax. I’m certain this isn’t the first “serum” he had to “sit still” for. https://t.co/Vc9DrBA6Sl
— Jim Sciutto (@jimsciutto) September 16, 2021
If you’re a reporter covering the anti-vax movement, please recognize that this (astroturfing, right-wing activism) is a feature, not a bug, and that many of the loudest voices — ie, the people you’re most likely to interact with — are driven by politics, not vaccine concerns.
— Caroline Orr Bueno, Ph.D (@RVAwonk) October 4, 2021
Marshall is, as usual, right. The coverage of of this story has been extraordinarily bad.
Times is just on a roll. They actually say here that Biden just backed linkage for the “first time”. We’re supposed to forget that there was actually a faux scandal over this a couple months ago when he threatened a veto if anyone tried to delink the bills? pic.twitter.com/8O8oEvMI7L
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) October 2, 2021
For combining bombast with inanity this tweet is hard to beat. A level beyond the normal patter of the "win the morning" press. And the full article is... something! All about the views of her allies, but fails to quote or identify a single one. So inside it's almost intestinal. https://t.co/w3TBHYIo7o
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) October 2, 2021
Germany is the guy who is trying to lose weight by going to gym, but rewards himself with McDonald's on the way home https://t.co/vDKZns7hno
— luispedro.substack.com🌻 (@luispedrocoelho) September 20, 2021
is there anything it can't do pic.twitter.com/cCwnA6IbUH
— flglmn (@flglmn) September 16, 2021
lmao knee slapper https://t.co/hHpoa7bXp0
— Linette Lopez (@lopezlinette) October 1, 2021
California hit the lowest coronavirus case rate in the nation. https://t.co/258kDSrZ02 pic.twitter.com/dAkKXET7QB
— San Francisco Chronicle (@sfchronicle) September 18, 2021
California’s job growth tripled the nation’s, even as the Delta variant spread https://t.co/idQFT2f3Dy
— Russ Mitchell (@russ1mitchell) September 18, 2021
Basically we agree that his readers are so brain-poisoned by reflexive partisanship and conspiracy theories that they’ll refuse life-saving medicine for a chance to own the libs. https://t.co/38hSfczirA
— Matthew Gertz (@MattGertz) September 19, 2021
I wrote about this in more detail. https://t.co/7ThUt8uADQ
— Matthew Gertz (@MattGertz) September 20, 2021
Your regular reminder that "depolarization" is only good if both sides are bad. If one side is good -- say, advancing democracy incl. civic equality like Reps during Reconstruction or Dems today -- then depolarization is antithetical to democracy & thus deeply *harmful.* https://t.co/sFNHc1ZzGe
— Nathan Kalmoe (@NathanKalmoe) September 16, 2021
OAN keeps talking ABOUT the recall. "Officials are finishing up the ballot count," different anchors reading the same script said at both 5 and 7am ET. But they're not admitting what AP, CNN, and everyone else reported last night: The recall failed. Newsom prevailed. (4/7)
— Brian Stelter (@brianstelter) September 15, 2021
Congrats to the TV producers and journalists who devoted air time to Caitlyn Jenner. https://t.co/Bk3nqQIocK
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) September 15, 2021
She got one percent of the vote last night. Good call.
I can’t stop watching this interview on repeat, absolutely incredible Alan Partridge level interview skills pic.twitter.com/GZVVuDIFdy
— Charlie Haynes (@charliehtweets) September 29, 2021
Important study results from NASA Ames: in simulator testing, drivers using Level 2 driver assistance reported feeling sleepier and showed more signs of "nodding off" than people who drove unassisted. https://t.co/8lIeJM4rKE
— E.W. Niedermeyer (@Tweetermeyer) September 16, 2021
TWENTY PERCENT. We are not talking nearly enough about mobile homes & the climate crisis. This is a big BIG deal. https://t.co/9zuJhtv3YT
— lizweil (@lizweil) September 15, 2021
Did Nicki Minaj's cousin's friend's testicles really swell up? Maybe artificial intelligence can help us find the answer.
— New York Times Pitchbot (@DougJBalloon) September 17, 2021
"Ozy Media was built on years of lies that together created a woefully false narrative about its business, financials and culture..." https://t.co/m57DsHRYUE
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) October 2, 2021
It's hard to overstate how little was there.
Okay am I the only one or did something happen to my Ozy shows I was saving on my Quibi? Wtf
— Luke Burbank (@lukeburbank) October 1, 2021
It's the weekend, so please enjoy this video of a moose dutifully using a crosswalk.https://t.co/PHUnluSJqm pic.twitter.com/puVS1KBIWy
— David Zipper (@DavidZipper) October 2, 2021