Thursday, July 30, 2020

Blog Mirror/ A Hundred Years Ago: 1920 Directions for Building a Fire in a Coal Stove

Nice coal burning stove.  This highly modern AGA stove wasn't introduced until 1922 and they're still being made.

This is just the sort of information that I was seeking to explore when I first started this blog:

1920 Directions for Building a Fire in a Coal Stove


And which, I'd note, I haven't done a very good job of really exploring.

One of the things I think we really fail to appreciate about the first half of the 20th Century is the nature of appliances.  We just don't grasp what was there and what wasn't, and how the things that were there worked.

I've actually given a fair amount of thought to this in regard to stoves as it has to do with the very first opening part of a very slow moving novel I'm theoretically writing, but my thought in regard to that was on wood burning stoves, not coal burning ones.  Indeed, I've never even considered coal burning stoves in regard to cooking.  It didn't occur to me that people used them for cooking.

Why didn't that occur to me?

It probably should have, as I have some exposure to coal burning stoves.  Some close friends of mine from my teens onward used a coal stove for heat, but not cooking, in their really unique self built home.  It was actually designed for solar, but that didn't generate enough heat in our really cold winters.  That stove was a large Franklin type stove.  Other people I've known have used surplus Army Cannon Heaters fired with coal for shops.  And my inlaws at one time used a coal burning stove of yet another type for additional heat in their rural home in the winter.  But I've never known anyone to cook with a coal burning stove.  It didn't occur to me that people did.

Or do.

One thing about coal burning anything is that it really smells.*  Of course, burning wood smells too.  Coal burns really hot, but it gives off an oily petroleum smell, which given what it is, it would.  You can tell if a place has a coal burning stove as the inside of the home or shop will smell oily.  And after only a short time in the premises, you'll smell oily too.

I think that would get to me, but oddly enough I like the coal smell.  It's one of those things like cigars in certain places, or the smoke of certain types of wood, it's a pleasant smell even if you don't want to go around smelling like it.  Sounds odd, I know, but I imagine that most folks have that feeling about certain odors.

Which brings up this odd point.  When we read about the history of something, we usually appreciate the sense of sight much more than anything else, as we have a "mind's eye".  We don't have a "mind's smell", and while extraordinary smells are noted in fiction and history, its only when they're extraordinary.  We are much more likely to have something described to us as to what it looked like than anything else, as that's principally how we perceive the world.  We might get in what people heard as well in a description, particularly if its speech, but only rarely do we read as to what something smelled like.  You can read, for instance, volumes and volumes of Westerns that contain a line about what horses in a corral look like, but as anyone who has been around such scenes in real life knows, there's a distinct smell that goes with that.

And indeed the entire world was full of smells a century ago that most of us don't even imagine today.  I'd argue that the average person encountered many more smells on a daily basis, no matter where they lived or what they did, than they do now.  Today, I'll get up, shave at some point, and go to work.  In the course of doing that, I'm going to smell the coffee I make, smell the shaving cream I use, and maybe smell a little bit of fuel my motor vehicle burns on the way to work.  I probably won't encounter any distinct smells until somebody makes lunch at work, if somebody does, and then again until I come home and smell dinner cooking, or maybe the grill on.  Pretty minimal.

But if I lived a century ago, there'd be a lot more.  The stoves used for cooking gave off wood, and now I know coal, smells. Coffee still smelled.  Lunch time meals had more smells. Horses in the street had their own smells, to which was added the smell of horse urine and horse flop.  In big cities, in tenement districts, people kept chickens and livestock, which definitely have a smell.  Washing was more difficult so clothing was more likely to have a smell.  Men didn't use deodorant at the time and therefore for men in the workplace, and that was mostly men, they had a smell.  Women of course would as well, but chances are that women were more likely to use perfume to cover their smells, which was its principal original purpose, and that stuff has a (horrible, in my opinion) smell.  Men smoked in large numbers and women were just starting too, and that certainly has a smell.

I won't argue that we now have a poverty of smells. But the world, mid 20th Century, certainly had a lot more smells.

And among those smells were smoke.  And some of that smoke was from coal fired stoves.

_________________________________________________________________________________

*Another thing about them is that they put out a blistering amount of heat, but the heat is conveyed inefficiently.  I.e., you can be roasting a few feet away from one and freezing just a few more feet distant.

July 30, 1920 Outdoors

The First World Scout Jamboree commenced at the Olympia in London.  It would run through August 8.


Also on this day, Lord Baden-Powell was declared to be the Chief Scout of the World.

Scouting, of course, was founded by Baden Powell as his Boer War experience lead him to conclude that British youth were lacking outdoor skills.  On this same day one of the Casper papers informed the public that an outdoor activity, agriculture, was being taken up by returned Great War veterans.  Over 90% of new homestead entrants reported having been in the military during the war.  I know of two such instances myself.

Indeed, not only was there an increase in veteran homesteading following World War One, there was an effort to "open" up lands to them, which in the case of Wyoming actually meant shrinking the boundaries of the Wind River Indian Reservation and opening them to homesteaders for farming. The view was that the lands weren't being "used", which of course was incorrect and otherwise immoral, but it was done.

In contrast, a limited reopening of the homestead provisions following World War Two brought very few homesteaders. Something had changed between the wars, with one of those things being that farmers had ceased to have economic parity with those employed in town occupations.

Dreams of Past Glory

Last week I published an item here that showed a new map for Greece, published in 1920, which depicted the portions of Anatolia it believed it had separated from Turkey.  Cultural Greeks did live in those places, but they went far beyond those areas where Greeks were the majority.

And Greek troops went far beyond those places.

Italians took a set of islands off Anatolia as well.

Italy had already taken territory from the Ottomans by that time. More specifically, they'd taken Libya in 1912 as a result of the Italo-Turkish War.  Italians, in the form of Romans, had governed Libya at one time, but hadn't since the collapse of the Roman Empire.*  If a person wished to be more generous, Greco Roman culture hadn't governed there since the Byzantine Empire had been pushed out in 647, although at least one Christian city remained as late as the 1400s at the absolute latest.

Basically, both powers were asserting claims to territory they hadn't actually governed since 1453.

Yesterday we looked at the French conquest of Syria.  The French had been very influential in Syria. . . up until the 1190s.  At least that claim was there, however, which it really wasn't for Algeria which the French started colonizing in 1830.

What the heck, however.


*Italian immigrants would ultimately make up 20% of the Libyan population.

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

July 29, 1920. Echoes of wars.

Ruth Sturtevant Smith at the launching of the U.S.S. Sturtevant on July 29, 1920. The ship was named after her brother Albert Dillon Sturtevant (1894-1918) who served as a U.S. Navy officer and was killed in World War I.

The Navy remembered Albert Dillon Sturtevant on the name of a ship.

He was an aircrewman of a Curtis Model H that had an international crew and which was shot down on February 15, 1918.  The crew survived the crash into the sea, but they were not able to be rescued by an other seaplane, as the waves were too rough.  He was the only American on the aircrew and occupied the position of gunner. He was the first serving member of the U.S. military to be brought down in an air action.

The destroyer named after him and dedicated on this day was lost to mines during World War Two.  A second destroyer was named after him in 1943 and served until 1960.

Villa many have surrendered in the north, but Lower California was going into revolt.


And if course the war between Poland and the Soviet Union raged on.


And there was trouble brewing with the Japanese Empire and its role in what had been the Russian Empire.


Forty years ago right now I was between my junior and senior years of high school trying to decide what I was going to do for a living.

I knew that I was going to college after high school, and for that matter, I knew that I was going in the fall.  I only had half days my senior year, so I had registered for the community college to get a jump start on my college "career".

2012-11-28 17.08.21 by WoodenShoeMaker
My old high school, prior to renovations, at night.  Up until my last year of high school I'd been on the swim team and saw a lot of the building from this prospective as we had early, early morning practices and evening practices too.

In 1980 I wasn't sure what that career would really consist of.

Earlier, when I was in grade school and junior high, I'd thought I wanted to join the Army and have a military career.  Even by junior high, however, that desire was somewhat waning and by the time I had entered high school, and the immediate post school world became more real, that desire was rapidly diminishing.  I still thought of entering the service, but probably following graduating from college and maybe not for a career.  Indeed, at that time my immediate plan was to go to UW and join Army ROTC, although I'd avoid JrROTC in high school.   The loose thought, at the time, was that I'd major in wildlife biology and after a stint in the Army, I'd either get out and get into the Wyoming Game & Fish Department or make a twenty year career of the Army and then do that.

I didn't do either of those things.

In 1980 I knew that what I wanted was an outdoor life.

What I really loved was hunting, fishing and being out in nature.  I didn't want to be indoors.  I didn't at that time even know how to tie a tie, and as my high school graduation the following year would show, I was in the class of people who were so unfamiliar with formal clothes that I couldn't wear them and look unnatural. 

Next month will be the 30th anniversary of my admission to the bar.  I've worked indoors now for thirty years.

How did that happen?

It's weird looking back as even now that's really not apparent. 

What I do know is that I changed my views on attending UW in the fall by August of 1981.  I went down to the orientation and didn't like it, so I enrolled at Casper College instead.  I enrolled, moreover, as a geology student as my father had related to me how there were a lot of guys around with wildlife management degrees who didn't find work, and I didn't want that to happen.  My plan then was to do two years at CC and then go down to US and I still planned on enrolling in ROTC. 

Me as a geology student.  I'm one of those people in the photo.

However, the same summer I enlisted in the National Guard for a six year term of enlistment. That really wouldn't have kept me from joining ROTC but by the time I went down to UW two years later I knew that I really didn't want an Army career.  It wasn't that I didn't like the National Guard, I did.  It's that I didn't need to be an Army officer to know what being an Army officer was like, and that I had no interest in that as a career.  The Guard served me really well in a lot of ways, that being one of them.

Geology was my choice as it was still outdoors.  Living in a state in which extractive industries are such a big deal, it seemed like a safe employment choice. But the bust cycle was setting in even by the time I was getting ready to graduate from CC and it was fully in by the time I was ready to graduate at UW.

Geology building class room, 1986.

Law school as an option first occurred to me as a suggestion from a CC professor.  I didn't know it at the time, but the professor, a history professor, was a licensed lawyer.  I was surprised by it as I conceived of studying law as being really difficult and lawyers as being really smart, but I did toy with the idea a bit.  In part I did that as my father was a professional and an outdoorsman and so were a lot of his friends.  I was also worrying, by that point , how employable I was going to be. And I knew, by that point, that getting a job in geology meant going on to grad school and I had real personal doubts about whether I'd be able to get in, and if I did, whether I'd be able to make it through, geology grad school.

Frankly, I could have on both points, but at that point in time I labored under the burden of scholastic myths more than reality.  When I did take the geology GRE I did really well and in retrospect the worries were self created.  The same year I took those I took the LSAT, not really expecting to do well, but I did.  I told myself that if I got into law school, and I only applied to one, I'd go.  I did, so I did.

M110 howitzer.  I was an artilleryman.

I didn't know any lawyers personally when I went to law school and I never bothered to ask them anything about what being a lawyer was like. That was an odd way to go about that, I guess, but then in the thirty years of doing this, I've only been asked what practicing law was like by young people perhaps two or three times.  Indeed, of younger people I remotely know whom I know to be interested in the law, none of them have asked me nor, to my knowledge, any other lawyer.

But then I never asked any game wardens what being a game warden was like.  In later years, when speaking to them, a couple of them have related a daily life much different than I would have anticipated.  And for that matter I never spoke to any geologist either.  I had spoken to soldiers, however, just because in those days it seemed like most men had been in the service.

And so, thirty years, thousands of depositions, lots of trials, and countless office hours later, here I am.

Is there a moral to this story?  I don't know that there is, other than like the they sing in Truckin:
Sometimes the light's all shinin' on me
Other times, I can barely see
Lately, it occurs to me
What a long, strange trip it's been 
Or maybe that's just lame.

It's funny how we get where we are going sometimes without realizing that we're getting there, and when we get there, we're not only a lot further along than we realize, but it'd be pretty hard to get back.
Amen, amen, I say to you,j when you were younger, you used to dress yourself and go where you wanted; but when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress you and lead you where you do not want to go.
John  21:18.

None of this, I suspect, is uncommon.

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

July 28, 1920. Villa comes in.

On this day in 1920, President de law Huerta of Mexico and Pancho Villa met and negotiated an armistice.  Villa ended his role as a guerilla leader in exchange for a land grant of 25,000 acres in Canutillo, Mexico.  His remaining 200 troops were to go with him to his hacienda, also receiving a pension of 500,000 gold pesos upon their laying down arms. Fifty of his men were to remain in his service as bodyguards.

Villa and his acknowledged wife, Luz Corral, in 1923.  Villa's domestic situation was complicated but Corral was able to claim the position of legitimacy in regards to his female consorts.

It would be predictable that a character like Villa would not remain outside of politics indefinitely, and that would seem to have not only been correct, but to have lead to his assassination in 1923.  A person can debate whether Villas armistice on this date, or his assassination in 1923, really marked the end of the armed struggle phase of the Mexican Revolution, but the better argument would be this date.  That would, of course, regard the Cristero War that broke out in 1926 as a separate event.

It might be noted, and notable, that no newspapers appear here in our entry for this day.  That's because the news broke sufficiently late, and inaccurately, that it appeared in only one of Wyoming's newspapers. That one reported that Villa had agreed to an unconditional surrender, which he had not.

On that day, the news was focused on the fate of Poland, which was struggling within own borders against the Red Army, and on Resolute wining the America's Cup.

Resolute.

Also on this day, the Duchy of Teschen was divided between the new state of Czechoslovakia and Poland, which must have given its residents at least a little pause, given that the fate of Poland at the time did not look good.

Unknown to the world, Archibald Leach, a 16 year old actor, arrived in the United States with members of The Penders, an acting troop.  We know him as Cary Grant.

Cary Grant in 1941.

Grant had an extremely difficult early youth, which may explain his being on the road at such an early age.  His father was an alcoholic and his mother clinically insane.  His father had committed his mother to a mental hospital and told Grant that she was dead.  He would not learn that she was still alive until after his acting career had taken off.

Air Mail in the United States had two notable events, one being the end of a strike in which it was promised that pilots would no longer be required to fly in dangerous weather.  The other was the taking off of two all metal planes from New York on a transcontinental air mail flight that would take them to a landing in San Francisco on August 8.  Moving the mail by train, actually, might have been quicker in that instance.

Monday, July 27, 2020

July 27, 1920. Old and new.

Babies at a Red Cross baby clinic in Boston, and automobiles and carriages.

Depicting Jesse James

There is very little to admire about Jesse James, and yet Americans for generations have.

Jesse James, 1876.

James, as everyone knows, was the Missouri born leader of what was essentially a family, and indeed an ethnic, gang based in Missouri that successfully operated for a time in the Post Civil War Missouri region.  James and his siblings had been exposed to extreme violence as Confederate guerillas during the war and were endowed with the "Little Dixie" region of Missouri's views on the world, none of which would draw sympathy from many people today, but which allowed them to operate relatively safely in the region in spite of their criminal activities due to the feeling that they were, in some ways, continuing the Southern cause.  Those views didn't hold up everywhere in Missouri and they certainly didn't outside of the state, which brought the end of the gang following an extremely failed attempt to raid a bank in Northfield Minnesota.

In spite of the fact that James-Younger gang is not admirable in any sense, they've been the topic of fascination of Americans since their very own time and therefore have been the subject of numerous movies.  Indeed, there are at least twenty screen depiction of James and his gang including one television series from 1965-66.  Numerous Americans claim to be related or descendant from James no matter how dubious their claims may be and, just like for Butch Cassidy, plenty of people claim that James didn't die from a bullet to the back of the head fired by Bob Ford in 1882.  He did.

I haven't seen most of the films that portray James, but there are three that really stand out that a lot of people have seen and which are worth mentioning.  I'll deal with them here, in chronological order.

The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid is a 1972 film limited to the raid on Northfield Minnesota and the events leading up to it.  It has a notable cast, including a young Robert Duvall as James and Cliff Robertson as Cole Younger.  It's a fictionalized version of the raid containing fanciful and strained elements but it's really notable for Duvall's portray of James as a homicidal maniac.  It's worth watching for that reason as Duvall, in a portrayal that perhaps could be regarded as an example of an early anti Western, portrays a really disturbing James which served to strip him from the heroic portrayal that was more common up until then.  Robertson, however, steals the show with a really eclectic portrayal of an intellectually curious Younger.

The film isn't bad in terms of material details.

Returning, however, to a more sympathetic portrayal is the sweeping 1980 The Long Riders which is really unique for casting actors who were in fact brothers to play characters in the true story who were actually brothers.  While this film is only eight years later than The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid it placed really close attention to material details and has the look and feel of mid 19th Century Missouri right.  

As noted, the film made use of actual siblings, with the Keach bothers playing the James brothers, the Caradine brothers playing the Younger brothers, the Quaids playing the Miller brothers, and the Guests playing Bob and Charley Ford.  In some odd way that makes the film feel that much more accurate.

This film starts before the Northfield Minnesota Raid and also features James Whitmore, Jr. as a Pinkerton agent.  It concludes with Ford's killing of James.

As does the 2007 film The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.  The awkwardly long title of the film in some ways sets this film up nicely for what it is, a beautifully filmed and very accurate movie which starts after the Northfield Minnesota Raid and deals with the gang and its central post raid figures.  Extremely moody and presented almost like a narrated book, Brad Pitt's portrayal of James as a highly intelligent, charismatic, and mentally deranged figure is brilliant.  Casely Affleck's Robert Ford is really the main focus of the film and his portrayal of James "assassin" is likewise brilliantly done.  The portrayals are so effective that they risk actually defining the real individuals, which may not be fair in context.

This film is superb on material details and it has the look and feel of mid 19th Century Missouri, and then briefly late 19th Century Colorado, just right.  The film concludes with the death of Bob Ford, showing how its focus is really on the Ford character, not on James.  In some ways its a subtle morality tale which none of the other James movies are.  If a person was going to watch just one of these films, this one would be the one to watch.

The Aerodrome: The F15 is back in production and so is the Mig 31.

The Aerodrome: The F15 is back in production and so is the Mig 31.:

The F15 is back in production and so is the Mig 31.



The F15 is the F15EX variant, a brand new version of the old F15, which first went into production in 1976.  The planes history dates back to tests that go as far back as 1972.

The enormous Mig 31 first went into production in 1981 and has a history that goes back to 1975.

Why are they back?

Missiles.

The F15EX can carry a seven foot long missiles that can reach deep into China, should the need arise, and its external hard points can carry more missiles than the F35.

The Mig 31, which might simply be getting an overhaul rather than new editions, can carry missiles that can reach into low orbit and hit satellites.

And so the Cold War sort of returns, in a way.

Blog Mirror: How to Serve Process in Vietnam

How to Serve Process in Vietnam

Sunday, July 26, 2020

July 26, 1920. Leaders and their qualities



On this day in 1920 Pancho Villa entered the town of Sabina and sent word to President de la Heurta that he wished to lay down his arms and receive amnesty.

North of the border, by quite some measure, also on this day in 1920, famed writer H. L. Mencken penned an editorial that contained words that have been frequently quoted over the last decade:
The larger the mob, the harder the test. In small areas, before small electorates, a first-rate man occasionally fights his way through, carrying even the mob with him by force of his personality. But when the field is nationwide, and the fight must be waged chiefly at second and third hand, and the force of personality cannot so readily make itself felt, then all the odds are on the man who is, intrinsically, the most devious and mediocre — the man who can most easily adeptly disperse the notion that his mind is a virtual vacuum.
The Presidency tends, year by year, to go to such men. As democracy is perfected, the office represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people. We move toward a lofty ideal. On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart’s desire at last, and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron.

The Baltimore Sun, July 26, 1920.

Mencken in 1928.

Mencken was writing about the 1920 campaign of Cox v. Harding, dissing them both.  In recent years this quote has been made regarding various candidates going back to George Bush II.  It's been frequently quoted in very recent years and I've seen it stated both about Barack Obama and Donald Trump.  It's been most frequently misquoted in regard to Trump, with repeaters adding "narcissist" in the last line in addition to "moron".

In an attempt to be fair to everyone, and to credit the original writer, the full quote is almost never taken in full context, and what Mencken really was complaining about was two candidates who seemed to stand for nothing, so that the public could imagine that the candidates stood for them.  That criticism isn't invalid on large scale politics such as Mencken referenced, but those who use the quote currently are actually upset about what various candidates openly stand for, which isn't what Mencken was concerned about at all.  Having said that, Mencken was obviously despairing of democracy in a fashion that people rarely openly do, taking an elitist view that, ultimately, the public couldn't be trusted to elect a proper candidate.

Indeed, while Mencken is celebrated today for his pithy quotes, he was an unrestrained elitist in his own time and an admirer of Nietzsche.  His disdain of democracy was genuine as he didn't believe in it, something no major writer today would dare admit.  He was essentially expressing the same fear that Thomas Jefferson had about all democracies ultimately descending into mob rule, but without Jefferson's agrarian philosophy that placed faith in independent men.


And sculptor Nellie Walker, wearing a campaign hat, was in Washington D.C.


Misunderstanding demographics

The professor returns for a discussion on demographics.

One of the most common features of social science is completely misunderstanding the topic of demographics. Indeed, we ought to note that nearly all demographic predictions are wrong in retrospect.

One thing we might start off with is something we noted long ago in our first law of history, which holds:


This was presented, of course, in terms of the historical past, but it's also true of the present.  We might, in fact, need to present another rule, which would be:
By the time media picks up on a story, it's already well advanced.
Such is certainly the case here.

Pop social scientists have been worried about the "population bomb" since at least the 1960s, or even much earlier if you go back to Malthusian angst. But the truth of the matter is that professional demographers have known for decades that the predicted population curve will start to decline this century.  Usually they run populations through the end of the century and no further, for good reason. Demographic predictions, as noted, are notoriously inaccurate. But the ultimate decline in the human population is an established scientific probability that's so well established its not worth debating.

Indeed, from a scientific perspective, the predictions that the population is going to keep growing and growing all over the globe which has been popular in apocalyptic books has been known to be flat out wrong for at least two decades if not longer.  Demographers began to revise their downward population trend predictions well over a decade ago to take into account the much more rapid decline, that's right decline, in population that was already beginning to become a feature across the globe. Apparently nobody really took note, however, until sometime a couple of weeks ago when they did it again as the well established trend is accelerating and therefore global population decline will set in much more quickly than we had originally thought.

Indeed, in spite of the "what we're doing now to ourselves" concerns, some of which are indeed very valid, this is something that's been occurring since the turn of the prior century and was a matter of angst then.  Observers in the United States, for example, worried as far ago as the early 20th Century that the white, or rather the White Anglo Saxon Protestant, demographic birth rate was dropping off so fast that it meant demographic death, while they also worried about the black birth rate (and the Catholic one) which was not, at that time.  Such concerns ultimately gave rise to the likes of people like Margaret Sanger who called blacks "weeds" and promoted abortion as as a well of arresting their population increase.  Only this past week did Planned Parenthood, the organization that she founded, change the name of one of their installations once it became too politically imprudent to continue an honor a woman who was a racist promoting abortion to keep black numbers down.

In Germany there was such a concern about the drop off in the birth rate that the Nazi Party went to extreme rates, icky propaganda, and icky programs to try to reverse the decline.  Ultimately, they even took to kidnapping children who they felt could pass for German, handing them out to German families.  Most never made it back to their original parents.  More than one country in that time frame boosted programs to try to increase the number of children that women were having, all to no effect.

The reason that we note all of this is that the decline is a demographic fact that pre dates pharmaceuticals to prevent or abort birth.

It's closely tied to economics, something that's well known in one way, and the source of misplaced concern in another.  Simply put, and dating back prior to the real incorporation of women into the workplace, as advanced economies managed to raise the bulk of their populations into the middle class, birth rates fell.  As this is happening all over the world, and quickly, birth rates are accordingly falling quickly.

Indeed, poor societies tend to have high birth rates, although this isn't always true. The classic reason for this is that the poor have tended to depend on their children for support in old age, although in the United States, where most of the poor actually are at an economic level that would have been regarded as lower middle class a century ago, this isn't the reason.  In that case the law of unintended consequences has operated to incentive child birth economically while simultaneously operating to destroy marital bonds in the same demographic.

Which takes us to our next point, which perhaps should be a law as well, that being
Old understandings of conditions continue to be believed well after they are no longer correct.
Here that old understanding is the same one that operates classically to produce high birth rates in poor demographics, but with a societal application.

That is, it's widely believed that a declining birth rate is a societal disaster as large numbers, indeed an ever increasing number, of new workers is necessary to support an old retiring populations.

That's complete nonsense.

It's nonsense as it doesn't contemplate the fact of ever increasing societal wealth, which has been a decade by decade feature of economies ever since the beginning of the Renaissance.  It also doesn't take into account the advance of technology.

In fact, it's interesting to note that the very same societies and journals that are now worried about the human population now decreasing are also proposing a Universal Basic Income because technology is, they assert (probably correctly) going to put so many people out of work.  So we're simultaneously worrying that a decrease in the population means that there are fewer workers to support an aging population while we are also worrying that entering generations of workers are going to be put out of work by technology.

If you consider that both things may be operating at one time, what it should lead you to believe is that; 1) a declining population of workers is a good thing as work is also declining; and 2) advances in technology are making society wealthier and that's a good thing as it supports everyone, including the old.

Of course, that ought to also lead you to question the American policy of massive immigration rates, which are designed to offset our population decline, which otherwise set in during the 1970s.  We frankly aren't going to have a place for the workers we're bringing in, if technologist are correct, so what we're doing is importing future unemployment.  Indeed, as those same entrants come from less technologically advanced nations, the argument can be made that their future labor, which they depend on for a livelihood, will shortly be needed more where they are, than where they are going to.

All of which means:

1.  This isn't a future economic problem of any sort.
2.  It doesn't mean that future generations of elderly will be without economic support.
3.  It's actually good for the environment and the standard of living in every sense.

That doesn't mean, however that there aren't some things worth considering and perhaps being a bit worried about.

In that context, while take a look at bits of an essay by Fr. David Longnecker.  Fr. Longnecker is more classically concerned about this, and I've discounted those concerns above, but that doesn't mean that there aren't societal things that shouldn't be considered, with some rejected, nonetheless.

Well start with his essay, which was titled:

THE ABOLITION OF MAN…LITERALLY
First of all, that's dramatic, but that' isn't occurring.  People aren't going away.  There are a lot of us, and a long term decline in population will have to go on for at least two centuries before there's a real problem.  The BBC article that Fr. Longnecker linked in noted that Japan and Spain could see a 50% reduction in their populations by 2100, but if we consider that Japan's population is 126,500,000, nearly as high as Russia's, that would hardly amount to a disaster.  That would place Japan's population at around 60,000,000 which is still far too high to make Japan a really nice place to live.  Added to that, on the human understanding of population, Japan's pre World War Two population was 90,000,000 which the Japanese regarded as so dense that it required, in their view, starting colonies in Asia in order to export its population.

Spain's population is about 47,000,000, about the same as pre World War Two Germany's.  Spain isn't big.  If it had 23,000,000 it's still be pretty darned crowded.

You get the point.

The US, I'd note, hasn't. Our population is predicted to be higher than it current is in 2100, although not enormously so, as we keep importing a population.  The US is already so densely populated in some areas that regions that were once regarded as really idyllic are horrifying crapholes, Los Angeles being a prime example, followed by the rest of California.  We keep doing that for the reasons noted above, and also because we find it convenient to engage in a version of slavery light, in which we import the poor so that we don't have to pay our own poor a living wage.

Okay, so that only reinforces what I've already said.  So nothing to worry about, right?

Well, societally there is, which is mostly not what we're doing.  And here's where Longnecker, first among the really erudite critics, points out, succinctly, things that are problematic.

We first note:

What else is driving the lower birth rate? Young people are not choosing to marry and have children. Not only that, an increasing number are choosing not to make love. They can’t be bothered.
Is that really correct?

Well, part of it is, and part of it isn't. 

We've noted already that the widely held perception that people are marrying later and later isn't really true.  The young marriage ages that people generally are considering are actually usually demographic flukes that apply to unique economic conditions. 

Indeed, we've analyzed that all here in depth, and shown that marriage ages have remained remarkably stable since the Middle Ages:

Shockingly young! Surprisingly old! Too young, too old! Well, nothing much actually changing at all. . . Marriage ages then. . . and now. . and what does it all mean?

Added to this is the statistical problem of how couples that "cohabitate" or "live together" are regarded and counted.  Throughout the Christian era, until very recently, this was strongly frowned upon culturally, but at the same time occured much more often than might be supposed.  If examples given, for instance, in such well researched works as Kristin Lavransdatter are considered, they were fairly common among the gentry, if again strongly disapproved of, although they usually didn't have an illegitimate status endlessly. They broke up or resulted in marriage.  They were extremely common among British minor nobility in the 18th Century and early 19th.  They'd become so common among the British industrial working class that the concept of Common Law Marriage was introduced in order to deal with the situation in a formal way.

When no fault divorce spread through the English world and then around the world, the common law marriage died off. But the behavior remains.  This causes a statistical problem here as if these same couples were regarded as they once were, marriage in fact would be much more common.  The interesting thing is that with the death of the common law marriage a certain elevation in concept of formal marriages occurred, although divorce, which was once fairly uncommon, remains very very common.

Fr. Longnecker wouldn't want to be seen to be endorsing common law marriage and is really dealing with a social issue in advance of dealing with it from the Catholic and Christian prospective, but its important to note there that our concept of what's occurring may be inaccurate.  Having said that, the second part and third parts of his observation is correct.

Young people are not choosing to marry and have children. Not only that, an increasing number are choosing not to make love. They can’t be bothered.
People remaining childless has become quite common, although in recent years, at least by informal observation, that trend is reversing. Even where it is reversing, however, it isn't as if couples are normally choosing to have large numbers of children.  And while Catholics would generally regard it as a good development, the epidemic of sex outside of marriage that dropped down into the teens and twenties in the 70s, 80s, and 90s has really reversed.  Not only are married couples not having as many children, unmarried people aren't engaging in sex as often as they were in spite of the constant entertainment industry and societal pressure that urges them too.

Indeed, on the last item things are really thick with irony.

There's been a lot of questions about all of this in recent years, with theories ranging from the sociological to the biological.  

Sociologically, the impact of work seems to be a definite factor in some societies, particularly the United States and Japan.  The US has become as obsessed with careerism as Japan has and the emphasis in the US has really shifted since World War Two from finding a good job or career, to support a family, to a career being the end all and be all of everything.  This has been something that's impacted both men and women.  

Fr. Longnecker notes:
The reasons are complicated but among them are the aggressiveness of the modern feminist. High powered career focussed women are not interested in marriage and babies and many young men are not interested in this type of woman so the guys just opt out.
And he may in fact be right, but only in part.  Its not only because the feminist ethos has become hostile to men, which in some instances it is, and always has been, but the emphasis on careers and work in Western society have spread to women when originally it only pertained to men, and not in the same way.

This can sound like we're saying something we're not.  We're not saying women shouldn't work.  Rather, what we're saying is that there came a shift over time in which both men and women were sold a line of propaganda that held real worldly fulfillment came through careers.  That was always baloney.  

Indeed, people have always normally taken up whatever work they take up in order to get by in life, which for most people meant providing for their family  The thought of a spouse interfering with a career was really foreign to most people. Rather, the opposite, often applying only to men in earlier times, was that a career became a necessary burden and even a sacrifice to support a family The family came first in the equation.  Now a lot of people simply forgo families as its hindrance to a career, the irony being that careers are just jobs and it turns out that the majority of people don't like their jobs.

Indeed, before we move on, one thing that all of this raises is the topic of "temporary marriages", something that now exist throughout Western society but which is basically only acknowledged, oddly enough, in Iran.

Islam has a religious institution of temporary marriages, although it's really rare in almost every Islamic society save for Iran.  In Iran, which retains a fairly advanced Western economy, it's not and its even somewhat encouraged.

The Islamic institution of the temporary marriage acknowledged that humans have a sex drive while, at the same time, young people often have goals which are contrary to contracting a marriage.  In Christian cultures divorce was traditionally disallowed, which obviously isn't the case in Western cultures now, but in both Islamic and Judaic societies it isn't.  Sex outside of marriage is frowned upon in nearly every culture and religion and very much so in the Abrahamic religions.  Temporary marriages made temporary couples' actions licit.  They can have sex and not stray from morality, even though they're likely to split up later.

Following the sexual revolution the cultural leaders in the Western world encouraged and nearly demanded that everyone engage in premarital sex and only those with strong religious feelings will openly regard it as wrong now in spite of the social devastation that the change has brought about.  What's been missed is that as this has occurred, a lot of Westerners basically engage in something equivalent to temporary marriages.  No formal marriage is (usually) contracted, but people cohabitate in conditions in which its nearly acknowledged that it's all just temporary and has at least a partial goal of satisfying urges.  Obviously, a child is permanent, and therefore they're creation is diligently avoided in those arrangements.  

But is is more than that.  The heavy emphasis on work has been shown, in Japan, to cause such a level of fatigue that people are just not interested.

The example of Japan gives us another factor as well, although our own culture also does.

Pornography is a huge Japanese industry. There's something really odd here in that Japan produces a massive amount of pornography of all types, right down to the cartoon level.  That stuff is being used for something.

When the word was first coined over a hundred years ago the world "homosexual" pertained to men whose sexual impulses were self directed.  The word's meaning has changed, rather obviously, over the years, but at that time it was believed that the other meaning, the one it now has, flowed naturally from the first meaning to the practice of the second. That may sound odd, but it's not completely illogical as it is in fact the case that some people become so focused on the first that all conventional impulses are overridden, and for others it leads them into really odd acts.  There would be few (although there are some) who would maintain that this is the case today, but the mental pathway for those assumptions weren't completely illogical.

Part of the reason that they weren't completely illogical is that by and large people's impulses had to be conventionally directed by nature.  Pornography was in printed form up until introduced into film, and in both instances obtaining it had to be done at least somewhat publicly, and often illegally in earlier eras.  We've already dealt with how that changed after the introduction of Playboy magazine, which introduced a really skewed version of femininity,and we've traced that history and its interactions with pharmaceuticals and the sexual revolution already.  Indeed, we have multiple posts on it.  What the Internet has done is to make pornography free. 

And what that has done has turned a lot of men, more or less, into the original definition of homosexuals. Rather than have to deal with woman who is a person, will have moods, problems, get sick, get mad, have expectations, and the like, they just opt for a photographed (or cartoon) harem that doesn't do any of those things and is only interested in sex whenever men are.

And men will be more interested as a rule than women.  And like the old knowledge that we're no longer supposed to acknowledge holds, women are much more moodier, and perhaps simply have much keener and sharper feelings, than men do.  Nearly any married man has had to learn, or at least to learn, how to deal with feelings and reactions that he can't really fathom.  Simply electing to turn on the desktop and opt for photos of a series of massive boobed prostitutes (as that's really what they are) is easier.  At some point, it becomes not only easier, but a habit, and then some cross over into what the original definition of homosexuality was.  Most will not, but all will suffer some decay because of it and indeed nearly our entire society has.  Frustrated men who would have made decent husbands and fathers in earlier eras become loners who really have only the companionship of their workmates in fairly large numbers.  Fr. Longnekcer briefly addresses this in his comment here:
Another contributing factor to the falling birth rate is the twisted approach to sex caused by pornography. An article in London’s Daily Mail explains the research done on the effect porn and masturbation have on male libido. The short version is, guys find porn more stimulating than the real thing and self abuse easier than building a real relationship.
Finally, it can't help be noted that part of the explanation, but not all of it, for the decline in population is pharmacological and that the law of unintended consequences applies to that.  We've addressed that before a couple of times here:

The Chemical News: "New Study Links Birth Control Pill to Brain Differences, but Don't Panic", "Breast Cancer Warning Tied To Hair Dye", "Hair Dyes and Straighteners May Raise Breast Cancer Risk for Black Women". Go ahead and panic.


And here:

We like everything to be all natural. . . . except for us.


Truth be known, if the "pill" were introduced today, it's unlikely that it would be around long.  Lawyers would drive it out of existence through lawsuits if government regulators didn't.  But now we're fully used to it and it's not going away.  But its impacts aren't.

It's been repeatedly more or less maintained that this set of drugs is "safe" and that there's no overall impact on the human biome in any significant way. But we know that some of this isn't true, as the first item noted above notes.  Birth control pills are known to cause disruption in female thinking, alter brains, and cause cancer.  What the do to men isn't known, but the routine assertion that they do nothing is at least questionable.

Something is causing an increase in male sterility.  We don't know what it is. And while it may simply be a reflection of the Strauss-Howe generational theory at work (men become what women want them to be), it might not be.  Scientifically its been shown that younger generations of men are weaker than currently older ones.  And a lot, but certainly not all, of younger men now are much more lighter and, dare we say it, effeminate than their predecessors.  It's currently popular to speak of "Toxic Masculinity", but much of that was simply masculinity and, in an era not all that long ago, what women sought out.

That latter fact may be, as noted, an example of the Strauss Howe factors at work.  But it might also be the influences of chemicals in our environment as well.  And those chemicals may be having long term effects on both men and women in unnatural ways.

Well, does it matter?

It does, therefore, but not for the reasons that people are worried about.  It matters because families are the root of any decent society where as the individual and the individuals whims aren't.  People aren't made to live the lives of rootless economic samurai and they aren't happy doing so.  If we're altering ourselves chemically that's definitely a bad thing.

So once again, we should at least pause and think.

Churches of the West: Centennial Postponed

Churches of the West: Centennial Postponed:

Centennial Postponed


St. Anthony of Padua Church in Casper, Wyoming was dedicated in August, 1920.  It had planned to celebrate that event this August.

And then COVID 19 struck:


THE 100-YEAR CELEBRATION

For The Dedication of St.

Anthony's Church Building has been

POSTPONEÐ

Due to the requirements mandated from The Health Department and the limited gathering size, the Celebration Committee moved the event to next summer with the hope more people will feel comfortable attending and the requirement of everyone needing to wear a face mask won’t exist. This will make it a more enjoyable time to celebrate the church where it all began for our Catholic Community.

We wish to thank the following sponsors for their commitment to this event, and

Thank you to all who have supported, planned, and used their time and talents on this project. Stay tuned, we will be back in 2021.

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the West: St. Bernard's Catholic Church, Belfield North Dakota.

Churches of the West: St. Bernard's Catholic Church, Belfield North Dakota.:

St. Bernard's Catholic Church, Belfield North Dakota.


One of four Catholic Churches in Belfield, North Dakota, this beautiful Romanesque style church dates back to the 1950s.


Saturday, July 25, 2020

Best Posts of the Week of July 13, 2020

The best posts of the week of July 13, 2020.

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the West: St. John's Ukrainian Catholic Church. Belfield, North Dakota


July 19, 1920. Turgid Times


California, 1918.


And note, there's always somebody who wears their mask improperly.

A Prayer to St. Jude


Jeep gets competition for the first time in a long time.


A Prayer to St. Jude


Virtue Signaling: "A New York restaurant owner set fire to a table where Jeffrey Epstein and Harvey Weinstein used to sit"


A Prayer to St. Jude


The War Movies of 1970


The 2020 Election, Part 8


Pandemic, Part Two


July 25, 1920. Saladin, nous voici




July 25, 1920. Saladin, nous voici

Syrian volunteers uniformed and equipped in the fashion of the former Ottoman Army, 1920

On this day in 1920 the French, largely using native troops drawn from North Africa, officially entered Damascus and put an end to the Emir Feisal's independent Syrian government.  The French commander, Mariano Goybet, made the unfortunate reference to the Crusades on the occasion at the Umayyad Mosque when he declared, "Saladin, nous voici", which translates (at bit roughly), to "Saladin, we're back", or "Saladin, we're here."

Probably more fortunately most of the people in Damascus didn't speak French, but nonetheless the sentiment expressed the really aggressive and arrogant position taken by France in regard to Syria, which had only lately been freed from Ottoman rule by the Arab Army and the British Commonwealth during World War One.  The Arab Army's late war goal had been the occupation of Damascus.

Syria was then, as it is now, a multicultural nation which featured a variety of ethnicities and which retained a significant Christian population.  The reference to Saladin recalled the defeat of Christian forces at the hands of Saladin at the end of the Crusader era in the 1170s through 1190s.  France had at that time been heavily invested in the region and, in spite of the passage of centuries, that had not been forgotten by the French who regarded Syria as a special charge even if the Syrians did not want them back.

Feisal would flea to British protection and was given Iraq as a consolation prize, a kingdom that ultimately cost him his life.

Syria would remain a French mandate until 1946, with French rule being unpopular.  A long running revolt broke out in 1926 which ultimately lead to an effort to create an independent state by the French in 1936, but the French government did not ratify it.  The British supported Syrian independence following World War Two and a Syrian government formed during the mandate period took it into independence.   

Following Syrian governments have proven themselves to be unstable since that time, with coups taking place within a few years of independence.  The Ba'ath Party, an Arab nationalist fascist party, has been in power since 1961, but obviously its rule is far from unchallenged.

Syrian soldier in 2012.

What would have occurred had the French simply acquiesced to a Hashamite kingdom in 1920 remains a great historical, "what if".

Schlumberger is laying off 21,000 people.

It has a work force in Wyoming of 150 people.  Who is getting laid off where isn't yet known, but this is another example of the extractive industries depression of 2020.