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03/30/23 02:24 PM #12411    

 

Michael McLeod

Meanwhile let's all raise a cheer for this former columbus resident!!! YAY!

This is the beginning of story in the nytimes sunday magazine.

 

 

 

It was said that Thomas Midgley Jr. had the finest lawn in America. Golf-club chairmen from across the Midwest would visit his estate on the outskirts of Columbus, Ohio, purely to admire the grounds; the Scott Seed Company eventually put an image of Midgley’s lawn on its letterhead. Midgley cultivated his acres of grass with the same compulsive innovation that characterized his entire career. He installed a wind gauge on the roof that would sound an alarm in his bedroom, alerting him whenever the lawn risked being desiccated by a breeze. Fifty years before the arrival of smart-home devices, Midgley wired up the rotary telephone in his bedroom so that a few spins of the dial would operate the sprinklers.

In the fall of 1940, at age 51, Midgley contracted polio, and the dashing, charismatic inventor soon found himself in a wheelchair, paralyzed from the waist down. At first he took on his disability with the same ingenuity that he applied to maintaining his legendary lawn, analyzing the problem and devising a novel solution to it — in this case, a mechanized harness with pulleys attached to his bed, allowing him to clamber into his wheelchair each morning without assistance. At the time, the contraption seemed emblematic of everything Midgley had stood for in his career as an inventor: determined, innovative thinking that took on a seemingly intractable challenge and somehow found a way around it.

Or at least it seemed like that until the morning of Nov. 2, 1944, when Midgley was found dead in his bedroom. The public was told he had been accidentally strangled to death by his own invention. Privately, his death was ruled a suicide. Either way, the machine he designed had become the instrument of his death.

Midgley was laid to rest as a brilliant American maverick of the first order. Newspapers ran eulogies recounting the heroic inventions he brought into the world, breakthroughs that advanced two of the most important technological revolutions of the age: automobiles and refrigeration. “The world has lost a truly great citizen in Mr. Midgley’s death,” Orville Wright declared. “I have been proud to call him friend.” But the dark story line of Midgley’s demise — the inventor killed by his own invention! — would take an even darker turn in the decades that followed. While The Times praised him as “one of the nation’s outstanding chemists” in its obituary, today Midgley is best known for the terrible consequences of that chemistry, thanks to the stretch of his career from 1922 to 1928, during which he managed to invent leaded gasoline and also develop the first commercial use of the chlorofluorocarbons that would create a hole in the ozone layer.

Each of these innovations offered a brilliant solution to an urgent technological problem of the era: making automobiles more efficient, producing a safer refrigerant. But each turned out to have deadly secondary effects on a global scale. Indeed, there may be no other single person in history who did as much damage to human health and the planet, all with the best of intentions as an inventor.

 


03/30/23 04:14 PM #12412    

Joseph Gentilini

Very Interesting article, Michael.  I assume you wrote it.  The USA is the first country that every launched a nuclear weapon that killing millions.  At the same time, a good bit of energy comes from nuclear reactions.  Any item, any progress also can have a good effect and an evil one. 

 

I agree with John Jackson's comments about assault weapons and the damage they produce.  In this case, I don't see any good use of assault weapons, except I suppose countries can and do use them in war (but the morality of that is for another time), but no one - no civlian -- needs to have assault weapons and these are the ones used in school shootings.

joe


03/30/23 07:46 PM #12413    

Timothy Lavelle

March 2023 Update:

  • After a full year struggle it is Renee LaVelle 2, Cancer 0. Badass woman.
  • I turned 75 and heard from global friends and others. Had a great steak; great weed.

HOLD THE PRESSES - WE HAVE AN UPDATE TO THE UPDATE:

DONALD TRUMP INDICTED

EFFING BONUS!!!!!!!!!

No reply requested, required, respected.

 

 


03/31/23 09:14 AM #12414    

Joseph Gentilini

I know you said no response requested, etc., but your message was full of good news!!!

 

So happy for you, your wife, and the country!!


03/31/23 11:33 AM #12415    

 

Michael McLeod

glad you liked the article Joe but no I didn't write it. 

If I were at the columbus dispatch I would. I'd pull together bizarre local history stories and use that one as the centerpiece.

Nice to hear from you tim and better still to hear from you with good news. 


03/31/23 01:02 PM #12416    

 

David Mitchell

I have been wondering for some time where we lost Tim. Welcome back, and great news of your wife's health. 

And somewhre along tthe way Fred has foresaken us. We even had one Joe Donahure way back in our ancient history. Vas gibt's?

 

 

 


03/31/23 01:09 PM #12417    

 

David Mitchell

After spending a whole afternoon in a dentist chair in the student dental clinic Chareston (highly rated MUSC - Medical University of So. Carolina) and a brief stop downtwon on trendy "King Strreet" to visit the nearest Apple store, I decided while I was in teh "Holy City" to drag my fanny into the Main VA hospital ER to ask some questions about my health issues. I ended up spending about 5 hours getting a Cat Scan and an MRI. Negative on both counts,cool!  But vertigo due to inner ear issues - damn, had that all my life. 

Finnised a long day with a bratwurst out at the Hofbrauhaus on West Ashley (across the street from the oyster bar wher I met Johhy Shaufele a few months ago. So I saw only iPhone peeks at yesterday's news until getting home last night.

I was shocked and peleasantly suprized to see the indictment. I do not put this matter on such high political level as several of the other indictments, but after all this waiting I say,

Let the games begin! 


03/31/23 01:41 PM #12418    

 

David Mitchell

Mary Margaret,

I cannot fathom your line about making

"any rock, baseball bat, shovel, or mini-van" designed to kill people.

That kind of reasing is beneath you!

Why didn't you add Stinger missiiles and Abams tanks to your list. Or do you agree that there are common sense limits?

 

The AR-15 (M-16, CAR-15, and that family of weopons) were specificlly desinged to kill as many enemy troops, and as fast as possible - period.

Back in 1959, when Eugene Stoner designed this weapon, he specifically intended that it be miltary only, and never dreamed it would be allowed in the hands of civilians.

For better or worse, I am intimately familiar with the variety known as the C.A.R.-15. This was teh weapon used by our "Observers" (the enlisted man in our left seat, leaning out the side of his cockpit door to "observe" (watch for) VC or occaissnal NVA. They used this weapon (only after having been fired upon first) for one purpose only. 

Do I think the banning of Assault Rifles solves the entire poroblem of gun violence? No. But is is a one step in the right direction. Among my list of other ideas - Mandatory waiting periods for hand gun purchase is my next wish. A lot of suicides and armed robberies are last minute impulsive acts, and waiting periods could mitiage that to a degree.  And I have a list of other ideas. 


03/31/23 02:59 PM #12419    

 

Michael McLeod

The crazy thing about an m16 is that it feels like a toy in your hands. It's so light, and I don't recall it having much of a recoil. But damn. What it can do, and how fast it can do it. I loved having one for the short time I had access to it. And I was also scared to death of it the whole time.

The world -- at least the world that is unaware of the power of gun lobbyists -  must think we are crazy as a culture to treat weapons like that so casually, to champion their abundance, to be world headquarters for happy hunting everybody! C'mon kids join the fun!

I'm all about cops and the military having access to wmd's and for private citizens to have guns of a lower calibre and capability but only if they are adults and only if they have qualified to carry instant death and lots of it in a very short time around by training and some sort of ongoing screening process. 

I think the surveys, at least the legimate ones, regularly say that the majority of Americans agree with me in general. But when lobbyists and shrillness carry the day we get what we get. And we're getting more and more of it as time goes by. Tell me how surprised you are. 

 

 


04/01/23 12:08 PM #12420    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

I am wondering how many readers on this forum would be concerned at all by the fact that it isn't just the police and the military who are armed with all manner of assault weapons. And further, I also wonder who among you believes that the govenment with all of its federal agencies (staffed by unelected personnel), are not subject to corruption and the usurping of citizen rights under the Constitution? 

"One hundred three executive agencies outside of the Department of Defense spent $2.7 billion on guns, ammunition, and military-style equipment between fiscal years 2006 and 2019 (inflation adjusted). Nearly $1 billion ($944.9 million) was spent between fiscal years 2015 and 2019 alone. Seventy-six administrative agencies spent $110.6 million on guns, ammunition, and military-style equipment between fiscal years 2015 and 2019. Examples included: • Internal Revenue Service • Veterans Affairs • Executive Office of the President • Small Business Administration (SBA) • Smithsonian Institution • Social Security Administration • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration • Animal Health Inspection Service Non-military federal spending on guns and gear averaged $192 million per year since 2006 (inflation adjusted). In the last two years, spending averaged $173 million, about ten-percent below the long-term average. (It is now) estimated that there are now more federal officers with arrest and firearm authority (200,000+) than U.S. Marines (182,000).

 

 


04/01/23 12:52 PM #12421    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

What does the group think about Nancy Pelosi's statement about the Trump indictment that, 

 "The Grand Jury has acted upon the facts and the law. No one is above the law, and everyone has the right to a trial to prove innocence. Hopefully, the former President will peacefully respect the system, which grants him that right." 

Here we have someone, who just a few months ago was 3rd in line to become our President, does not believe or who is remarkably unknowledgeable about the basic legal principle regarding the "presumption of innocence".  An accused does not have to prove his/her innocence....it ts the prosecution that must prove guilt.  

Did she just speak the quiet part out loud? Is this the Democrat Party's thinking toward persecution from the government? 


04/01/23 01:40 PM #12422    

 

Michael McLeod

This is such a delicate subject that I advise everyone who opines on it to do a little homework first.

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=simpsons+the+quiet+part+loud


04/02/23 10:26 AM #12423    

 

Janie Albright (Blank)

Tim!!  So great to receive your check-in. Clare and I were JUST saying how much we miss you! Incredible news on Renee! Prayers for sure. My 75 upcoming this month. I guess if you can do it I can too. 
 

Thanks for the update!!

heartheart

Janie


04/02/23 01:48 PM #12424    

 

Mark Schweickart

Tim -- I must respectfully reject your "No response required" request, and as a rejoinder reply that we all rejoice in receiving your recounting of Renee's recovery.  Woo hoo!!! Please give our love to your sweetie. 


04/03/23 06:12 AM #12425    

 

Michael Boulware

Tim,

Great news from a great friend. 


04/03/23 11:54 AM #12426    

 

Deborah Alexander (Rogers)

Tim,

So glad to hear the wonderful news about Renee!  I guess we're all reaching the three quarters of a century milestone soon (mine's in September).  Hard to believe...we're a long way from St. Agatha grade school!  We're lucky to have made it this far, and I hope all of us have some more good years in us!


04/04/23 02:15 PM #12427    

Timothy Lavelle

Thank you for your lovely comments regarding Renee. 

Did you know that I only married her because her name went so well with LaVelle?

See, that's just how easy it is for me to say something pretty stupid that I nevertheless find funny.

And so, for that reason, and because I love a few of you, I won't be back to compete for room on the forum. I simply do not play well with others. Here's a simple "for instance"...200 plus years ago some pretty smart old whities (I believe with help from their old whitey wives) decided that in view of the strongest nation in the known world (England) having a desire to tax the hell out of us, we should reserve the right to have weapons handy. Fairly practical sort of situation. In the 50s, when we were tiny children and needed to be protected, there was a law against owning machine guns. Remember that? Truly, a law. The only civilians with machine guns were gangsters. The law protected the innocent. But the very idea of limiting rapid fire weapons leads to men and women flipping out "because gun ownership is in the constitution."

Are our grandchildren not innocent? Or is their safety just not important enough?

Here, you have classmates from when we were 14 thru 18, when we all knew each other as uninformed children, telling you what to believe and what you should think. Including me, right here. What an unimaginably large load of crap. 

Talk soon...coupla years. 


04/06/23 01:18 PM #12428    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Easter Snow

It is said that snow is more common on Easter than it is on Christmas in Colorado Springs. This is actually true.

I awoke this morning and had to shovel some of the white stuff. Looks like the deer up the street a few yards did not mind it that much.

An early HAPPY EASTER TO ALL!

Jim


04/07/23 08:07 AM #12429    

 

Michael McLeod

meanwhile my lawn is brown and crunchy. terrible drought here in the south.

not exactly happy easter weather.

must be a middle ground somewhere between jim and me.

if not philosophically then weather-wise.


04/07/23 04:35 PM #12430    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike,

Brown lawns - that's good in Florida - makes it easier to spot those gators and iguanas.

Jim


04/08/23 10:59 AM #12431    

 

Michael McLeod

The only reptiles I have in my yard here in central florida are snakes - harmless ones; little brown or green bug-eating lizards the size of my thumb; and tree frogs whose croaking would lead you to believe they are a lot larger than they really are, which is, perhaps, their intent. We do have winters here, however mild, so the bigger cold-blooded critters like iguanas stay down south, Miami-way, which is fine by me.  Gators, unfortunately, do inhabit our many lakes. 


04/08/23 04:27 PM #12432    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)


04/09/23 11:17 AM #12433    

 

John Maxwell

HAPPY EASTER! Everyone. I hope the all is well.

04/09/23 03:21 PM #12434    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)


04/09/23 03:52 PM #12435    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Easter Bunny?

I know I have shared this photo in the past but I don't recall if I have done so on this Forum. I took it back in 2017 but it still remains one of my favorite shots of "backyard wildlife".

Anyone have any captions that would fit for this Easter day?

Jim


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