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Playlist of posts listened to, or scrobbled
👓 The stress of the fathers: epigenetics | The Economist
Abused or neglected children are more likely to have health problems as adults.
🎧 The Hamlet Fire | Eat This Podcast
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 23:25 — 19.1MB)
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Industrial accidents, tragic though they may be, can also lead to change. The fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York in 1911 is credited with changing a generation’s attitudes to worker safety, unions and regulation. Eighty years later, another industrial fire also killed workers because, like the Triangle fire, the doors were chained shut from the outside. That fire, at the Imperial Food Products plant in Hamlet, North Carolina, changed almost nothing.
In his new book The Hamlet Fire, historian Bryant Simon uses the fire to tell what he calls A Tragic Story of Cheap Food, Cheap Government and Cheap Lives. Simon’s thesis is essentially that the Hamlet fire wasn’t really an accident; circumstances conspired to make it likely, and if it hadn’t happened in Hamlet, it would have happened somewhere else. Among the points he makes: at the time of the fire North Carolina, a state that my imagination sees as resolutely rural, was the most industrialised of the United States. It had become so essentially by gutting control, regulation and inspection in order to attract jobs.
The USDA, responsible for the safety of the food people eat, agreed that a good way to keep out flies would be to lock the doors of the plant. But the North Carolina Occupational Safety and Health Administration had never once inspected the plant.
There’s a whole lot of Bryant Simon’s analysis that just wouldn’t fit comfortably in the episode. One nugget I really want to share here is a brief little scene from the first season of The Wire.
In a minute and a half, David Simon’s characters offer an object lesson in poultry economics, which Bryant Simon uses to explore the real history of the chicken nugget. And the dipping sauces are the key to overcoming chicken fatigue. Genius.
Notes
- Bryant Simon is a professor of history at Temple University in Philadelphia.
- His book The Hamlet Fire is available at Amazon and elsewhere.
- The music at the front is Hamlet Chicken Plant Disaster by Mojo Nixon and Jello Biafra, from their album Prairie Home Invasion.
👓 Power Causes Brain Damage | The Atlantic
How leaders lose mental capacities—most notably for reading other people—that were essential to their rise
👓 How Y’all, Youse and You Guys Talk | The New York Times
What does the way you speak say about where you’re from? Answer all the questions below to see your personal dialect map.
👓 A statistical analysis of the art on convicts’ bodies | The Economist
What can be learned from a prisoner’s tattoos
👓 The art and science of prison tattoos | The Economist
Using data analysis to learn from the art on prisoners’ bodies
👓 Malu Is Like A Golden Ticket | Christopher Lynn – Medium
This piece is about the fieldwork I’ve conducted the past two summers. I just wrote it the weekend before the first day of class, so, for better or worse, students heard an early draft of this story that may get published on its own somewhere or in a book some day in some form that will probably ultimately be very different than this. I wrote it because I think our work this summer epitomizes the nature of neuroanthropology as essentially biocultural, and because I think this story encapsulates much of our experience of fieldwork this summer. There may be less neuro than you’d expect here, given the course I read it to, but it’s the ethnographic prelude before we’ve finished collecting and analyzing the neuro data.
👓 How Your Favorite Tech Blog Is Grappling With Europe's New Privacy Law | Gizmodo
In the run-up to Friday’s launch of the new GDPR privacy protections, most of the focus has been on how it will affect huge data-mining tech giants like Google and Facebook. But as many people are finding out today, GDPR applies to any site that collects user data or, in the case of publishers like Gizmodo Media Group, displays advertisements that collect this data. What that really means in practice is extremely complicated.
👓 The General Data Protection Regulation sets privacy by default | Brookings
Tom Wheeler writes that the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation establishes privacy by default for personal information online.
👓 The Royal Family using Drupal | Dries Buytaert
An average of 12 million people check the Royal Family website each year
In any case, it’s always interesting to see which organizations are using which platforms.
👓 When should we release Drupal 9? | Dries Buytaert
Thoughts about Drupal 9 release timelines, including how this might impact Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and even Drupal 10.
👓 Former journo Alexia Bonatsos unveils her new venture fund, Dream Machine | Tech Crunch
Five years ago, Alexia Bonatsos, née Tsotsis, was co-editor of TechCrunch, a job that made her renowned in startup circles and familiar with a wide number of startups and their founders. What she really longed to do, in fact, was invest in some of them. “I was among the first people to write …
👓 U.S.C. President Agrees to Step Down Over Scandal Involving Gynecologist | The New York Times
The decision followed a call from students, faculty and alumni for his resignation.
👓 Audio discredits Trump's claim that White House official 'doesn't exist' | The Hill
An audio recording of a conversation between reporters and a senior White House official released Saturday disproved President Trump's claims that a source quoted by The New York Times "doesn't exist." Trump lashed out at the Times on Twitter Saturday, saying the paper had used "phony sources" and quoted a member of his staff "who doesn’t exist." But audio released Saturday, and reports backed up by other news outlets, point out that the source does, in fact, exist.
Industrial accidents, tragic though they may be, can also lead to change. The fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York in 1911 is credited with changing a generation’s attitudes to worker safety, unions and regulation. Eighty years later, another industrial fire also killed workers because, like the Triangle fire, the doors were chained shut from the outside. That fire, at the Imperial Food Products plant in Hamlet, North Carolina, changed almost nothing.