On this day, sharing its anniversary with many events great and good, as our faithful chronicler reminds, according to astute if not somewhat creative calculations and biblical scholarship (see also from the day before) by Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland James Ussher (*1581 – †1656) the creation occurred either nightfall on the twenty-second (and by reckoning with that initial rhythm until the next sundown was counted as that, the first day) or more specifically according to some at nine o’clock in the a.m., the twenty-third of October, 4004 BC.
Though hardly unique and there were competing chronologies being put forward all the time in the seventeenth century as a counterbalance to the Enlightenment and the slowly mounting and unimpeachable evidence that the Earth and the Cosmos were far more ancient and interesting than the Young Earth of Creationism but none the less represented rigorous scholarship and textual analysis and is in a class by itself among these many attempts to pin down a date and time—which is easily but perhaps not for nought dismissed as small-minded, and did not stop in any case.Friday, 23 October 2020
8x8
politicians are not engineeringly-minded: an unrealised but extensively planned and covered technocratic utopia that the media dubbed Laboratory Land
not enough hours in the day: an interesting look at the way people around the world keep time
karen and donald are out of the running: a look at popular (perhaps too soon) baby names for 2020—via Miss Cellania’s Links
swan song: sad footage of the last Kauaสปi สปลสปล singing to attract a mate that will never come—more on Endlings here
u-kiyoe: the lovely drawings of Kitao Masayoshi (ๅๅฐพ ๆฟ็พ)—via Things Magazine
narrowing, widening, metaphor, metonymy: a refreshing reminder to revisit Merriam-Webster’s time machine (see previously) to see the year words first appeared in print
prickly business: maintaining this hedgehog network binds a village in Oxfordshire together—via Messy Nessy Chic (with much more to explore on their latest aggregation, curation)
oh brave new world with so many goodly creatures: Facebook’s Prospero I solar array (see also) will fuel fracking operations in Texas—via Super Punch
red scare, town square
Via Super Punch, we made witness to the spectacle and pageantry of the politics of fear and allure of bad actor cosplay in this vignette from 1950 about a small town called Mosinee in Wisconsin that staged a pretend Communist coup.
Given the state of America’s dictatorial and regressive aspiration, this episode is highly resonant and corresponds to a particular sort of reactionary tribalism and the paternalism of the well-intentioned and seems quite the antithesis of a similar demonstration undertaken in Canada less than a decade earlier to impress upon people the price of complacency. Albeit the latter was only a one-day affair and described by Life Magazine as the town’s most exciting since the business district burned down in 1910, and ‘according to the official Schedule of Events, the entire town would “cast aside their subversive roles and join in the raising of the American flag.” Boy Scouts would “burn all Communist banners, etc. in a huge bonfire” before the whole crowd would join in singing “God Bless America” and “start peacefully home, thankful to God that they live in AMERICA.”’bully pulpit
Though there are many parallels to the Trump regime and the Nixon administration, possibly a more apt comparison bridged by the through-line of Roy Cohn might be Wisconsin circuit court judge and senator Joseph McCarthy for the sheer hysteria that they both incite through nihilism and demagoguery.
On this day in 2019, Trump’s legal team deflected the question in a hearing before the US Second Circuit Court of Appeals regarding the efforts to subpoena Trump’s tax returns by citing his infamous campaign quote, saying that high office shielded Trump from prosecution, were he to actually test the proposition. On 23 January 2016, during a rally in Sioux City, Iowa, Trump boasted about the loyalty of his supporters: “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose any voters.” There were echoes of a pronouncement made sixty-two years to the day before by public sentiment pollster George Gallup expressed a similar prediction about McCarthy’s die-hard base, saying that even if it were known that the senator had taken the lives of five innocent children, those who voted for him would still go along with him. Trump persecution complex does find witch-hunts everywhere. Thanks to a jury of his peers, his esteemed senatorial colleagues, that were willing to censure McCartney for his behaviour and character assassinations, the once charismatic figure is synonymous with villainy and obsession for power for its own sake and this prediction ahead of his 1954 re-election bid did not need to be borne out.Thursday, 22 October 2020
a human document
Via Austin Kleon, we were delighted to be reacquainted with the cut-up collage creations of artist, illustrator, muralist and titleist Tom Phillips, who has a new limited edition print for sale at the Royal Academy summer exhibition as part of his Humument series (an altered book with the subtitle a Treated Victorian novel, art superimposed originally throughout W H Mallock’s purposefully obscure above titled book, here page 224: Corona) and is reminiscent of concrete poetry. Much more of Phillips’ works to explore at the links above.




