FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 2.28.20

Good morning.

Friday in Whitewater will be partly sunny with a high of twenty-six.  Sunrise is 6:31 AM and sunset 5:43 PM, for 11h 12m 03s of daytime.  The moon is a waxing crescent with 20.1% of its visible disk illuminated.

Today is the one thousand two hundred seventh day.

  On this day in 1935, DuPont scientist Wallace Carothers invents nylon.

Recommended for reading in full —

Jill Lapore writes of The Last Time Democracy Almost Died (‘Learning from the upheaval of the nineteen-thirties’):

The last time democracy nearly died all over the world and almost all at once, Americans argued about it, and then they tried to fix it. “The future of democracy is topic number one in the animated discussion going on all over America,” a contributor to the New York Times wrote in 1937. “In the Legislatures, over the radio, at the luncheon table, in the drawing rooms, at meetings of forums and in all kinds of groups of citizens everywhere, people are talking about the democratic way of life.” People bickered and people hollered, and they also made rules. “You are a liar!” one guy shouted from the audience during a political debate heard on the radio by ten million Americans, from Missoula to Tallahassee. “Now, now, we don’t allow that,” the moderator said, calmly, and asked him to leave.

….

“Epitaphs for democracy are the fashion of the day,” the soon-to-be Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter wrote, dismally, in 1930. The annus horribilis that followed differed from every other year in the history of the world, according to the British historian Arnold Toynbee: “In 1931, men and women all over the world were seriously contemplating and frankly discussing the possibility that the Western system of Society might break down and cease to work.” When Japan invaded Manchuria, the League of Nations condemned the annexation, to no avail. “The liberal state is destined to perish,” Mussolini predicted in 1932. “All the political experiments of our day are anti-liberal.” By 1933, the year Adolf Hitler came to power, the American political commentator Walter Lippmann was telling an audience of students at Berkeley that “the old relationships among the great masses of the people of the earth have disappeared.” What next? More epitaphs: Greece, Romania, Estonia, and Latvia. Authoritarians multiplied in Portugal, Uruguay, Spain. Japan invaded Shanghai. Mussolini invaded Ethiopia. “The present century is the century of authority,” he declared, “a century of the Right, a Fascist century.”

Earth has a new mini-moon, temporarily – See its orbit:

Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments