The Stand, Stephen King, expanded edition 1990 (restores 400 pages the publisher made him remove from the 1978 first edition to cut costs), 1141 pagesThe Stand, Stephen King, expanded edition 1990 (restores 400 pages the publisher made him remove from the 1978 first edition to cut costs), 1141 pages, ISBN 0451169530. Set in 1990.
An engaging story. Elements of magic. p. 730.
This is fiction, but gives us true portrayals of the attitudes of people in power toward people without power. The most horrific parts are the ways people with power really do use it.
"Gentlemen, a regrettable incident has occurred. And when a regrettable incident occurs which involves any branch of the United States Military, we don't question the roots of that incident but rather how the branches may best be pruned. The service is mother and father to us. And if you find your mother raped or your father beaten and robbed, before you call the police or begin an investigation, you cover their nakedness. Because you love them." p. 124. "Covering up, even after the damage is done, is all-important." p. 525.
Spoiler: plot: (view spoiler)["He'll call them. The evil ones, the weak ones, the lonely ones, and the ones that have left God out of their hearts" p. 503. "We're the knot in a tug-o-war." pp. 535, 696. "Nothin' lasts, only the love of the Lord." p. 510. "I don't believe in God." "Bless you, but that don't matter. /He/ believes in /you/." p. 505.
To Stephen King, "The half-life of evil is always relatively short." p. 1001. (hide spoiler)]
Many characters, each with too little of what they need, many are self-destructive, but most of them are resilient.
"The world had all the charm of an eighty-year-old man dying of cancer of the colon." p. 329.
"He's come out the other side. No one can chart that lonely section of hell. You just … come out the other side. Or you don't. p. 435.
The mother of one character: "Sometimes I think you'd cross the street to step in dogshit." p. 88.
Another character: "They thought I was a lunatic. The strong possibility that they were right did nothing to improve our relations." p. 328.
"Where would he go? A hotel? The doorman at any hotel better than a fleabag would laugh his ass off and tell him to get lost. He was wearing good threads, but they knew. Somehow those bastards knew. They could /smell/ an empty wallet." p. 89.
Only love allows men and women to stand in a world where gravity always wants to pull them down. p. 199.
"He knew enough to shut off his mouth when his brains weren't running." p. 641.
Voting makes them feel like they're in control. p. 746.
A little self-righteousness is to the soul what sunblock is to the skin. p. 799.
He had translated his terror to the page. p. 794. The only writing that had ever come as a result of belief and personal commitment. p. 796.
Regular doses of gratuitous sex, as expected of the average best-seller.
Recommends "Lapham's /The Law and the Classes of Society/;" the closest actual book may be Lewis H. Lapham's /Money and Class in America/. p. 920. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3...
When humans Nearly Vanished: The Catastrophic Explosion of the Toba Volcano, Donald R. Prothero, 2018, 198 pages, ISBN 9781588346353, Dewey 551.210959When humans Nearly Vanished: The Catastrophic Explosion of the Toba Volcano, Donald R. Prothero, 2018, 198 pages, ISBN 9781588346353, Dewey 551.210959812
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not "Eureka!" but "That's funny."--Isaac Asimov, 1987. p. 7.
Current atmospheric carbon dioxide, 410 parts per million, is the highest in 50 million years. p. 13.
PREHISTORY
Humans diverged from chimps 5 million to 7 million years ago. p. 103.
Australopithecines lived from 4 million to 2 million years ago. pp. 91, 122-129.
Homo erectus left Africa 1.8 million years ago. p. 130. Or 1 million years ago p. 142.
Neanderthals diverged from Homo sapiens 588,000 years ago p. 88 or 300,000 years ago p. 141. [but remained able to interbreed--still the same species].
Homo sapiens appeared in southern Africa 100,000 to 300,000 years ago. pp. 1, 141. Or 1.2 million years ago p. 131.
Y-CHROMOSOME ADAM
All human Y chromosomes descend from one African man who lived 200,00 to 300,000 years ago. p. 88.
MITOCHONDRIAL EVE
All human mitochondrial DNA comes from a woman who lived in Africa between 140,000 and 200,000 years ago. p. 86.
TOBA CATASTROPHE
About 74,000 years ago: Humans lived in Africa, Asia, and Europe, but not Australia nor the Americas. p. 1.
Mount Toba (in northwestern Sumatra, Indonesia, west of Malaysia, northwest of Singapore) erupted: the largest eruption in 28 million years. pp. 2, 6, 48. It spewed 720 cubic miles of ash into the atmosphere. p. 4. Global air temperatures fell 5°F to 9°F; it took 10 years to rewarm. p. 5. Or began a 1,000-year or 57,000-year ice age p. 147. The tree line and snow line descended 10,000 vertical feet. pp. 5, 146-147.
VOLCANIC EXPLOSIVITY INDEX pp. 47-49
VEI 0-1 most Hawaiian flows 4 Pelée (Martinique) 1902, > 0.1 km³ or 0.024 mi³ 5 Mount Saint Helens (Washington) 1980, 1 km³ or 0.24 mi³ 5 Vesuvius (Italy) 79 CE, > 1 km³ or 0.24 mi³ 5-6 Pinatubo (Philippines) 1991, 5 to 10 km³ or 1.2 to 2.4 mi³ 6 Krakatau (Indonesia) 1883, 20 km³ or 4.8 mi³. Global air temperatures fell 1°C to 2°C, stayed low for 5 years. 7 Tambora (Indonesia) 1815, > 100 km³ or 24 mi³. Largest in recorded history p. 59. Sulfuric acid and fine ash stayed in the atmosphere for several years. 1816 no summer. Global average air temperature fell 0.7°C. p. 61. Crop failures caused a European famine. p. 63. 8 Yellowstone (Idaho, Montana, Wyoming) 640,000 years ago, 1,000 km³ or 240 mi³ pp. 178-179. 8 Toba (Indonesia) 74,000 years ago, 3,000 km³ or 720 mi³ 8 La Garita (Colorado) 27.8 million years ago, 5,000 km³ or 1,300 mi³ p. 177.
EFFECTS
Only about 5,000 people survived to have now-living descendents. pp. 5, 91.
Several other large-animal species also suffered genetic bottlenecks at about that time. pp. 144-145.
All humans on Earth (except a few of the still-surviving ancient African lineages) are extremely closely-related. p. 183. [?? There are more than a few people in Africa, and everyone's lineage is equally ancient.]
OUT-OF-AFRICA II
Ancestors of native peoples in Eurasia and the Americas left Africa 71,000 to 77,000 years ago. They reached Europe 55,000 years ago, Australia 50,000 years ago, the Americas 13,000 to 16,000, or maybe 30,000, years ago. All living Native Americans descend from 70 individuals who lived 11,000 to 13,000 years ago. pp. 88-89, 91.
HOW WE KNOW
Sulfur dioxide in bubbles trapped in ice from 74,000 years ago was off the scale. p. 14.
Water containing oxygen-16 evaporates more readily than water containing oxygen-18. Polar ice thus has mostly the lighter oxygen isotope. The more polar ice, the higher the oxygen-18 concentration in seawater, and thus in shells of zooplankton in sediments. Minerals in 74,000-year-old sediments had enough oxygen-18 to indicate global air temperatures more than 10°F cooler in just a few hundred years. There was ash at that layer too. pp. 19-20, 148.
UGLY SPIN
Published by Smithsonian Books. Brought to us by our friends the U.S. Government. With a friendly reminder that U.S. military spending is a Good Thing! We let geologists sample the ice we drilled, trying to hide nuclear missiles in Greenland glaciers.
The author is a geologist and a military buff. pp. 14-15, 36.
ERRORS
All human mitochondrial DNA comes from a woman who lived between 140,000 and 200,000 years ago. "In other words, most human fossils more than 200,000 years old are not closely related to anyone living today." p. 86. No, they could be Eve's ancestors.
"All modern humans descend from African ancestors who left that continent less than 100,000 years ago." pp. 87, 183. No, modern Africans descend from African ancestors who never left that continent.
"All of us descend from a common ancestor who left Africa less than 70,000 years ago." p. 183. He had said that we [non-Africans] descend from a /population/ that left around that time. This wording contradicts what he said earlier about Adam and Eve.
Gives metric and English measurements for everything--which often contradict each other: sloppy number-work.
Claims 200,000 dead in 1816-1817 was the worst European famine of the 19th Century, p. 63. To the contrary, 1.1 million Irish starved to death in 1845 and 1846. --Revolutionary Spring: Europe Aflame and the Fight for a New World, 1848-1849, Christopher Clark, 2023, pp. 44-45.
How Migration Really Works, Hein de Haas, 2023, 451 pages, Dewey 325, ISBN 9781541604315
To the author, there's no crisis. He seems to be minimizing whHow Migration Really Works, Hein de Haas, 2023, 451 pages, Dewey 325, ISBN 9781541604315
To the author, there's no crisis. He seems to be minimizing what at least locally is traumatic.
WORDS
Migration: A change in habitual residence across administrative borders. Most administrative systems count a 6- to 12-month change in habitual residence as migration. p. ix.
Migrant: A person who lives in a place or country other than their place or country of birth. p. ix.
International migrant: (for this book) Foreign-born. (Other users of the term include children and even grandchildren of the foreign-born. This book calls such people 2nd- and 3rd-generation migrants.) p. ix.
"Pro-" vs. "anti-'' framing yields only bickering. p. 4.
Migration is normal. p. 4. It benefits some people more than others, can have downsides for some, but it's intrinsic to our world and can't be eliminated. p. 2.
MYTHS
Immigration is not as massive and transformative as we often think. p. 5.
U.S. border enforcement turned what had been a circular flow of migrants into a permanent population of 11 million unauthorized residents. By Reagan, Bush I, Clinton, Bush II, Obama, Trump, and Biden. p. 7. [Fraction of U.S. population born elsewhere rose from .06 in 1960 to .14 in 2015: https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=... and is nearing the 1890 peak of 15%: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-rea... ]
TRENDS
MYTH 1: MIGRATION IS AT AN ALL-TIME HIGH. p. 15.
International migration has remained low and stable. p. 16. The number of people habitually living in a country they weren't born in has stayed around 3% of global population from 1960 (93 M/3B) to 2017 (247 M/7.6 B). Plus, such counts are now more inclusive. p. 17.
[Here's the current list by country: fraction of population born elsewhere: https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=... .256 Australia .202 Canada .144 Germany .137 United States .033 world average .017 Japan .009 Mexico .004 India .001 China
Globally, 3% of us have migrated. Few of us have migrated to /become/ victims of financial feudalism. Those 3% have migrated largely to try to escape it. I wish them well.
The author obscures what's happening by giving us only the global average.]
97% of global population lives in its native country. Weird, in light of huge inequalities. p. 19. [People must really like living at home. And/or, it's a rare Chinese or Indian who /can/ leave.]
Moving production to where labor is cheap has lessened the need for workers to relocate. pp. 29-30.
MYTH 2: BORDERS ARE BEYOND CONTROL. p. 31.
Most unauthorized residents entered legally and overstayed their visas. p. 41.
Demand for foreign workers exceeds legal quotas. This drives migration "under ground," which enables abuse of workers. p. 41.
10.5 million, 3.2% of the U.S. population, are unauthorized residents, as of 2018. p. 35.
The U.S. doesn't prosecute illegal employers of unauthorized workers. p. 35.
BRACEROS: The U.S. Government recruited 4.5 million Mexicans for farm and rail work, 1942-1964. p. 40.
[The U.S. Government still grants visas that tie immigrants to a specific employer--making it easy for that employer to underpay and overwork the migrant. ]
MYTH 3: THE WORLD IS FACING A REFUGEE CRISIS. p. 45.
No, only .1% to .35% of world population are refugees, 1950s-2022. pp. 47-48. Down from 8% after WWII. p. 57. [Worse yet after the Toba catastrophe. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toba_... . Keep calm?] Most refugees stay in neighboring, developing, countries. p. 49-50.
8.7 million, 41% of the prewar population, fled Syria, 2012-2021. p. 56.
[The author minimizes the problem by dividing it by world population.]
Refugee flow is peaky: during a conflict, refugees flow. Afterward, there's little flow. p. 55. [Many of those refugees remain displaced.]
MYTH 4: OUR SOCIETIES ARE MORE DIVERSE THAN EVER. p. 60.
No, we've been diverse before. [Circa 1911, the Socialist Party delivered flyers in 12 languages in Milwaukee. --The Fall of Wisconsin, Dan Kaufman, 2018, p. 63. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milwa... Migrants speak their native tongue; their kids are fully bilingual; their grandchildren speak English. ]
MYTH 5: DEVELOPMENT IN POOR COUNTRIES WILL REDUCE MIGRATION. p. 78.
No, economic development gives more people the ability to migrate, and infects more people with the aspiration to migrate. So migration increases. pp. 83, 85.
MYTH 6: EMIGRATION IS A DESPERATE FLIGHT FROM MISERY. p. 93.
Migration is a rational decision requiring planning and resources. p. 96.
MYTH 7: WE DON'T NEED MIGRANT WORKERS. p. 109.
People migrate when they can get jobs. p. 110.
IMPACTS
MYTH 8: IMMIGRANTS STEAL JOBS AND DRIVE DOWN WAGES. p. 129.
Immigration is a reaction to labor shortages. p. 131.
In 1980, Fidel Castro permitted 125,000 Cubans to emigrate. This increased Miami's lower-skilled workforce by 20%. Wages and employment rates were unchanged, for those workers already there. p. 133.
MYTH 9: IMMIGRATION UNDERMINES THE WELFARE STATE. p. 145.
Tax benefits or costs of immigration range plus or minus 1 percent of gross domestic product. pp. 147-149.
MYTH 10: IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION HAS FAILED. p. 160.
Latino and Asian kids now learn English faster than German or Italian kids did in the early 1900s. p. 163. [My grandparents' part of east-central Missouri spoke German from 1848 to 1914.]
MYTH 11: MASS MIGRATION HAS PRODUCED MASS SEGREGATION. p. 180.
Class disparity is the real problem. p. 193.
MYTH 12: IMMIGRATION SENDS CRIME RATES SOARING. p. 196.
In general, immigration lowers violent crime. p. 197.
MYTH 13: EMIGRATION LEADS TO A BRAIN DRAIN. p. 209.
Most countries are relatively able to retain most of their higher-skilled citizens. p. 211.
[Puerto Rico lost 5,000 physicians, about 36% of them, from 2006 to 2016, to outmigration. --/Puerto Rico: What Everyone Needs to Know/, Jorge Duany, 2017. p. 151.]
MYTH 14: IMMIGRATION LIFTS ALL BOATS. p. 222.
No, the benefits of migration accrue disproportionately to the rich. p. 224
MYTH 15: WE NEED IMMIGRANTS TO FIX THE PROBLEMS OF AGEING SOCIETIES. p. 234.
Immigration is too small to fix the effects of ageing. p. 236.
LIES & MYTHS
MYTH 16: BORDERS ARE CLOSING DOWN. p. 249.
Immigration policies have largely become more liberal since WWII. pp. 250-252.
MYTH 17: CONSERVATIVES ARE TOUGHER ON IMMIGRATION. p. 266.
There is no left-right divide on immigration. p. 267.
MYTH 18: PUBLIC OPINION HAS TURNED AGAINST IMMIGRATION. p. 279.
Public opinion has grown more positive on immigration. In 2020, for the first time, more Americans polled said immigration should be increased rather than reduced. p. 281.
MYTH 19: SMUGGLING IS THE CAUSE OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION. p. 291.
Smuggling is a reaction to border controls. p. 292.
MYTH 20: TRAFFICKING IS A FORM OF MODERN SLAVERY. p. 309.
Many alleged trafficking victims who were "rescued" in Italy and flown back to Nigeria did all they could to return to Italy and resume their work. p. 311.
MYTH 21: BORDER RESTRICTIONS REDUCE IMMIGRATION. p. 326.
Border restrictions make temporary migrants permanent. p. 333.
MYTH 22: CLIMATE CHANGE WILL LEAD TO MASS MIGRATION. p. 343.
The Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming, David Wallace-Wells, 2023 edition adapted for young adults, 157 pages, ISBN 9780593483572, Dewey 304.28 WThe Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming, David Wallace-Wells, 2023 edition adapted for young adults, 157 pages, ISBN 9780593483572, Dewey 304.28 W155un new teen collection
mya = million years ago
Extinction events: 450 mya 86% of species dead 380 mya 75% of species dead 255 mya 96% of species dead 205 mya 80% of species dead 70 mya 75% of species dead
All but one of these involved greenhouse-gas-produced climate change. p. 3.
The worst, 255 mya, 96% of species dead, was caused by carbon dioxide raising global air temperature 5°C, leading to methane release. p. 3.
We are now adding carbon to the atmosphere at more than 10 times the rate of 255 mya. p. 4.
We're going to
bake, starve, drown, burn, parch, lose ocean life, choke, sicken, be impoverished, go to war, and worse.
Yet the author says he's optimistic because, "we remain in command."
The Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming, David Wallace-Wells, 2023 edition adapted for young adults, 157 pages, ISBN 9780593483572, Dewey 304.28 WThe Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming, David Wallace-Wells, 2023 edition adapted for young adults, 157 pages, ISBN 9780593483572, Dewey 304.28 W155un new teen collection
mya = million years ago
Extinction events: 450 mya 86% of species dead 380 mya 75% of species dead 255 mya 96% of species dead 205 mya 80% of species dead 70 mya 75% of species dead
All but one of these involved greenhouse-gas-produced climate change. p. 3.
The worst, 255 mya, 96% of species dead, was caused by carbon dioxide raising global air temperature 5°C, leading to methane release. p. 3.
We are now adding carbon to the atmosphere at more than 10 times the rate of 255 mya. p. 4.
We're going to
bake, starve, drown, burn, parch, lose ocean life, choke, sicken, be impoverished, go to war, and worse.
Yet the author says he's optimistic because, "we remain in command."
Bailout: How Washington Abandoned Main Street while Rescuing Wall Street, Neil Barofsky, 2012, 270 pages, Dewey 338.97302, ISBN 9781451684933
The authoBailout: How Washington Abandoned Main Street while Rescuing Wall Street, Neil Barofsky, 2012, 270 pages, Dewey 338.97302, ISBN 9781451684933
The author was the special inspector general for the Troubled Assets Relief Program, the 2008 Wall Street bailout.
2019 update: the $700 billion Wall Street bailout ended up costing $16 trillion. --/Money, Power, and the People: The American Struggle to Make Banking Democratic/, Christopher W. Shaw, 2019: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Top financial-institution executives know that the U.S. Government will bail them out if their bets lose. Wall Street has captured control of the U.S. Government. p. 19. [Obama had to kiss Wall Street's ring to get the campaign money to win the presidency, as Charles Gasparino details in /Bought and Paid For/: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... .] Obama filled his administration with bankers and let them give hundreds of billions of dollars to their firms to recover their losses from their fraudulent transactions. Same as George W. Bush's team did. pp. 90-95. Every secretary of the Treasury has a callous indifference to the public interest and a slavish bias toward Wall Street. As does the president who appointed him. p. 149.
PERVERSE INCENTIVE
Subprime loans earned the lender higher interest and fees than prime loans. The less chance the borrower had of repaying, the more the lender received. No one on Wall Street--rating agencies, accountants, banks, lawyers, brokers, notaries, appraisers, …--cared to look at fraud, as long as they were getting fat fees. pp. 13-16, 84-95.
WANT TO BET?
The big banks created, marketed, and sold (purportedly AAA but in fact junk) bonds they expected to plummet in value as the real estate market soured; the banks placed large bets that their bonds would tank; the banks reaped profits from their dishonest bond sales. The Bush and Obama administrations appointed the bankers to administer hundreds of billions of dollars of bailouts to their banks. pp. 91-95.
I OWE HOW MUCH?
The orgy of subprime and subsubprime lending ballooned Americans' mortgage debt from $5.3 trillion in 2001 to $10.5 trillion in 2007. p. 87. https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=...
USELESS GOVERNMENT
U.S. Government procedure for investigations: "adopt a narrative:" define the status quo as a success. Bury all evidence suggesting otherwise. pp. 8-9. The bailout administrators ignored the many ways fraudsters could steal the money. p. 22. The Treasury Department gave banks hundreds of billions of dollars with no verification that the banks were "healthy and viable," no oversight, no terms or conditions to comply with. pp. 71-77. Inspectors general behave as lapdogs to the agencies they're supposed to watch. p. 61. Congressmen and senators enact laws without reading them. pp. 50, 96. Senators questioning administration officials don't care what the answer is. They care only about getting their question on the news. p. 30. "I had done one of the stupidest things possible. I had trusted someone." pp. 79-80. The FBI tips off the press ahead of search warrants and arrests. p. 108. If a program is unpopular, give it a new name. p. 123.
GOVERNMENT AGENCY PRIORITIES
1. Maintaining and hopefully increasing their budget. 2. Giving the appearance of activity. 3. Not making too many waves. p. 51.
PLAY TO WIN
The only way to make things happen in Washington is to make sure that Congress and the public are aware of the problems you see, so they can then pressure the agency to resolve them. The media are key. p. 65. In Washington, being loud is a virtue p. 104.
WILL 2008 REPLAY 1929?
2008: Mortgage fraud is epidemic. p. 14.
2008: 2.3 million foreclosures. p. 4.
Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers failed due to investments in bad mortgages. pp. 17-18, 142.
September 2008: Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are about to collapse. p. 25. If all the dominoes fall, there could be another Great Depression. p. 43.
AMERICANS LOSE
September 2007 to December 2008: people's 401(k)s lost $2.8 trillion, 1/3 of their value. p. 4.
October 2008: Congress passes Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), a $700 billion Wall Street bailout. pp. 1, 103-104.
October 2008: Hank Paulson, George W. Bush's secretary of the Treasury and former CEO of Goldman Sachs, /gives/ the 9 largest banks (view spoiler)[(Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, State Street, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, Bank of New York Mellon) (hide spoiler)]$125 billion, instead of using the money to buy bad mortgages, as Congress wanted. p. 26. The total was $290 billion by November. By December, AIG and Citigroup would be bailed out again, along with General Motors, Chrysler, and Bank of America. pp. 43, 102-105.
November 2008: Obama wins election.
EXECUTIVE BAILOUT
AIG gave its executives $168 million in bonuses. pp. 60, 138.
WHERE'S THE MONEY?
Banks did not lend out the money they were bailed out with. So the bailouts did not help end the recession, did not help businesses nor homeowners. pp. 72-73, 98-99.
DEMOCRATS ARE NO BETTER
January 2009: Obama becomes president. Banker Timothy Geithner, Treasury secretary, dismisses efforts to protect TARP from fraud. p. 113.
HOMEOWNERS NOT BAILED OUT
Though $50 billion was allocated ostensibly to help homeowners, it did not reduce the amounts they owed on their mortgages, and provided no relief to unemployed homeowners. It was a boon to the financial industry, in new fees they could charge. p. 128.
April 2010: Obama's troubled-assets relief program administrator, Wall Street banker Herb Allison, advises Neil Barofsky, the government's special inspector general (SIGTARP), that Barofsky has a choice: make the financial power brokers look good and get a plum job, or tell the truth and end up discredited and unemployed. pp. xi-xvi.
Welcome to the Universe: An Astrophysical Tour, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Michael A. Strauss, and J. Richard Gott, 2016, 470 pages, ISBN 9780691157245, DewWelcome to the Universe: An Astrophysical Tour, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Michael A. Strauss, and J. Richard Gott, 2016, 470 pages, ISBN 9780691157245, Dewey 523.1
Electromagnetism is mathematically equivalent to the action of gravity in an extra dimension. p. 349.
The universe began as infinitely dense, but was always infinitely large. --Michael A. Strauss, pp. 220-221.
The universe had a circumference of 3*10^-27 cm at the Big Bang. --J. Richard Gott, p. 377.
v is the speed at which a distant galaxy is fleeing from us
d is its distance from us.
Defines the parsec. 3.26 light-years. p. 58.
We can see light from quasars that was in flight for 12.5 billion years, and from galaxies 6 billion years. p. 353.
Quasars are supermassive black holes with hot gas spiraling in. p. 308.
Radius of a black hole = 2GM/c^2
p. 302.
Tells us that the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies are bound to each other by gravity enough that they're nearing each other. Andromeda light is blueshifted. p. 217.
In Retrospect: Stories and Pictures, Dick Flanigan (1935-2017) and Paul Flanigan, 2023, 310 pages, ISBN 9781329645493
Madison, WI television personaliIn Retrospect: Stories and Pictures, Dick Flanigan (1935-2017) and Paul Flanigan, 2023, 310 pages, ISBN 9781329645493
Madison, WI television personality Dick Flanigan. He worked in television from 1964 to 1996, playing humorous characters and doing artwork.
He would use double-talk constantly. Instead of saying, "it's immaterial as far as I'm concerned," he'd say "it's immatesticle as far as I'm circumcised." One of his favorite axioms was, "I can handle the crazy people. It's the sane ones that scare me." p. 305.