914Driver said:
The irony of this is that Mike Rowe has an entire episode called Safety Third. The point being that some jobs are inherently unsafe, but have to get done. So we keep safety in mind, but it can't be the top item. And Safety First is such an overused and ignored concept, but Safety Third sounds odd and makes one think.
Tipperary Hill in Syracuse, NY, a very Irish neighborhood has an upside down traffic light. Green (Irish) on the bottom wasn't acceptable having the red (British) over it on top. Kids hit it with rocks etc., finally the town flipped the lenses.
In reply to 914Driver :
It takes a certain brand of idiot to get that upset over something that small.
In reply to Duke :
My take is, colorblindness must be fairly low in those of Irish descent.
I worked with someone who was full on colorblind, he said he just watches what other traffic does and worst case, he watches the light's location if he can see it.
Started new job yesterday on the opposite side of Cleveland.
Today I learned that about 75% of the people downtown took St. Patrick's Day off of work.
In reply to Duke :
It was done in the 1920s, so British-Irish tensions were a little bit more of a raw subject in those times. The city has just continued to do it out of a sense of tradition.
TIL that 949Racing's name and their habit of painting/powdercoating/anodizing everything orange is because they're based in Orange County, area code 949.
Duke said:In reply to 914Driver :
It takes a certain brand of idiot to get that upset over something that small.
And that's the world we live in.
I theorize that these things go in cycles, and that type of outrage behaviour is due for a change any time now
Peabody said:Duke said:In reply to 914Driver :
It takes a certain brand of idiot to get that upset over something that small.
And that's the world we live in.
I theorize that these things go in cycles, and that type of outrage behaviour is due for a change any time now
Well, we may find it cyclical in the US, but it's a long-standing tradition for most of the world to harbor grudges for literal millennia. I suppose it may have something to do with honor-shame cultures vs the majority guilt-based culture most of us operate in. In [some?] H/S I understand that there's not even a concept of forgiveness. Whereas here we are like "you did this thing and I did this thing and now we are even" or just move on because we are not worried that our honor (a concept we barely get) is still intact after an offense against us.
For instance, some of the well-known parables of Jesus (a guy steeped in dirt-farmer H-S) are misunderstood in our culture because guilt-based is how we see the world, but the lessons are revolutionary in other cultures, such as his own. So like there's one parable where a dad asks his two sons to do a task. The older one says yes but then never does it. The younger one says no but then does the task. In HS, the *younger* child is bad because he dishonored his father by his initial refusal. The switcharoo of the new morality Jesus was introducing was that it's your *behavior* that is judged, not if you kept up honor and appearances.
So, for example, someone in an HS culture will not feel bad about stealing, but will feel bad if they are caught and bring shame to the family. There is no forgiveness here, either. You must deny what you did and try to out-shame the one who caught you. Or go to extreme measures.
This extends even to the Christian story of the crucifixion. In a Guilt culture, such as our own, a lot of people want to evangelize on this notion that we have sin-guilt that God had to punish and God beat upon Jesus instead of us. So we should be happy that we don't get punishment we deserve! Yay! But that resonates not at all with HS cultures. That is not in their schema, nor was it in the Jewish culture of the time. The real clincher for HS is the notion of reconciliation with the one you offended.
Consider then the more famous parable of the Prodigal Son - he dishonors his dad by demanding his share of the inheritance in advance. Then he comes back and his dad accepts him back into the family. And the older son is pissed about it for reasons. The revolutionary part of the story is that his father allowed his *honor* to be trampled on *for the sake of relationship with his son*. Now, in the eyes of the neighbors, dad is low because his child is a dirtbag, and now he's even LOWER because he let his son back into the family. The lesson being that relationship is more important and that there's forgiveness.
I happen to find alternate ways of viewing the world just mind-blowing, pardon the interruption :)
In reply to P3PPY :
There are various "cultural maps" of USA, which are absolutely scientifically accurate and not controversial at all. In general the maps are similar to historical territorial expansion and waves of immigration/migration, or broadly "who settled where".
Anyway, one suggestion/ theory/ wtfe is that some of the USA "sub-cultures" have more of a focus on 'honor'.
Handwaving Freakoutery has comparisons between one of these cultural maps and rates of suicide vs. homicide by county, and the maps look really similar.
My actual TIL (technically last night for me, but it was 'today' in official GRM Eastern time):
Hurrah
they saw
your Sabo-Tabby Kitten!
...
Hurry now!
Wonder how?
Meow!
Sabotage!
If I cared enough, I would see if AI could do "Sabo-Tabby Kitten" in the style of Beastie Boys "Sabotage"
Illinois Nazis were a real, serious thing.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Socialist_Party_of_America_v._Village_of_Skokie
TIL Cops in California busted a chop shop specializing in Chargers, Challengers and Jeeps. About $3 million in stock.
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