Ted Gioia Ted Gioia

Silicon Valley and a Meaningless Life

(This is an excerpt from Ted Gioia’s consistently provocative Substack: The Honest Broker.)

More than 100 years ago, sociologist Emile Durkheim studied the problem of anomie. That’s not a word you hear very often nowadays. But we need to bring it back.

Anomie is a sense that life has no purpose or meaning. The people who suffer from it are listless, disconnected, and prone to mental illnesses of various sorts. Durkheim believed, for example, that suicide was frequently caused by anomie.

But the most shocking part of Durkheim’s analysis was his view that anomie increased when social norms were lessened. You might think that people rejoice when rules and regulations get eliminated. But Durkheim believed the exact opposite. . .

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Melinda Moulton Melinda Moulton

Sex in the Seventies

No, no, no—I don’t mean the 1970s. I mean the seventh decade of one’s life.

For anyone under that age, your gagging reflux might kick in when you think of older people having sex. I get it. When I see an older couple kissing and making out in a movie, I get a little queasy. My usual response is “Oh my gosh—do we look like that? Ugh, what a turn-off.”

So, don’t worry; I promise to keep this essay quietly tucked under a PG rating and I will not attach any videos.

But take a look at the photo above, one of my husband and me just a few months ago, getting all giddy for one another. We are indeed a sexy couple. We can’t keep our hands off each other. . . .

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Neil Offen and Mitchell Stephens Neil Offen and Mitchell Stephens

Justice does triumph

No, we’re not talking about the 34 recent felony convictions of that real estate guy from Queens.

We’re talking about two other guys from the boroughs in our 70s—us—who just, finally, have convinced Facebook that the website you are currently reading is not spewing spam all over the internet.

Here’s the backstory. . . .

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Neil Offen Neil Offen

Running for My Life

On the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend, four months, 24 days and 11 hours after nearly dying from a heart attack, I finished a 5K race.

It was my daughter’s idea, part birthday gift, part incentive, part recovery celebration.

She thought I could do it; I wasn’t so sure, even though the cardiologist had said my heart had healed.

5Ks, I thought, is a lot of Ks. I had neither run nor even walked that far since the heart attack….

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Mitchell Stephens Mitchell Stephens

AI versus HI: A Video

Thinking About ArtificiaI Intelligence

Requires Thinking About Human Intelligence.

And Humans Have Demonstrated

The Limitations Of Their Intelligence

By Messing Things Up Pretty Badly.

Click for video.

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Neil Offen and Mitchell Stephens Neil Offen and Mitchell Stephens

Things we miss

Tough newspaper city columnists, like Breslin, Royko and Hamill

Newspapers

Sleeping through the night

A human being answering the phone

Snuggling up in the front seat

Feeling comfortable driving at night

Leafing through Life Magazine

The new Beatles album

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Laura Small Laura Small

We are downsizing

I winced as the friendly, strong junk guys maneuvered my husband’s old desk down the brick front steps and tossed it into the truck bed, where it splintered. Even though that desk was never my favorite, I felt a quick pang of regret as it landed with a crunch.

The competent guy in charge had told us that they would recycle what they could. I realized then that our definitions of recycling might vary, but overall I was glad to get these eight or nine pieces of well-used furniture out of our house.

There went the particle board bookcases I bought more than 45 years ago for my first apartment—cheap, because that was all I could afford on my teacher’s salary. Onto the pile went my mother‘s antique vanity dressing table, which had one broken leg for years that we never got around to fixing.

You get the idea. None of the items in the junk pile was worth saving and no one wanted any of them. Even so, I could almost hear a few pieces groan and sigh as they were abandoned.

We are downsizing from a two-story house to a one-level ranch. . . .

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Jerry Lanson Jerry Lanson

Trump’s a Felon: Say it Loud!

Donald Trump supporters are turning their flags upside down this week to protest his conviction, CNN reports. I’m not impressed. My head has felt like it has been turned upside down for many months now.

In fact, at times it’s felt ready to explode as I try to understand how more than 40 percent of U.S. voters reportedly support, and in many cases revere, a man who is a non-stop liar, a bully, a narcissist, a wanna-be dictator, a racist and, now, a convicted felon. It pains me to even think about it; I can’t fathom why.

I do know this: if Joe Biden loses the presidency in 2024 it won’t be because of his age. It won’t be because he’s a mediocre speaker. . . .

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Melinda Moulton Melinda Moulton

Staring Down the Grim Reaper

Ever since I turned 70, which was four years ago, I have been attending a lot of “Celebrations of Life.” They always include many of my living friends and one dead one.

We gather and share memories of the person we are celebrating. Sometimes we cry, but most of the time we wish we knew the person better—had spent more time with them, visited them when they were sick, reached out and created friend time while they were alive.

I always feel very guilty at these events because I realize I could have done better while they were alive to let them know how much I would miss them when they left. . . .

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M. S. VOROS M. S. VOROS

A Poem: AGING ABOUT

On Sunday, at age 82,

It had gotten old

As all things do

So, on Monday

I turned the page

And moved into a different age

Now, tra-la-la, tra-la-lee,

I’m setting sail

At 83 . . . .

(click for complete poem)

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Mitchell Stephens Mitchell Stephens

Are We the Luckiest Generation?

We spend a lot of time lately and rightly worrying about the challenges and horrors of our day: climate change, war, pandemics, the rise of fascism worldwide, etc. It is certainly difficult to see progress through the miasma of such modern horrors, but it is there.

As a generation we have witnessed considerable progress—progress sometimes at a cost, progress sometimes woefully inadequate, progress usually inequitably distributed, progress not without some backsliding—but progress nonetheless.

Our generation, born between World War II and Woodstock, has lived through a period of major, perhaps unprecedented, growth in the economy and of similarly substantial improvements in medicine and life expectancy, in living standards and physical comforts, in transportation and, of course, in technology.

We experienced considerable improvements, as well, in civil rights and in sexual and cultural freedom. We even witnessed, globally in particular, a major, though still woefully incomplete, reduction in extreme poverty. . . .

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Roger Waldon Roger Waldon

Back Beat: The Soundtrack of our Generation

Because of back beat, our generation lived through one of the most consequential evolutions in popular music, a change that profoundly affected and reflected our view of the world.

What Is Back Beat?

Quick definition: “back beat” is a musical term that establishes a particular structure for a song.

Think about the structure of measures in songs: Four beats to a measure: 1-2-3-4.

In the music of our parents’ generations and before, the emphasis in a song would be on notes 1 and 3. 1-2-3-4.

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Neil Offen Neil Offen

Voice Messages from the Dead

      Technology is wonderful. It helps keep us alive. It also helps keep the idea of us alive after we’re dead.  

      My voice mailbox now includes four messages from people who are no longer living. Some of them, in fact, have been dead for some time. I haven’t erased the messages although they fill up space in the mailbox and there is no practical purpose for them to still be there.

      But I still don’t want to get rid of them, erase them from my machine, delete them from my life, and I know I am not alone in doing this. Or not doing this. . . .

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Mitchell Stephens Mitchell Stephens

The Rolling Stones—Last Night

I am not known for the power of my memory, but I can tell you that the first time I saw the Rolling Stones (Mick and Keith plus Brian, Bill and Charlie—the original five lads) was 55 and a half years ago. It was easy to remember: Thanksgiving Day, my junior year of college, Madison Square Garden.

Keith was still on the upward slope of his career as an addict then. Mick, to the best of my recollection, was considerably less concerned in 1969 with our feelings as an audience, less likely to inquire, at frequent intervals, as he did last night “are you having a good time”?

The Stones when I saw them that year, had released, within the previous five months, three singles: “Jumping Jack Flash,” “Street Fighting Man” and “Sympathy for the Devil.” …

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Mitchell Stephens Mitchell Stephens

the Beatniks and the Hippies

On the left in the above photograph is Ken Kesey: ace novelist, but also LSD aficionado, leader of the Merry Pranksters and the San Francisco Acid Tests in the mid-1960s, and captain of the original, brightly painted, used school bus, which traversed the country in 1964.

Kesey is the star of the best book written about the Hippies: Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. Along with LSD guru Timothy Leary (whom Kesey and his bus visited in New York) and Jerry Garcia (whose band gained renown at Kesey’s Acid Tests), Kesey has a claim on the designation, if there were such a thing, Hippie # 1.

But my point here is that on the right in the above photograph, standing next to Ken Kesey, is a remarkably strong link between the Hippies and their precursors, the Beatniks: Neal Cassady….

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Richard G Merkler, MD Richard G Merkler, MD

A statement FROM the coronavirus

The COVID 19 Pandemic has waned, but at the United Nations General Assembly Hall the list of speakers includes one unexpected individual, Virus Coronensis.

When it comes his turn to speak, no one appears at the podium, but a slide appears on the screen behind it, showing the now well-recognized drawing of the corona virus. Although he can’t be seen, Mr. Coronensis addresses the hall.

“There has been great suffering in the world due to the pandemic attributed to my fellow microbes. As much as you may not believe, we viruses, bacteria, amoebae and other micro-organisms are suffering, too.

“Please believe me when I say that we are not at all happy about our finding ourselves entering your bodies and multiplying at such a great rate. This is as great a tragedy for us as it is for you. And, worst of all, the planet that we all share is suffering as well. . . .

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Mitchell Stephens Mitchell Stephens

  • In his Six-Chart Sunday newsletter, Washington strategist Bruce Mehlman spells out startling differences that have emerged between older and younger generations across a striking array of topics. . . . via Axios

  • The end of pen and pad

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Cheryl Slobod Cheryl Slobod

What I Love and What I Hate—at 78

  • Why is everyone high on kale? I can't stand the stuff. The texture is crinkly, and the taste is bitter. If I see kale soup on another menu, I'll puke. Whatever happened to spinach? It's delicious, nutritious and look what it did for Popeye.

  • I love submarine movies...all of them, from Run Silent, Run Deep to Das Boot (including the director's cut which runs over three hours), to Cary Grant in Operation Petticoat. Don't have a clue why. After visiting the Intrepid, I know I wouldn't want to spend the night in one.

  • I spend huge amounts of money on designer clothes online at Neiman Marcus (Needless Markup), then when it's time to finalize the sale, I cancel it. . . .

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Neil Offen Neil Offen

Figuring out Medicare

Being able to enroll in Medicare is one of the major benefits of getting older, right after qualifying for the five-percent-off senior discount at the supermarket.

Like many of us, I thought enrolling in Medicare would be easy. I figured I’d have to prove I was 65 by remembering who won Super Bowl III (the New York Jets) and who was the Beatles’ drummer before Ringo Starr (Pete Best), but then I’d automatically be covered because … well, that was the American way.

Well, not exactly. Just like the American way, with its tolls every few miles, dangerous curves up ahead, and lack of a single clean rest stop, Medicare frequently has co-pays every few visits, dangerous deductibles up ahead and also not a single clean rest stop. . . .

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