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Betty J. Barbano
2-7-1941 / 12-27-2005
Remember her laughterOn January 16, 1959, two babies were born.
They became sisters in both life and death.Larry Barbano, Frater Mei
12-18-1947 / 10-18-2023Under construxion / Stay tuned
Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds
Barbwire by Andrew Quarantino Barbáno / Expanded from the Sparks Tribune 2-19-2025 / Expansions in blueThe title of this column is taken from a book guaranteed to become a world-class bestseller.
But this column's not going anywhere. Neither is this newspaper nor any of its compadres. Ditto the CBS, NBC, PBS, ABC or FOX TV networks.
Steve Jobs and his Appleistas put computers in the hands of just about everybody from the masters of Wall Street to the bushmasters of Africa. At first, it looked like democracy was finally going to proliferate everywhere. Information is power, right? The iPhone empowered the little people. What's not to like?
Well, as Disney's greatest cartoon inventor, Gyro Gearloose, once memorably observed, "there's no machine so smart that somebody won't be too dumb to use it."
As with sugar, spice and everything nice, the iPhone has done great good and great harm. Bandidos quickly figured out how to abuse it in order to swindle the gullible and create a new form of drug addiction ingested thru the eyes rather than the mouth.
The iPhone transferred the well-researched technology of slot machine addiction to a mass audience. That glorified postage stamp-sized screen has turned billions into algorithm robots, easily seduced and addicted whether by money or politics. (Like there's a difference, eh wot?)
Enter legendary British lawyer and author Charles Mackay.
"Every age has its peculiar folly; some scheme, project or phantasy into which it plunges, spurred on by the the love of gain, the necessity of excitement, or the mere force of imitation," Mackay wrote.
He chronicled and foreshadowed the herd seduction of "this monster mannunkind" (props to poet e.e. cummings) from Tulipomania to Beatlemania and Bitcoin.
In the chapter "Popular Admiration of Great Thieves," he takes us from Robin Hood thru the 19th Century Robber Barons to the viciousness of Czar Dastardo Donaldov and the avariciousness of Baron Elon and his fELONious cadre of pubescent pimply poltroons.
"Whether it be that the multitude, feeling the pangs of poverty, sympathise with the daring and ingenious depredators who take away the rich man's superfluity, or whether it be the interest that mankind in general feel for the records of perilous adventure, it is certain that the populace of all countries look with admiration upon great and successful thieves," Mackay noted.
"Perhaps both these causes combine to invest their career with charms in the popular eye. Almost every country in Europe has its traditional thief, whose exploits are recorded with all the graces of poetry, and whose trespasses 'Are cited up in rhymes and sung by children in succeeding times.' " (as Shakespeare wrote in "The Rape of Lucretia.")
I especially enjoyed the madness of Tulipomania. In the 1500s, tulips were as popular as Bitcoin today. Imported from Turkey ("tulip" comes from a Turkish word meaning "turban") speculation in tulip bulbs (pardon the fruity pun) went bananas.
By the 1600s, "a trader in (Holland) was known to pay one-half his fortune for a single root, not with the design of selling it again at a profit, but to keep in his own conservatory for the admiration of his acquaintance."
Tulips as the status symbol of the wealthy. Cut to the golden toilet and escalator of Trump Tower.
Mackay told the tale of a sailor who made a delivery to a wealthy man's house. The seafarer liked onions, and took what looked like one from the kitchen. He left to eat his lunch of onion and herring when the homeowner and the police showed up as he gulped down the last morsel.
As the bulbist lamented, the lunched tulip bulb was so valuable that it "might have sumptuously feasted the Princes of Orange." Oops.
See any parallels between tulip bulbs and T-Rump's tawdry schemes like Trump trading cards? Our new king has announced he wants the U.S. Treasury to invest in his version of unregulated Bitcoin, the imaginary and unregulated Internet money.
You can fool some of the people some of the time and that's usually enough.
Guess what? "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" was first published in 1841. The more things change, the more they stay the same. Collective amnesia is a malady for which the former American colonies have become notorious. (Thanks to my union brother Mike Grimm [IBEW 1245/AFL-CIO] for sending me Mackay's book. He thought I might find it useful one day.)
SHORT SHOTS: Czar Dastardo and his hussars want to defund those dirty liberal fake news organizations known as the Public Broadcasting System (PBS) and National Public Radio (NPR). ("Sesame Street" is again jeopardized.) PBS gets about 15 percent of its support from the feds, the rest comes from tax-deductible entities and individuals, me included.
But the government money is the foundation of the networks. With T-Rump's assault on non-profits coming next, they are rightly worried.
While we still have KNPB TV-5 in this region, I suggest you watch "The Disappearance of Miss Scott" this Friday, Feb. 21. It will air three times, first at 9:30 p.m., then at 2:00 a.m. and finally Sunday at 1:30 p.m.
"Hazel Scott was not only the most famous jazz virtuoso of her time, but the first African-American to have her own television show," PBS states.
At 9:00 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 25, TV-5 airs an installment of "The American Experience" about something dear to my heart. "The NAACP and Its Architects" is the story of "the most powerful civil rights organization ever created." Repeats at 2:00 a.m.
Spread the word and tune in.Get the latest boosters, mask up, stay safe and continue to pray for Ukraine and the currently 160 worldwide war-torn lands, including ours.
¡Sí se puede!Be well. Raise hell. / Esté bien. Haga infierno. (Pardon my Spanglish.)
être bien, élever l'enfer (Pardon my French.) Stammi bene. Scatenare l'inferno. (And Italian.)_________________________Andrew Quarantino Barbano is a 56-year Nevadan and editor of NevadaLabor.com, SenJoeNeal.org, DoctorLawyerWatch.com, BallotBoxing.US, ConsumerCoalitionv.org, ChantalCoalition.org, Rentvolution.org, MIssissippiWestNV.org and CesarChavezNevada.com among others. He is a longtime member and former vice-president of the Reno-Sparks NAACP and a member Sparks-based Communications Workers of America Local 9413/AFL-CIO. As always, his comments are entirely his own. Barbwire by Barbano has originated in the Sparks Tribune since August 12, 1988. His first byline in the paper came in 1973.
The Northern Nevada Central Labor Council/AFL-CIO inducted him into the César Chávez Nevada Labor Hall of Fame on April 5, 2024.
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Barbwire by Andrew Quarantino Barbáno / Expanded from the Sparks Tribune 2-12-2025 / Expansions in blue
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