Saturday, January 10, 2015
Secret Parameters in Firefox
Please be sure not to tell anyone that the secret parameters in Mozilla Firefox are listed under "about:config".
Friday, January 9, 2015
Previously Discredited Treatment for Depression Shows Amazing Success in Trials
Millions of right thinking Americans have depression but in spite of years of therapy and the prolonged use of various anti-depressants, a large proportion of those who suffer do not respond to treatment or respond only in a limited way. But now an obscure therapy first pioneered by a radical fringe group of doctors in Queens, NY has been found to have an unprecedented success rate of over 80% in the group of patients that previously did not respond to therapy.
“We are completely astonished,” said Dr. Irving Bloomworth of the Institute for the Prevention of Mental Disorders, whose headquarters is located in Falmouth, NY. “As part of reviewing old and discredited approaches to treating depression, we came across this approach from the 1930s. We felt that there may have been some procedural mistakes in the trials back then and that it was worth trying again. But we never expected this kind of success.”
In a multiyear experiment funded by the NIH, several different groups of subjects were assigned either the therapy in question or a placebo. Those who received the actual therapy were given paper sacks filled with large amounts of money. The control group received paper sacks filled with old copies of the NY Post "Page Six" column.
“We noticed a striking improvement in the mood and functionality of the people who received the sacks of money,” said Dr. Bloomworth in a press conference yesterday. "Those who received the placebo were mildly amused but the effect did not last long. But those who received large sacks of cash not only reported feeling better, that feeling seemed to persist for long periods of time."
"As a doctor, someone who wants to heal the sick, I was very gratified when some of the selected group, people who had been depressed and stuck in life for years, suddenly began to have new hope and solve problems that they previously thought were unsolvable. The depression seemed to disappear as if by magic when they could just throw money at a problem".
"As a doctor, someone who wants to heal the sick, I was very gratified when some of the selected group, people who had been depressed and stuck in life for years, suddenly began to have new hope and solve problems that they previously thought were unsolvable. The depression seemed to disappear as if by magic when they could just throw money at a problem".
"The mistake we noticed in the original experiments in the 1930s was that they limited the amount of money involved to less than $100. Of course, $100 was worth a lot more back then, but even so this caught our eye. What if they had simply not been using enough cash, we wondered. We created an experiment that gave out money in the 10s of thousands of dollars and we immediately saw an amazing improvement in the quality of life of the subjects as well as an improvement in their attitude towards problem solving."
One limitation of the technique is that the subjects must be allowed to keep the money, doctors discovered. When they took the money away again, the subjects reported that the depression immediately returned and brain scans confirmed this. Those who had received the NY Post, on the other hand, were not much affected one way or another when the popular newspaper was taken away.
The therapy was seen to be enhanced by post-care care in which the recipients received help with accounting, investment and taxation. Tellingly, only those who actually received sacks of money responded to this care. Those who received the placebo, the NY Post related material, were not affected one way or another by the contributions of an outside accountancy firm.
“This is a very exciting, possibly breakthrough approach,” said Dr. Fremkin at the NYU Medical School who was not involved in the study. “But we must not rush to judgment, many more studies must be done before we just start handing out sacks of money to depressed people”.
Followon large scale trials are being planned.
__________________________________________________
Notes:
__________________________________________________
Notes:
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Mental Health on Depression
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/depression/index.shtmlPage Six at the NY Post
Thursday, January 8, 2015
North County Transit and the Kindness of Strangers
A
few nights ago, I came back from Los Angeles by train to Oceanside
and discovered that I had left my car keys somewhere else. It was
8:30 at night and I was roughly 20 miles or $90.00 by taxi to get
home.
It
turns out that I got home by spending $6.00 on local transit and
$10.00 for the final 3 miles. It took a few hours, but was otherwise
pleasant and educational. But it would not have happened without
the help of many of the other people on the poor trail home.
The
North San Diego County Transit Authority (NCTA) runs all the buses
and trains in the North County. Believe it or else, there is a light
rail system that connects Oceanside (pop 180K) to Escondido (150K).
How is it possible that these two communities are connected by train
when in Los Angeles they can not connect Santa Monica to Los Angeles?
Well I am here to tell you that they act that way down here out of
fear, fear that they will turn out to be Los Angeles, that hunk of
vile stinking shit, if they are not careful.
But
even a train does not do people much good if it is not run and the
fact is that all good white people in North County are home in bed by
8 PM in order to be able to get up at 5 AM when the rooster crows and
they have to start plowing the back forty. And except for Friday
night when they run it late for their teenagers, the last train east
is at 8:33 PM.
So
here I come wandering up at about 8:40 PM and all I see is an empty
train station and one black guy hunched over his bike. So I say to
him, I think we missed the last train. He looks at me. I say, I
think we missed the last train. He says, where you going. I say
Escondido. He says so am I. We have to take the 302/303 and then
connect to the 305, he says. It takes about two hours.
Now
I had been living in this here part of the world for a few years now
and I can tell you that I had never been able to figure out the
buses. I had not tried all that hard, it is true, but I had tried a
few times to figure it out and I could not make heads or tails out of
it.
But
with some discussion with my new friend and his bicycle these are the
things that I have learned which I write here so that the knowledge
may not be lost. And to encourage others to use the system when it
fits their lifestyle or circumstances.
1.
Although the train stops about 8:30 PM, major segments of the bus
system continues until about 11 PM or so on weekdays. After that, I
think you are either walking, taking your bike, or staying over in a
local motel or hotel lobby.
2.
All the buses that I saw were new, clean, did not seem to be pumping
out diesel or other shit, and were driven by nice people who spoke
English, whatever their first language may have been.
3.
Every bus I saw that night had room for two bicycles on a rack in the
front. I do not know what would happen if a third bicyclist showed
up, but that did not happen.
4.
It is not self-explanatory, but once you know, you realize that the
302 bus goes from Oceanside to Vista. And that the 305 goes from
Escondido to Vista and, although it does not say so, back again.
And furthermore, that the 305 arrives at Vista a few minutes after
the bus from Oceanside arrives at Vista.
5.
Now, armed with that knowledge, and with the knowledge that the buses
of the NCTA actually run on time, at most a minute or two late, you
can take two buses and arrive at Escondio transit center.
6.
But even better than that, I noticed that the bus to Escondido also
stopped at Nordahl & Mission, which is several miles closer to my
house.
7.
Now I have to admit that the 302 in particular seemed to go in
circles and that not everything was as speedy as it might be. It
took about an hour to go the 7 miles from Oceanside to Vista but it
took about 30 minutes to go the 12 or so miles from Vista to
Escondido.
8.
On top of that was a very nice, young, hip security guard at the
Vista station who was extremely helpful.
9.
I was also impressed that everyone was looking out for my interests,
moneywise. Unlike my experience in Escondido where you are expected
to pay like you were living in Manhattan or Beverly Hills, the people
of the NCTA and their passengers made no such assumption, and worried
whether I would have the 2 * $1.75 fare to get home.
Then
as a footnote to all this, when I arrived at Nordahl & Mission
expecting to have to walk the 2 plus miles home, I ran into a taxi
cab, which never happens, and he took me home for $10 including one
stop at the local mini-mall.
So
there you have it. It is not speedy, and the routes seem to be quirky as hell, but it does get you there and the people are very friendly. Be prepared to walk the last mile or two, of course.
I
really have to get over my “I hate buses” thing which I developed
living in LA where the buses are dirty, slow, unfriendly and made me
sick from the exhaust fumes.
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Ladd McPartland 1951 - 2015
I am sorry to have to report that Ladd McPartland passed away last week. Apparently he died unexpectedly in his sleep from causes that are still being determined.
Ladd was one of the nicest human beings that I have ever met. He ran editorial at deGraf/Wahrman and then went on to the same thing at Sony Imageworks and ILM. He lived in Darwin, a ghost town in California that he and several other people occupied.
His brother Tim McPartland wrote the following obituary for Ladd:
Ladd McPartland was born on March 29, 1951 to John and Eleanor McPartland. He died peacefully in his sleep on December 20, 2014. Ladd was highly creative as a photographer, filmmaker and in the way he crafted his own life.
After graduating from Pacific Grove High School in 1969, he attended UCLA Film School where he earned his Bachelors Degree in 1973. Many years later, Ladd completed coursework and projects to earn his Masters Degree in Film. As an undergraduate, he directed, shot and edited a student film entitled “Stillborn” that was screened worldwide, including at the Cannes Film Festival. and earned him respect and recognition among the creative community.
Ladd also worked extensively in the film industry as an editor and visual effects artist. At Industrial Light and Magic and Sony Imageworks, he contributed to films including Star Trek: First Contact, Look Who’s Talking Now, Speed 2: Cruise Control, Jetsons: The Movie and many other theatrical features. Ladd was for many years the editor of the prestigious SIGGRAPH conference on computer graphics. He later was videographer for the Institute of Noetic Science in Petaluma.
Ladd was beloved for his wry sense of humor and charmingly quirky approach to life. From early childhood, his uniquely creative sensibility astonished and amazed all who knew him and he remained true to his own vision of life until his untimely passing. Ladd is survived by his brothers Tam, Tip and Tor McPartland and his sister Jan. His ashes will be scattered in his adopted home, Sebastopol, California.
I am not sure when this picture was taken, but I would guess it might have been when he was attending UCLA.
Apparently the audio from the memorial service was recorded and can be found at:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/nyvs1b62j0kvw4r/LaddMemorial.wav?dl=0Darwin, Ca on Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin,_California
Sunday, January 4, 2015
The Case of Daniel Chong: DEA and DOJ Work Together
It is often said that US Government Agencies can not work together well. Here we have a case where two agencies, the Dept of Justice and the Drug Enforcement Administration, which is part of the DOJ by the way, worked very well together in order to hide an unlawful arrest, torture and attempted murder through negligence by the DEA.
www.cryptome.org has published on their website a FOIA response in the matter of Daniel Chong. Mr Chong, a student at UCSD, was falsely arrested by the DEA, thrown in prison, told he would be released, and then held without food or water, in handcuffs, for the next five days where he was discovered by accident in a holding cell, unconscious and near death, and rushed to a local intensive care unit. Someone, we do not know who, called various Department of Justice (DOJ) hotlines describing the situation and informing the DOJ of the situation.
Mr Chong did survive. Several investigations were held, he was given a chunk of cash, and the DEA and the DOJ attempted to suppress the matter. No one from the DEA was in the least bit reprimanded, nor dismissed, and the Southern California Attorney General office declined to prosecute for “lack of evidence”.
You may read the FOIA document at
Here are some obvious questions after reading the report.
1. Why are the names of the DEA Special Agents blacked out?
An innocent citizen was falsely imprisoned tortured by starvation to within an inch of his life and nearly died. Why do we, as American citizens, not have the right to know which of our public servants perpetrated these apparent crimes?
2. For what reason have the people involved not been dismissed from government service?
At the very least we can say they were grossly incompetent and criminally negligent.
3. Why have criminal proceedings not being brought against these people?
The statement of “lack of evidence” is not the least bit credible. From the description of this case, there would seem to be ample evidence of criminal negligence if not malicious intent.
4. How do we know that others have not been tortured by the DEA and possibly murdered. What assurance can you give us that this is a one time anomaly?
Since by all appearances the DEA and the DOJ are covering these crimes up, it gives me no confidence that it has not happened before and is likely to happen again.
If the US Government wants to be given the benefit of the doubt regarding matters that an informed citizenry can not truly know about, such as the NSA matter, then it is all the more important for them to come clean on matters that we certainly have the right to know about. Very clearly gross incompetence led to the torture and near murder of a citizen and the Attorney General's office does NOTHING?
Wake up, DOJ. Its time to do your job and apply a little justice to the matter. Do it. Do it now. Or do not be surprised when in the future people do not believe a word you say and assume that you are just lying.
It is nice to discover that DOJ and DEA can work together so amicably in order to repress justice showing once again that there is often a silver lining if you look for one.
Wake up, DOJ. Its time to do your job and apply a little justice to the matter. Do it. Do it now. Or do not be surprised when in the future people do not believe a word you say and assume that you are just lying.
It is nice to discover that DOJ and DEA can work together so amicably in order to repress justice showing once again that there is often a silver lining if you look for one.
Saturday, January 3, 2015
More on the Vision of the Future Past
Dave Moon asks if
there was really a vision about tomorrow in America? He points out
that the 1964 Worlds Fair left a lot of people out.
He is right, so let
me qualify my statement, which I believe is still correct but for
fewer people. Among middle class Americans, most of them white but
by no means all of them, there was a vision of tomorrow that was
shared, unspoken and positive. I believe that the 1964 World's Fair was
the high point of that belief system as it was before Vietnam, Three
Mile Island, the Oil crisis, Watergate, and the Tea Party.
So I confess, I
readily use words like “Everyone” when I really mean and meant
the middle-class of this country, a class that probably does not
exist anymore. Could poor black families in the inner cities or
Hispanic families laboring for below minimum wage in the fields of
the rich buy into this vision? I guess not, although I think some of
them might have.
A taxi driver from
Ethiopia told me, a few weeks ago, that America was a great country
and a country of opportunity for anyone with a lot of energy who was
willing to play by the rules. I did not disagree with him to his face and I
thought it was actually a very nice thing for an immigrant (1) to say and believe. But I do not happen to
believe it. Maybe it is true relative to where he came from.
But back then
“everyone”, again by which I mean the mostly white middle class,
believed that Americans would have jobs and be able to support their
children and send them to college. Even Don Corleone believed that his children or grandchildren could prosper without crime. That was when people believed
that the government, although not perfect by any means, was generally
on our side and not entirely a corrupt servant of the rich. This was
when nuclear power was good, the environment was not yet recognized
as being destroyed, and there were two cars in every garage. That
was before a very large part of our citizenry had publicly disavowed
their belief in science because it did not support their
politics. A citizenry who wants to sell the national park system as
part of some sort of religious faith in the free market which not
even an economist can begin to make sense of.
That vision, the
promise of the future being better, gave a stability and a moral
force to all our actions. Even if some detail was not right, a
corrupt local politician for example or racism in our education system, we knew that the broad vision was in place
and that things would work out.
But they did not
work out. Technology has not been a force of good. Intolerance,
racism, greed and stupidity is rampant throughout this country. No
one even knows how many unemployed there are. Genetic engineering is
feared and loathed by most Americans when it is used to engineer more
profitable plants: note its all about profits not about feeding the
world. I do not know when genetic engineering will achieve its
promise in medicine, or if it will, but I am confident that only the
rich will be able to afford it when it happens. I am not sure what
the war in Iraq was about, but if it really was about the banality of
protecting oil sources, which I do not think it was, then at least it
was about something instead of being merely insane.
The morality is
gone, perhaps it was never there.
The belief that we
were fighting for the right, and that our strength was as the
strength of ten because our heart was pure is gone, betrayed.
Elections were
stolen, districts gerrymandered, the government worked and continues
to work very hard to see that the poor and the sick are exploited for
the profit of their friends.
I can give you
hundreds if not thousands of examples where we threw it away. From
Los Angeles transit to offshore drilling contracts let to incompetent
friends of the Nixon White House to a total failure to regulate the
obviously out of control and dangerous financial community,
The abandoned and derelict transit systems and compromised attractions at Tomorowland are mere symptoms of the failure of our cultural myth. Yes, I am saying at some deeper level, Disneyland and our civilization, if you call this civilized, are symbolically or at least metaphorically linked.
In fact, it is probably even arguable the Disneyland is overall more functional than society as a whole. Consider, for example, that while no doubt there are privileges for the rich at Disneyland, they are not slapped in your face every moment of every day as it is in the rest of America where being poor is the greatest crime and the rich laugh at the misery of their fellow Americans.
The abandoned and derelict transit systems and compromised attractions at Tomorowland are mere symptoms of the failure of our cultural myth. Yes, I am saying at some deeper level, Disneyland and our civilization, if you call this civilized, are symbolically or at least metaphorically linked.
In fact, it is probably even arguable the Disneyland is overall more functional than society as a whole. Consider, for example, that while no doubt there are privileges for the rich at Disneyland, they are not slapped in your face every moment of every day as it is in the rest of America where being poor is the greatest crime and the rich laugh at the misery of their fellow Americans.
So yes, Dave, I do
believe that there was a shared vision of tomorrow that was positive
and that motivated and gave hope to a large segment of the American
people. But you are right to point out that there were always
people who did not share that delusion.
I may be
romanticizing things a bit.
Well, this is certainly a bright note to start the new year with.
Well, this is certainly a bright note to start the new year with.
_______________________________________________________
1. We are all of course immigrants here in America except for perhaps the Native Americans.
1. We are all of course immigrants here in America except for perhaps the Native Americans.
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Google Chrome Now Works with Centos Linux
I
have used Centos Linux for all my professional software development in the last five years or so and I have
been very happy with it. For those who are sensitive to the different camps of Linux self-Balkanization, this is in the same lineage as Redhat and Fedora. It is supposedly the most used
variant of Linux for commercial and enterprise-related activities.
But
one problem with it is that it was very difficult to get Google
Chrome to run under Centos even though it seemed to work fine with
Ubuntu.
Anyway,
this has been fixed, and it is necessary to run a script which has
been created by Richard Lloyd, and you may read about the situation
and the fix here.
This
is known to work under Centos 6.5 which is the version I am running.
Thank
you, Mr. Lloyd.
Monday, December 29, 2014
Understanding Our Cuban Foreign Policy
Just recently the US has
“normalized” relations with Cuba, a country with which we have had an
awkward relationship for decades. But this should not have
been a surprise because the real reason that we have been estranged
has become less of an issue as time goes by, but it is a reason that
you will never read about in the popular press and even many foreign
policy journals seem to be unaware, or choose not to bring it up in
their analysis.
I will therefore, in my own
words, describe why I think our policy towards Cuba has in the past
been so intransigent and why it matters less today. It has to do
with how we nominate and elect our President. The explanation goes
something like this.
It is possible to win the nomination of one of the parties to be a candidate for the Presidency
of the United States of America without carrying certain key states,
such as California, New York, Illinois and Florida. However, losing
such a state, with its vast number of delegates makes winning the
nomination that much more difficult as you must make it up by winning
a large number of “minor”, in terms of numbers of delegates,
states.
Therefore, it follows that if
you want to be President of the United States, you must work very
hard to win these key states and each of these states has its own
local politics and political forces who must be catered to and
appeased. The politics of California are very different from the
politics of New York and the politics of New York and California are
both very different from the politics of the State of Florida.
If you want to win the state
of Florida, then you pretty much have to win Dade County. If you
don't win Dade County then it is still possible to win the state of
Florida but its much harder and you have to win pretty much
everywhere else in the state. But if you want to win Dade County,
then you pretty much have to win the City of Miami. It is basically
not possible to win Dade County without Miami.
It turns out that the City of
Miami had a large population of ex-patriot Cubans and most of these
Cubans had come to this country because they had to flee the island
of Cuba when the revolution happened. These people all still had
relatives back in Cuba and the whole thing was ugly and they are, or
were, hopping mad.
Now you may say, well, we can
not run the foreign policy of this country because one little
interest group has a grudge because they lost a war. Well, thats
easy for you to say, but if you pissed off this group you were
probably not going to carry Miami, and if you did not carry Miami,
then you probably would not carry Dade County and if you did not
carry Dade County, then you probably lost Florida and if you lost
Florida then you may very well have lost the nomination of your party
for the Presidency of the United States.
As this Cuban population has
aged, their descendents, although still not all that happy about
Castro and the communists, are not as committed to the cause as their
parents and grand parents were.
And that, I propose to you, is
one of the key reasons that our foreign policy has been the way it
has been for many years. It is not the only reason, but it was
certainly part of the reason, and it is a reason that with time has
become less important.
Comment from Dave Moon about Tomorrowland
I
was delignted that Dave Moon, formerly of the MIT AI Lab and
Symbolics, commented on my Disneyland / Tomorrowland post.
He wrote:
He wrote:
____________________________________
Dave
Moon December 26, 2014 at 11:37 AM
I am shocked, shocked, to learn that Disneyland has been commercialized!
You
will perhaps be pleased to know that in Disneyland's clone sister in
Florida, as of a year and a half ago,
the People Mover had been refurbished and was back in operation.
the People Mover had been refurbished and was back in operation.
The
Carousel of Progress is still in operation there and pretty well
corresponds to my memory of it from the New
York Worlds Fair in 1964. Presumably it has been refurbished too, but its essence is unchanged. If you haven't
read Cory Doctorow's novella The Great Big Beautiful Tomrrow, you should.
York Worlds Fair in 1964. Presumably it has been refurbished too, but its essence is unchanged. If you haven't
read Cory Doctorow's novella The Great Big Beautiful Tomrrow, you should.
The
train people are cool in Florida, too.
--Dave
Moon
____________________________________
Dave
Its
great to hear from you. Its been a long time. You may not remember
this but I used to lurk on one of the ITS systems at MIT and used to
see you logged on and apparently active at all hours of the day and
night. This would have been about 1974 and I was at the time
“mike@ucsb-mod75”
I
am delighted to hear that the Carousel of Progress is still in
Disneyworld. I was under the mistaken impression that it was not
there but that GE Horizons in EPCOT had replaced it. Well
apparently the Carousel is still there but its “sequel”,
Horizons, is gone. Also good to know about the Peoplemover.
But
even if those were recreated at Tomorrowland it would still not solve
the “vision” problem that I am talking about. Both of those two
attractions are from the 1967 or so vision which benefited in no
small part from the triumph of the 1964 World's Fair. I believe that
the 1964 World's Fair was the apogee of American civilization, when
we had hope for the future, economic strength and a great sense of
design. We might go so far as to say that the 64 World's Fair was
the REAL Tomorrowland for our nation, and the others were pleasant
but pale reflections.
The
problem today is not merely to clean up the decayed infrastructure,
or to create some new cool attractions, both of which I am sure
Imagineering can do just fine. The problem is to create a vision of
the future, a vision that we can believe in. That feeling, that
vision, that gestalt is not there now and not even the Carousel of
Progress or a roomful of
robotic presidents can bring it back.
Do
we really believe that there is a great big beautiful tomorrow
shining at the end of every day? I don't think so.
Hope
all is well, tell me how you are.
Sincerely,
MW
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Scale, Future and Decay at Disneyland
Christmas Day, 2014
This
is the second part of my impressions of a recent trip to Disneyland,
the original park, for the first time in many years. You can read
the first part here.
It
has been speculated that Disneyland has a function in our
civilization beyond merely being an entertaining vacation
destination. From Tinkerbell, to the ancient myths, to the promise
of tomorrow, these concepts manifested in Disneyland but originated
in our unspoken hopes and beliefs for the future. At least they
were our beliefs in the future back when we were naive enough to
believe in a future.
When
I approached Disneyland on this occasion, I was moving fast to meet my friends who were
waiting for me in Frontierland. I was late. I was also
disoriented because the traditional parking lot was missing and the
entire entrance now reconfigured into the space between two gates and
a transit center. My pass worked and I sprinted to my rendezvous.
Having found my friends, I paused to catch my breathe. There was something wrong. I felt a sense of disquiet as I walked around New Orleans Square, past the
river, across from Tom Sawyer's Island. It was something to do with
scale. It was smaller somehow. Jungleland,
Frontierland, the River it all seemed smaller than I had
remembered.
Of
course my first memories of Disneyland were from the mid-60s and I
was much smaller and the park was much bigger, relatively speaking.
Is it possible that the memories from visiting Disneyland all those
times when I was young remained in ways beyond what we normally think
of as memory, but as a sense memory of the rightness of things, of its
basic size and dimensions? Could this unconscious dissonance be the
cause of the unease that I felt?
Familiar
and yet unfamiliar some of the dissonance was probably a reaction to
the crass repurposing of classic attractions for more current popular
product placement, the Swiss Family Treehouse was appropriated by
Tarzan for example, but the feeling of a scale difference was
persistent.
As
evening approached this sensation finally went away. I had
chosen to walk around the Matterhorn to New Orleans Square to meet my
friends for dinner, and the dark of evening restored the sense of
mystery and of scale that had been missing during the day. Night
made it less apparent how the pieces all fit together, night allowed
the park to expand in my imagination.
It
was in this darkness that I was able to pass through Fantasyland and it was at night that I was finally able to get to Tomorrowland.
The old TWA rocket still remains, unlabeled, but defiant
Lets review for a moment the Tomorrowland of 1967 or so. On one side of the entrance is the AT&T Bell System Circlevision film with a working Picturephone to their headquarters in New York City. On the other side was the Monsanto exhibit “Adventure Thru Inner Space” which talked of the promise of microscopy and the quantum world through a journey into a snowflake. Dare I go any further into the center of the nucleus itself?
Further on was a recreation of our nuclear submarine force which had
just recently gone under the polar ice cap for the first time.
There was an external and beautifully plastic House of the Future.
The GE pavilion's Carousel of Progress swept you away in a narrative
of white suburban Americans singing about their home appliances.
Trans World Airlines took you on a trip to Mars. The future of
transportation opened in July 67 with the PeopleMover to
augment the Monorail, the overhead tram, and the Disneyland Railroad.
And even that 60s vision of world peace: There's so much that we
share that its time we're aware: its a small world, after all.
We
would go to the moon. We would explore the ocean floor. We would
create new and unlimited sources of energy. We would look at the
night sky and explore its mysteries. We would heal the sick. We would live in a world of
peace, freedom and harmony. We would save the world.
We
jump to the present and we find the promise betrayed. AT&T and TWA no longer in business. GE a shadow of its former self threatening to just go bankrupt rather than take responsibility for the gross environmental destruction of the Hudson river which they did with deliberate malignancy and for a fast buck. A NASA without the capability of going to space without assistance from the Russians. The people betrayed and unemployed. A cluttered
monstrosity of a “rocket jets” attraction destroys the symmetry
of the entrance to tomorrow. The rotting hulk of decaying urban
transportation infrastructure lies abandoned and rusting in the
center of everything, attached to the former location of the “rocket
jets”, now a transit hub to nowhere. Silent it stands abandoned
at night. The Circlevision film about our country has been turned
into some sort of video game arcade to promote a Pixar film. The Mighty Microscope
(Monsanto Exhibit) becomes a redo of the original Star Tours
continuing the theme of idle tourism for the wealthy The Carousel of Progress is
now a house of tomorrow that is more like a house of today, but for
the very rich. You see, it seemed to be saying, this is how you could live today if you had a lot of money. The Submarine Ride which formerly presented the sense
of adventure of those heady days of the submarine pioneers, now
advertises a fish movie.
Abandoned rocket jets and Peoplemover turnabout
No
transportation, the transport was all gone. Only the rotting
infrastructure remained. The promise of how we would live in the
future became the betrayal that said only the rich would live well.
Advances in science were turned into cheap movie promotions.
Symmetry became clutter. It was all outsourced to China, perhaps to Shanghai Disneyland, by our government. I guess if you wanted to see the future you would have to go there, if you could afford it.
But
if you look, you will find remnants of the former greatness. With
the help of some docents at the Illuminations pavilion we were able to find elements of the Carousel of Progress hidden in plain sight on the outskirts of the exhibits. In urban archaeology, you find the old doors, you walk to the end of the hallway and check to see if there is space beyond. And there on the floor was the
track of the former Carousel of Progress, now stopped with no promise
for the future. But still there, nevertheless.
Look on the floor to see the seam that separated the unmoving stage from the rotating audience platform.
So what does the future hold for Tomorrowland? We know that the Brad Bird movie of the same name and shot in part in Tomorrowland is coming out in a year. I have no doubts that many plans are in the works for the rehabilitation of the future. Will it convey an articulate and inspirational vision ?
Vision of Tomorroland from the first trailer for the movie
Trailer for Tomorrowland (2015)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11fgwFAk3fk
PeopleMover on Wikipedia:
Updated 12/15/2025
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