Erosion of Human Values

If you’re in the Northern hemisphere and you look to the south to the constellation Centaurus tonight you might view Alpha Centauri.  4.5 light years away.  The nearest star to this one claiming ownership of us and our planet.

That’s right.  About the time the light from Alpha Centauri was leaving home on the journey to your eye, all that clothing you see in the photo was sparkling new sitting on shelves in stores, racking up cash register numbers and causing people to have to frown at the bills at the end of the month.  Now every item hanging there is worth less than a US dollar.  Nobody likes products produced when the light from Alpha Centauri was just cranking up the engine, gunning the motor and heading here.

Weirdly, the value of everything around you reflects what I’m describing.  Doesn’t matter whether it’s a toaster, a washing machine, an automobile, frequently even a marriage.

Face it.  That stuff you’re buying won’t be worth squat when the light starting from Alpha Centauri today reaches here.

Maybe you’re humanocentric and think that’s lousy behavior on the part of a star, or maybe you’re one of those apologists who blame it on humanity, or Old Sol.  But either way, you’re not looking at the worst case.

Consider Vega.

Northwest sky, bright, 25 light years.  “Nothing wrong with Vega,” a person might think.  But you’d be wrong.  Almost everything people yearned and bankrupted themselves buying in 1986, when Vega was sending out the light you’ll see tonight, is in landfills and junkyards.  Owning something manufactured when that light was leaving Vega’s worse than owning something manufactured in the USSR on Monday or Friday.

But there’s a lot more.  When Vega was shooting that dot of light at your rods and cones writers were pounding away on typewriters and computers months at a time cranking out manuscripts, publishers running them up to the tops of the lists, creating tomes of gigantic lasting importance.  But Vega took care of that, too:

New York Times Best Seller Number Ones Listing
Not one stayed around until that light from Vega reached here.

Lie Down with Lions by Ken Follett (Morrow) – February 16, 1986

The Bourne Supremacy by Robert Ludlum (Random House) – March 9, 1986

A Perfect Spy by John le Carré (Knopf) – May 4, 1986

I’ll Take Manhattan by Judith Krantz (Crown) – June 8, 1986

Last of the Breed by Louis L’Amour (Bantam) – June 22, 1986

Wanderlust by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) – July 20, 1986

Red Storm Rising by Tom Clancy (Putnam) – August 17, 1986

It by Stephen King (Viking) – September 14, 1986

Whirlwind by James Clavell (Morrow) – November 23, 1986

You can buy any one of them for a quarter, sometimes a dime at the Salvation Army Thrift Store.

————————————

Computers?  When Vega was spitting out that dot of light you see here’s what was happening:

Microsoft releases MS-DOS3.2. It adds support for 3.5-inch 720 kB floppy disk drives. [130] (December 1995 [146]) (March [346.254])

Apple Computer introduces the Macintosh Plus. It features a 8 MHz 68000 processor, 1 MB RAM, SCSI connector for hard drive support, a new keyboard with cursor keys and numeric keypad, and an 800 kB 3.5-inch floppy drive. Price is US$2600. It is the first personal computer to provide embedded SCSI support. [46] [75] [120] [140] [180.222] [203.68] [346.167] [346.268] [593.350] [597.94] [611.41] [750.49]

Lotus Development announces it would support Microsoft Windowswith future product releases. [1133.22]

Microsoft releases MS-DOS3.25. [346.268]

Two months after releasing Microsoft Windows, Microsoft has shipped 35,000 copies. [1133.22]

The first virus program for the IBM PC appears, called the Brain. It infects the boot sector of 360 kB floppy disks. [1230.56] [1805.23] (1987 [1260.193])

IBM announces the IBM RT Personal Computer, using RISC-based technology from IBM’s “801” project of the mid-70s. It is one of the first commercially-available 32-bit RISC-based computers. The base configuration has 1 MB RAM, a 1.2 MB floppy, and 40 MB hard drive, for US$11,700. (With performance of only 2 MIPS, it is doomed from the beginning.) [31] [116] [205.114] [329.129] [1311] [1391.D1]

Compaq Computer introduces the Compaq Portable II. [108]

Tandy debuts the Tandy Color Computer, with 64 kB RAM. It is the successor to the Color Computer 2. [1133.21]

AT&T creates the first silicon fabrication of its CRISP architecture CPU, incorporating 172,163 transistors, and operating at 16 MHz. [660.6]

Apple Computer introduces the Macintosh 512K Enhanced, for US$2000. It features an 8 MHz 68000 processor, 512 kB RAM, and 800 kB 3.5-inch floppy drive. [46] [75] [597.94]

http://pctimeline.info/comp1986.htm

Seen any of that stuff lately?  No.  It’s all deep in attics, closets, garages, or in the city dumps.

But when you look up there at Vega, that’s what you’re seeing.  All that stuff shiny and new gleaming in the eyes of you back then, packaged up for birthdays, anniversaries, Christmas.  Happy faces. 

The erosion of human values following a straight line between Vega and your optic nerve.  All that stuff listed above, the cars, the computers, the books, people worked their asses off to manufacture it and others worked their asses off to buy it all. 

But that time lag between Vega and here screwed it all.  Rendered it worthless.

I’m not partisan on this, not pointing fingers of blame at Vega.  I don’t know whether it’s the fault of Vega, or whether it’s a conspiracy concocted by the same people who assassinated President Kennedy back when the light you see when you look at 19 Draconis or Alpha Cephei was leaving home.

Sirius, Procyon and Altair stuff

Old Jules

Simon & Garfunkel – Leaves That Are Green

 

18 responses to “Erosion of Human Values

  1. Top of the morning to Ya’
    (~_~) I have noticed the older I get the less I’m worth (!_!)

    have a quality day~

  2. I acquired my first personal computer in 1983. It was a Televideo TS-803. It featured 64K of memory, a monochrome monitor (green on black), two double-sided, dual-density 360K 5.25″ floppy drives, and a keyboard. And it only cost me $2,145.00!

  3. This. Is. Outstanding. I love being shown a new perspective on life and the Universe always provides it, but you have illustrated it with Real examples.

    Well-done. Good post. Thank You, Jules.

    • Morning Teresa Evangeline: Time and perspective are probably ways the Universe has of telling us we aren’t as smart as we think we are. Looking out at that night sky and realizing each of those lights we’re seeing represent spans of time, each separate from the other, has always been a challenge to me to wrap my mind around. Carried down to a microscopic level nearer home, that cat I see on the porch and the tree a mile away also occupy different places in linear time, which is even more difficult to recognize as a concept. I love all that implies. Thanks for stopping in. Gracias, Jules

  4. The disadvantage of taking the long view like that is that you need the short view to get from day to day.
    Those clothes are worth less now, but (presumably) you felt they were worth what you paid at the time, knowing they would wear out and lose their value.
    On the other hand, anything that allows mention of a Tandy pc is worth it!

    • Morning El Guapo: Thanks for the visit this morning. Actually I tend to buy Vega, or at best Alpha Centauri. I don’t allow myself any of this Old Sol stuff, mostly. Getting through day-to-day just seems to come natural for most of us. Short-term, whether to give priority to the light arriving at our eyeballs from ten feet, ten miles, ten thousand miles, or ten million miles just gets awfully complicated unless we’re trying to beat a stale yellow light before it becomes a red light. Gracias, Jules

  5. I bought something like that as well for a gift. Texas Instruments maybe. I believe it spoke as well. Appreciate the effort for a great mid morning read.

    • Morning amigo. I appreciate the visit. Hope you’re enjoying your new spot in the overall scheme of things this Universe thinks it’s building up to. Scenery is pleasant. Thanks for sharing it. Gracias, Jules

  6. This post made me laugh and sigh in equal measure. As Damien Rice has it: ‘Time is contagious, and everybody’s getting old’ – and may I say I couldn’t agree more with your point here! Brilliantly thought through, and adeptly delivered. Have a great day.

  7. I really enjoyed this thought provoking post. Rhetorically, are things just not built to last or are we consumerism obsessed? Or is the striding advance of science making current things obsolete?

    Good post!

    • servitob: I appreciate your remarks. I thinks we’re consumerism obsessed. Nothing much is obsolete except the scientific facts of yesteryear. Gracias, Jules

  8. This is great, Jules. You make a very important point. Material stuff ain’t worth squat, but we spend our precious years working our asses off for it. It’s not making a living–it’s making a dying. I wish I would have encountered and really understood this post before I wracked up all of the credit card debt I am now working to pay off. BELIEVE ME.

    Love to you and the cats,

    SB

  9. Great post Jules and a good point i would take it a little further and think that at that very moment the lite headed out from Vega how many lites headed out from other stars in universe at the very same moment and what power did they drop on the planet as they passed through,”Wow confusion” Take care

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