Over 100 King County Metro bus trips canceled - https://www.kiro7.com/news/local/over-60-king-county-metro-bus-trips-canceled/XRXIUVUGDFCZ5BNWHZFSDQPTO4/
Seattle Police Department activates Stage 3 emergency operations amid staffing shortage - https://komonews.com/news/local/seattle-police-department-activates-stage-3-emergency-operations-amid-staffing-shortage
Amid crew shortages, Washington State Ferries to cut sailings on some routes by half - https://old.reddit.com/r/SeattleWA/comments/q7r6c9/amid_crew_shortages_washington_state_ferries_to/
Seattle Public Schools are cancelling almost ALL school buses - https://old.reddit.com/r/SeattleWA/comments/q8t06f/seattle_public_schools_are_cancelling_almost_all/
Seattle Public Schools begs students to return after low enrollment affects budget; a decrease in enrollment means a decrease in budget - https://thepostmillennial.com/seattle-public-schools-begs-students-to-return-after-low-enrollment-affects-budget
Los Angeles, Chicago, and Seattle are among the cities to see public school enrollment plummet for a second consecutive year. - https://fee.org/articles/cities-lead-the-way-in-another-massive-fall-exodus-from-us-public-schools/
Edit to add the email I got this week from Harborview/UW health services:
To Our Valued Patients:
At UW Medicine, your access to timely care is always our priority. While our teams are working diligently to meet your needs, we are currently experiencing very high demand for all services. As a result, it may be taking longer than normal to find open appointments with your healthcare providers.
If this is your experience, we ask for your patience and courtesy. Like many other healthcare organizations and industries, we continue to face disruptions from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on our workforce and operations.
LOL the book has a larger wordcount than War and Peace, the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy, and Les Miserables; but I will try.
The book takes place in an alternate timeline in the US in the 1940s which is in a deep depression. The protagonists are all STEM executives (one is a railroad exec, one is a copper miner, one owns/operates a foundry for high-strength alloys) for whom IMO the closes embodiment today is Elon Musk, and the antagonists are all Fauci types. The general theme of the book is the executives realizing that society at large hates them despite taking advantage of their unique skillsets and exiting society to their own parallel and independent society to let it collapse so they can rebuild when it does. Much of the book details scenarios where all the employees of a particular company just decide to quit, leaving it unable to fulfill some primary function to the detriment of society, and the government trying to prevent this from happening using more and more punitive measures.
It's a tedious read (the book is infamous for a 60 page uninterrupted speech made by one of the protagonists), but she does accurately portray our enemies and their mindset. I don't exaggerate when I say that when I first read the book 20 years ago I thought the antagonists were caricatures but found them moderate when I re-read it 2 years ago. I rarely read fiction and almost never re-read it; it and Starship Troopers are the two books where I've done both.
Other than nihilism, what were the intertwining themes of her books that was so important? She seems to be making a roaring comeback after 60 years of being in the dustbin.
Rand grew up in Communist Russia, had escaped to the West, and her books and philosophy were a particular brand of materialist, atheistic, meritocratic libertarianism known as Objectivism. She had a particular affinity for STEM types -- engineers and architects mostly. This philosophy was expressed and refined in all her novels.
The reason her books are making a comeback is because society is starting to very strongly resemble the societies in her books. Particularly Atlas Shrugged, because of all the lockdowns and the government's attempted control of all aspects of the economy and society (which are strong themes in that book). And since that book primarily concerns itself with the operation and decline of a railroad, seeing airlines and railroads now going through what she described in that book is of particular interest.
Yes as I recall Ayn Rand was enamored with the aesthetics of Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture. Who made some rather beautiful homes that weren't particularly structurally sound and suffered quite a bit from mold damage due to all the moisture from artificial streams running through them.
She was a product of her time like a lot of us. I'm not an Objectivist, but she does seem to understand the mindset of our enemies. Otherwise she wouldn't so accurately predict their behavior 50 years ago.
Not gonna lie, I would prefer if billionaires would leave behind beautiful buildings as part of their legacy instead leaving behind an increasingly hollowed out country even if they were just as corrupt back then.
What is random or misplaced about an appreciation for aesthetics?