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Wednesday 31 May 2017

In an era of monumental political stupidity at an unprecedented presidential height, of racism, xenophobia and Islamophobia in Europe and the United States, of hatred and wholesale butchery and slaughter on an abattoir-scale of Christians and their fellow Muslims throughout the Arab world of North Africa - especially in Libya, Egypt, Nigeria, The Sahel, across the Levant Syria, Iraq and elsewhere – and where the flames of democracy, justice, civil rights, freedom of thought, expression and sexuality are being extinguished by exhortations from what was once regarded as the leadership of the free world, I could not resist to include the article below, as encouragement and support to all whose disabilities may now be mocked openly – with sanction from the highest political authority you can imagine – that the struggle must continue:
' A Luta Continua!'


[The motto of the story below is that it is not the money – but knowing where to leave the chalk mark. Henry Ford no doubt learned a valuable lesson from the encounter.]
Patrick Emek


now read on...............................................................................................................


Important Quotes

There are no foolish questions, and nobody becomes a fool until they stop asking questions.”
Money is a stupid measure of achievement, but unfortunately it is the only universal measure we have.” 

Charles Steinmetz
1865 – 1923

Charles Steinmetz stood four feet tall with a humped back. Now virtually unknown, he was a brilliant German mathematician and engineer in the 1890’s and early 1900’s.  A devout socialist with capitalist tendencies, he had no problem charging huge fees for his services.  A friend of Albert Einstein, he rode to work every day on a bicycle wearing a suit and a top hat. Steinmetz moved to America at age 24.
His work with electricity was monumental. His calculations and experiments allowed electricity to become safer, stable and more widely used.
Henry Ford enlisted his help with electrical problems, hiring Steinmetz to fix a troubled generator.
Steinmetz arrived without tools and began staring at and listening to the generator, doing it for two days. He finally climbed up a ladder and made a chalk mark on the side of the generator.  He told Ford employees to replace certain parts at the chalk mark. The generator was fixed.
Henry Ford was happy, but almost fell on the floor when he got a bill for what he considered a simple task – $10,000.  Ford, at first refused to pay, saying he wanted Steinmetz to itemize his bill.
Steinmetz did just that.  He told Ford that the chalk mark was one dollar. The other $9,999 was for knowing where to put the mark.

A rare 1921 photo taken at a tour of an RCA wireless station in New Jersey.  Steinmetz is in the middle with Albert Einstein to the left.  



The above article and photograph are courtesy of
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    PE






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