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Re: color blindness

To: mgs@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: color blindness
From: jfischer@supercollider.com (James Fischer)
Date: Tue, 21 Nov 1995 07:05:36 -0500
Mark "I dream in Black and White" Jurras re-stated:

>> 
>>  - -snip- -
>>    Red/Orange/Green must exist in your dreams
>>  - -snip- -
>
>I have heard of this condition independantly from three people who do
>not know each other.

    As an ex-Bostonian who was smart enough to keep his cars in
    a leased garage at the end of the Green Line (just off route 128),
    I think I can shed some "light" on the matter.

        1) The "in you dreams" comment came from an ex-Boston
            cabbie.  No Boston cab driver would ever pay much
            attention to the stoplights, so he can be forgiven
            for his lack of specific knowledge.            

        2) The tri-color light condition would seem to have been
            one of many side-effects of the Kevin White administration.
            When Mr. White was mayor, everyone got the answer they
            wanted from City Hall, even if the answers were in
            conflict with each other.  (Those were the days... Kevin
            was in the mayor's office, pretending to be Mayor, the
            Patriots still pretended to play football in the state
            of Mass, the Celtics still pretended that they could
            START aging short white guys in their lineup, everyone 
            pretended that the Boston Garden basketball court did 
            not have any loose floorboards, and most people pretended
            that the infamous WALL at Fenway Park was fair...)

        3) The lights were (and are) not the problem with downtown Boston
            driving.  It was (and is) the POTHOLES!!!  Some of those
            suckers could swallow an MGB whole!  The Boston Globe
            newspaper had a contest to find the largest pothole in 
            Boston back in the late 70s, and I won.  The "largest
            pothole" had filled up with water over time, and had been 
            named "Boston Harbor"...


Scientists and Engineers try to make the future some sort of theme park.
Humanist Intellectuals wish the future did not exist.
Ecologists point out that the future may not exist, after all.

   james fischer                       jfischer@supercollider.com


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