Here's one to liven things up, that's maybe a little interesting too. :mrgreen:
Take a look at this video of barrel making/coppering from the Guninness brewery in Dublin pre-WW2 (complete with US tourist commentary in the background): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AdI8rAXZA-Y It really brings out how back then even quite high volume woodworking relied almost entirely on the skill of the wood worker with hand tools - there wasn't much reliance on machine tools for accuracy!
I can't help thinking that the guy hacking away with great precision with the cleaver (not sure what you call it) brings some perspective to the health and safety debate - this given how people are now panicking about even quite heavily guarded machines, and huge payouts are being made for gormless accidents.
I'm not arguing against improvements in safety, but it really does show that 'safety' is highly relative.
In the form we experience it - as initiatives increasingly driven mostly by sectional greed, insane legalities and the appetite for personal power and earning capability of ever more people, professions and institutions, rather than by any serious concern for the welfare of the small guy (whose judgement is anyway discarded as an irrelevance) - it risks moving from fulfilling a genuine need to becoming an insatiable monster that will keep on upping the ante regardless of the broader consequences.
We like to think that systems of competing self interests are self balancing, but the lesson of history (and the recent economic crash) is that they always get out of balance and kill or injure the host they feed on.
My pennyworth is to suggest before we reflexively pile on the bandwagon, knock 'dangerous' practices and mutter 'there oughter be a law' that we (a) focus on what's best for the guy in question, (b) require him/her to take some responsibility for his/her own self, (c) credit him/her with some intelligence and (d) ensure that we're genuinely acting in his/her interests, and in the interests of our society.
i.e make sure that our motivation is genuinely and in the broadest sense both wise and compassionate....
:wink: Fire away...
Take a look at this video of barrel making/coppering from the Guninness brewery in Dublin pre-WW2 (complete with US tourist commentary in the background): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AdI8rAXZA-Y It really brings out how back then even quite high volume woodworking relied almost entirely on the skill of the wood worker with hand tools - there wasn't much reliance on machine tools for accuracy!
I can't help thinking that the guy hacking away with great precision with the cleaver (not sure what you call it) brings some perspective to the health and safety debate - this given how people are now panicking about even quite heavily guarded machines, and huge payouts are being made for gormless accidents.
I'm not arguing against improvements in safety, but it really does show that 'safety' is highly relative.
In the form we experience it - as initiatives increasingly driven mostly by sectional greed, insane legalities and the appetite for personal power and earning capability of ever more people, professions and institutions, rather than by any serious concern for the welfare of the small guy (whose judgement is anyway discarded as an irrelevance) - it risks moving from fulfilling a genuine need to becoming an insatiable monster that will keep on upping the ante regardless of the broader consequences.
We like to think that systems of competing self interests are self balancing, but the lesson of history (and the recent economic crash) is that they always get out of balance and kill or injure the host they feed on.
My pennyworth is to suggest before we reflexively pile on the bandwagon, knock 'dangerous' practices and mutter 'there oughter be a law' that we (a) focus on what's best for the guy in question, (b) require him/her to take some responsibility for his/her own self, (c) credit him/her with some intelligence and (d) ensure that we're genuinely acting in his/her interests, and in the interests of our society.
i.e make sure that our motivation is genuinely and in the broadest sense both wise and compassionate....
:wink: Fire away...