At some time in your life you didn't know this, but many other people did. Then 
you learnt it, and it was a new discovery for you. 

Since then the world has circled the sun a few times. You and I have increased 
our store of wisdom as we have increased our store of wrinkles and incontinence 
pads. The old have shuffled into the shadows and new people have been born, and 
none of them, not a single one, knew this when they emerged slimy and helpless 
from their mother's womb. 

Since then the world has turned, they have grown, they are no longer 
incontinent, and they have become hungry for knowledge of the useless kind, and 
somebody is there to supply it. Is that such a bad thing?

B



> On 12 Aug 2015, at 20:38, P.J. Alling <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I knew this already, and I'll bet a lot of people on this list did too.  
> However when one has to fill inches, (in the old days of newspapers, column 
> inches), of space to keep one's blog or web site fresh, one must write things 
> like this, which are almost common knowledge, up as if it was a new discovery.
> 
>> On 8/12/2015 11:27 AM, Mark Roberts wrote:
>> http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/12/why-dont-people-smile-old-photographs-google-answer
>>  
>> 
>> 
>> ---
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>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> I don't want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve 
> immortality through not dying.
> -- Woody Allen
> 
> 
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