{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "I\u2019m at a low point on my emotional/energetic cycle, and on top of that my laptop caught some battery issues and keeps restarting...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/113862492018/", "html": "<p>I\u2019m at a low point on my emotional/energetic cycle, and on top of that my laptop caught some battery issues and keeps restarting during startup, leaving me with this iffy reblog-as-link mobile app.</p>\n\n<p>Soooo, not much posting lately. I\u2019ve got ideas kicking around for two American history effortposts though, drop a note if there\u2019s one you\u2019d like me to prioritize.</p>\n\n<p>They are:</p>\n\n<p>1) \u201cHoly Shit You Guys The Post Office Was Important\u201d</p>\n\n<p>(When people say the federal government used to be just the post office and the military that\u2019s close enough to true, but it\u2019s one of those \u201call you have is a hammer\u201d situations - the Post Office was why we have vertically integrated political parties [on several accounts], it was key to creating a coherent American literature and culture, it was the first domestic spy agency, it was long a battlefield of cultural subversion and countersubversion, it was how the government first started to establish control over railroads, with Rural Free Delivery and parcel post, Sears &amp; Roebuck became the Amazon of its day. Actually, a better title might be \u201cThe Post Office: the Internet of its Day.\u201d)</p>\n\n<p>2) \u201cOkay Seriously Who *Did* Build Roads When The State Didn\u2019t?\u201d</p>\n\n<p>(Local roads developed organically [under government-enforced common law] but were inevitably placed under government control when maintenance ran into free-rider issues. Medium distance point-to-point roads could be built privately [though often with use of eminent domain or other state support] but the owners often actively resisted connecting them to any useful network, and in any case they tended to degrade for lack of maintenance and fall into state hands. [Even with tolls such roads usually lost money on operations, their profitability coming by way of increasing the value their builders\u2019 newly accessible landholdings.] Long-distance roads have always been state projects, but that\u2019s kinda minor since roads as a method of long-distance travel and transport are actually a pretty recent innovation in America.)</p>\n\n<p>Eh? Eh?</p>"}