Great Moments in Unintended Consequences: Road Noise Meters, San Francisco Red State Boycott, and Pennsylvania's Political Cartoon Ban (Vol. 15)
Good intentions, bad results.
HD DownloadGreat moments in unintended consequences—when something that sounds like a great idea goes horribly wrong. Watch the whole series.
Part 1: Game Engine
The year: 2018
The problem: Too many loud vehicles in the city of Edmonton!
The solution: Erect sound monitoring display boards in various locations in the city, alerting motorists if they are exceeding the 85-decibel level limit by displaying their current noise level.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out games are fun! Since the display board went up as part of a pilot program with no accompanying enforcement mechanism, competitive motorists used the scoreboards… er, displays…to see just how loud they could get. As revving engines increased, so did noise complaints. Within weeks the city reversed course and turned off the displays.
Looks like cars aren't the only things that backfire.
Part 2: I Left My Smart in San Francisco
The year: 2016
The problem: States are passing laws San Francisco doesn't like!
The solution: Pressure them to change by prohibiting any city contracts with companies headquartered in states that don't share San Francisco's values.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out, competition drives down prices! With limited bidding options, public project costs ballooned by around 20 percent according to city administrators. The ban also created additional bureaucratic costs, totaling nearly half a million dollars in staffing expenses alone, and made it difficult to support like-minded businesses in verboten states.
More and more waivers and exemptions were granted as the list of covered states grew from 4 to 30, which should have been a clue that these expensive pressure tactics weren't exactly changing hearts and minds. In 2023, the city trashed the bans, probably in a very expensive trash can.
Part 3: Tooned Up
The Year: 1903
The Problem: Cartoonists keep depicting Pennsylvania politician Samuel Pennypacker as a parrot!
The Solution: Introduce a bill banning any cartoon in which a person is depicted as a "beast, bird, fish, insect, or other inhuman animal."
Sounds unconstitutional and entirely self-interested! What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
Turns out, people who make fun of politicians for a living are pretty comfortable fighting back against politicians. Criticism of Governor Pennypacker and the anti-cartoon bill exploded, with cartoonists nationwide depicting the Governor and others as turnips, trees, chestnut burrs, squash, and beer steins. The blowback was so humiliating that the bill was pulled from consideration and replaced with a new broader bill making newspaper editors and publishers personally responsible for libel lawsuits.
The press ramped up their ridicule, daring Pennypacker to take them to court. But the law was never enforced and was repealed after he left office, having been hounded for his entire term by critical cartoons.
That's one way to draw attention.
Great moments in unintended consequences: good intentions, bad results.
Do you know a great moment in unintended consequences? Email us at comedy@reason.com.
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Save for next year, maybe. And for the record I like R+ but...
The Year: 2024
The Problem: Reason comment section is full of spam.
The Solution: Reason+, for a small annual fee one can now post comment dissuading spam.
Sounds like a great idea with the best of intentions; what could possibly go wrong.
Turns out people like free shit and readership dropped, forcing Reason to end Reason+.
I doubt spam is why they're forcing people to identify themselves with credit cards in order to comment.
It should reduce the number of comments critical of Reason. "Hooray, you all love us."
Of course it is. Identification is available in several ways.
Twofer-
The Year: 2024
The Problem: “Reason” doesn’t like Donald Trump
The Solution: Dump a whole bunch of money behind another candidate to defeat Donald Trump.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions! What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out people don’t exactly hate Donald Trump as much as they hate the Boomers and their Establishment vs. Controlled Opposition false dilemma.
To be clear - This is not a criticism of the Braggs'/Carter's choice of topic or the critical motif, rather the opposite.
The Braggs and Remy are far and away the most libertarian on staff here. FAR and away.
Reason feels the force of all the comments on here pointing to their many and increasing stupid stands. So, institute a pay increase and make them support Reason, that should limit negaitve comments and make them look better.That is all they want
How true , evne though Reason doesn't like Christians
“Above all, don't lie to yourself. The man who lies to himself and listens to his own lie comes to a point that he cannot distinguish the truth within him, or around him, and so loses all respect for himself and for others. And having no respect he ceases to love.”
― Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov
The Year: 1903 The Problem: Cartoonists keep depicting Pennsylvania politician Samuel Pennypacker as a parrot!
The Year: 2024 The Problem : Not enough MAGA parrot cartoons
The solution :
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2024/03/supremes-ponder-diplomatic-immunity-for.html
We believe everyone has a right to shelter.
What could go wrong?
I recall a case where a bar in a college town installed an breath alcohol test device, whereupon students - predictably - tried to see how high they could get the number.
that "good intentions" in your byline is doing a lot of heavy lifting there.
Man I wish the media was as critical of politicians now as they apparently used to be.
Now they're only critical of outsiders who dare to run against the grain.
Radar speed display signs also have drivers trying to get the high score. Doesn't matter. Speed signs are PR tools meant to reassure residents that the city council cares about their traffic complaints.
Worked in software my whole life. When I do scrum coaching I still have to explain that most developers are also gamers. You have to be VERY careful what you measure, because they'll game the system. What you measure is what you'll get way too much of.
If you measure productivity by lines of code? Oh, that's my favorite. You get LOTS of code. Why do something simply when you can add 40 lines. Or, more often, why not write tests for conditions that don't test anything. Tests are LOTS of lines of code!
Being competitive is human nature. Lawmakers just aren't, quite, a part of humanity so they don't understand.
>>Being competitive is human nature.
shhhhh you'll trigger some lazy 20 year-old with parent issues
I agree. Roads can be engineered to self-enforce those limits and that's exactly how they should be engineered. If a street next to a school needs a 25 limit, then that street should have chicanes, bollards, bulbouts, crossings that are sidewalk grade not street grade, don't fix potholes, trees instead of parking lane, etc. Roundabouts are perfect for this to replace intersections because they are reverse banked. Well make those 45 degree banks. That'll slow people down Instead of roads being designed to be safe at speeds well in excess of a posted limit. They should designed, and perceived, to be increasingly unsafe. The only signs would be advisories/warnings re the road design ahead.
I absolutely blow through the "Your Speed Is:" scoreboards.
also I love the spirit of political cartoonists I think it's how I ended up here.
Suggestion for a future episode:
Made in USA: more factories
More factories: more power consumption
But very few new power plants are being built.
Few transmission lines are being built.
... not least because of regulators and endless approval cycles.
Keep the coal-fired plants operating for a few more decades.
Get used to blackouts.