Great Moments in Unintended Consequences: Fossils, Price Controls, and Traffic Lights (Vol. 17)
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 One: Beef Grief
The Year: 1946
The Problem: The price of beef is skyrocketing! And voters are angry! And it's an election year!
The Solution: Reinstitute federal war-time price controls.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out, artificially low prices are harder to swallow when you're the one selling. Angry farmers, unwilling to sell their meat at government-mandated prices, refused to bring their cattle to market. Meat production plummeted. Now everyone was angry. Miners went on strike. Butchers closed. Hospitals complained they'd have to serve horse meat. With voters up in arms and an election weeks away, President Harry Truman lifted the restrictions. But not soon enough: in what's been called "The Beefsteak Election," Democrats were slaughtered at the polls, losing Congress for the first time in 16 years.
But at least that meat shortage was cured.
Part Two: Reaching New Lights
The Year: 2010-ish
The Problem: Traffic lights in Japan use up too much energy!
The Solution: Replace the incandescent bulbs with energy efficient LEDs that last longer and cost less to operate!
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out, it gets cold! And since LED bulbs don't radiate enough heat to melt snow and ice, the signals became obscured, resulting in numerous traffic accidents and workers being sent out to clean the signals with brooms. And it wasn't just Japan—in Green Bay, maintenance crews in bucket lifts scraped their new lights by hand, St. Paul used air compressors, and Newark even employed Super Soakers filled with anti-freeze.
Various solutions are in the works, but until they get it all figured out just treat it like a four-way stop, OK? That's snow joke.
Part Three: Keeping Up With The Boneses
The Year: 1937
The Problem: Finding early human fossils is hard, especially in Indonesia!
The Solution: Pay locals for every fragment they can find!
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out, it worked like a charm! Paleontologist and Awesome Name Club member Gustav Heinrich Ralph von Koenigswald was delighted to find that enterprising locals were bringing him useful fossils. Even better, the small fragments fit together to create a virtually complete hominid skull. They fit together so well, in fact, that he realized the helpful locals "were breaking up the larger pieces behind my back, in order to get a bigger bonus."
That's one way to get ahead.
Do you know a great moment in unintended consequences? Email us at comedy@reason.com.
- Producer: Austin Bragg
- Producer: Meredith Bragg
- Producer: John Carter
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Very few of those consequences are unintended.
Channeling RC Dean?
I met a Swiss man who did IT for a big Swiss bank. His branch decided to replace CRT computer screens with newly released flat screens to save energy. Then they couldn't heat the building because the HVAC was designed to take into account the heat from the old CRT monitors. It wasn't powerful enough without them.
Now they're putting Critical Race Theory into computer screens!?
Street lights where I live are efficient LEDs by law, but they also contain electric heating elements.
STEAL from the productive.
GIVE-IT all to the lazy (UN-productive).
What could possibly go wrong?
Turns-out the USA lost all of it’s production (manufacturing) and all the ?working? people resorted to full-time fraudsters, printing $fake$, cheating accountability, creating MORE bureaucracies with ‘Gun’-Power *all* after the same ?free? sh*t; While the entire nation goes BANKRUPT, looses all it’s Individual Liberty & Justice and tumbles into the remnants of Nazi-Germany or the USSR (take your pick of the socialist despair). Realizing all too late that 'armed' THEFT is a zero-sum game.
Well, the traffic lights thing won't be an issue long, because we are outlawing cars.
To see how badly paying for such things works out, look at Quora before and after their incentive program.
In January 1945 a 16 oz jar of Skippy peanut butter cost 34¢. Yesterday I saw one for sale for $3. That's a liiitle bit short of an order of magnitude difference.