This is my small contribution to Pandemic-era furniture design. Today is my beloved wife's birthday. A special birthday. She's a psychotherapist with a general practice, but specializing in grief. Like many therapists the pandemic has shifted her practice to virtual sessions.
2/ For many patients this means Zoom. She sits on a couch with an Ipad propped up at the right height to approximate an in-person session, usually stacking things on top of each other to get the right height. Countless therapists around the country are doing some version of this.
3/ I call this a custom therapizing bench. Basic mortise and tenon joinery. Made in Pine to keep it light weight for easy mobility. Designed to be the right height for comfortable viewing from a couch. Certainly it's not a radical design innovation. You could do something ...
5/ similar w a barstool of 28" or 29". But I wanted something purpose-built, enough space on the top to accommodate different tech set ups and a small platform beneath for a writing tablet or a drink or a pen just beneath the platform. I'd noticed she had workarounds for that.
6/ The under platform extends out three inches from the main structure for convenience. Some night stands might work but those tend to be about 20" tall. The accent is this "everlasting knot" design on the top. This is a symbol with deep meaning in Buddhism but also in other ...
7/ ... South Asian religions - both Samsara and also the interrelationship of the 8 fold path. This was the technically challenging part as I'd never done any inlay work before. Lofted design, chisels used like cutting mortises. The inlay is Bubinga, an African tropical hardwood.
8/ Not perfect. First try. But I was pretty happy with how it turned out. Anyway, happy birthday, @MilletIsraeli. You complete me.

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More from @joshtpm

6 Feb
As the Dominion/Smartmatic litigation moves forward one of the most fascinating veins of reporting will be on the culture of impunity at Fox. With Rudy, Lindell, Powell these are degenerate liars and sociopaths. Evil, crazy people do evil crazy things.
2/ But Fox is a huge and hugely profitable corporation. It may be a corrosive and destructive force in American life. But it’s not run by idiots. It is remarkable to me that the actions for which they are being sued weren’t yanked back by the corporations lawyers within ...
3/ days at the very latest. By any normal standard these claims never should have aired at all. But this went on for weeks and weeks. It was crystal clear these claims were nonsense. Unlike so many other Fox News victims, these companies had every incentive to sue ...
Read 8 tweets
6 Feb
The Supreme Court rightly put a very high bar on success in libel suits for public people and entities. You have to be wrong. And you have to have known you were wrong or have had a malicious indifference to whether you were right or wrong. It's very hard to mete that ...
2/ standard. And even in the cases I can think of where juries have found for plaintiffs often it's a generous (toward the plaintiffs) interpretation of malice. The Smartmatic/Dominion cases are the first case at scale that seems almost to try out the Sullivan standard.
3/ Fox and various other pro-Trump entities made numerous, repeated and HIGHLY damaging claims which certainly in the cases of the institutions and almost certainly with the individuals (with Lindell he may simply be crazy) they were false.
Read 11 tweets
5 Feb
There’s an important lesson here. It is very credible that the White House denies Politicos claim that the Summers oped or Summers thinking is influencing their internal thinking because there’s basically nothing the White House has **done** to support that claim.
2/ Summers oped isn’t some big revelation or shift. (Indeed, as a separate matter the most interesting thing to me is how tepid his argument is.) with the knowledge of those views the WH has proposed a very large package, shown no inclination to meaningfully reduce ...
3/ the total package price, has said that inflation is basically a non-issue and that even in its own terms (which are not the primary terms of the argument) long term deficits will be lower with a big package now because a quicker return to growth etc.
Read 6 tweets
4 Feb
Good thread. Read it. GOPs have rapidly moved on to mocking people who were afraid during the violent assault on the capitol they fomented. This amounts to the first step toward their explicit endorsement of the insurrection. Perception of threat is inherently subjective.
2/ But the only thing any Republican member of Congress - with the possible exception of Mitt Romney - should say to @AOC is “I’m sorry because I [enter name of elected] personally helped incite the insurrection.” As I said, perception of threat is inherently subjective.
3/ But I would guess that the vast majority of the violent Republican insurgents who stormed the capitol could identify at most a handful of Democratic members of Congress. Probably every last one could identify two: Nancy Pelosi and AOC. Pelosi as part of the line ...
Read 6 tweets
30 Jan
AZ lawmakers who were in DC during the insurrection refuse public records request for emails/texts citing privacy and 5th Am right not to incriminate themselves. azcentral.com/story/news/pol…
2/ Lawmakers say "the threat of criminal prosecution gives rise to certain Constitutional rights that may overcome the duty to disclose otherwise public documents under Arizona’s public records law."
3/ "certain constitutional rights" 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Read 4 tweets
30 Jan
A telling illustration. On the right, failure to take elementary responsibility for one's actions becomes the basis of *new* threats and is used to stoke new grievances. It's a ratcheting cycle of unaccountability and menace. @tedcruz willfully stoked a climate of lies ...
2/ and aggression which led to a violent assault on the seat of government and at least five deaths. He's certainly not criminally responsible for those fatalities. But he bears a significant moral responsibility. His refusal to take any account of his own role only ...
3/ deepens the stain on him. He stoked that climate with claims he absolutely knew were lies and he didn't to advance his own career. We are already seeing numerous Republicans say that demands for accountability for what happened will lead to **new** violence.
Read 5 tweets

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