Behind the Bastards - The Man Who Pioneered Libraries and Sexual Harassment
Episode Date: February 8, 2022Robert is joined by Jamie Loftus to discuss John Dewey.FOOTNOTES; https://slate.com/human-interest/2019/09/melvil-dewey-american-libraryassociation-award-name-change.html https://americanlibrariesma...gazine.org/2018/06/01/melvil-dewey-bringingharassment-out-of-the-history-books/ https://bookriot.com/life-of-melvil-dewey/ https://bookriot.com/racism-in-the-dewey-decimal-system/ https://www.newyorkalmanack.com/2020/11/melvil-dewey-efficient-inventive-annoying-racistsexist/ https://www.history.com/news/the-father-of-modern-libraries-was-a-serial-sexualharasser https://daily.jstor.org/melvil-deweys-attempt-at-a-spelling-revolution/ https://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/melvil-dewey-the-womanizing-ocdlibrarian-who-organized-the-olympics/ https://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/2014/03/24/melvil-dewey-compulsiveinnovator/ https://web.archive.org/web/20081010135016/www.hwwilson.com/databases/PDFsample/WLB/dewey.pdf https://doi.org/10.5406/pluralist.7.3.0096 http://www.danielgreenfield.org/2019/07/the-progressive-feminist-whofounded.html?m=1 Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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What would you do if a secret cabal of the most powerful folks in the United States told you,
hey, let's start a coup? Back in the 1930s, a Marine named Smedley Butler was all that stood
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With the Soviet Union collapsing around him, he orbited the earth for 313 days that changed
the world. Listen to The Last Soviet on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get
your podcasts. All right. Hi, Robert. All right, Sophie. Do we need to do anything else?
No. All right. Well, this is Behind the Bastards podcast about the worst people in all of history.
This is our first recording session of 2020. What year is it, Jamie Loftus?
Two. It's 2022. 2022. Jamie, how is the new year treating you?
I mean, it's already been a roller coaster. The ups, the downs. I wish I was kidding. We just talked
about it off. We just did talk about it. We just had a wild catch-up session, and I guess we're just
going to have to let the listeners fill in the blanks for themselves. Yeah, this is behind the
bastards. This is behind the bastards. I just, I just, I missed you guys. Your brain, Jamie,
is like a library of different screenwriters. Speaking of that, how do you feel about libraries?
Do you understand the gift I sent you yesterday now, Jamie? Do you like libraries? Do you
big family libraries? I like libraries. I used to have, I used to scare my little brother with,
okay, this, the reason my little brother is not very well read. Sorry for calling him out. But
when I, I loved libraries when I was a kid, and then I told my, I made, I made up a weird lie
that I'm very proud of because I was very young when I made it up. I told my little brother,
yeah, I told my little brother that there's one book in every library and you don't know what
book it is. But if you pull it off the shelf, the whole library blows up. Oh, good. That's a good
one. And then he didn't go to the library and didn't read books. Oh, yeah. That's, that's a good one.
That's, that's, that's very ambitious. My, my favorite lie I've told the loved one is I,
I convinced someone I cared about very much that the band Hanson had died in a terrible bus crash.
And then like a year later at a party, somebody brought up Hanson, or I think that's one of
their songs started playing. And the, the person I had told this lie to was like, oh, it's so sad
that they died in that bus crash. And it was the funniest moment the world made. That is an incredible
lie because it is believable. Yeah. Cause where did Hanson go? Right? Yeah. Right. That kind of fell
off. Wow. I would believe that. I think that there would have been, and then I, because I know better,
because I keep up with Hanson, I'd be like, that's not true. But most people would believe that lie.
Most people would believe that the only way to really make yourself immune from those kind
of lies is to spend a lot of time at the library. Now, Jamie. Yeah. Have you ever heard of Melville
Dewey? Is that of, of the Dewey decibel system? Yup. Yup. Yup. I've heard of them. I know nothing
about them. Is he bad? Well, he's a tremendous piece of shit. Oh, this episode is titled Melville
Dewey library asshole. And it's about Melville Dewey. And this is, this is going to be interesting.
We're taking a little bit of a, a different sort of task than we do with most of our episodes
are about bad people who do bad things, right? But sometimes like there are bad people who make
broadly good things. And the opposite is true too, right? Like you look into the atomic bomb project
and a lot of the dudes who were like responsible for that were basically decent men who were either
like the war was so bad, they thought it was, you know, necessary, or they were just overwhelmed
by scientific fascination. They weren't like monsters. They were just like guys who because of,
you know, wound up contributing despite the fact that they were basically decent to something
that wound up being terrible. That shit happens. And the opposite happens. Like people who are
shitty can make good things. I'm sure like being Carson. George W. Bush's art. George W. Bush's art.
Beautiful, perfect art. No notes. Yeah. So this is a story about a terrible man whose
influence was not entirely, but like probably broadly positive, although we'll talk about
some ways in which the Dewey Decimal System reinforces racism, which I did not know and
I found fascinating. I don't know this either. He was an extremely influential man and his
achievements were significant parts of the foundation of like the global library systems,
right? So like nations around the world that have national and public libraries,
almost all of them, pretty much all of them owe some sort of a debt to the way Melville Dewey,
not just the Dewey Decimal System, but other kind of library infrastructure,
he was one of the people who helped to come up with. I feel like those bookstores as well.
Like don't use it directly, but definitely influence by it. Yeah. Yeah. There's probably
a couple of billion people who have been alive that could credit some degree of their education
or at least their love of reading to the work of Melville Dewey. That's like a significant legacy
for anybody. Melville was also a real, real unpleasant motherfucker. Yeah. So Melville Lewis
Coseth Dewey was born on December 10th, 1851 in Adams Center, upstate New York. At the time,
this was known as the burned over district due to the fact that successive waves of evangelical
Christian movements had swept the area repeatedly during the half century before Melville's birth.
The burned over district gave us Mormonism, Millerism, the Oneida Colony, a huge influential
chunks of the suffrage and abolitionist movement, as well as the temperance movement.
So it was like, this is a place where a lot of these like major social movements in the U.S.
kind of repeatedly, if it's not the only place where they start, it's one of the places where
they really get their start. It was also not an easy place to live. This is not like comfortable
country. It's a heart. Like if you think about like upstate New York and like what the weather is
like there and how difficult it can be to subsist in like the winter there with modern technology,
it's like a rough motherfucking place to be a human being. Even with modern technology,
it fucking sucks. There's difficulties. Yeah. One Wilson library bulletin right up that I found
refers to it as a hard-bitten country, quote, where survival was the goal and adherence to the
basic codes of industry, frugality, and self-reliance were the guideposts. In other words,
Millville was born into a part of the world where influential people regularly set out to
fundamentally change major aspects of the world around them. And it was also a place where working
people had thin margins for success or failure and precision and efficiency were crucial. So this
is kind of what is molding him as a person is this place where like not only is this place where
people set out to change everything on a pretty regular basis, but also it's a place where you
learn as a kid you've got to be your shit's got to be on point, you know, like there's not that
margins here. You have to be a high achieving person in order to continue living. To keep your
house warm. You have to be industrious and shit. You have to be fucking on your shit to not die.
Right. Yeah. Okay. That makes sense then for the region. Yeah, it really does. Millville's parents
were boot makers and boot sellers. Now, some sources will claim that they were the hardest
working people in town, although it's quite likely this has its origin in the various
hagiographies of Dewey rather than objective reality. Like, I mean, that just sounds like an
American origin story. Yeah. They were the best at the thing. They were the hardest workers in the
town. And you know, maybe it's because he said that and that's just he was the only person from
his town who lived long enough that people cared about what he said about the past. I don't know.
Well, as we all know, in this era, the best of the most shoes were coming out of my hometown,
Brockton, Massachusetts, aka, shoe city. So it's kind of hard to say that they were the hardest.
New Jersey. Because it's shoe city, Massachusetts, whatever.
Shoes, it's Robert. Taxi, Jersey. Kiss my ass.
So his parents were not very affectionate or emotionally engaged. And Dewey inherited from
them a maniacal work ethic and what some might call a robotic attitude towards productivity
and efficiency, right? Yeah, he's one of these people who's just like he's like a machine the
way that he works. Now, at age five, he took it upon himself to take an inventory of his mother's
spice cabinet. He decided that she was basically a messy motherfucker and like, this isn't efficient
at all. You've done a terrible job of organizing your spice cabinet, mom. And as a five year old,
he rearranges everything without asking her. This is the first story you'll hear about what will
become a lifelong predilection for what he called self improvement activities. He's obsessed with
organizing things, making them more efficient. And even as I wonder if that is actually true,
because that just sounds like something you would make up about the guy who would go on to invent
the Dewey decimal system. He couldn't stop organizing things. It's like when you find out
Chuck E. Cheese was an orphan and you're like, yeah, well, that's an interesting detail.
You mean Charles Alexander? Charles entertainment cheese? Yes. He was an orphan. And then he
became a rat who smoked a cigar, you know, classic American origin story. Yeah, really,
really evidence of the, yeah, sorry. Do you think he was organizing spices or do you think that
that's kind of like a psychology? So I have to think back to our Jeff Bezos episodes,
which kind of start with very similar stories about him when he's like seven or eight years
old doing this stuff, like grading his teachers and his parents and like this very analytical,
like, and it, you know, it's the same question I have with Bezos. I think it's a little more
likely that the stories are real just because you hear them from like they come from people who were
like his adults around him when he was a kid. But so I don't know, like maybe Dewey made them up,
but also like maybe he and Bezos are just kind of similar people and there's kids who have that
kind of mind. But I think the fact that Dewey and Bezos that like there's elements of their
childhood of like their childhood isn't similar because Dewey grows up in a very difficult
part of the world and Bezos does not. But they both kind of have this organization brain where
they're kind of obsessed with efficiency. That does sound kind of similar to me. And I kind of
am inclined to think that there might be some truth to the spice cabinet story just because,
yeah, there's there's there's people like that, you know, maybe. Now, his parents were successful
enough that they could afford to pay him for doing his chores. The first product he remembered
saving up to buy with his money was an unabridged dictionary, which he had to walk 10 miles in
order to purchase. Now, weird kid, that part of the story may be apocryphal, the 10 miles part,
because Dewey was obsessed with the number 10. And he may have retroactively inserted it into
his past and later recollections because he was just like absolutely obsessed with the number 10.
And with like decimals with based to like all this kind of stuff, he fucking loves 10 big,
big, huge 10 nerd. Yeah, as a teenager, Melville extended his organizational mind to the family
business. From a 1981 write up in the Wilson Library bulletin, quote, he made a thorough
analysis of his father's store, proved its business of inefficiencies and made arrangements for the
transfer of its inventory to its competitor down the street. Apparently, Joel Dewey accepted
his son's criticism. He closed the store. So his dad both made shoes and stole them and Dewey's like,
this isn't efficient. You should just be making shoes. You're not good at selling them. Like,
let's have a competitor down the street sell the shoes and focus entirely on manufacturing. And for
whatever, whatever else is going on, his dad is like, yeah, I guess that makes sense.
See, I for some reason, I do believe that over the story because I feel like there are some parents
that I don't know. I did my parents were asking me for a marriage advice way too young. And like,
they were just like, how do you feel about how this is? And I'm like, well, I'm six,
and I'm not having a good time, you know? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, my parents asked me if they should
cash their 401ks out to buy beanie babies. And I said, absolutely. You say, yes, this bubble
is never going to burst, baby. And that's why you're the world's most famous economist. That's
why I got him putting all their money into NFTs now. Stop it. So high school is when Dewey grew
first grew obsessed with the number 10. And it was as he learned about, so he's in high school
and he learns about the metric system. And he's just like, oh, this is so much better than the
way that we count things in America. I fucking love the metric system. The thing that was
particularly striking Dan was that his birthday was December 10th, 1851, which was exactly 52
years after the French assembly adopted the meter bar as a standard unit of measurement.
I don't know why he found that meaningful, but he found that intensely meaningful.
Whatever, go figure. How do you even find that out? How do you even, like, what? I don't know.
Well, I mean, that's an important moment in the development of the metric system, like deciding
what a meter is, like that is meaningful. I feel like that's like his version of astrology,
though. Some people have moments with astrology where they're like, yes, this means this means
this means this. And this is just like his weirdo version of that. Yeah, he just he fucking loves
the metric system. He loves decimal shit. He loves the number 10. He's just that's, it's a thing for
him. That's his father, son, Holy Ghost. Yeah, it's fine. When he was 16, Melville started attending
the Hungerford Collegiate Institute, which is a college prep school. Now, this is a period,
kind of the mid to late 1800s. This is when college starts to become vastly more common,
right? For a long time, it had just a bit like you had, if you were very rich and powerful,
if you were in the aristocracy, you would go to college and like a man, obviously.
The 1800s is when that starts to change and college becomes something that like the middle
class and like people who are rich, but not of the aristocracy can reasonably expect to experience.
The number of colleges, wait a second, we've extorted every class for this semi useful thing.
I don't know if they're even extorted because, right, like it is, I think more reasonably,
I don't know what how it is at this point. I know when my parents went to college,
it was the kind of thing you could accidentally pay for if you had a decent job bartending.
Yeah, that is how my parents went to school. Yeah, the number of colleges, I think it is,
I don't think it's quite, I think it is still pretty expensive at that point. Obviously, there's
not as many colleges. The number of colleges actually doubles in the first half of the 1800s.
And so by the time Melville starts prep school, it's become much more common to go to college,
but it was still not the norm for teen boys to prepare for higher learning. In fact,
the fact that he goes to high school means that he's gotten more education than most kids probably
could expect to get in the United States. My fucking grandfather never made it past the fourth
grade because the Great Depression happened, right? Like that wasn't abnormal in that period.
So the fact that he makes it to this is both a mark of the fact that his family has some money.
They're certainly not rich, but like they're comfortable enough that they can afford this
sacrifice. And also, he's obviously brilliant. You do not, in this period of time, just for bragging
rights, put your kid in this kind of program. You do it if they're like, well, this kid has
a mind that everyone around us has noted, and we have to get him into a college.
This kid's doing shit with spices since he was in...
This kid's organizing spices. Get him in a college.
...a program.
Yeah. So during his first year of prep school, there's a terrible fire in the building. And
Dewey risks his life to rescue not other classmates, but as many armed loads of books as he could
manage. And he almost dies doing this. Like that's how dedicated this kid is to books,
which I do find admirable, honestly. I would rescue people first, but I don't know that there
were people in danger. I was going to say, I mean, there is an asterisk, but at its core...
They may have all gotten out. I didn't hear that anyone died in the fire. I don't know.
That would be funny if he was running past people who were burning alive.
He kept kicking people to get books out.
No, we got to get these R.L. Steins out of here. He was an author in the 1800s, right?
Yeah, absolutely. But yeah, he inhales enough smoke, saving as much of the library as he could
that he gets bedridden for like six months. And his doctor actually warns his parents that
he's probably going to die. Obviously, he does not.
Are you really going to be like a great person one day, quote unquote, if you don't have a
long childhood illness? That is such a common thing. You're just going to lay in bed and be like,
wow, life really is fragile, isn't it? And then you go on to do the most horrific
shit you can think of. Yeah, I think it's worth noting that,
like, I think probably most kids have a near-death experience in the mid-1800s, right?
That's true. I would have such a failure complex if I had a long childhood illness
and then went on to be a regular person, because it just seems like you have to be
prussed after that. I don't know.
Yeah, that's the only way. That's why we have so many prusses.
So for Dewey, this experience drives home the almighty importance of efficiency. He believes
that death could come at any time, which obviously it can, and you needed to get as much done as
possible before you die. Before he graduates from high school, Dewey gives a speech to his
classmates about how wasting time is immoral. As a graduation present, he buys himself cufflinks.
Sorry, that wasn't nice.
No, it's not. As a graduation present, he buys himself cufflinks inscribed with the letter R,
which meant reformer. So there you go.
Okay, I'm going to get a t-shirt that says, I'm going to get a bunch of A's. I'm like,
it's because I'm awesome. What a weird man, all right.
He's a weird man. Also, like, whatever. Nothing bad, yeah.
No, I'm just hearing a weird teenager is on the list.
He's definitely a little bit of a weird teenager, right?
Yeah, a weird virgin is on the loose, which does not usually lead to good things, I will say.
Oh, Reddit's going to get angry at that one, Jamie.
No, cut it out, Chris. Cut it out. Cut it out. Cut it out. I don't want them to get mad at me.
You know what else Reddit gets angry about, Jamie?
Oh, what?
The products and services support this podcast.
They do, probably. I mean, yeah.
Please don't yell at me, Reddit. I'm sorry. I called weird virgins angry.
Jamie loves virgins. I don't say that.
Do whatever you want. Do whatever you want.
Or don't do whatever you want.
Or don't do whatever you want.
Sure.
And now I'm flashing my R cuff links so you know that I'm serious.
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Oh, man, we are back. Those were some products. Those were some products and might have been a service
or two, to be honest. I can't say it wasn't a service or two. That I certainly wouldn't argue.
So we've got a teen on the loose. We've got a teen on the loose. Melville Dewey is out in the
motherfucking wild. And by the wild, I mean, Alfred University. That's where he gets accepted after
high school. Before he leaves home, he changes his name from Melville, M-E-L-V-I-L-L-E, you know,
the way that people spell Melville, to M-E-L-V-I-L, which he considered more efficient.
No way. Oh, this goes real far, Jamie. Yeah.
He trimmed off the last two letters? He trimmed off two letters? Yeah, to make it more efficient.
You don't need that last L and E. You can pronounce Melville fine without them.
He's like, phonetically, it still works. It's just wasted time and space.
I'm kind of loving him. It's very funny. Yeah.
At this phase in his life, I feel like we would have been friends in high school.
I feel like I would have been exhausted by him, but I am exhausted by him just reading about him.
So as a university student, he continues his old habits.
He was offended by the fact that many of his classmates smoked cigars,
which he thought was financially inefficient. And he calculated that their smoking habits
would cost them each an average of $15,000 over the course of a lifetime.
He tried to tell people this, but I don't think it actually made anyone stop smoking.
No, it just got his ass beat. What?
It's where Bezos did kind of the same thing with his fucking grandma.
Oh, right. Yeah. Yeah. Jesus.
It's just this like, just a lot of people do. It's the 18 fucking what's like 60s.
Like life is terrible. He's got 50 years to live max anyways.
Yeah, top. And it's going to suck for most of that. Let him smoke.
They're not going to live long enough to get throat cancer. Come on.
They're going to die because they touched a nail wrong.
So at any rate, Dewey quickly transferred to Amherst College.
He was inspired by their physical education program, which was one of the best in the world.
But once he gets there, he doesn't actually enroll in any sports classes.
The only athletic course he took was horseback riding because it was more efficient,
because it would get him to class faster.
Oh my God.
Which is like a weird series of decisions to make.
I kind of love it. I mean, I, I, I love a singular goal.
Yeah. I mean, this one is going, I, you can already tell the goal of efficiency is going to,
is going to slide at some point and get very scary. But right now it's still fun.
I would also argue that horseback riding isn't a sport. Look, there are two sports.
One of them is that, that game they play in Afghanistan with goat heads on horseback,
where they kill each other sometimes. And the other is, I don't know.
Hot dog eating.
Hot dog eating. Those are the two, another analysis of sport.
Fuck you if you disagree. You know, that's what I got to say.
So the official stance.
PE does not wind up appealing to him in practice.
But Amherst had another boom, another boon for him.
It had a kind of shitty library that didn't have enough employees to keep it organized.
And this is sort of this thing that you see in a lot of really successful people where
they find like a system they're interested in and they find like it's not being,
they find it neglected. I think if he'd gone to a college with a better library,
his life might have been totally different. But the best thing that happens is that Amherst's
library kind of sucks. And it's kind of underfunded because they're so into PE.
So he's able to apply for a job there and he gets one and immediately sets to reforming
the way the library is organized. So this is like a hugely influential part of his life that
Amherst hadn't really put much time into it.
So he started this as a teenager.
Yeah, I mean, I think he's got to be like 19 or 20, you know, when he gets into this.
And I'm going to read a quote from that right up in the Wilson Library bulletin.
In that era, library books often were housed according to a numbering system that indicated
the floor, aisle, section and shelf on which they were stored. Whenever rearrangement was
necessary, all of the books had to be reclassified. Perceiving the amount of time wasted not only
in finding books when they were needed, but in their necessary and frequently reclassification,
Dewey was determined to devise a simple, workable and permanent classification system.
While attending a chapel service at Amherst, he suddenly conceived of the idea of using a system
of Arabic numerals with decimals for book classification. The scope of the plan put
all printed human knowledge into the 10 classifications of a numerical system ranging
from 0000 to 900 and made use of as many decimals within each group as were needed to define
adequately the content of the book being classified. So I'm guessing it has something to do with the
way like Bible verses are numbered that started this, like that would be my guess as to why it
happens in a chapel. But this is like, it makes sense, you know, he's the guy, it makes sense
based on what we know of his childhood that like this is the thing he decides to do.
It literally sounds like the culmination of everything he's given a shit about his entire life.
Yeah. Yeah. Now, Dewey was 21 years old when he invented the Dewey Decimal System.
He was very quickly, people very immediately recognized, oh, this is a way better way to
have a library be organized and he's given a job. Do we know how it was organized before?
Yeah, I just said that. Like they kind of had... Oh, just like the previous way, okay.
Yeah, the previous way was like books, like books had a numbering system that like
told you where in the library, in that specific library they were stored. Right. Which meant
that like when you have to reclassify everything regularly when you change the library or like
if you get a bunch of new stuff and like every library has a different system. So you never
know where to find things. If you go from one library to the other, it's a totally different
system. Okay. So this just like standardized it than anything could use it. Yeah, it standardizes
it. It makes it much simpler and easier for anyone to find books. If you know, you don't have to
know the library. If you know the system, you can find the books, right? And people at Amherst
like are immediately like, oh, this is a fucking great idea. So he's given a job, he's like promoted
and is now like helping to run the entire library. And he spends the next couple of years refining
his idea until he was ready to patent it in 1876. Dewey's innovation was immediately appreciated
and his 40 page manifesto spread rapidly among institutes of higher learning who adopted it
one by one. So far, so good, right? Like he comes up with a better way to make libraries be organized.
Everybody is pretty much instantly like, well, this is great. And they do it. I mean, yeah,
it's we still have, you know, efficiency manifesto there. But yes, yeah, I'm not saying he would
have been a fun dude at a party, but like it's so far pretty reasonable. But in terms of the work,
it seems like he's doing good. Yeah, nobody has any qualms with Dewey at this point. Here's the
problem though. And this is a problem with the system he devises. I don't know how much you
want to categorize it as a moral problem because a lot of this is the result of where the culture
he's raised in. Where does where do moral problems go in the Dewey decimal system? Is there not a
section? We're about to talk about that a lot. So Dewey didn't just see himself as creating a
way to organize knowledge. The system he devised was deeply tied in with his beliefs about hierarchy.
And I'm going to quote from the website Book Riot here. It's important to remember the reasons
that Dewey wanted public libraries to be a thing in the first place. He was no altruist. He believed
that people and concepts belonged in certain places in society and that in those places they
must stay. Poor people, for example, needed to be content with non-unionized factory work. Christianity
was the only real religion, as for non-white people, was there really a need to address them
at all. Now, these are not radical beliefs at the time, but Dewey's status as an innovator allowed
him to codify them into the structure of libraries. And we can see this today in how the Dewey decimal
system treats religions. Book Riot continues, quote, the two hundreds encompass all religion
nominally, although the problems with this premise are obvious. Each Dewey heading encompasses
10 major subjects, dividing each up by subtopics that add digits to the end of the number.
Six of the 10 subjects in the two hundreds are explicitly for Christianity related subjects.
Three of those remaining are either explicitly or implicitly Judeo-Christian. Finally, at the
bottom of the heap, the two nineties cover other religions. Islam, Baha'i, and Babism all get to
share 297. Germanic religions get 293. All religions of Indic origins, in other words, Hinduism,
Jainism, and Buddhism get to share 294. Hinduism gets all of 294.5 to itself. How generous.
299 covers everything else. And we're going to focus on this a bit because it's the most glaring
example of racism in the Dewey decimal system. You see where I'm going with this. Religions,
Dewey associated with people of color ended up with way less space than the real faith.
Not convinced? Fine. There's a section in the two hundreds just for black people.
The entire 299.6 subdivision is for religions originating among black Africans and people of
black African descent. In fact, everything about African religion of Haitians and Haiti
can be fit into 299.6097294 according to the DDS because at some point someone for some reason
decided that Haitian religions originating from black people were not as important as
Germanic religions originating from white ones. Well, it's like we know who decided that,
correct? Well, parts of it where I don't even think he thought about Haitian religions, right?
So like he devises the system aspects of it are kind of like codified by other people,
but he does kind of start this trend. This is fascinating because it's like we've both walked
past this problem a million times and never really considered it. Everyone has. This is like,
yeah, the biases are so, so glaring. Wow. Okay. Sorry. Continue. This is why.
I've heard it argued that this is less of an issue now for a variety of reasons,
largely due to computers and the way that's kind of changed how libraries work.
But for decades, book catalogers would have to print or write the actual numbers of the
Dewey numbers on the spine of a book. It was rarely practical to write a cutter number as long as,
say, 0.6097294, right? You just don't have the room. So catalogers would shop that number down
to three or four digits. So a book about Haitian religion would get sliced down to 299.609 or
299.6, which would mean it gets lumped in with all black religions. Now, this is gross, but it
also has really practical concerns. Quote, once local cataloging conventions reduce it to 299.609
or 299.6, its author's last name will determine where it goes on the shelf. At that point,
it won't be with other books about Haitian religion. So people who look for it will need to comb
through every book about black non-Abrahamic religions alphabetically by author. Instead
of using the system as a discovery tool, they'll need to know exactly what they're looking for
right down to the correct spelling of the author's last name. Thus, do people of color get lost in the
Dewey system? The problem with the 200s occurs again in the 300s, where almost everything about
people of color can be classified under 305.8, ethnic and national groups. Within this subheading,
Germanic peoples again get a relatively clean cutter, 305.82, to be exact. Meanwhile, 305.895
covers all East and South Asian peoples. You can probably extrapolate the problems with stuff in
close to 2 billion people. This is really fascinating. If you think about it for a minute,
you're like, oh, of course colonialism and all of this person's deeply held prejudices are
naturally filtering into the system, but it's just not one I've ever
thought about for more than a minute, I guess. It's the kind of thing. It is the kind of thing
when we talk about what makes someone a bastard. His goal was not to exclude people of color. His
goal was not to reinforce racism. He was just trying to organize books and he was also a guy
who just did not think about this kind of thing because he was very much in the biases of the
system. He was not in this. He was not being actively racist. It's more a matter of like,
because of who he is and the culture he comes from and the fact that he's very much bought into
that culture. He doesn't think about any of these things and his racism winds up being part of
structurally the system that organizes libraries. Right. I mean, it's like a different kind of
insidious because I agree with you. It doesn't sound like anything, at least anything he's said.
It's not hateful. This is not the result of him being hateful. It's a result of like,
he just doesn't think about these people. I feel like it's a strong case for why systems like this
and obviously it's like... We talk about systemic racism. This is what we're talking about. One of
the things. Systems like this, it can't be just one guy making them because then it's just going
to reflect the worldview of one guy. Yeah. I'm kind of making this. I'm not trying to like,
we need to be fair to do it. I'm trying to say, this alone, I wouldn't have a behind the bastards on
Dewey even though this is a really significant... Probably some of the bastards we've done have
contributed less evil to the world than this kind of structural racism in the Dewey system does.
Intentionally or not. Yeah. But there was no... There needs to be some sort of intent,
some sort of actual evil for me to really want to dig into someone in this way and that's coming.
That is not this part of it because again, this is more the result of just he's
a racist like everyone else but not hateful. I will say that I did read the first paragraph
of his Wikipedia page and so I feel like I have a little charcuterie board of what's to come.
Oh boy. Some fun stuff, Jamie. Wow, wow, wow. Does that paragraph end? Not like I was expecting.
It's quite a tale. The story of Melville Dewey. So obviously, this is when we talk about
the harms Dewey perpetuated. This is the big one, right? And this is a really significant harm.
But we haven't got to the part yet where he is choosing actively to hurt people. That's a common.
So, in 1876, Dewey left Amherst for Boston. By this point, his interest in efficiency had
expanded to developing an entirely new, more efficient system of spelling, which he claimed
could cut three years off from the time necessary to educate a child. He wrote in one paper and
I'm going to read what he's saying first and then I'm going to read how it's spelled, okay?
He wrote, just think of what else you could learn in those years. And he spelled it JST,
think is spelled normally, of is spelled U-V and instead of O-F, which I don't understand.
Now, that's more efficient. What is spelled W-A-T? Else is spelled E-L-S. U is of course
spelled with just the letter U. Could is spelled C-U-D. Learn and in are spelled normally. And
then those are spelled T-H-O-Z years of Y-R-N. So, like, a lot of it is him like texting basically.
He sounds like he's on Tumblr. He sounds like he's on Tumblr. That is so funny.
It's really funny. He's so, like, the library guy, like, spells like a 16-year-old texting in 2004.
It's very funny. Look, he's curating a Lolita fashion blog. Oh, my God, that's so funny.
And, like, all of his personal letters are like this. They all read like he's a high school student
when, like, Hannah Montana is on TV. What's up? Like, it's very funny. What's up? Melville here?
I love it. Oh, God, I hate that he's a bastard. That's so fucking funny. It's extremely funny.
It's extremely funny that, like, the father of libraries hated spelling with a passion.
I think that's, see, that's the kind of ed-floored attitude I can get behind.
And you'll notice here, again, he's spelled O-F-U-V, which isn't more efficient, but that's
the reason he hated the original spelling of it. His issue with English isn't just that it's
inefficient. He also doesn't like the way a lot of words are spelled. He doesn't think it makes
any sense. I think that that's a reasonable argument, though. Yeah. I mean, sure. Yeah. In 1886,
he creates a group called the Spelling Reform Association out of a desire to regularize American
spelling. And then that's the line. That's the line, right? That's a bit much. How does he spell
the spelling of a reformer? How does he spell his group? I mean, it was spelled normally where I
found it, but I'm sure he had his ideas. I bet that they're like numerals and emojis. Yeah.
Mm-hmm. Very funny. He would have loved emojis. This is so efficient.
He would have loved. He's like, an entire emotion for Italians in one emoji.
Oh, God. So, in this quest, he was less successful. People do not jump on the spell-like
Melville Dewey train. At one point, Dewey shortens his surname to DUI, which he has to give up,
I think because his bank won't recognize his checks. But it's funny. Like, theoretically,
if people had agreed to let him do this, we would all be talking about the DUI decimal system,
which I find funny. That is funny. And it also is, I mean, I feel like, again, it's like, he's
just so wildly ahead of his time in naming conventions and spelling specifically because
he's, you're describing like internet talk and like how soundcloud rappers name themselves.
Yeah. He would have been a great soundcloud rapper, for sure.
I think that that's safe to say. Yes, for sure. Yeah. He and XXXTentacion, whatever that guy's
name was, would have been best friends. No, they wouldn't have. He was very racist. So.
Jesus Christ. Continue the story, please. Yeah. Melville launches a company to sell
library supplies, including the hanging vertical file. This is when he moves to Boston.
And he invents the hanging vertical file, which is a big part of how libraries work.
Kind of, I think. Yeah. In his first year in the city, he organized a librarian convention that
led directly to the founding of the American Library Association, which exists to this day.
He helps to found the ALA. The convention is where he meets his wife, Annie Godfrey,
who is a librarian from Wellesley University. Now, the fact that he meets his wife at a
professional convention as a co-worker and then like hits on her and marries her was not seen as
problematic at the time. Sure. But I did find an excerpt from a glowing write-up in 1981 of
Melville Dewey that talks about this and has what you might notice some red flags in it.
Okay. Dewey attended the event, as did Annie Godfrey, the librarian at Wellesley College,
the single-purposed business like Mr. Dewey did not surprise those of his acquaintance,
who recognized him as a ladies man when he later married this young woman.
Now, 1981, none of the bad stuff about Dewey is really popularly talked about. He's still
kind of louded as the hero of the library world. But as a general rule, not always,
because to talk about Jeff Bezos, met his wife at work. She insists she was the one who started
things. I've never heard any evidence of him being creepy to people at work. Bill Gates,
on the other hand, also meets his wife at work. A ton of women found him very creepy at work.
I was going to say, there's no shortage there.
So, just the fact that he meets his wife at a library convention, not inherently creepy,
but spoilers, he's a creepy sex pest. Yeah. Yeah. He is not a ladies man. He is a sexual
harasser. But I do see, I mean, I think that ladies man was code for sexual harassment.
That is probably fair to say. Very, very recently. Maybe the past five years even.
Yeah. Now, I get ahead of myself a little bit though. So, Dewey founds the American Library
journal around the same time, which he edits. And his ideas through this journal kind of
sweep through the field. He continues after starting the decimal system to have a huge
influence on the, because this is the period in which libraries are really becoming like a thing
in public and not just in the United States. And he is maybe the most influential person
in this period. He's a library influencer. He literally is Gen Z, but he's going to get cancelled.
He's, oh boy, is he going to get cancelled, Jamie? I don't know what happened. We'll get
into the way he gets cancelled. It's pretty remarkable. So, pretty soon though, his ideas
sweep the field and in quick order, his decimal system and his other innovations are standard,
not just nationwide, but all over the world, it starts to happen. In 1883, he gets a job at
Columbia University and he moves his family to New York so he could found the Columbia School of
Library Economy. Now, this was probably Dewey's great feminist icon moment because he encourages
women to apply to Columbia to become librarians, even though women are banned from attending the
school. This 1981 article, the Wilson Library Bolton article, which is very positive towards him,
notes, Dewey was firmly convinced that women were destined to become librarians and that his
goal was to help them achieve this destiny. He simply ignored the rules and he seemed oblivious
to the fact that his endeavor was further frowned upon because his enrollment questionnaire,
which obviously had not been screened by higher authorities, required an information as to the
applicant's weight, height, and color of hair and eyes, as well as the suggestion that a photograph
be included. I know, right? I was like, that's, and then she's lost. The start is like, oh,
he's fighting for women to be able to have a career. That's, oh, no, no, no, no. That's so,
oh God, that's so fascinating too, because it's like, I mean, it's just, it just takes one pervert
to change an industry, doesn't it? Because you do like associate, I feel like almost, I mean,
I at least associate librarian as a traditionally feminine job, but also it is like a highly
skilled job and requires a lot of training and degrees. And it's because he was horny.
It's because he's horny. One could argue it's, broadly speaking, positive that he's this horny
weirdo and thus does this. You can be horny for good. I would say he's horny for good.
I would say that accidentally the outcome of this is more positive than negative.
And this is stating the obvious, but systemically, someone shouldn't have,
some weird guy shouldn't have to get horny for women to get a college education.
No, of course not. Of course not. But I see what you're saying.
Yeah. And when he's asked to explain why he requires photographs for applicants to the
library program, his explanation is you cannot polish a pumpkin.
Can you unpack that for me?
Yeah. If they're ugly, he doesn't want to let him into the program.
No, that's what that means. Yeah.
That reminds me of when I was working on the Kathy podcast, there was like this whole,
and this is like talk from like the 70s and 80s, like this whatever this attitude existed
until very recently of like secretaries also like front facing skilled jobs that are underpaid
and traditionally by women. And like, yeah, this whole concept of like,
you have to have a front desk look, like you have to, like you looking good makes the whole
business more appealing, even though it's like, well, you're just, you're doing a skilled job.
You shouldn't have to also worry about making some weird guy horny and dealing.
But it sounds like that's going to be a big problem.
Right? Yeah. Nobody, nobody asks me to look nice to do my job.
I do, but you ignore it.
I definitely do.
I keep sending you emails. I should be fired. I'm like a robber.
I am a rumbling piece of shit most days. So the fact that Melville Dewey decided that
women were destined to be librarians had a number of reverberating positive impacts.
For generations, the field was a way for independent women to find work in a way to
support themselves independent of a father or a husband. The career field provided opportunities
for single women and mothers. Like a lot of, I think a lot of women who are like,
not straight are able to find ways to be more independent because this is a career path that
are open to them. And to this day, about 79% of librarians are women. Like, right? It's very
positive that there is a professional, reasonably well paid way job that is seen as like a job a
woman can get that isn't that like that's good in this time. It gives you access to higher
education. Yeah. Right. Absolutely. That's positive. That's not nothing. Yeah.
And he does get fired from Columbia for accepting women because that's not their policy. Like,
so he's he was so horny. He got fired. He was so horny. He got fired for equality.
And he's also like a suffrage advocate later in life. Like that's not, he's not.
I know. I know. He's not all horny. He's not all horny, but he's largely horny.
And he was he was definitely not a believer in basic mental equality between men and women
in an 1886 speech titled librarianship as a profession for college bred women. And we'll
talk about that term in a second. Do we noted that while women who had been bred well enough to get
a college education were intelligent and could be librarians, they were not reliable employees.
He warned that they were likely to get sick or to quit the job to pursue a home life.
This wasn't a reason not to hire them, he argued, but it was reason to pay them less than men for
the same work. He added that men deserved more money because they were better able to quote,
lift a heavy case or climb a ladder. There were many uses for which a stout corduroy is really
worth more than the finest silk. Oh, and also always says his like bigoted statement in the
creepiest way possible. Stout corduroy and the finest silk. I'm like, oh, God, I mean,
I'm going to stop calling him a virgin. But like, you know, he's married. I just, yeah, that's
gross. That's gross. It is. It is. It is definitely a way to describe your sexism that seems unique
to me. I'm sure other dudes in the time we're doing it. It's fascinating. I mean, I mean,
speaking of Reddit, men on Reddit are describing genders like that as we speak. They're slapping
their hands across. Oh my God. We would have killed it. This guy would have killed it on the
internet in all the worst ways. My question is how did that pay breakdown work? Do you have
any information on that? Like how much less were... I don't have specific breakdowns on this. And I
don't think he was advocating in numbers. He was just saying like, of course, you're not going to
pay women as much to do... Oh, he was like, well, obviously women shouldn't be paid equal for equal
work. But that said, I'm horny. He doesn't believe it's equal work because they can't lift.
Sheesh. Now, starting in the 1880s and continuing for nearly half a century,
Dewey also engaged in a pattern of behavior against his female colleagues that his biographer,
Wayne Wygan, described as, quote, unwelcome hugging, unwelcome touching, and certainly unwelcome kissing.
In a 2018 interview with the American Libraries magazine, Wygan said this,
was there an element of power in his behavior? There was. To my knowledge, he never squeezed
a woman who was his equal. It was usually subordinates. And when Wygan says equal, he's not being
sexist. He's talking about like within the structures of the institutions, right? So not
only is he sexually harassing women, but he's only sexually harassing women who are lower
positioned than him in the organizations that they work in. I mean, and not that it's okay.
Like that's... No, obviously not. Because it's like you shouldn't sexually harass anyone,
but that implies a level of strategy to women who cannot retaliate.
That makes it more predatory, right? Like it's more predatory if you are going,
if you are thinking about the position of the women that you are sexually harassing, you know?
Yeah. And I mean, and he's a very like, I mean, just based on what we know about him
and how his brain works, he's a very deliberate and strategic person. And I think it stands
to reason that he would have thought something like that. Absolutely. Yeah. This is further,
we don't have as, you know, the kind of granular detail, obviously, you get about a guy like Harvey
Weinstein and what he was doing, because this is happening in the 1880s, you know, like you just
don't have most of these reports. But the information we do get, I think it makes it clear
that he is predatory in his behavior towards female support. It feels like you should have
his reports because he writes like he's I am-ing people, but you don't. We do have a lot. Like
it is, it is a mark of what a sexual harasser he was that we have quite a bit of detail
of a guy sexually harassing women in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
This is kind of unusual to hear of sexual harassment with detail from this era specifically.
This is another important thing worth noting. The racism that kind of gets baked into the
Dewey Decimal System that's in his head is not exceptional for his time. The level to which
he sexually harasses women is seen by his peers as exceptional and unsettling.
That in the- In the late 1800s, yeah. Women can't vote. Oh my God.
Yeah. And other dudes are being like, this guy is really not, this is not okay.
Like- Putting their arms around their wives, they forced to marry them being like,
babe, I'd never do that to you. Yeah. Oh my God. Like that is the kind of sexual harasser
that he is. Like it is noted at the time as being exceptional. Okay. That's not good.
Yeah. In 1905, Millville takes a cruise to Alaska with a number of his colleagues at the
American Library Association. This is after a big convention. The cruise was meant as a place for
them to like- They had this big convention. Now we're going to kind of start laying out
our plans for next year. And over the course of a few days, Dewey, who is, I should note,
six feet tall, which is very tall for the time, sexually harasses and like physically
goes after four different female ALA members on a cruise ship.
God. Now- I like, I do feel comforted by the fact that I'm the same height as him,
because I'm looking at a picture of him. Oh, you can kick his ass. No, yeah. Absolutely.
I was like, I can kick these guys ass. No problem. Not even an issue.
Because again, motherfucker didn't lift. So over the course- In spite of the fact that he was a
stout corduroy, he couldn't lift for shit. The impact of Dewey's sexual harassment is perhaps
best illustrated by the story of Adelaide Hass, who is to this, like now a very influential fit,
like helps, I think to a similar extent to Dewey, build the concept of like how libraries function,
what a librarian should do. There's like books about her. She's like a very influential female
librarian. I've never heard of her. Yeah. I mean, librarians, right? Like how much do you hear about
influential librarians as a rule? But yeah. I guess that's true. But I think people might want
to look into Adelaide Hass, if you're interested in this history. And she, when early on in her
career, she crosses paths with Melville, also in 1905. And I'm going to read a quote from
history.com about what happens next. As a young woman, she struggled to be taken seriously by
mostly male executive boards. She created a groundbreaking new way to classify government
documents and was disappointed when a male colleague claimed the credit. But armed with a new job at
the New York Public Library, a better salary and an ambitious new project, she finally felt optimistic
about her career. To pull off her newest plan, she'd need support. So she approached the leading
voice in the field, Melville Dewey, a man whose innovations made him a household name. He suggested
they meet privately about her new project. Encouraged, she made her way to Albany, New York,
only to find that he had arranged what amounted to a weekend long date. It's unclear what happened
next, but Hass departed hastily after being taken for a long drive by Dewey and later
spoke to colleagues about how offensive his behavior had been. Now, I think that that's,
I mean, I know that that's not particularly specific. Oh, God. Yeah. Again, we don't know
exactly what happened, but I found an article from American Libraries Magazine that does go
into more detail. It cites from a letter Dewey wrote to Hass later in which he complained that
she had ran away so suddenly, but also stated, I am very glad that I know you better. Sometimes I
think of you as Shakespeare's Cordelia for your voice as hers, sometimes as Bruhilda, fair, blue
eyed Saxon. So he does not get the message. No, this is, oh, God, that this is like, I mean,
it's, it's, it's chilling and bad. And also I'm like, I just, I am stuck on like, I am shocked that
the records from this era exist of this kind of behavior. And it, it does so closely mirror
stories from. Yeah, it's exactly the same shit. It's exactly the same shit. Like this is Harvey
Weinstein shit, what Hass went through. Like this is exactly the same shit. Yeah. It's just like
creepy misspelled letters instead of emails. Like that's just, I mean, it's like, you know, this
is all, but this is like kind of an interesting example of like, and we have every receipt for
some reason. Yeah. I mean, obviously not all though. I'm sure there are probably a couple,
probably, I mean, dozens to hundreds of women who we don't have the stories of that, that do we,
in some way mistreated. But, but we know we have some of Hass's story. In part because she became
a very significant figure in her own right. And her biographer noted in it. Oh, I was just, I was
going to say that, that, that always makes a difference too. If she's a person of note, then
she'll always, you know, like, and that's not a slight against her. It's just like when, when
women and or like victims in general, like if they're not someone that worth talking about,
people don't talk about them. Yeah. It's one of the val, it's one of the ways in which a woman
who has been through that experience, like a positive to being famous is that you can help
make it clear by your experience, how many people who are not famous have gone through something
similar. And that's positive. Her biographer noted in 2018 that the way do we refer to her there
with the lurid romantic mythical descriptions was not at all the normal style for coed communication
between librarians. He's like, this is not even men who are probably guilty of a lot of gross
behavior themselves. They don't write to their female colleagues this way. Like this is weird.
This stands out within, I'm a dude, I'm a biographer who reads a lot of letters from
librarians to librarians. I ain't seen anything else like this. Right. Like this is egregiously
harassment. Yeah. Adelaide decides though not to take any action against him. And she explains
to one colleague in a letter, we are a professional body, the members of which encountering obnoxious
personal traits and fellow members must content ourselves to employ those defenses which reason,
training and character dictate. So she's like, we need to defend against this guy. We need to warn
women about him, stop him from, but we, we can't like make a big thing about it. Right.
That's, I mean, that's like a classic whisper. It's the same. It's the same. Yeah. It's like,
you can't, it's the system in which it's like, well, we don't have any faith that anyone in
an authoritative position is going to advocate for us. So we have to protect ourselves and just
like, or we're, or, and it's like, that's a, especially in this era, that's a reasonable
concern for her of like, if I speak up, I'm going to lose my job. That's a reasonable concern in
20, fucking 22. Like this is 1905, you know? Yeah. Like that makes total sense and it's
also still so depressing. God, God. Well, there's actually, it's about to get a little less depressing
briefly because it would be wrong to say that knowledge of Dewey's improprieties was an open
secret because that would imply it was secretive in any kind of way. Like it was well known to
everybody that he was this kind of dude. On one occasion, his son and daughter-in-law,
Godfrey and Marjorie Dewey, move out of the family house because Dewey's own son felt
the need to get his wife away from his father because the sexual advances his father was
making towards his daughter-in-law were so constant and uncomfortable. Like that is the level of,
like that's another level, right? Of like- That is, yeah. Yeah. That's another level of sex. I mean,
it's like that your daughter-in-law who you live with and your, that's, yeah, that's like, that's
very, very sick. It would be hard to exaggerate the degree to which this guy is a creep. Like,
okay. Like he's a Weinstein level offender. Even if we don't have that amount of detail,
he's, he's has to be. Like, yeah. I mean, if there's this much information from so long ago,
like, yeah. And I think the fact that he's like sexually harassing his own daughter-in-law,
that also makes the case that like, it's compulsive for him. Like he's, he's doing it to,
like every chance he gets pretty much. I mean, there's a degree, I think, of calculation, but
like, yeah. I mean, it just does seem like any, anyone that he thinks he can get away with this
behavior from, he will pray on. Yeah. Yeah. Now, Dewey was fairly open about his behavior. He didn't
see it as problematic and he wasn't sure why anyone else would either. From American Libraries
magazine, quote, in general, Dewey himself did not deny his actions, only their impropriety.
I have been very unconventional, as men always are, who frankly show and speak of their liking
for women, he wrote. But he insisted it was not his fault if the targets of his unconventional
actions took offense. That's like ladies man rhetoric. That's something that still mostly
exists. Yeah. There's literally a quote from, and that's like, they, I think women know to take it
as a compliment. Like, he's just a real piece of shit. Yeah. Yeah. It's like, oh, they can't,
like, if they don't like it, they can't fucking hang, you know, like, yeah. That's, oh, geez.
Now, the times being what they were back then, few of his victims ever said anything publicly
about his behavior. That we have as much documentation as we do suggest that, again,
he was a sex pest on a pretty staggering scale. Nothing makes this point so well as the fact
that in 1906, after harassing Haas and then several colleagues on a cruise, the other members of the
ALA united to push Dewey out of the organization he had helped to found. Wygan notes, quote,
in exchange for a quiet departure, he was spared an ugly and public expose of one of his major
flaws. He was never again a power player in ALA politics. And this is, I think they actually get,
I give the ALA in 1905 canceled. He got canceled in 1906 for sexual harassment. Do you know how
bad you have to be to be canceled in 1906 for this? Holy, that is like, this is kind of blowing my
mind. It's intense. And it's one of those things. It's like the people who were not getting canceled.
We're using canceled facetiously, but like in 1906. In 1906. There was some shit going on.
Yeah. Wow. And it's the kind of thing where in 2022, you tell me that like an organization,
a big company or whatever, quietly forces its founder out so that sexual, the fact that he's
been sexually harassing and even assaulting women doesn't become public. That's damning of that
organization. That's damning in 2022. In 1906, you get a lot of credit for doing that because
that's something, you know? Like that is something. And there's a whole lot of nothing going on.
Yeah. Yeah. It's a different, it is morally, I think, different to quietly force the founder
of your organization out in 1906 for sexual harassment than it is in 2022.
I'm sure that there's other examples of it, but like this is the first,
this is the earliest example I've heard of. I've not heard of an earlier one for sure.
For this specific thing. Like they get, and I think it's a lot of the people who are doing this
are women because it's, you know, the ALA. And this is the most they could do too. So I don't
think this is an example. Today, you hear about this, like he gets a chance to leave quietly.
And I think it's kind of cowardice on part of the organization. I don't feel that way here.
Like I'm sure maybe some of them feel that way, but I think a lot of it is just
people doing what can be done, you know? I agree. I think that the implications of this
decision in 1906 versus 2022 are very, very, very different. I would agree. Yeah. Yeah.
You know what else the implications of are different? Oh, no. Is it a product or a service?
Yeah. That's not a great ad pivot. You know, they can all be good. Look, what do you want from me?
Look, no one's, okay, you're being defensive. No one's yelling at you. Thank you. I just,
I get so angry at the fans. You're just a bar so high for yourself,
and then you lash out at people who love you. Let's do that. Yeah, that is what I do.
All right. Well, you know who also, who does love? What? These ads. That was a good one. Yeah.
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Oh, we're back. My goodness. You know, my god. Well, that was a brutal segment.
That was rough, right? That's a rough one. I'm sure it's not going to get worse.
Yeah. Now, of course, the quiet nature of his resignation after decades of lauded work for
the L.A. meant that for a very long time, there was almost no discussion of his improprieties.
The first biography published after his death written in 1932 was titled Melville Dewey,
Seer, Inspirer, Doer. And it leaves out all of the references to his behavior, except for one
sentence. So this is the one is 1932 biography sentence. This is this is the one reference
made in the 30s. Okay. Dewey's consciousness of his own strength and freedom from evil purpose
led to a serene indifference in his everyday public relations with women.
What is that even mean? Can you read that again in a little slower?
Dewey's consciousness of his own strength and freedom from evil purpose led to a serene
indifference in his everyday public relations with women. Evil purpose. He knew he was a good
guy, so it was fine for him to sexually harass them. Like that's kind of what they're saying.
I think that's exactly what they're saying. Because he knew he was such a good man. It was
okay for him to treat them this way. Yeah. Oh, God, I mean, it's legitimately a fucking insane
sentence. Was it evil? What? His he's he's caught. He was so conscious of his own strength and his
freedom from evil purpose that he was indifferent to how he treated women.
Evil purpose to serene indifference. Yeah, that does sound like that's out of its mind.
That sentence. That sentence really goes. That is, wow, I could spend days with that.
Yeah. There's books that can be written about what that sentence is saying.
Oh, God. Yeah. That is gnarly. Wow. Okay. Thank you for that.
I will note, because this is the period that it is, I found a whole ass scholarly paper that
makes what seems to be a pretty thorough case that Dewey was not a eugenicist. He wasn't really
an opponent of eugenics either. He just didn't seem to agree with a lot of the arguments being made.
He doesn't seem to have been a eugenicist. And this is also worth noting he was not a eugenicist.
He was for sure a racist. And this is where I get beyond the racism that Dewey Decimal system is.
This is a guy who grows up in a racist system, never questions it. So he builds some of that
racism into this thing he built. Now we're going to talk about Dewey being aggressively and like
exceptionally for the time racist. And to talk about that, we're going to talk about the Lake
Placid Club. So he's at this point because he invents the Dewey Decimal system in his early
20s. Now he's in his 50s, right? It's like well into his, okay. So this is like a totally different
era of this man. Yeah. This is the early 1900s. He buys a private club in the Adirondacks.
From the beginning, Jews and black people were forbidden to be members of the club,
which is not unusual for clubs at the time. The club rules noted no one shall be received
as a member or a guest against whom there is physical, moral, social or race objection.
It is found impracticable to make exceptions to Jews or others excluded,
even when of unusual personal qualifications. Now again, this is not uncommon with like fancy
clubs at the time, but they usually don't write it down. That's what makes it weird,
is that they just won't let Jews. This is very, very mask off. Yeah. Yeah. And do we
knew that these rules were offensive enough? That so obviously when he's still with the ALA
and when he's with it, there's a New York Library Association that he's a member of
for a later period. When they have, he'll do gatherings for these organizations that he'll
host at the club that he owns and he'll hide the rule book because he'll let like there's Jews
that he lets in for these library events, you know, so he wants to hide. So he knows that what
he's doing is fucked up, right? Like he hides it. That's so insidious. Yeah. Yeah. Now this came
to an end in a rather spectacular fashion in 1903. And I want to quote now from a write up by Book Riot.
This swanky party happened every year at the Lake Placid Club. However, 1903 was special.
That year, Dewey hadn't hidden the club's rule book. This lead being a librarian,
Shindig, someone found the thing on a side table and decided to read it. That person turned out
to be a friend of Henry Leipziger, a Jewish member of the NYLA, the New York Library Association
Circulation Committee. Together, they read the pamphlet and discovered the language forbidding
racial and ethnic minorities, but especially and specifically Jews. Coincidentally, Leipziger
had been trying to become a member of the Lake Placid Club for years. Now he knew why his application
was on permanent hold. That's right. Dewey hadn't even told him about the no Jews rule.
Jesus Christ. Leipziger did the opposite of shutting
up about Dewey's racist social club. Dewey was then the state librarian of New York,
a publicly funded position. New York City was a major center of Jewish culture,
and Leipziger felt that Jewish tax dollars were going to waste on an unapologetic anti-Semite.
He hired lawyer Louis Marshall, who lodged a petition with the Board of Regents to get
Dewey fired in 1905. Oh boy. This is why we don't record on Friday night. Yeah. Wow.
Dewey was forced to quit his state library position, even though he mounted a spirited
defense by saying he had Jewish friends. And again, to talk about how racist he gets canceled
for sexual harassment and racism in 1906. This story took place last spring, as far as I'm
concerned. It's amazing. This is absurd. Wow. Yeah. Yeah. And again, you'll also note that
this Jewish guy who gets offended at the Lake Plastic Club, I don't think is arguing on behalf
of black people. I don't think he's offended that black people aren't. So like, you know,
it's 1906, right? Like everything's terrible or 1905. But yeah. So, Dewey quits his state
library position. This is, I think, a little after he got kicked out of the ALA. And right
around the time that this controversy breaks out, part of why he has to quit is it comes out that
not only was he not allowing Jewish people to enter his club, he had bought a bunch of the land
around the Lake Plastic Club so that Jews couldn't buy it. So there wouldn't even be Jews who could
like look at his club. Like that's, again, he keeps going the extra mile on this shit, you know?
This is like, yeah. Like it's, oh my God, that's so much anti-Semitism. And then he's just like
going into regular spaces. Like this is not a thing that he's spending a lot of time and money
to do. This is, yeah. And again, the thing worth noting is that he is not getting canceled for his
racism against black people, which is not at all exceptional for the time. And it's kind of gets
lost in sort of the, everyone's that racist. He's not getting canceled because he's racist
towards Southeast Asians. He's really racist, specifically racist towards Jewish people. And
in New York, probably wouldn't have happened if he lived somewhere else. But in New York,
he gets canceled as a result of that, you know? It's worth being specific about the racism that
is considered a problem in this period, you know? Yeah. So his history of sexual harassment and
racism had cratered his public career by 1906. But do we continue to run the Lake Plastic Club,
which among other things was a place where he could indulge in his language revision fantasies
without pushback. One 1927 menu listed Haddock, H-A-D-O-K, Potted Beef, P-O-T-E-D, with noodles,
N-O-O-D-L-S, Parsley, P-A-R-S-L-I, or Mashed, M-A-S-H-T, Potato, Butter, B-U-T-R, Steamed Rice,
S-T-E-E-A-M-D, R-Y-S, Lettuce, L-E-T-I-S, and Weiss Cream? I don't know what Weiss Cream is supposed
to be. Is that how he thinks you should say ice cream? Is that maybe ice cream? I think that
might be ice cream. Y-S to be ice cream? Weiss cream? See, I think this is a good yardstick for
like how I feel about him because it was hilarious the first time. And when he's doing it in the
1920s, I'm not laughing. There's nothing funny though. It's not funny anymore. Now you're just a sad,
weird man in Lake Placid making typos on purpose. In 1927, Dewey hired a stenographer who he
described in his unique spelling way as a dainty little L-I-T-L flapper and better looking than I
expected, B-E-T-R. After he hugged and kissed her in public, she threatened to file charges and
ended up settling with Dewey for $2,147.66. And again, like... Not nothing then. That's not
nothing then. And also, again, this is egregious enough that he doesn't think he can win in court
despite being a rich dude against this woman. I'm always pro like people being sexually harassed,
just taking the rich person's money because the justice system is so fucking broken. It's like,
go as far as you can in the justice system and then take all their money while you're fucking at it.
Get what you can. According to Wayne Wygan, author of Irrepressible Reformer, a biography of
Melville Dewey, Dewey was upset with the settlement not because he had been reprimanded for anything
improper, but because he worried the stenographer might spread rumors that she got $2,000 for no
work. Similarly, unrepentant after he... Yeah, I know, right? Like, what the fuck? Still efficiency
minded, even when he is in court for being a sex pest. Similarly, unrepentant after he was
censured by the ALA, Dewey insisted he hadn't done anything wrong. Pure women would understand my
ways, he said. I have no comment. He's real piece of shit. It sucks. It sucks pretty bad.
There's just like this impulse in people that I don't understand to double down on
the worst parts of themselves to the point where like anything remotely useful that they had done
in their entire lives are rendered upsetting to even think about. Like, what is that element of
human nature? It is so ugly and dark and I'm upset, Robert. Well, here's a good thing, Jamie.
Is he gonna die soon? He does. He dies on December 26th, 1931 of a stroke in Lake Placid.
Okay, good. Please say there's no more information. No, he's fucking dead as shit now. Now, for decades,
he is, as we've talked about a bit, largely lionized and applauded for his achievements.
But in recent years, the tide has begun to turn, not because of new evidence brought up against
the man, but because his behavior started being recognized by broader culture as problematic
again. In 2019, the American Library Association dropped his name from an award as the result
of his racism and sexual harassment. Sherry Harrington, part of the task force that drafted
the resolution to do this, explained, it wasn't like he's being judged by 21st century standards.
He was called out repeatedly for his sexual harassment behavior during his time.
Yeah. Yeah. Oh, I mean, that's crumbs, but I'm glad that it happened. That's very good.
It does happen and it is like, when I heard there was a man who got canceled for sexual
harassment in 1906, I was like, well, we've got to talk about this.
That will have had to have been pretty fucking bad. Yeah, yeah. That's gotta be a tale. Yeah.
And it sure was. Wow, Robert, I simply didn't know. Was this all information that
you learned about relatively recently? I had known Dewey was like a sexist asshole. I didn't
know most of that. I certainly did not know that the racism in the Dewey decimals, I had no idea
about any of that. That's the thesis paper right there. I'm sure there's a lot that has, I mean,
no, I know there's a lot that has. I'm sure there's more to be written about the impact that has had.
Which is certainly like the most toxic thing he did in terms of its impact on society.
Yeah, it's pretty bad, pretty shitty dude, Melville Dewey.
Wow, not a fan. I'm gonna fuck that guy. I'm sorry, takeaways. I'm gonna go burn down a library?
Yeah, go burn down a library. All librarians are your enemy now. I think that's clear.
Always has been true. I'll hunt them down in their places, wherever they hide, you know.
If someone makes a Parks and Recreation joke, I will kill myself, so don't take any Parks and
Recreation jokes. Are there librarians in that show? There's librarians in that show.
I couldn't get into that. See, and that's what I love about you. No, it's fine. I do love a
library. I do feel that it's still so wild to me that libraries are so underfunded and also
are the only place where so many things are able to happen in a socially acceptable,
like it's the only socially acceptable place to get free Wi-Fi or go to the bathroom or read.
The two coolest things our government does is the post office and libraries that government in
general does. Easily. Yeah, big fan. Yes. So it sucks that there was a deeply unsettling,
bigoted person who has such a large effect on libraries, but I'm glad that libraries are grappling
with it. Yeah, it seems like this is a thing because it is like a very, like the library
biz, like the people who are in libraries tend to be well-educated and pretty progressive. I think
the ALI is... You gotta have a master's, baby....somewhat progressive as an organism. I'm sure
librarians, progressive librarians might disagree with aspects of that, but I think broadly speaking,
it seems like there are ongoing attempts to address the impact of these problems.
Can I plug a quick library-related thing? For sure. Okay, if you're currently, and if it's
one of the products and services in the episode, I'm sorry, but if you're currently an Audible
subscriber, stop giving your money to Jeff Bezos. And there are... So I get all of my audiobooks
from the library on an app. Absolutely. And so if you're not tapped into your local libraries,
like audiobook system or ebook system, stop giving money to billionaires and start giving
money to nobody. It's your right to listen to Sharon Stone's biography. Speaking as a guy who's
written multiple books that are in libraries every now and then you get some fucking shithead
writer on Twitter who is like, well, you're taking money from me by getting my books from a library.
If you find a writer who has that attitude, stop reading their books and start hitting them with
a brick. Go fuck yourself. Hit them with a brick. Give them a brickin'. That's a brickin'.
Free books are dope. Free books are amazing and make sure that you're using your library
for all its work because that's why it's there. Yeah. Good times. All right. Well,
Jamie, you got any other pluggables? You want to drop in the P zone?
In the Pzone? In the Pzone. Do you guys remember when Pazones were a thing?
Of course I remember when Pazones were a thing. Yeah, there was like Pizza Hut, right? That took
the Pazones. Joey Chestnut competed in Pazone competition back in the day.
Jamie, who the fuck is Joey Chestnut? You talk about Joey Chestnut all the time and I have no idea
who you're talking about. We don't have time for that. Is that that sounds like a fake guy? Not a
fake guy. He's a real guy. He's a real guy. I don't like that. Joey Chestnut. Don't like that.
Although, actually, there is a behind the bastards in the hot dog eating world that I will
talk to you about off mic because it's fascinating. Oh, God. I'll do. I'll lead the episode for
Christ's sake. I just wrote 12,000 words about it. Absolutely. Jamie Greenwood. Anytime you come
here and we'll do a reverse bastards. That sounds incredible. That would be really fun. I know way
too much. Joey Chestnut is the champion. I mean, in hot dogs, but also everything. He's the
speedy champion of the world. Oh, it's speedy. Okay, that makes sense. Yeah, of the world.
His name sounds like a fake person. It's a real name. Joseph Chestnut of San Jose, California.
My God. He's an Indiana now. I really look. He's one Pizzone contest. There's a whole,
I would hide. Okay, the other thing I'll plug besides library cards is the 30 for 30 episode
about Takara Kobayashi and Joey Chestnut. It is one of the most fascinating stories I
were told or don't watch it and I will recap it for you on a future episode of behind the
bastards because it is just wild. Well, I think I'm about to learn a lot about the competitive
eating industry, which I have devoted about a third of a second thinking to in my life up to
this point. I would say 99% of my knowledge of competitive eating comes from that one king
of the hill episode. That's pretty good. And that is a pretty well informed episode. I will plug,
I'll plug two things. I'll plug, I have a solo podcast that have come out in the last year,
ACKcast, which is about the Kathy podcast or the Kathy comic, not podcast and Lolita podcast,
which is about Lolita and its cultural impact. And I'll also plug a TV show I wrote on last year
that just got released on HBO Max called Teenage Euthanasia. It's a very fun show about a teenage
euthanasia. Oh, yeah. It's about a family that owns a funeral home and zombies in Florida.
Okay. So it's, it's very fun and it's on HBO Max finally. It was really hard to watch for a while,
so you can watch it now. And you can catch my show, Mrs. Joseph Chestnut, America, USA
in LA at the Allegiant Theater on February 17th at nine o'clock p.m. I'm really excited for it.
I play Joey Chestnut's widow because I murdered him. So if you live in the LA area, it's mandatory.
You have to come. Watch Jamie's sweet ass show. And that's it. Go, you know, fight a librarian.
Just challenge a librarian to a duel. You know, they have to accept. That's one of the rules
about being a librarian. If you challenge them to a formal duel, they can't say no.
They cannot turn you down. And if not, you can report them. No, they get to pick the weapon.
So be careful there. But you, you, they will fight you every time. I've encountered a Katana
librarian or two in my day. I've never won. That's how you lost those fingers. Well, that's the
episode of Behind the Bastards. Go, go with God. Wow. God bless Jesus Christ. Bye.
What would you do if a secret cabal of the most powerful folks in the United States told you,
hey, let's start a coup. Back in the 1930s, a marine named Smedley Butler was all that stood
between the US and fascism. I'm Ben Bullitt. I'm Alex French. And I'm Smedley Butler. Join us for
this sordid tale of ambition, treason, and what happens when evil tycoons have too much time on
their hands. Listen to Let's Start a Coup on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you
find your favorite shows. What if I told you that much of the forensic science you see on shows
like CSI isn't based on actual science and the wrongly convicted pay a horrific price?
Two death sentences in a life without parole. My youngest, I was incarcerated two days after
her first birthday. Listen to CSI on trial on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you get your podcasts. Did you know Lance Bass is a Russian trained astronaut? That he went
through training in a secret facility outside Moscow, hoping to become the youngest person to
go to space? Well, I ought to know because I'm Lance Bass. And I'm hosting a new podcast that
tells my crazy story and an even crazier story about a Russian astronaut who found himself
stuck in space with no country to bring him down. With the Soviet Union collapsing around him,
he orbited the earth for 313 days that changed the world. Listen to The Last Soviet on the
iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.