Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Looking at 'trans people’s lived genders and gender realities' and doing so 'on trans people’s terms'

In a recent interview, Ding explains their PhD philosophy research at UArizona. It's "a theory of gender equality that begins from trans people’s lived genders and gender realities on trans people’s terms. This is both a story of what gender is that reckons with the fact that, yes, trans people are a thing, and a vision of what equality would then mean and require in light of that recognition." We should "take seriously transgender equality as an element, requirement, and condition of gender equality, rather than something in direct opposition to it." This helps solve "tricky conceptual and analytical challenges that trouble current trans law and feminist politics," including "real issues of injustice."

Is "gender identity" a necessary concept? Maybe it's just

"an easy way to simplify gender for a cis audience, to make our lived experiences more palatable to a dominant world that has not been hesitant to exercise power over our basic needs and our very existence when it feels threatened.

Would gender identity have as significant a part to play (if any at all) in a story of gender told by and for trans people? Does transgender equality perhaps demand far more than the mere inclusion of trans people in existing cis-centric analyses, movements, and institutions?"

Ding also proposes: "People often presume that trans people learn to navigate the social world as our lived genders by modeling ourselves after how cis people do gender, and philosophers theorize trans people’s genders as a problem to be solved by retrofitting gender identity into existing cis-centric frameworks." Ding thinks it should be "the other way around." Cis people could "do gender better by borrowing from trans people’s gender practices," and furthermore we could all understand gender better "starting from trans rather than cis people's genders." Trans people's "gender practices better explain important aspects of gender reality that may not be immediately obvious to most cis people, and our gender practices manage to turn gender into a source of love, strength, joy, knowledge, dignity, and freedom."

I recommend the interview! Pride Month Q&A: Gender, Equality, and Feminism Through a Philosopher’s Lens June 20, 2024

person in a meadow

Climate: Denmark will tax farmers per cow

"Dairy farmers in Denmark face having to pay an annual tax of 672 krone ($96) per cow for the planet-heating emissions they generate.

The country’s coalition government agreed this week to introduce the world’s first carbon emissions tax on agriculture. It will mean new levies on livestock starting in 2030."

World’s first carbon tax on livestock will cost farmers $100 per cow, Hanna Ziady, CNN, June 26, 2024

cow licking lips
Cow by Leopictures from Pixabay

Yulia Alyoshina was coerced into saying she would live as a man

In May 2024, "Yulia Alyoshina, who headed the opposition Civic Initiative party in Siberia’s Altai region until 2022, announced...that she had returned to her gender assigned at birth and changed her channel’s name to 'Alyoshin', the male version of her surname."

She is "the first openly transgender politician in Russia." So why did she do this?

On June 25, Novaya Gazeta Baltic reported that (as Novaya Gazeta Europe paraphrased) she "has described how the Russian authorities threatened to commit her to a psychiatric hospital unless she detransitioned."

Read more: Russia’s first transgender politician reveals she was forced to announce her detransition, Novaya Gazeta Europe, 25 June 2024

About the news outlet

Quote:

"Journalists from Russia’s oldest independent newspaper, Novaya Gazeta, have launched a new, Europe-based media outlet in a bid to avoid an ongoing media clampdown amid their country’s war in Ukraine.

The creation of Novaya Gazeta Europe comes nine days after its Russian counterpart suspended operations in Moscow. The outlet, headed by Nobel Peace Prize-winning editor Dmitry Muratov, had been repeatedly threatened with closure for its reporting on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta Europe, Kirill Martynov, said that the paper will be independent from Russia’s Novaya Gazeta, “both legally and in practice.” The newsroom itself will consist of Novaya Gazeta staffers who have chosen to leave Russia.

'There’ll be no one working for Novaya Gazeta and Novaya Gazeta Europe at the same time,' Martynov told The Moscow Times on Thursday. 'We’ll have our own editorial council and guidelines.'"

Novaya Gazeta Launches European Edition in Bid to Dodge Kremlin Censorship, Irina Shcherbakova, Moscow Times, April 19, 2022

swan

JK Rowling demands to be assured that trans people won't have too many rights

Keir Starmer, the leader of Britain's Labour Party since 2020, recently said he's "not in favour of ideology being taught in our schools on gender. I think we need to complete the consultation process and make sure that there is guidance that is age-appropriate." Those are Starmer's words.

James Greig notes that "'gender ideology' is an amorphous and essentially meaningless term, a far-right talking point which is used to oppose teaching young people about the existence of trans people in any way, shape or form."

Greig continues:

In its new manifesto, Labour tried to have it both ways: pledging to make it easier for trans people to change their legal gender on one hand and promising to uphold the Cass Review’s effective ban on gender-affirming care for young people on the other. At the level of rhetoric, Starmer has been moving steadily to the right on trans issues. Last week, for example, he agreed with Tony Blair that “a woman is with a vagina and a man is with a penis”, where he had previously allowed that only 99.9 per cent of women do. But on this issue, more than most, you can’t play both sides without pissing everyone off. There is no compromise position between people who think being trans is legitimate and those who disagree."

One issue now is:

"Over the weekend [June 22–23, 2024], JK Rowling published an article accusing Labour of 'abandoning women' over its support for trans rights. Instead of taking the obvious lesson – that there is no point in trying to appease these people because nothing, short of the wholesale exclusion of trans people from public, will be enough – Keir Starmer seems to be trying his hardest to get them back on side."

Keir Starmer celebrates Pride by promising to ban ‘gender ideology’: By embracing transphobic talking points, Starmer is shifting labour to the right on LGBTQ+ rights, James Greig, Dazed, June 24, 2024

More

See this article: "The Labour Party is Willing to Meet With JK Rowling?: So apparently both parties in Britain hate trans people," ElizaBeth, Medium, Jun 25, 2024

ElizaBeth says:

"Rachel Reeves, the Shadow Chancellor, has said Labour is willing to meet with JK Rowling to address her concerns." In other words, "Labour explicitly courts her."

They "endlessly push some victim narrative around her," making her seem a martyr, presenting "any pushback she gets for her comments as some excess of the patriarchy" and thus casting her as "a clear example of how trans rights have apparently engulfed cis women’s rights to free speech and power."

ElizaBeth continues: "When they agree to meet with JK Rowling, when Starmer responds to JK Rowling’s comments on Labour with an apology, it concedes that transphobia is now gonna be a central tenet of British politics."

In response to this news

Rowling has demanded that leaders of the Labour Party meet with five anti-trans groups in-person, after which Rowling says she too will consent to an in-person meeting wtih Labour to be personally assured that trans people won't have too many rights to live in our genders.

JK Rowling has agreed to a meeting with Labour after Rachel Reeves said the party would be “really happy” to “give her assurances” over its plans to change the process through which people can legally change gender.

Speaking in Scotland, Reeves said protection for women-only spaces would “absolutely stay”, adding: “We’re not going to be changing anything around biological sex … We’re really happy to talk to JK Rowling to give her assurances about that.”

But Rowling said the meeting was conditional on Labour first meeting a series of groups from across the UK that she supported [Keep Prisons Single Sex, Lesbian Labour, Women’s Rights Network, Woman’s Place UK, and LGB Alliance].

The shadow chancellor made the offer to meet the author and former Labour donor on Monday, after Rowling said she would “struggle to support” the party in next week’s general election."

JK Rowling agrees to meeting with Labour about gender transition policy: Author responds after shadow chancellor says party would be ‘really happy’ to ‘give her assurances’. Peter Walker, Aletha Adu and Libby Brooks. 24 Jun 2024.

antique beast statue

Kristen Smyth says:

"The attacks on the Trans and Non-Binary community and vulnerable society— be it asylum seekers, immigrants, and female Olympians during August—has created this extraordinary coalition of TERFS, fascists, and left-leaning newspapers. Like, imagine all these people in a room together. They’d eat each other alive. I often reflect on just what we’ve done to upset these people so much. If anger, bitterness, and violence are your go-to vehicles of choice to “protect” vulnerability well—I’m struck by the irony, of course, and fear for the safety of us all, including these fired up.

Let’s be clear with J.K. Rowling in particular, there's an extraordinary level of entitlement to be “right.” Never trust anyone who comes at you with absolute certainty. It is a short walk to a fascist mentality that provides no room for difference or positions of softness and conviviality."

To Kristen Smyth, Frankenstein Is a Metaphor for the Transgender Experience Her solo show Cruel Britannia: After Frankenstein is currently running at Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Dylan Parent, Playbill, August 13, 2024

Melanie Phillips in the Times:

Times article: Human rights culture has eroded our freedoms, by Melanie Phillips, Sept 23, 2024

November 2024

We know. She hasn't fucked up in years.

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— H Lee Hurley (@hleehurley.substack.com) November 23, 2024 at 4:01 AM

Ah yes because no one has “heard” her in years, even though she’s literally always tweeting and seems to be front page news whenever she shits on a trans person

— Binx02 (@binx02.bsky.social) November 23, 2024 at 4:04 AM

Trans people don't have a right to speak but GCs have a right to be heard. Trans people are, as standard, excluded from discussions about us because we are deemed too biased. This applies to healthcare policy, media coverage and everything in between. GCs are never biased. Always just concerned.

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— H Lee Hurley (@hleehurley.substack.com) November 23, 2024 at 9:48 AM

Divorce with 13 minor kids in Nevada

"The show follows The Derricos as they raise their 14 kids -- the oldest, Darian is 18 so she's not mentioned in the divorce filing -- focusing on their childrearing in North Las Vegas."
'DOUBLING DOWN WITH THE DERRICOS': KAREN AND DEON DERRICO DIVORCE ... Joint Legal, Physical Custody of 13 Minor Kids. TMZ, June 14, 2024.

To learn more about child support in Nevada, here's an quick calculator.

flower

Monday, June 24, 2024

U.S. Supreme Court to hear the TN gender-affirming healthcare case

Just published

The U.S. Supreme Court Will Decide About Trans Kids’ Bodies
This fall, it’ll hear arguments over the Tennessee ban on gender-affirming care

two people fencing

Oct 2024: Still happening

HuffPost says:

"The highest-profile case on the agenda so far is a fight over transgender rights that is focused on state bans on gender-affirming care. It probably will be argued in December.

Republican-led states have enacted a variety of restrictions on health care for transgender people, school sports participation, bathroom usage and drag shows. The administration and Democratic-led states have extended protections for transgender people. The Supreme Court has separately prohibited the administration from enforcing a new federal regulation that seeks to protect transgender students.

The case before the high court involves a law in Tennessee that restrict puberty blockers and hormone therapy for transgender minors. About half the states have enacted similar restrictions."

— Mark Sherman, Supreme Court Opens Its New Term With Election Disputes In The Air — But Not Yet On The Docket Transgender rights, the regulation of “ghost guns” and the death penalty highlight the Supreme Court’s election-season term that begins Monday. AP, Oct 5, 2024

See also

Supreme Court to weigh state restrictions on gender-affirming care for youths The court is expected to hear oral arguments and make a ruling in its upcoming term, which starts in October and will end in June 2025. Lawrence Hurley, NBC News, June 24, 2024

I'm the parent of a trans daughter. There's nothing conservative about blocking her care. Politicians should stop trying to impose personal beliefs as statewide mandates that harm children and interfere with the private, individualized medical decisions of families. Sean P. Madden, USA Today, June 24, 2024

US Supreme Court to hear challenge to ban on transgender care for minors, Andrew Chung, Reuters, June 24, 2024

The Supreme Court Is Taking Aim at Transgender Rights: The justices have picked a case that can cause maximum harm with minimum blowback. Matt Ford, The New Republic, June 25, 2024

Legal scholars worry Supreme Court may prioritize “politics” over “real stakes” in trans rights case: SCOTUS announced it was taking up a case on transgender rights on the second anniversary of the Dobbs decision. Tatyana Tandanpolie. Salon. June 25, 2024

U.S.: Republicans run up the national debt

Republicans run up the debt more than the Democrats. If you care about balancing budgets or spending "conservatively," this is something to know.

See this new article: Trump ran up national debt twice as much as Biden: new analysis, Neil Irwin, Axios, June 24, 2024

Also: "Inflation will soar once again if former President Donald Trump wins back the White House, a group of 16 Nobel prize-winning economists have predicted in a letter obtained by Axios. ... The letter was signed by Joseph Stiglitz, George A. Akerlof, Sir Angus Deaton, Claudia Goldin, Sir Oliver Hart, Eric S. Maskin, Daniel L. McFadden, Paul R. Milgrom, Roger B. Myerson, Edmund S. Phelps, Paul M. Romer, Alvin E. Roth, William F. Sharpe, Robert J. Shiller, Christopher A. Sims and Robert B. Wilson, per Axios." (HuffPost, June 25, 2024)

See my essay on the book It Was All a Lie: How the Republican Party Became Donald Trump by Stuart Stevens

flag-colored checkmark over a war zone

Speaking of bearing false witness

Louisiana has mandated posting the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms.

"Louisiana classrooms now required by law to display the Ten Commandments," Stephanie Gallman Dianne Gallagher, CNN, June 19, 2024

Here's the law (PDF).

Donald Trump's reaction:

"'Has anyone read the ‘Thou shalt not steal’? I mean, has anybody read this incredible stuff? It’s just incredible,' Trump said at the gathering of the Faith & Freedom Coalition. 'They don’t want it to go up. It’s a crazy world.'

Trump a day earlier posted an endorsement of the new law on his social media network, saying: 'I LOVE THE TEN COMMANDMENTS IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS, PRIVATE SCHOOLS, AND MANY OTHER PLACES, FOR THAT MATTER. READ IT — HOW CAN WE, AS A NATION, GO WRONG???'"

— "Trump Endorses Ten Commandments In Schools, Urges Evangelical Christians To Vote: Donald Trump has told a group of evangelicals that they 'cannot afford to sit on the sidelines' of the 2024 election, imploring them at one point to 'go and vote, Christians, please!'." Michelle L. Price and Ayanna Alexander, HuffPost, Jun 22, 2024

The reason that people who are secular or pluralistic don't think the Ten Commandments should be put up in public schools and other public buildings isn't that we think it should be legal to steal.

Speaking of bearing false witness.

U.S. Capitol building

Read more on Medium: Rep. Jamie Raskin’s book Unthinkable

"An initial review by The Texas Tribune of the proposed textbooks showed that religious references are featured prominently, with texts sourced from the Bible being the most heavily used." Texas is a really large textbook market which then sets the standard for those markets nationwide.

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— Nails Nathan (@chadstanton.bsky.social) Jun 27, 2024 at 6:38 PM

if you squint, you can see some of the last dying vestiges of principled bipartisan conservatism that used to be fairly common in oklahoma governance

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— GOLIKEHELLMACHINE (@golikehellmachine.com) Jun 25, 2024 at 11:01 AM

Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters issued this memo today requiring teachers in all schools to keep a Bible in their classroom and teach from it as a historical document. (Via KOCO 5 News)

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— David S. Bernstein (@dbernstein.bsky.social) Jun 27, 2024 at 12:54 PM

Friday, June 21, 2024

Hate groups are funded by major organizations. The underlying sources are often obscure.

1.

Arturo Dominguez tells us that "more dark money going to hate groups through donor-advised funds than ever — many through major organizations."

[From: The Growing Political Support for Hate Groups is Dangerous: The number of hate groups and the growing number of powerful political groups who share their views highlight a real threat to marginalized people. Arturo Dominguez, June 21, 2024]

2.

The June 19 episode of The ReidOut with Joy Reid is "Dark money's insidious impact on U.S. politics," which discusses "White Boy Summer," which is — as the episode description puts it — "the new symbol of white nationalists and the latest recruitment tool for the far right."

3.

Trump’s dark money gets darker: How campaign finance loopholes help his criminal cases: The Supreme Court’s reactionary rulings have allowed for Trump’s unprecedented assault on U.S. democracy. Gregg Barak, Salon, June 22, 2024

face looking ominous in weird blue light

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Someone wants you to automate your art so you can devote your attention to working for them

Cameron Summers writes for Broken Hands (What is Technology? (Contraslop, Part 1), June 19, 2024) that "a better term [than what today we call "AI"], put forward by Emily M. Bender et al., is 'stochastic parrot,' which emphasizes that no thinking is happening – it’s simply a statistical trick to produce strings of imitative text."

Then consider that,

"in a hypothetical world where material problems had been solved, and human needs are perfectly attended to – we would be left with art, games, and relationships between equals. To try to automate these things doesn’t really strike me as evil necessarily, it strikes me as malignantly stupid. I’ve spoken quite often on this website as the figure of the spoilsport, and that’s exactly what this is: someone misunderstanding the rules of the game so completely as to say, “don’t worry about all that art and poetry you were going to make, don’t worry about all those jokes you were going to make with your friends, we automated that so you can spend more of your time on paperwork. The machine really can’t do that,” simply doesn’t understand what’s happening, and if we have structured things so that those people have power, then we’ve made a horrible error, akin to drafting the drunkest man at the party as our designated driver."

guy on typewriter

See also

TikTok pulls new AI tool that spouted Hitler on command, horrified experts, CNN video, June 21, 2024

The other day I was asked over email about our editorial position on Ai. Figured I'd share my response here.

[image or embed]

— Undertow Publications (@undertow.bsky.social) Jun 22, 2024 at 12:03 PM

It’s so cool that cities are like “pweeease only turn your AC on if you’re actively dying and don’t go below 79 🥺🤘🏻💗” while the AI nobody asked for is slurping up the power grid to make 1 image of a girl with 5 tits

— Lauren (@laurenkayes.bsky.social) Jun 22, 2024 at 4:58 PM

The part of college that needs to be re thought is not “can we create essay writing tools?”, it’s, how do we help people complete college when they don’t have four years of time, money, and support to complete a degree?

— Tobias Wilson-Bates (@phdhurtbrain.bsky.social) Jun 23, 2024 at 8:08 AM

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Elad Nehorai: Through 'Imagination. Belief. Connection,' we empower ourselves to create what we hope for

"If the Democratic, semi-liberal approach has failed us, then we need to stop fishing for hope in that lake. We can and must vote to prevent the fascist invasion, but that’s like keeping the walls from crumbling as the horde starves us as it lays seige.

That isn’t hope. Hope is seeing that, understanding why it has failed, and imagining what can replace it. Not the messianic fervor of the right, but also not the calm deliberation of the establishment.

Having imagination is phase one of that transformation. The second phase is belief. Believing we can do it. Believing we have the power to do it, whoever wins the election, whatever happens next. Third is finding the people to help make it happen.

Imagination. Belief. Connection. These are what give us power. This is what they want to kill in us. This is what will get us to making hope something real.

There are fascist invasion phases. It’s now time for us to start the transformative phase.

— Elad Nehorai, The Second Phase of the Fascist Invasion Has Begun: It's time to change how we think of the way fascists are winning. And, as a result, how we can fight back. Substack, June 17, 2024

On the theme of hope, I previously spotted:

"The hope is that, like in a special form of Tulpamancy, through an act of faith, this outside pole can be invested with enough power to pull the 'I,' or a mutilated form of it, outside of its world; through a leap of faith to force the 'I' to make a leap outside of the loop that constitutes it and its world. This outside is usually spatially represented but could be temporal too."

— Florin Flueras. "Dreaming the End of Dreaming." In Serial Killing: A Philosophical Anthology. Edia Connole and Gary J. Shipley, eds. Schism, 2015. p. 364.

ocean

See my article, Let's Make Hope. It's an 11-minute read on Medium.

Saturday, June 15, 2024

Newitz: To be 'seen and erased at the same time'

I learned a few things about Indigenous American history from Annalee Newitz's new book Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind.

abstract digital illustration

Look at these connections

In Chapter 2: A Fake Frontier, Newitz writes:

“Today it’s often called the ‘manifest destiny’ period [the second half of the 19th century], though at the time there was nothing manifest or obvious about what the future of the United States would look like.”

* * *

“The Indian Wars took place at a time when nobody had any idea whether the West could be ‘won.’ And yet, by the early twentieth century, most Americans accepted the idea that ‘manifest destiny’ had been the guiding principle of the Indian Wars, suggesting that the US government had always been steadfast in its commitment to owning the West. That’s because the final psychological battle of the Indian Wars hinged on the question of how the nineteenth century would be remembered.”

* * *

“…the phrase ‘manifest destiny’…was ensconced in history books for decades, affecting the perceptions of generations of young Americans. This latter feat was thanks largely to a Harvard historian named Frederick Jackson Turner, whose ‘frontier thesis’ is what popularized the idea of manifest destiny. The young professor presented his frontier thesis in a famous speech during the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago. There he told the assembled crowd that westward expansion defined the American character. This was a departure from the assertions of thinkers in previous generations, including Alexis de Tocqueville, who thought of New England as the center of gravity in the United States. Instead, Turner argued, the western frontier was what forged a uniquely American identity. It was a place where settlers could reinvent themselves, shedding their European origins and constraining Old World Traditions.”

* * *

“…Turner was suggesting that Europeans became American in the nineteenth century by replacing Indigenous people. The frontier thesis was the original racial replacement theory. And the settler public loved it.”

— Annalee Newitz, Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind. W. W. Norton, 2024. Chapter 2: A Fake Frontier.

And in Chapter 5: School Rules:

"...psyops targeting education are incredibly fungible. Today, advocates for Don't Say Gay bills and trans bans push for 'parents' rights.' Yet in the nineteenth century, legislators argued against parents' rights when it came to Indigenous children. During the Indian Wars, the US government took Indigenous children away from their families and taught values that contradicted their ancestral traditions. The justifications for residential schools were like the Don't Say Gay laws in reverse. Indigenous kids needed exposure to new ideas to help them progress, the government claimed. Parents had no right to set the curricula in these schools, nor even to visit their children on campus. Then and now, educational psyops harm children to punish — or appeal to — their parents."

And:

"Schools are places where we implant our hopes for the future in the minds of the people who will build it. When activists take away the right to discuss LGBT identity in school, they are participating in a larger project to eliminate LGBT people from the next generation of Americans. Refusing to teach kids about their history and culture is a way of erasing their futures."

And in Chapter 7: History is a Gift:

"Though the government's official stance was that there were no Indians in Coos Bay [Oregon], they nevertheless sent a number of Indigenous children to boarding school in Pennsylvania. This familiar psyop from the Indian Wars, in which Indigenous people are seen and erased at the same time, is why white people said to [Coquille tribal chief Jason] Younker's face that there were no Indigenous people in Coos Bay."

What Cambridge Analytica did in the 2014 and 2016 U.S. elections

In their new book Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind, Annalee Newitz explains: "Social media election psyops have an unexpected origin story."

red robot

From "studying the advertising industry," psyops based itself on this principle: "Appealing to people's buried biases is the best way to activate them, for profit or for war."

"In 1943, a group of three researchers from the University of California at Berkeley invented a new kind of personality test that they administered to thousands of Americans. They called it the F-Scale test. Put simply, this test could measure a person's likelihood of becoming a fascist." They "collaborated with philosopher Theodor Adorno, who had fled Nazi Germany, to publish a book in 1950 called The Authoritarian Personality." Authoritarian feelings were ethnocentric, and authoritarian beliefs included "the strong would always rule the weak" and "force was the only way to resolve conflicts." Such people "would fall for fascist propaganda." Especially "when triggered by rapid social changes, these unconscious beliefs could erupt into full-blown genocidal movements."

Newitz quotes intellectual historian Martin Jay: "The way to confront fascism wasn't at the level of argumentation. You had to confront unconscious motivations. So how do you deal with something you can't argue people out of?" You can raise children a certain way: put them in racially diverse classrooms where their teachers don't hit them with rulers. It does help. But "every generation invents a new system for emotional exploitation," and there's the problem.

In the 2010s, Cambridge Analytica "administered a personality test to hundreds of thousands of people online" which "contained elements of the F-Scale." They were indeed looking for "latent authoritarians" because they were helping the authoritarian side. This was "a massive operation to influence American voters in the 2014 midterms and 2016 presidential election." Christopher Wylie, who had worked for Cambridge Analytica's project and became a whistleblower, called it "Steve Bannon's psychological warfare mindfuck tool."

About 270,000 people took the test, and Cambridge Analytica grabbed lists of their Facebook "friends," yielding data on 87 million accounts. Now, Cambridge Analytica could predict who had the "'dark triad' of antisocial personality traits: narcissism, Machiavellianism (manipulativeness), and psychopathy (lack of care for others)." Next, Cambridge Analytica "targeted those people with ads, luring them to Facebook pages that the firm had set up to test out which messages worked best on these easily activated people." Trump adopted two of the winners — "drain the swamp" and "make America great again" — as his 2016 campaign slogans. Worse: "Once a group of people with dark triad personalities had converged on a message, Cambridge Analytica operatives would encourage them to gather in a local bar or coffee shop, where they could swap conspiracy theories and strengthen their ties."

Bannon was specifically interested in cognitive biases that would surface unconscious racism. Cambridge Analytica found that a popular fear was being laughed at for being unable to pronounce an "ethnic" name. People who were outraged at "imagin[ing] an America where you can't pronounce anyone's name" were easily nudged into narratives in which white people were posited as superior.

Cambridge Analytica was simultaneously "running a 'voter disengagement' initiative aimed at African Americans, with the goal of confusing and disempowering a voting bloc that threatened Republican candidates." Those narratives included that Hillary Clinton was racist and that the Democratic National Committee preferred her candidacy over Bernie Sanders's. The strategy seems to have worked: The 2016 election saw "the first decline in Black voter turnout in twenty years."

In early 2016, the Russian intelligence organization GRU hacked into the emails of the chair of the Clinton campaign, John Podesta. Then, the Internet Research Agency, a private Russian psyops company, scoured them for anything that seemed useful. This led to "the '#Pizzagate' conspiracy, a precursor to QAnon."

This is the book

I have reached the limit of my ability and prerogative to explain the thing! Here is the book you want.

Annalee Newitz, Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind. W. W. Norton, 2024. Chapter 3: Advertisements for Disenfranchisement.

There's 'no door four' and it's 'hard not to question your own thoughts'

Thinking about these passages

First passage

"Door one has opened in front of Spoon and he don’t like that one either. He hanging from a tree in that one.
And perhaps you may find
Find him there

'That's a very nice voice you got there, what shall we call you then? Elvis maybe?'

* * *

I grab a handle on a purple slice of wheel and pull down. Fate spins. It spins and spins and spins and spins. I hear spoon man screaming. Fate spins us all. He don’t stop crying out.

* * *

Door four. There is no door four. But I see it in front of me."

— "Door Four," Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Chain-Gang All-Stars, Pantheon Books, 2023.

Second passage

"Psyops are pernicious because they are designed to create a mental catch-22. If you notice hte psyop, your own psychological health is called into question. In all the examples of culture war we've looked at, attackers portray their adversaries as stupid, criminal, and crazy — the kinds of people whose stories can't be trusted. It's hard to defend against a foe who convinces onlookers that you aren't being attacked or that, if you are, you deserve it. If you find yourself at the muzzle end of a psychological attack for long enough, it's hard not to question your own thoughts."

— Annalee Newitz, Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind. W. W. Norton, 2024. Chapter 6: Dirty Comics.

Related to my novel

Most Famous Short Film of All Time (tRaum Books, 2022).

swimming pool

Quotes: When patriotism intensifies

Some old quotes I collected on this topic, years ago.

soldier interacting with two girls
What do we mean by patriotism in the context of our times? ... A patriotism that puts country ahead of self; a patriotism which is not short, frenzied outbursts of emotion, but the tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime. There are words that are easy to utter, but this is a mighty assignment. For it is often easier to fight for principles than to live up to them.
Adlai Stevenson. New York, August 27, 1952. Quoted in Sen. J. William Fulbright. The Arrogance of Power. New York: Vintage Books, 1966. p. 23.
Let him begin by treating patriotism...as a part of his religion. Then let him, under the influence of partisan spirit, come to regard it as the most important part.
The demon Screwtape explaining how to mislead a Christian, in The Screwtape Letters by C. S. Lewis. Quoted by David Kuo. Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction. New York: Free Press, 2006. p. 57.
...the author comes to the conclusion that there are two Americas. One is the America of Abraham Lincoln and Adlai Stevenson; the other is the America of Theodore Roosevelt and the modern superpatriots. Or to put it another way, two strands have coexisted in American history: "a dominant strand of democratic humanism and a lesser but durable strand of intolerant puritanism."
Francis O. Wilcox. Preface to Sen. J. William Fulbright. The Arrogance of Power. New York: Vintage Books, 1966. p. x.
There are two Americas. One is the America of Lincoln and Adlai Stevenson; the other is the America of Teddy Roosevelt and the modern superpatriots. One is generous and humane, the other narrowly egotistical; one is self-critical, the other self-righteous; one is sensible, the other romantic; one is good-humored, the other solemn; one is inquiring, the other pontificating; one is moderate, the other filled with passionate intensity; one is judicious and the other arrogant in the use of great power.
Sen. J. William Fulbright. The Arrogance of Power. New York: Vintage Books, 1966. p. 245.
The intensity of a Scottish boy's patriotism, reared as I was, constitutes a real force in his life to the very end. If the source of my stock of that prime article — courage — were studied, I am sure the final analysis would find it founded upon Wallace, the hero of Scotland.
Andrew Carnegie. The Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie and his essay The Gospel of Wealth. New York: Signet Classics, 2006. Autobiography, p. 21.
Patriotism, as we have recently come to understand it, rarely contemplates the nation's endangered young. Today's so-called "patriotism," with its obsessive loathing of taxation and deep suspicion of communal responsibility, is more an exercise in getting one's own.
"Real patriotism is about reclaiming our children." Ron Powers, special to CNN. July 4, 2011.
In an interconnected world, when you serve your community, you serve your country. Our longstanding sense of charity and humanity -- particularly outside of the government -- is one of the things that have made us a great country. And, in the 21st century, that is more essential than ever. Not just because it makes us a better example to others in the world and helps restore our all-important moral credibility, but most importantly, because it makes us better examples to ourselves. Citizenship is not residence, and patriotism isn't something you feel or put on a bumper sticker -- it's something you do, for others.
"National Service Day." Ret. Col. Christopher Holshek. Nov. 11, 2011. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/christopher-holshek/national-service-day_b_1086206.html

Friday, June 14, 2024

10x more fires than last year in Brazil's Pantanal wetlands

Endgame?

"As Jose Cleiton and Brandao Amilton ride their horses into the vastness of the Pantanal grassy wetlands of Brazil, a wall of smoke towers from the horizon far into the sky above.

The worst of the dry season is still far off, but already these Brazilian wetlands are so dry that wildfires are surging.

The number of Pantanal fires so far this year has jumped tenfold from the same period last year according to Brazil's National Institute of Space Research (INPE)."

Fires in Brazil wetlands surge to record start in 2024, Leonardo Benassatto, Reuters, June 11, 2024.

See also:

Brazilian heat waves fueled by climate change are flaming the rainforest at highest rate in 14 years, Salon.com, Sept 3, 2024

Earth

Thursday, June 13, 2024

You can't vote a fact out of office

What's at stake in the upcoming U.S. Supreme Court decision Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless v. Department of Commerce?

(Update: The ruling was made June 28, and it "upended what’s called the 'Chevron doctrine,' a long-standing legal principle that gave federal agencies broad discretion to interpret the instructions Congress hands them for writing rules and regulations." &mdash, Jonathan Cohn, HuffPost) Media Matters published this headline: "Project 2025 partners join right-wing media and climate deniers to celebrate SCOTUS decision overturning Chevron deference."

Carrie Campbell Severino says in the conservative National Review yesterday that "agency expertise" is unnecessarily "cherished." So-called experts who work in government agencies are unelected and are little more than "bureaucrats," as she'd have it.

Chevron and the Myth of Agency Expertise Should Be Put to Rest. By CARRIE CAMPBELL SEVERINO
June 12, 2024. First paragraph of this National Review article: As we await the Court’s decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo and Relentless v. Department of Commerce, where the justices have been asked to overturn or substantially narrow the application of Chevron deference to judicial review of agency rules, expect a lot of howling about the impending defeat of cherished agency expertise. This sentiment is especially pronounced from special interests who thrive off the work of bureaucrats who enjoy substantial isolation from democratic accountability. Earthjustice is a fan of Chevron deference because it “allows for expertise to craft effective policies.” The AFL-CIO, a strong defender of Chevron, touts “the expertise within agencies that have been given authority to ensure public health, safety and financial security as well as many other critical jobs.” Some of us actually look to the people’s elected representatives, not unelected bureaucrats, to do that.

But consider: Experts know things. They are experts in something. They can find facts, analyze them and turn them into information, and communicate them to us.

Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell in a June 11 article calls this "a rejection of democratic accountability in favor of the administrative state."

The Supreme Court itself has recognized in a line of cases that unelected bureaucrats should not decide major questions. Major or minor, the number of questions decided by agencies has proliferated over the course of generations. For more than a century, distrust of the electorate and the ceding of more and more power to the unelected—the phenomenon associated with the Progressive Era—was the dominant paradigm of governing. The vast bulk of the executive branch became insulated from elected officials without serious challenge, even as the everyday experience of citizens rendered the notion of the superior competence of government bureaucrats ridiculous. More recently, the battle lines have been drawn as conservatives recognized the problem with a system that had departed from the structural Constitution of the Founders. As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell notes in today’s Wall Street Journal, liberals’ ongoing faith in unelected bureaucrats “might come from a good-faith trust in ‘experts,’ or a sincere belief that sound policy is too valuable to risk in elections. But at its core, it is a rejection of democratic accountability in favor of the administrative state.”

Source:

Mitch McConnell: Liberal Bureaucrats Threaten Democracy
The administrative state thwarts the Constitution’s structure for keeping officials accountable. Mitch McConnell,
WSJ, June 11, 2024

Yes, that's the point. Facts are not democratically accountable. You can't vote a fact out of office, and you shouldn't try. "Unelected" is not a synonym for "bad."

If the government does not have anyone with expertise in what the facts are, the government is full of people who are popular and who do not necessarily know anything, and thus cannot be held to account.

Republicans object to employing any government knowledge-workers who aren't on their team and can't be pressured at the ballot box to conform to their team. What they're pulling here is a power play.

Similarly

Some of Trump's supporters

"assert that there is too much separation of powers—that the Constitution doesn’t authorize the cabinet departments and the federal bureaucracy to defy the president as a sort of “fourth branch of government.” He’s elected and they’re not. The story is more complex than that: in many cases Congress deliberately set up semi-independent agencies, and the Supreme Court hasn’t ruled them unconstitutional. (The Court upheld the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, one of Republicans’ least favorite agencies, just a few weeks ago.) Some of these entities are pretty important: the Federal Reserve comes to mind. But it’s true that many presidents grow frustrated by the power of the bureaucracy."
Separation anxiety: A week of news illuminates, and tests, the separation of powers. Steve Inskeep, June 15, 2024

See here

Importing this @volts.wtf thread from the bad place. It opens with a link to a piece that used official data to establish that yes, crime rates are indeed very much down recently. But here’s the thing, Project 2025’s Trump 2.0 promises to destroy that world in which we can “know” things like this.

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— Seth Cotlar (@sethcotlar.bsky.social) Jun 27, 2024 at 7:57 AM

See:

"But the 'key part' and 'most important' for Americans 'to understand [about Project 2025] is this reshaping of the federal government,' she [Griffin] said.

'I saw the actual executive order at the end of the last administration, ready to go, that would remake every civil servant into a political appointee and a loyalist to Trump,' recalled Griffin, an apparent reference to Trump’s Schedule F plan, which he has vowed to reinstitute if he wins back the White House.

Ex-Donald Trump Aide Names ‘Most Important’ Part Of Project 2025: It’s the “key part” that’s ready to go, warned Alyssa Farah Griffin. Lee Moran, HuffPost, Jul 12, 2024

Also

I keep on thinking about how John Roberts messed up nitrogen oxide with nitrous oxide in a ruling on how the courts were better suited to provide expertise than experts.

— Molly Shah (@mommunism.bsky.social) Jun 30, 2024 at 4:36 AM

Sometimes certain people feel it's unfair to debate certain other people who are going to win the debate

I had to double-check that this was the real New York Times headline for the story about his appearance on Hannity. It is.

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— Matt Novak (@paleofuture.bsky.social) Sep 4, 2024 at 9:49 PM

More knowledge

I've written:

Expertise is knowing how to survive

We secrete the shell

John DeVore: 'Compassion, kindness, and creativity...glows in the darkness like fireflies'

A compelling essay by John DeVore on attending the theater in London:

"Here’s what I remember: energy, life, fire, hundreds of humans gathering, talking and gesticulating, finding their seats, leafing through programs, and watching other people fill a space with words and tears and bones. I remember thinking, “Theatre is not dead.”

* * *

I sat in a theater and watched a play in London. I remember wanting to be there. I remember everyone wanting to be there, too.

* * *

The only way to save the theatre — and, in turn, the national soul because the stakes are high — is to reevaluate our cultural values. Oh yeah. Conservatives are going to hate it. We will need to take over all the baseball stadiums and megachurches to do this right. It has to be IRL. I propose not inviting the tech guys, but we should because every voice is blah blah blah. But this needs to happen in person, like Model UN, Galactus-sized.

* * *

What’s important to me? Family. Friends. Listening to and showing up for those who love and see me. Those who accept me for who I am. It’s important to eat, laugh, and tell each other everything will work out, even if it does not. It’s important to tell stories and to do the work, especially the work that never ends. The work will never be finished, and there is joy in that knowledge. The fight was fought before you were born, and it will continue. Patience and spine are important — compassion, kindness, and creativity, the kind that glows in the darkness like fireflies at midnight. All important. Those are my values. It’s important to step out onto the stage and open yourself up. It’s important to share dreams, even those that feel like memories."

A Few Thoughts On How To Save The Theatre, John DeVore, June 12, 2024

It somehow reminds me of this too:

"But today I’ll say, I don’t just tolerate fifth grade graduations. I’m not just relieved when they are tolerable simulacra of the Real Graduations. Fifth grade graduations are, at this moment in time, my absolute favorite graduations. Because these ceremonies, for once, aren’t about winning a race. They aren’t about passing a bar whose very existence implies that others didn’t get there with you. They’re about a group of friends who shared a space for far more than half of their lives look each other in the eyes and say that this was ours, together. Some of us were better athletes and some of us were better dancers and singers and some of us memorized more digits of Pi and read thicker books, but it would not have been the same if we were not all here. We were friends, in the most complicated, transcendent form of the word. And if we are lucky, that is what we will still be, years from now."

Actually, fifth grade graduations might be the best graduations: On celebrating in public, together, Garrett Bucks, June 12, 2024

old photo of drama lady in leopardskin cavewoman dress

Friday, June 7, 2024

Democrats do need to worry about media narratives

You're not a farm animal: A plea to journalists to release themselves from Trump's press pens: This campaign has abused the media on a scale previously unseen in American politics. It's time to take a stand, Eric Boehlert, Salon, April 1, 2016

Eric Boehlert ("America isn't guaranteed a happy ending: A failure of imagination", Oct 06, 2021):

"This country has been facing a looming and open threat for a year now, ever since Trump signaled in September 2020, that he would not abide by the election results and assure a peaceful transfer of power – then everything unraveled from there. But news organizations still see themselves primarily as witnesses in the drama, paid to document the beating that democracy is taking at the hands of radical Republicans who try to dismantle the concept of free and fair elections in America.

It's almost 2022 and outlets like Washington Post are still pointlessly, and sheepishly, referring to incessant Trump lies about the election as “baseless claims” and “false allegations.”

Too many journalists don’t see themselves as having a vested interest in America maintaining a functioning democracy. They’re afraid that’s seen as picking sides so they remain reluctant to call out the party that’s purposely threatening it."

A new idea is gaining traction: Because most newspaper readers and network news viewers are already Biden voters, Dem efforts to influence media narratives and improve journalism are largely wasted. The idea is based on a false conceit, and (thus) wrong.

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— Brian Beutler (@brianbeutler.bsky.social) Jun 7, 2024 at 11:41 AM

The false conceit is that what appears, e.g., on the front page of the New York Times has no effect on the factoids and memes and propaganda people marinate in on social media, YouTube, and elsewhere. They cross-pollinate. www.offmessage.net/p/democrats-...

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— Brian Beutler (@brianbeutler.bsky.social) Jun 7, 2024 at 11:49 AM

Here's that link: Yes, Democrats Should Still Care How Real Journalists Cover The News (www.offmessage.net)

happy guy on old typewriter

"...we are now three decades into a right-wing takeover of our information ecosystem that is fundamentally changing people's frameworks. We're talking about the loss of local news. More than half of American counties have no access or very limited access to local news. We're talking about Sinclair, a right-wing operation taking over local broadcasts that reaches over 70% of the American population, with a deliberate agenda and a focus on crime, homelessness, and drugs. Add in social media — where so many people get their news — and how easily manipulable that is at its best. And at its worst, it's Elon Musk.

* * *

[Post 2024 election,] Democrats are in the wilderness. So we're not going to be able to govern and deliver in most places. Certainly not at the federal level. But we can really recognize the monumental task of the information ecosystem problem for what it is and start rebuilding there."

How to compete with the right-wing meaning-making media machine: Writer and policy wonk Heather McGhee on how Democrats failed to reach voters on policy, why having Beyoncé on your side isn't enough, and what it will take to build a left media in the Trump years. The Ink, Nov 11, 2024

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

On nuclear arms reduction

Since the late 1960s, the U.S. has reduced its nuclear weapons from 31,000 to 4,000. The theologian Charles Hartshorne wrote in 1984: "A nuclear freeze would be better than nothing. But the only significant aim is reduction. We should try to lead the world in this, without looking over our shoulder too anxiously to see what others are doing.
" In The Economist: "Even George Bush, no dewy-eyed disarmer, negotiated [nuclear] cuts down to 1,700-2,200 apiece by 2012 (from the 6,000 agreed upon after the cold war had ended) and was ready to go lower." Andrew Bacevich wrote in 2008: "Even if one assumes that nuclear weapons possess any real utility, what conceivable target set would require more than 100 warheads to destroy? Far more severe cuts in the U.S. arsenal, shrinking the total to a couple hundred at most, are in order."

Furthermore, the condition of the existing weapons remains a concern. As reported in The Week in January 2015: "The Pentagon recently admitted there are 'systemic problems across the nuclear enterprise'...as fears of nuclear war eased, the government failed to adequately maintain and update this immensely dangerous arsenal, which still contains enough collective destructive force to lay waste to every country on Earth." The president in 2017 has pushed for a trillion-dollar modernization.

Trump face in mushroom cloud

This is a large request for someone who, a year previously, did not recognize the notion of a "triad" of air, land, and sea weapons. George F. Will wrote in May 2017:

"As a candidate, Trump did not know what the nuclear triad is. Asked about it, he said: 'We have to be extremely vigilant and extremely careful when it comes to nuclear. Nuclear changes the whole ballgame.' Invited to elaborate, he said: 'I think — I think, for me, nuclear is just the power, the devastation is very important to me.' Someone Trump deemed fit to be a spokesman for him appeared on television to put a tasty dressing on her employer’s word salad: 'What good does it do to have a good nuclear triad if you’re afraid to use it?' To which a retired Army colonel appearing on the same program replied with amazed asperity: 'The point of the nuclear triad is to be afraid to use the damn thing.'"

Javier Solana wrote on Nov. 24, 2017:

"Trump’s foreign policy is adding to a long list of perverse incentives in the area of nuclear proliferation. Consider the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, which was launched on the pretext that Saddam Hussein was hiding weapons of mass destruction. He wasn’t. And when he was brought down, the other two members of US President George W. Bush’s so-called axis of evil, Iran and North Korea, concluded that not having nuclear arms made them vulnerable to American attempts at regime change. This conclusion was further reinforced in 2011, with the US-assisted overthrow of Libyan leader Muammar el-Qaddafi, who had abandoned his nuclear program eight years earlier.

...Trump’s threats of “fire and fury” have further convinced the North Korean leader that his survival and that of the Kim dynasty depend on nuclear weapons. Punishingly tight sanctions alone will not change his mind. Kim seems perfectly willing to subject the North Korean people to privations of every kind in order to remain in power.

* * *

Finding a strategy that credibly contains the North Korean threat is the only way to ensure that South Korea and Japan do not make the regrettable choice of joining the nuclear club....International security depends on preserving diplomatic success stories such as the JCPOA, which are crucial to avoid contagion and to put an end, once and for all, to dangerous spirals of antagonism and polarization."

Jeffrey Feltman, UN under-secretary-general for political affairs, met Ri Yong Ho, North Korean minister for foreign affairs, during the first week in December 2017. It was "the first trip there by a top UN official in six years," according to CNN. The UN released a statement saying that Ri and Feltman "agreed that the current situation was the most tense and dangerous peace and security issue in the world today."

In the film The Fog of War (2003), former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara said, "At the end we lucked out. It was luck that prevented nuclear wars.... The major lesson of the Cuban Crisis is this: The indefinite combination of human fallibility and nuclear weapons will destroy nations." (video clip)

Ira Helfand wrote on Dec. 9, 2017 that "the belief that we can possess thousands of nuclear weapons forever, that our luck will never run out and they will never be used" is "magical thinking [that] belongs in children's books." If Russia were to use a mere 300 weapons against the US, it "would kill more than 75 million people in the first half hour, and destroy the entire economic infrastructure on which the rest of the population relies to sustain themselves." Depending on how many weapons were used, the global temperature would drop enough "to trigger a global famine that would put some 2 billion people at risk" or possibly make humans extinct. Helfand, a member of the group that won the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize, says that the only possible solution is the abolishment of nuclear weapons and that all nuclear weapons states should sign on to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons that 122 nations voted in favor of on July 7.

People are talking about this article from the Wilson Center:

French provided a turnkey plutonium factory. USA, under JFK, made some efforts to monitor & delay & prevent Israeli nuclear weapon acquisition. No other USA president did shit until Nixon cut a deal with Golda Meir that USA would ignore Israel’s nukes if Israel kept somewhat quiet about them.

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— 🇵🇸Martin “Doomsday” Pfeiffer🏳️‍🌈 (@nuclearanthro.bsky.social) May 20, 2024 at 9:06 AM

To which someone else commented on Bluesky that the French provided the plutonium reactor, not finished bombs, and that the US knowlege of this transaction was later documented.

Evil is mindless

Martin Edic, 2024:

"The events of D-Day and beyond are almost unimaginable today. The world literally stood on the edge of total destruction, not just in Europe but across the globe. Today we face a very different kind of world but one that could equally blaze out of control, this time fired by the glow of nuclear weapons in the control of fanatics.

Putin, Xi, and Bibi all have them. North Korea likely has them and Iran grows very close, aided by Donald Trump’s idiotic decision to abandon our nuclear treaty with them, based on personal lack of interest in anything that did not boost his standing or that reflected well on his predessors.

In some ways, that action alone illustrates how one stupid man, nearly illiterate and mindless, could make a decision that years later causes mass destruction. Add in his appeasement of Vladimir Putin that it could be argued empowered him to attack Ukraine, and you start to see how bad decisions can escalate into global conflicts."

Sources

“Our aging nuclear arsenal.” The Week, Jan. 23, 2015. p 11.

Charles Hartshorne, Omnipotence and Other Theological Mistakes, Albany, New York: State University of New York Press, 1984. p 133.

"Safe without the bomb?" The Economist. April 11-17, 2009. p. 11.

”Trump has a dangerous disability,” George F. Will, Washington Post, May 3, 2017.

Andrew J. Bacevich. The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2008. p. 179.

"The Dangers of Nuclear Bombast," by Javier Solana, Project Syndicate, Nov. 24, 2017.

Martin Edic, "Reflecting on the Eightieth Anniversary of D-Day in the Light of Our World Now," The Witness Chronicles, June 5, 2024

<

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

When Trump encourages certain people to have 'a breaking point,' it's a threat

A couple days ago, on June 2, regarding the possibility that he may be sentenced to prison or house arrest, Trump said: "I'm not sure the public would stand for it...You know, at a certain point, there's a breaking point."

Joe Scarborough

Joe Scarborough highlights that this is "coded language for a man who started the worst riot — political riot — in American history in Washington, DC since the Civil War." (2:57–3:08) Trump knows that certain individuals and groups will hear it as a call to violence.

Rachel Maddow

Yesterday, on June 3, Rachel Maddow said: "These threats, and the harassment and intimidation of people who are involved in the legal system — people who are witnesses, jurors, prosecutors, judges, court personnel — Trump, I mean, encourages it, indirectly, every time he makes individual people in these legal proceedings a personal target for his criticism and vitriol and often his lies. He's never, ever discouraged his supporters from mounting the kind of harassment and intimidation campaigns that they have against everyone involved in these cases — including, like, the court clerks and the family members of the judges, and the witnesses themselves and their families too. And it's every time, right? It's not just this court case." (0:52–1:35)

Regarding Trump's "breaking point" comment, Maddow states the obvious: "It is a threat. It is the same threat he always makes because he wants us all to feel threatened." (3:35–3:53)

She then explains: Although Trump would like to imagine that many USAmericans will riot in the streets to defend him, this doesn't happen en masse because most USAmericans find it reasonable that he was indicted (and now convicted) in a court, according to normal legal processes, for crimes he allegedly committed (and now has been legally proven to have committed). What does happen, unfortunately, is that his most dedicated supporters threaten the people involved in the legal process. That's their tactic. They don't need to make large protests in the streets. Through their threats, they convey the idea that any of us could be threatened.

Trump, talking to Dr. Phil

Trump is talking about jailing his opponents. In an interview that aired June 6, Trump told Dr. Phil: "Revenge does take time. And sometimes revenge can be justified."

This is an important question. Trump’s agenda of “revenge” and “retribution,” as against what? He’s largely escaped all accountability. He did what he wanted as “president,” regardless of the law. He continues to rake in huge sums. Revenge for what? For the imagined slights. Revenge against YOU.

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— David Waldman (@kagrox.bsky.social) Jul 10, 2024 at 8:18 AM

Read more: Four investigations that could finally bring down Donald Trump on Medium.

doorbell

Monday, June 3, 2024

U.S. taxpayer money sends kids to religious schools (Washington Post)

Today's news:

"Billions in taxpayer dollars are being used to pay tuition at religious schools throughout the country, as state voucher programs expand dramatically and the line separating public education and religion fades.

School vouchers can be used at almost any private school, but the vast majority of the money is being directed to religious schools, according to a Washington Post examination of the nation’s largest voucher programs."

— "Billions in taxpayer dollars now go to religious schools via vouchers: The rapid expansion of state voucher programs follows court decisions that have eroded the separation between church and state." Laura Meckler and Michelle Boorstein, Washington Post, June 3, 2024

US Capitol building

In case you missed it

Have you seen inside the book 'To Climates Unknown'?

The alternate history novel To Climates Unknown by Arturo Serrano was released on November 25, the 400th anniversary of the mythical First ...