The last of our laws follows from the ninth, and in a sense embraces them all. It is this: no consideration should ever deflect us from the pursuit and recognition of truth, for that essentially is what constitutes civilization itself. There are many around today who concede, in theory, that truth is indivisible; but then insist, in practice, that some truths are more divisible than others. If we want to identify a social enemy we need go no further than examine his attitude to truth: it will always give him away; for, as Pascal says, 'The worst thing of all is when man begins to fear the truth, lest it denounce him.' But truth is much more than a means to expose the malevolent. It is the great creative force of civilization. For truth is knowledge; and a civilized man is one who, in Hobbes' words, has a 'perseverance of delight in the continual and indefatigable generation of knowledge.' Hobbes also writes: 'Joy, arising from imagination of a man's own power and ability, is that exaltation of mind called glorying.' And so it is; for the pursuit of truth is our civilization's glory, and the joy we obtain from it is the nearest we shall approach to happiness, at least on this side of the grave. If we are steadfast in this aim, we need not fear the enemies of society.
Tuesday, February 28, 2023
No consideration should ever deflect us from the pursuit and recognition of truth, for that essentially is what constitutes civilization itself.
When quality control goes out the window, an opportunity is created for someone
When it was time for Sam Beyda, then a freshman at Columbia University, to take his Calculus I midterm, the professor told students they had 90 minutes.But the exam would be administered online. And even though every student was expected to take it alone, in their dorms or apartments or at the library, it wouldn’t be proctored. And they had 24 hours to turn it in.“Anyone who hears that knows it’s a free-for-all,” Beyda told me.Beyda, an economics major, said students texted each other answers; looked up solutions on Chegg, a crowdsourced website with answers to exam questions; and used calculators, which were technically verboten.He finished the exam in under an hour, he said. Other students spent two or three hours on it. Some classmates paid older students who had already taken the course to do it for them.“Professors just don’t care,” he told me.For decades, campus standards have been plummeting. The hallowed, ivy-draped buildings, the stately quads, the timeless Latin mottos—all that tradition and honor have been slipping away. That’s an old story. Then Covid struck and all bets were off. With college kids doing college from their bedrooms and smartphones, and with the explosion of new technology, cheating became not just easy but practically unavoidable. “Cheating is rampant,” a Princeton senior told me. “Since Covid there’s been an increasing trend toward grade inflation, cheating, and ultimately, academic mediocrity.”Now that students are back on campus, colleges are having a hard time putting the genie back in the bottle. Remote testing combined with an array of tech tools—exam helpers like Chegg, Course Hero, Quizlet, and Coursera; messaging apps like GroupMe and WhatsApp; Dropbox folders containing course material from years past; and most recently, ChatGPT, the AI that can write essays—have permanently transformed the student experience.“It’s the Wild West when it comes to using emerging technologies and new forms of access to knowledge,” Gregory Keating, who has a joint appointment at USC’s Department of Philosophy and Gould School of Law, told me. “Faculties and administrations are scrambling to keep up.”
Don't forget Land Use
Large-scale alterations to the land surface can affect the weather and climate. For example, changing the land surface can alter albedo (its reflectivity of solar radiation back into space) which directly alters sensible heat (heat that we can measure with a thermometer) and latent heat (which is in the form of water vapor) mixed into the atmosphere.There are many peer reviewed papers that have for decades convincingly shown that land use can change regional climate. For instance, Gordon Bonan, a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, explained the significance research that I led on the effects of land use on the weather and climate of south Florida:“Nobody experiences the effect of a half a degree increase in global mean temperature. What we experience are the changes in the climate in the place where we live, and those changes might be large. Land cover change is as big an influence on regional and local climate and weather as doubled atmospheric carbon dioxide—perhaps even bigger….. Climate change is about more than a change in global temperature. It’s about changes in weather patterns across the Earth… The land is where we live. This research shows that the land itself exerts a first order [primary] influence on the climate we experience.”
Academia passing off poisonous ideological opinions as scientific research
MSN reported on the study here. The short version: COVID jab refusers evidence a “lack of problem-solving skills” and “rigid thinking,” as well as an “inability to see complexity.”Where shall we begin?The Many Ways This Study is Bullshit
This essay would be longer than the study itself if I gave it the dissection it deserves, so I’m going to have to limit myself to just a few points. This is more snarkfest than serious refutation because, frankly, it’s so goddamn dumb that it doesn’t deserve the time investment that a serious refutation would take.So let’s laugh together.Way #1: Their Construct Is Bullshit
History
John von Neumann and Enrico Fermi on the trouble with using four parameters to fit your data, as relayed by Freeman Dyson
— Michael Nielsen (@michael_nielsen) January 17, 2023
I think of this story & smile whenever I hear about a 17 zillion parameter neural net, & wonder what they would have said https://t.co/pxhY45SnOB pic.twitter.com/DhCsY8fAz6
Emotionally overwrought fanatics
Someone got misgendered in the room and all hell broke loose pic.twitter.com/nAocDH5NDe
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) February 28, 2023
I see wonderful things
Actual playground, 1912. Back then the adults weeded out the weaker kids who didn’t show World War-winning ability. pic.twitter.com/rwsG8nwH2W
— Super 70s Sports (@Super70sSports) January 16, 2023
Offbeat Humor
Until 1998, a point of order during a vote in the House of Commons could only be made while wearing a hat.
— Ned Donovan | فارس دونوفان (@Ned_Donovan) January 17, 2023
A collapsible opera top hat was kept with the doormen solely for this purpose, as seen worn by Tony Marlow in this clip from 1994. pic.twitter.com/evVm033phH
Nine Rhetorical Devices - (3) Anadiplosis
Anadiplosis (/ænədɪˈploʊsɪs/ AN-ə-di-PLOH-sis; Greek: ἀναδίπλωσις, anadíplōsis, "a doubling, folding up") is the repetition of the last word of a preceding clause. The word is used at the end of a sentence and then used again at the beginning of the next sentence.
The years to come seemed waste of breath,A waste of breath the years behind- W.B. Yeats, "An Irish Airman Foresees His Death"
For Lycidas is dead, dead ere his prime, Young Lycidas and hath not left his peer.- John Milton, LycidasAboard my ship, excellent performance is standard. Standard performance is sub-standard. Sub-standard performance is not permitted to exist.- Herman Wouk, The Caine Mutiny.Having power makes [totalitarian leadership] isolated; isolation breeds insecurity; insecurity breeds suspicion and fear; suspicion and fear breed violence.- Zbigniew Brzezinski, The Permanent Purge: Politics in Soviet TotalitarianismYour beliefs become your thoughts, your thoughts become your words, your words become your actions, your actions become your habits, your habits become your values, your values become your destiny.
Data Talks
The percentage growth in the number of health care administrators compared to that in physicians: That tiny barely-visible yellow sliver at the bottom of the graph is the growth in physicians, and the towering Alpine peaks on top of it is the growth in administrators. pic.twitter.com/RQbfAf26B4
— Monitoring Bias (@monitoringbias) January 15, 2023
Monday, February 27, 2023
Rely on science, based on objectively established criteria and agreed foundations, with a rational methodology and mature criteria of proof
Of course using words in their true sense is one element in precision of thought. And trained skill in thinking precisely to advance knowledge is what we mean by science. So the ninth commandment is: trust science. By this we mean a true science, based on objectively established criteria and agreed foundations, with a rational methodology and mature criteria of proof - not the multitude of pseudo-sciences which, as we have seen, have marked characteristics which can easily be detected and exposed. Science, properly defined, is an essential part of civilization. To be anti-science is not the mark of a civilized human being, or of a friend of humanity. Given the right safeguards and standards, the progress of science constitutes our best hope for the future, and anyone who denies this proposition is an enemy of science.
History
A whimsical 3,100 year-old ancient Egyptian image of a monkey scratching a girl’s nose. Painted on a potsherd, it was perhaps a student’s practice sketch. Found in an area identified as an artists’ school near the Ramesseum, ancient Thebes. Petrie Museum. 📷 my own.#Archaeology pic.twitter.com/mmuoNB4FVZ
— Alison Fisk (@AlisonFisk) January 17, 2023
Failed Urban Jurisdictions
Rising crime is the number one crisis facing Chicago today. More specifically, the city’s propensity for murder. Chicago was the nation’s extreme outlier for homicides in 2022, with 697 deaths. More people were murdered here than anywhere else.What’s worse, Chicago has out-paced the entire nation in murders for 11 years in a row. It’s become an embedded, chronic wound for the city.That’s not a surprising result given the failed policies of Chicago’s leadership in recent years, from a dramatic drop in arrests to ever-fewer prosecutions to reduced sentencing. The pursuit of “equity” and “social justice,” instead of actual justice, has only increased the protection of criminals, crushed police morale and increased the violence inflicted on ordinary Chicagoans.That’s just one of the facts contained in Wirepoints’ latest Special Report: Chicago, New Orleans were the nation’s murder capitals in 2022: A Wirepoints survey of America’s 75 largest cities.
There is no such thing as hate speech
An Insight
After coaching a lot of very successful people, here's an unsexy truth:
— Dr. Julie Gurner (@drgurner) January 14, 2023
A lot of success is learning to grind when it's boring.
Staying engaged, working, and seeing it through when it's "boring" is a skill. If you expect all building to be exciting, you'll never make it.
A willingness to protect enhances attractiveness
Here you see that women rate male dates (described in this particular version of the study as average in physical strength and average in physical attractiveness) who make no attempt to protect them as a 2 out of 10 in attractiveness. Women rate a man who attempts to protect them but fails as a 7.5 out of 10. And a man who attempts to protect them and succeeds is an 8 out of 10.So the major bump in attractiveness comes from willingness, rather than ability.The paper also finds that people judge same and opposite-sex individuals as more desirable as friends if they show a willingness to protect them. The most extreme real-world cases of this may be the documented accounts of military members who intentionally use their bodies to absorb blasts from explosive devices to protect their friends, as in the case of detonated grenades.Overall, people (especially women), prefer romantic partners (and friends) who are willing to protect them. The ability to protect is a factor in desirability ratings. But people assign more importance to willingness.More from the paper:“Discovering that a person is willing to physically protect you, independent of their ability to do so, is very attractive in both mates and friends…especially when women are judging targets and when the target judged is a man…Conversely, unwillingness to protect was unattractive. In fact, it was a deal-breaker for women rating male dates: male dates who stepped away when a woman was being attacked were rated near the floor of the scale.”In short, willingness to protect gives people (especially men) a strong boost in attractiveness.In contrast, the ability to protect gives a small (and mostly statistically insignificant) boost. The drive to protect seems to matter most for attractiveness judgments.Mate choice has been a powerful force in shaping human evolution. And mate choice has been sensitive to cues of violence in the ancestral environment.It is likely that the preference for partners who are willing to protect us has led to humans becoming particularly willing (relative to our primate relatives) to incur costs to help others.
I see wonderful things
This natural occurrence makes for a striking view! The silt-laden fresh water of the Fraser River and the sea water of the Strait of Georgia do not mix and therefore form a clearly visible boundary between each other. 🌊 pic.twitter.com/7V5LC3Bizf
— H0W_THlNGS_W0RK (@HowThingsWork_) January 16, 2023
Offbeat Humor
We asked 100 women what their favourite shampoo was.. pic.twitter.com/lrqMTxDJ4I
— Terrible Maps (@TerribleMaps) January 16, 2023
Nine Rhetorical Devices - (2) Polyptoton
Polyptoton /ˌpɒlɪpˈtoʊtɒn/ is the stylistic scheme in which words derived from the same root are repeated (such as "strong" and "strength"). A related stylistic device is antanaclasis, in which the same word is repeated, but each time with a different sense. Another related term is figura etymologica.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely.- Lord Acton
Who shall watch the watchmen themselves- Juvenal (Quis custodiet ipsos custodes)Diamond me no diamonds, prize me no prizes…- Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Lancelot and ElaineThe healthy man does not torture others—generally it is the tortured who turn into torturers.- Carl JungWith eager feeding food doth choke the feeder.- William Shakespeare Richard II II, i, 37
Data Talks
Why did CEO pay suddenly shoot up starting in the 1980s?
— Ethan Mollick (@emollick) January 11, 2023
This paper argues a big cause was the CEO role became more professionalized & demanding. This meant CEOs could now easily switch between companies, creating a competitive market for executives. The charts tell the story! pic.twitter.com/vT868bmbwf
The countenance of humanity, charmed into unity from a thousand contradictory features.
But even if a reader acquires no new language, or for that matter does not even acquaint himself with some new or hitherto unknown literature, he can endlessly go on with his reading, making finer distinctions, heightening, strengthening. For every thinking person each verse of each poet will show a new and different face to the reader every few years, will awaken a different resonance in him. When as a youth I read for the first time, only partially understanding it, Goethe’s Elective Affinities, that was a completely different book from the Elective Affinities that I have now read perhaps for the fifth time! The great and mysterious thing about this reading experience is this: the more discriminatingly, the more sensitively, and the more associatively we learn to read, the more clearly we see every thought and every poem in its uniqueness, its individuality, in its precise limitations and see that all beauty, all charm depend on this individuality and uniqueness—at the same time we come to realize ever more clearly how all these hundred thousand voices of nations strive toward the same goals, call upon the same gods by different names, dream the same wishes, suffer the same sorrows. Out of the thousandfold fabric of countless languages and books of several thousand years, in ecstatic instants there stares at the reader a marvelously noble and transcendent chimera: the countenance of humanity, charmed into unity from a thousand contradictory features.
Sunday, February 26, 2023
Beware of those who seek to win an argument at the expense of the language
When we are dealing with concepts like freedom and equality, it is essential to use words accurately and in good faith. So the eighth commandment is: beware of those who seek to win an argument at the expense of the language. For the fact that they do is proof positive that their argument is false, and proof presumptive that they know it is. A man who deliberately inflicts violence on the language will almost certainly inflict violence on human beings if he acquires the power. Those who treasure the meaning of words will treasure truth, and those who bend words to their purposes are very likely in pursuit of anti-social ones. The correct and honourable use of words is the first and natural credential of civilized status.
You must exaggerate much and you must omit much.
No nation admits of an abstract definition; all nations are beings of many qualities and many sides; no historical event exactly illustrates any one principle; every cause is intertwined and surrounded with a hundred others. The best history is but like the art of Rembrandt; it casts a vivid light on certain selected causes, on those which were best and greatest; it leaves all the rest in shadow and unseen. To make a single nation illustrate a principle, you must exaggerate much and you must omit much.
No person admits of an abstract definition; all people are beings of many qualities and many sides; no personal experience exactly illustrates any one principle; every personal action is intertwined and surrounded with a hundred others. The best personal biography is but like the art of Rembrandt; it casts a vivid light on certain selected causes, on those which were best and greatest; it leaves all the rest in shadow and unseen. To make a single person illustrate an abstract principle, you must exaggerate much and you must omit much.
History
The Victorian Photographic Society That Tried to Preserve 'Old London'
— Knowledge of London (@Knowledgepoint) January 15, 2023
In capturing images of doomed buildings, they documented the city they thought they were losing. The entrance to the Oxford Arms, the first photograph released by the Society. pic.twitter.com/e8vEuXywLs
An Insight
4 stories from Washington Post in a 2 day period:
— Oilfield Rando (@Oilfield_Rando) January 13, 2023
1. No one is coming after gas stoves
2. Republicans are just making gas stoves an issue to wage culture war
3. Why regulators are banning gas stoves
4. Why banning gas stoves is good actually pic.twitter.com/ED8NY8uHzV
Life is long enough.
It is not that we have a short space of time, but that we waste much of it. Life is long enough.Non exiguum temporis habemus, sed multum perdidimus. Satis longa vita.
I see wonderful things
CARAVAGGIO’s biblical paintings re-created as living paintings by the incredibly talented Ludovica Rambelli Theatre Troupe, accompanied by Mozart's Requiem.#TableauxVivants
— Michael Warburton (@MichaelWarbur17) January 15, 2023
pic.twitter.com/oZi2worA0u
Offbeat Humor
The China–North Korea–Russia tripoint must be one of the weirder borders out there... Source: https://t.co/IbQ6T85zDy pic.twitter.com/fLx2Bj641U
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) January 17, 2023
Data Talks
Does childhood maltreatment cause mental health problems? Our new meta-analysis of 34 quasi-experimental studies (N~54k individuals) suggests a small causal effect of child maltreatment on mental health problems. Published today in AJP! @APApsychiatric https://t.co/kN8a5CvnhR pic.twitter.com/87brzQDgXe
— Dr Jessie Baldwin (@jessiebaldwin) January 11, 2023
Nine Rhetorical Devices - (1) Antimetabole
In rhetoric, antimetabole (/æntɪməˈtæbəliː/ AN-ti-mə-TAB-ə-lee) is the repetition of words in successive clauses, but in transposed order; for example, "I know what I like, and I like what I know". It is related to, and sometimes considered a special case of, chiasmus.An antimetabole can be predictive, because it is easy to reverse the terms. It may trigger deeper reflection than merely stating one half of the line.
Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.
- John F. Kennedy, "Inaugural Address", January 20, 1961.
Unus pro omnibus, omnes pro uno (One for all, all for one)Eat to live, not live to eat. —attributed to SocratesThe Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath. —Mark 2:27When the going gets tough, the tough get going.Fair is foul, and foul is fair — William Shakespeare, MacbethAll crime is vulgar, just as all vulgarity is crime — Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray
And bread I broke with you was more than bread.
Music I HeardBy Conrad AikenMusic I heard with you was more than music,And bread I broke with you was more than bread.Now that I am without you, all is desolate,All that was once so beautiful is dead.Your hands once touched this table and this silver,And I have seen your fingers hold this glass.These things do not remember you, beloved:And yet your touch upon them will not pass.For it was in my heart you moved among them,And blessed them with your hands and with your eyes.And in my heart they will remember always:They knew you once, O beautiful and wise!
A thousand ways lead through the jungle to a thousand goals, and no goal is the final one; with each step new expanses open.
And each year we see thousands and thousands of children entering the first class, drawing their first letters, deciphering the first syllables, and we see again and again that for a majority of these children the ability to read quickly becomes an ordinary matter of little value, while others from year to year and decade to decade become more and more enchanted and astounded by the use they can make of the magic key that school gave them. For if today the ability to read is everyone's portion, still only a few notice what a powerful talisman has thus been put into their hands. The child proud of his youthful knowledge of the alphabet first achieves for himself the reading of a verse or a saying, then the reading of a first little story, a fairy tale, and while those who have not been called seem to apply their reading ability to news reports or to the business sections of their newspapers, there are a few who remain constantly bewitched by the strange miracle of letters and words (which once, to be sure, were an enchantment and magic formula to everyone). From these few come the readers. They discover as children a few poems and stories, a verse by Claudius, or a tale by Hebel or Hauff in the reader, and instead of turning their backs on these things after acquiring the ability to read they press forward into the realm of books and discover step by step how vast, how various and blessed this world is! At first they took this world for a little child’s pretty garden with a tulip bed and a little fish pond; now the garden becomes a park, it becomes a landscape, a section of the earth, the world, it becomes Paradise and the Ivory Coast, it entices with constantly new enchantments, blooms in ever-new colors. And what yesterday appeared to be a garden or a park or a jungle, today or tomorrow is recognized as a temple, a temple with a thousand halls and courtyards in which the spirit of all nations and times is present, constantly waiting for reawakening, ever ready, to recognize the many-voiced multiplicity of its phenomena as a unity. And for every true reader this endless world of books looks different, everyone seeks and recognizes himself in it. One gropes his way from children’s tales and books about Indians to Shakespeare or Dante, another from the first schoolbook essay about the starry heavens to Kepler or to Einstein, a third from a pious child’s prayer to the holy cool vaults of Saint Thomas or Saint Bonaventure, or to the sublime complexities of Talmudic thought, or to the springlike similes of the Upanishads, to the moving wisdom of the Hasidim, or to the lapidary and yet so friendly, so genial and merry teachings of ancient China. A thousand ways lead through the jungle to a thousand goals, and no goal is the final one; with each step new expanses open.
Saturday, February 25, 2023
When the claims of freedom conflict with the pursuit of other desirable objects of public policy, freedom should normally prevail
We have seen that there is a close connection between the rise of the middle class, and the growth of political and economic freedom. But it is not true, as Lenin contemptuously asserted, that 'freedom is a bourgeois prejudice'. Freedom is a good which any rational man knows how to value, whatever his social origins, occupation or economic prospects. Throughout history, the attachment of even the humblest people to their freedom, above all their freedom to earn their livings how and where they please, has come as an unpleasant shock to condescending ideologues. We need not suppose that the exercise of freedom is bought at the expense of any deserving class or interest - only of those with the itch to tyrannize. So the seventh commandment is that, when the claims of freedom conflict with the pursuit of other desirable objects of public policy, freedom should normally prevail; society should have a rational and an emotional disposition in its favour. In our times, liberty's chief conflict has been with equality. But absolute equality is not a good at all; it is a chimera, and if it existed would prove as fearful and destructive a monster as that grotesque creature Bellerophon killed. And the regarding and indiscriminate pursuit of relative equality, itself desirable, has led to many unwarranted restrictions on human freedom without attaining its object. In short, for many years the bias has been in the wrong direction, and it is now necessary to strike a new balance of moral good by redressing it. Where there is genuine doubt between the legitimate claims of liberty and equality, the decision taken should be the one most easily reversed if it proves mistaken.
History
This might be exciting.
— A Beautiful Culture (@ABeautifulCult1) January 16, 2023
A flintlock alarm clock that ignited gunpowder to wake you up. Made in the 1600s. pic.twitter.com/ERsf2h3XRd
An Insight
"There is a deep human need for beauty, and if you ignore that need in architecture, your buildings will not last, since people will never feel at home in them"
— Conor Lynch (@c_k_lynch) January 12, 2023
- Sir Roger Scruton
Today marks 3 years since the passing of this great man pic.twitter.com/Dww54YVUvN
Would you look at that.
I see wonderful things
The letters "ough" can be pronounced at least 8 different ways in English.
— The Cultural Tutor (@culturaltutor) January 15, 2023
How did that happen?! pic.twitter.com/DoIVcNuit0
Offbeat Humor
You can never be too old for Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner… pic.twitter.com/RB1sZFhqzE
— I❤️Nostalgia (@il0venostalgia) January 17, 2023
Data Talks
82% of published humanities articles are never cited. Of those that get cited, only 20% get read. Half of all papers get read only by their authors, reviewers, and editors. So why are we still subjected to nearly 2 million academic articles each year?https://t.co/qve9POsjZz
— Intellectual Takeout (@intellectualTO) January 5, 2023
Virgin and Child with Saint Nicasius and Saint Francis of Assisi ( Castelfranco Altarpiece ), c. 1500 by Giorgione (1478-1510)
Suddenly rise resplendent from the grave as though time did not exist
But in much narrower and simpler circles we can observe every day how completely marvelous and like fairy tales are the histories of books, how at one moment they have the greatest enchantment and then again the gift of becoming invisible. Poets live and die, known by few or none, and we see their work after their death, often decades after their death, suddenly rise resplendent from the grave as though time did not exist. We saw in amazement how Nietzsche, unanimously rejected by his people, after fulfilling his mission for a few dozen minds, became several decades too late a favorite author whose books could not be printed fast enough, or how Hodlderlin’s poems, more than a hundred years after their composition, suddenly intoxicated our studious youths, or how, from the ancient. treasury of Chinese wisdom, suddenly after millennia the one and only Lao-tse was discovered by postwar Europe; badly translated and badly read, Lao-tse became a fashion like Tarzan or the fox trot; nevertheless he was enormously influential on the productive level of our living minds.
Friday, February 24, 2023
The health of the middle class is probably the best index of the health of a society as a whole
The sixth of our rules is that there is nothing morally unhealthy about the existence of a middle class in society. No one need feel ashamed of being bourgeois, of pursuing a bourgeois way of life, or of adhering to bourgeois cultural and moral standards. That it should be necessary to assert such a proposition is a curious commentary on our age, and in particular its mania for the lowest common denominator of social uniformity. Throughout history all intelligent observers of society have welcomed the emergence of a flourishing middle-class, which they have rightly associated with economic prosperity, political stability, the growth of individual freedom and the raising of moral and cultural standards. The middle class, stretching from the self-employed skilled craftsman to the leaders of the learned professions, has produced the overwhelming majority of the painters, architects, writers, and musicians, as well as the administrators, technologists and scientists, on which the quality and strength of a culture principally rest. The health of the middle class is probably the best index of the health of a society as a whole; and any political system which persecutes its middle class systematically is unlikely to remain either free or prosperous for long.
They want you to suffer so that they can preen
To fill vacancies, most large police agencies have lowered their standards. In 2020 Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown announced that certain applicants would no longer be required to obtain 60 college credits. The department received 400 applications the day of the announcement. Philadelphia dropped its residency and age requirements in 2017 and applications jumped 20%. But it didn’t work for long, as poor recruitment and high attrition have since returned to those departments.The longer the staffing crisis goes on, the worse community-police tensions will become as faith in the competence and trustworthiness of law enforcement erodes. A four-year college degree may not be necessary to perform the duties of a police officer, but applicants with sketchy employment and education résumés are unlikely to possess the communication skills and self-control necessary to do well as cops. A history of drug and alcohol abuse or criminal activity has been shown to increase the risk that an officer will use excessive force or engage in serious misconduct on the job. Officers who are in poor physical shape can’t credibly protect the public from crime.Demetrius Haley, one of the five officers involved in Nichols’s death, joined the Memphis Police Department in 2020 after the agency loosened its education requirements. Mr. Haley had previously worked as a Shelby County corrections officer and was sued in 2016 for allegedly beating a jail inmate. That case was dismissed on a technicality, but Mr. Haley was reprimanded by the Memphis Police Department after only six months on the job for not filing a report after using force during an arrest. Months later, he crashed a cruiser while responding to a police call. Three of the four other officers had also earned official reprimands during their short careers.Memphis has been hiring questionable candidates since 2017-18, when it applied for six waivers to a Tennessee law preventing police departments from hiring recruits with criminal or drug histories. But the city lowered the bar further last year in a bid to get more recruits in the door. The college education and fitness requirements were watered down significantly.Memphis isn’t alone. Other departments have relaxed standards. The Police Executive Research Forum has found that a majority of departments are accepting recruits who admit to having used illegal drugs. Visible tattoos were once a no-no, but a third of departments now allow them. And many departments are granting exemptions to rules against hiring applicants with criminal convictions.The deprofessionalization of policing is a danger to public safety. Waiving or eliminating standards exacerbates the staffing problem by demoralizing veteran officers and turning off high-quality candidates. Excellence attracts excellence. Police officers who can’t handle the physical and ethical rigors of the job risk achieving through their actions what the “defund the police” movement never could by debasing the profession in the eyes of the American people.
History
These are choir chairs from the 14th c in #LundCathedral. When renovating them, dices and gambling cards were found! Also notes from the Middle Ages, among them, this love poem:
— Thomas Småberg 🏰🐉🌊 (@ThomasSmaberg) January 14, 2023
"I found a sweet rose in first bloom, her cheek blushing and my heart grows hot when she is near" pic.twitter.com/IDoXnNd8iB
An Insight
Drake owned slaves. Gandhi disliked blacks. MLK had affairs. Wilberforce opposed workers' rights. People like history are complex & are products of their age. And if we don't grow up & stop judging the past by our age, instead of learning from history we'll end up lecturing air. pic.twitter.com/mfTyRJ72mk
— Ike Ijeh (@ikeijeh) January 12, 2023
I see wonderful things
Some dream of fame.
— Into The Forest Dark (@ElliottBlackwe3) January 13, 2023
Some dream of traveling to space.
I dream of having a secret door in one library that leads to another hidden library. pic.twitter.com/uAYBrYb211
Offbeat Humor
Secret congressional codenames revealed during roll call #politics pic.twitter.com/s1zPFBrnMW
— Bad Lip Reading (@BadLipReading) January 12, 2023
Data Talks
Do people ever really change? A massive new meta-analysis says no—at least when it comes to the differences between us. Despite some fluctuations in adolescence and early adulthood, personality differences among adults are remarkably stable over time.https://t.co/WcntIZxuR4
— Benjamin Ruisch (@benruisch) January 9, 2023
The only means by which humanity can have a history and a continuing consciousness of itself.
We need not allow ourselves to be robbed of the agreeable feeling of progress attained, instead we will rejoice that reading and writing are no longer the prerogatives of a guild or caste. Since the invention of the printing press the book has become an object of general use and luxury distributed in huge quantities. Large printings make possible low book prices and therefore every country can make its best books (the so-called classics) available to those in modest circumstances. Then too we will not grieve very much over the fact | that the concept “book” has lost almost all its former splendor and that very recently the book seems to have sacrificed even more of its worth and attractiveness in the eyes of the crowd because of the cinema and the radio. And yet we need not fear a future elimination of the book. On the contrary, the more that certain needs for entertainment and education are satisfied through other inventions, the more the book will win back in dignity and authority. For even the most childish intoxication with progress will soon be forced to recognize that writing and books have a function that is eternal. It will become evident that formulation in words and the handing on of these formulations through writing are not only important aids but actually the only means by which humanity can have a history and a continuing consciousness of itself.
Thursday, February 23, 2023
The return of the ozone hole
NASA measurements of the Ozone Hole (OH) over the Southern Hemisphere do not support the claim that the Montreal Protocol, which banned the emissions of ozone destroying substances, had an effect on the OH
— Ned Nikolov, Ph.D. (@NikolovScience) February 22, 2023
- OH is bigger now than it was in the 1980s
- OH remained large since 1992 pic.twitter.com/eVMKPYqyiZ
The fifth salient rule is always, and in all situations, to stress the importance of the individual.
The fifth salient rule is always, and in all situations, to stress the importance of the individual. Where individual and corporate rights conflict, the political balance should usually be weighted in favor of the individual; for civilizations are created, and maintained, not by corporations, however benign, but my multitudes and multitudes of individuals, operating independently. We have seen how, under the Roman empire, political and economic freedom declined, pari passu, with the growth of the corporations, and their organization by the state. The Roman concept of the collegia survived; it was built into the Christian church, and so was carried over into the Dark Age towns and into the guilds of medieval and early modern society. Guild-forms were eventually transmuted into trade unions. The liberal epoch, which occurred after the powers of the guilds has been effectively curbed, and before the powers of the unions had been established, was thus a blessed and fruitful interval between the two tyrannies - fruitful, indeed, because it produced the Industrial Revolution, the first economic take-off, and thus taught the world how to achieve self-sustaining economic growth. The trade union is now increasing its economic power and its political influence faster than any other institutions in western society. It is not wholly malevolent, but is has certain increasingly reprehensible characteristics. One is that it claims, and gets, legal privilege; it thus breaks our forth commandment, the rule of law. Another is that it curbs the elitist urge in man, the very essence of civilization, and quite deliberately and exultantly reinforces the average. As Ortega Y Gasset puts it, in The Revolt of the Masses, 'The chief characteristic of our time is that the mediocre mind, aware of its own mediocrity, has the boldness to assert the rights of mediocrity and to impose them everywhere." Such an actual or potential menace to our culture can be contained, provided we keep this commandment strictly, and protect the individual against corporatism.
History
The balance and harmony of the Pantheon. Equal in height and diameter, the building's rotunda creates a perfect sphere measuring 43.2 metres (150 Roman feet). The Pantheon, completed in 126 AD, still holds the record for the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. pic.twitter.com/w0Ihak1suX
— Gareth Harney (@OptimoPrincipi) January 14, 2023
An Insight
You must know, then, that there are two methods of fighting, the one by law, the other by force: the first method is that of men, the second of beasts; but as the first method is often insufficient, one must have recourse to the second.
— Niccolò Machiavelli | The Prince ⚔️ (@NiccoloDaily) January 11, 2023
I see wonderful things
This man was extremely fortunate, narrowly avoiding a tornado just in front of him.🌪️😳 pic.twitter.com/FHHLBAXUBT
— H0W_THlNGS_W0RK (@HowThingsWork_) January 14, 2023
Offbeat Humor
People in 2023 are like, "Hello, I am a weird, damaged person who has personal pronouns, sees a therapist twice a week, and is on multiple drugs for anxiety and depression. First off, I want to explain why I became a teacher, then I want to tell you how to fix society."
— John Hawkins (@johnhawkinsrwn) January 11, 2023
The more progressive you are, the more you depend on really rich people.
California’s top income-tax rate is 13.3% on earners making more than $1 million. The top 0.5% of California taxpayers pay 40% of state income taxes. Volatile equity prices and layoffs at Silicon Valley companies are hitting capital gains. Companies are also cutting bonuses.
Data Talks
What happened in the 1980's so that
— Robert Lufkin MD (@robertlufkinmd) January 9, 2023
everyone, everywhere,
of all ages started getting fat? pic.twitter.com/yTTP08oIkU
Today, so it seems, the world of writing and of the intellect is open to everyone
Today all this is apparently completely changed. Today, so it seems, the world of writing and of the intellect is open to everyone; indeed he is forcibly initiated into it if he hesitates. Today, so it seems, being able to read and write is little more than being able to breathe or at most knowing how to ride horseback. Writing and the book have apparently been divested of every special dignity, every enchantment, every magic. In religious circles, no doubt, there is still the concept of the “holy” book based on revelation; but since the single, still really powerful religious organization in the Occident, the Roman Catholic Church, puts no great value on seeing the Bible distributed as reading matter, there are in reality no holy books at all except those of a small number of orthodox Jews and the members of a few Protestant sects. Here and there the requirement may still persist that, when taking an oath, the person swearing must place his hand on the Bible; this gesture however is only a chill, dead remnant of a once blazing power and for the average person contains, like the form of the oath itself, no magical force whatever. Books have ceased to be mysteries, they are accessible to everyone, so it seems. From a liberal, democratic point of view this is progress and is accepted as a matter of course; from other points of view, however, it is a devaluation and vulgarization of the spirit.
Wednesday, February 22, 2023
We seem monomaniacally focused on ensuring that bad services are equally distributed instead of ensuring that all citizens receive minimally acceptable services.
The central concern of this volume is to examine the interrelationships between three levels of urban social structure: (1) local public policy-makers, comprised of elected public officials, the heads of major municipal departments, and "civic notables," or persons who play important roles in urban civic life; (2) "institutional agents," or persons who operate on the grass roots levels of important urban structures, for example, policemen, teachers, case workers, retail merchants, and personnel offices of major employers; and (3) rank-and-file black citizens. The design of the study is comparative. Fifteen cities were examined, representing 13 of the 15 major metropolitan areas of the U. S. The historical context is early 1968 when the field work for the study was undertaken. The research described in this volume tends to support three major conclusions: First, the central institutions of different cities treat their black citizens quite differently. Second, black citizens keenly appreciate those differences. Third, the different treatment of blacks from place to place depends on the political strength that they can muster. In cities where blacks are a large proportion of the electorate, municipal administrations tend to be more attentive to black leaders. In cities where blacks are poorly organized or constitute a small minority, black citizens tend to get short shrift. (Author/JM)
Detroit (82.70%)Jackson, Mississippi (79.40%)Miami Gardens, Florida (76.3%)Birmingham (73.5%)Baltimore (64.3%)Memphis (61.4%)New Orleans (60.2%)Richmond, Virginia (57.2%)Flint (56.6%)Montgomery (56.6%)Savannah (55.0%)Augusta (54.7%)Cleveland (54.3%)Atlanta (54.0%)Newark (53.5%)St. Louis (51.2%)Shreveport (50.8%)Portsmouth, Virginia (50.6%)Baton Rouge (50.2%)