There is a fascinating passage in Rising Star, David Garrow’s comprehensive biography of Barack Obama’s early years, in which the historian examines Obama’s account in Dreams from My Father of his breakup with his longtime Chicago girlfriend, Sheila Miyoshi Jager. In Dreams, Obama describes a passionate disagreement following a play by African American playwright August Wilson, in which the young protagonist defends his incipient embrace of Black racial consciousness against his girlfriend’s white-identified liberal universalism. As readers, we know that the stakes of this decision would become more than simply personal: The Black American man that Obama wills into being in this scene would go on to marry a Black woman from the South Side of Chicago named Michelle Robinson and, after a meteoric rise, win election as the first Black president of the United States.Yet what Garrow documented, after tracking down and interviewing Sheila Miyoshi Jager, was an explosive fight over a very different subject. In Jager’s telling, the quarrel that ended the couple’s relationship was not about Obama’s self-identification as a Black man. And the impetus was not a play about the American Black experience, but an exhibit at Chicago’s Spertus Institute about the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann.At the time that Obama and Sheila visited the Spertus Institute, Chicago politics was being roiled by a Black mayoral aide named Steve Cokely who, in a series of lectures organized by Louis Farrakhan’s Nation of Islam, accused Jewish doctors in Chicago of infecting Black babies with AIDS as part of a genocidal plot against African Americans. The episode highlighted a deep rift within the city’s power echelons, with some prominent Black officials supporting Cokely and others calling for his firing.In Jager’s recollection, what set off the quarrel that precipitated the end of the couple’s relationship was Obama’s stubborn refusal, after seeing the exhibit, and in the swirl of this Cokely affair, to condemn Black racism. While acknowledging that Obama’s embrace of a Black identity had created some degree of distance between the couple, she insisted that what upset her that day was Obama’s inability to condemn Cokely’s comments. It was not Obama’s Blackness that bothered her, but that he would not condemn antisemitism.No doubt, Obama’s evolving race-based self-consciousness did distance him from Jager; in the end, the couple broke up. Yet it is revealing to read Obama’s account of the breakup in Dreams against the very different account that Jager offers. In Obama’s account, he was the particularist, embracing a personal meaning for the Black experience that Jager, the universalist, refused to grant. In Jager’s account, the poles of the argument are nearly, but not quite, reversed: It is Obama who appears to minimize Jewish anxiety about blood libels coming from the Black community. His particularism mattered; hers didn’t. While Obama defined himself as a realist or pragmatist, the episode reads like a textbook evasion of moral responsibility.Whose version of the story is correct? Who knows. The bridge between the two accounts is Obama’s emerging attachment to Blackness, which required him to fall in love with and marry a Black woman. In Obama’s account, his attachment to Blackness is truthful and noble. In Jager’s account, his claims are instrumental and selfish; he grants particularism to the experience and suffering of his own tribe while denying it to others.In evaluating the truthfulness of these two competing accounts, it seems worth noting that Jager is something more than a woman scorned by a man who would later become president of the United States. Obama asked her to marry him twice; she refused him both times, before going on to achieve her own high-level professional successes. A student of the great University of Chicago anthropologist Marshall Sahlins, Jager is a professor of East Asian Studies at Oberlin College whose scholarship on great power politics in Southeast Asia and the U.S.-Korean relationship is known for its factual rigor. In contrast, Dreams from My Father, as Garrow shows throughout Rising Star, is as much a work of dreamy literary fiction as it is an attempt to document Obama’s early life.
Thursday, August 31, 2023
He grants particularism to the experience and suffering of his own tribe while denying it to others.
History
Don't miss our @EmpirePodUK double bill on the life of the brilliant Olaudah Equiano, whose extraordinary memoir contains more plot twists than any novel ever would allow. Slave, midshipman and gunner in the Seven Years War, merchant in the Ottoman Empire, Artic explorer and… pic.twitter.com/uZJmr8qmkg
— William Dalrymple (@DalrympleWill) July 1, 2023
An Insight
Listened a while back to Megan McArdle and Russ Roberts’ discussion of what McArdle called the "Oedipus Trap", aka mistakes that no one can live with, even if they were innocently made.https://t.co/uEhM5dbEIy
— Sannah McDonough (@SannahMcDonough) July 10, 2023
I see wonderful things
It’s the colouration that makes the painted bat (Kerivoula picta) remarkable. Its body is covered in downy orange fur, while its wings are striped in highly-contrasting black and orange
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) August 5, 2023
[full video: https://t.co/NR6bptEe2T]pic.twitter.com/oQbe8lWAhU
Offbeat Humor
Original tweet by JasonLastName @JasonLastname pic.twitter.com/VtdeqQdIFC
— WholesomeMemes (@WholesomeMeme) May 19, 2023
Data Talks
This is a chart that big-city progressives really need to grapple with. pic.twitter.com/RgTXVgrHMu
— Noah Smith ππΊπΈπΊπ¦ (@Noahpinion) July 10, 2023
Wednesday, August 30, 2023
Even worse, there are no “solutions” in the sense of definitive and objective answers.
The search for scientific bases for confronting problems of social policy is bound to fail, becuase of the nature of these problems. They are “wicked” problems, whereas science has developed to deal with “tame” problems. Policy problems cannot be definitively described. Moreover, in a pluralistic society there is nothing like the undisputable public good; there is no objective definition of equity; policies that respond to social problems cannot be meaningfully correct or false; and it makes no sense to talk about “optimal solutions” to social problems unless severe qualifications are imposed first. Even worse, there are no “solutions” in the sense of definitive and objective answers.
Non sequitur - the rhetorical fallback when the data does not support the ideological argument
Do investors anticipate that demands for racial equity will impact companies? We explore this question in the context of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement—the largest racially motivated protest movement in U.S. history—and its effect on the U.S. policing industry using a novel dataset on publicly traded firms contracting with the police. It is unclear whether the BLM uprisings were likely to increase or decrease market valuations of firms contracting heavily with police because of the increased interest in reforming the police, fears over rising crime, and pushes to “defund the police”. We find, in contrast to the predictions of economics experts we surveyed, that in the three weeks following incidents triggering BLM uprisings, policing firms experienced a stock price increase of seven percentage points relative to the stock prices of nonpolicing firms in similar industries. In particular, firms producing surveillance technology and police accountability tools experienced higher returns following BLM activism–related events. Furthermore, policing firms’ fundamentals, such as sales, improved after the murder of George Floyd, suggesting that policing firms’ future performances bore out investors' positive expectations following incidents triggering BLM uprisings. Our research shows how—despite BLM’s calls to reduce investment in policing and explore alternative public safety approaches—the financial market has translated high-profile violence against Black civilians and calls for systemic change into shareholder gains and additional revenues for police suppliers.
. . . the financial market has translated high-profile violence against Black civilians and calls for systemic change into shareholder gains and additional revenues for police suppliers
Do investors anticipate that demands for racial equity will impact companies?
Do urban riots increase the valuation of companies who are primarily suppliers to police departments?
Do riots fuel demand for police services and does that increase demand for police services also fuel demand for the goods and services of companies supplying police departments?
History
St Mary’s, Tal-y-Llyn is all that remains of an Anglesey town that was wiped out by the plague. Andy Marshall's panoramic video shows just how lonely this little church is. pic.twitter.com/jwTsNJrpBQ
— Friendless Churches (@friendschurches) July 2, 2023
An Insight
Now everyone is offended by everything because in retrospect the civility we once thoughtlessly enjoyed was based on a shared culture where disagreement was on the margins. Now our disagreements are fundamental.
— wretchardthecat (@wretchardthecat) July 8, 2023
I see wonderful things
Omoide Yokocho is a maze of narrow alleys close to Shinjuku Station in Tokio and stands in stark contrast to all the bright and clean modern environs of the station. It has over 70 tiny bars and barbecue stalls
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) August 6, 2023
Does it remind you of some movie?pic.twitter.com/H6Miro3m9n
Offbeat Humor
If you don't buy your kids piΓ±atas how do you ever expect them to kill real donkeys
— JasonLastname (@JasonLastname) August 26, 2015
Data Talks
Another day, another great UMN paper.
— Alexandros Giannelis (@AlexGiannelis) July 8, 2023
Cognitive abilities are negatively associated with Neuroticism, and positively associated with Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, and Extraversion. These associations are only revealed when examining specific facets.https://t.co/T65rWIfsZn
Tuesday, August 29, 2023
Years later, the bishop returned, carrying with him "precious stones and the odiferous essences of that country".
The rains come to Kerala for months at a time. It is the greenest state in India: hot and humid, still and brooding. The soil is so fertile that as you drift up the lotus-choked waterways, the trees close in around you, as twisting tropical fan vaults of palm and bamboo arch together in the forest canopy. Mango trees hang heavy over the fishermen's skiffs; pepper vines creep through the fronds of the waterside papaya orchards.In this country live a people who believe that St Thomas - the apostle of Jesus who famously refused to believe in the resurrection "until I have placed my hands in the holes left by the nails and the wound left by the spear" - came to India from Palestine after the Resurrection, and that he baptised their ancestors. Moreover, this is not a modern tradition: it has been the firm conviction of the Christians here since at least the sixth century AD.In 594 AD, the French monastic chronicler Gregory of Tours met a wandering Greek monk who reported that, in southern India, he had met Christians who had told him about St Thomas's missionary journey to India and who had shown him the tomb of the apostle. Over the centuries to come, almost every western traveller to southern India, from Marco Polo to the first Portuguese conquistadors, reported the same story.The legend of St Thomas led to the first-ever recorded journey to India by an Englishman: according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, King Alfred (he of the burned cakes) sent Bishop Sighelm of Sherborne "to St Thomas in India"; years later, the bishop returned, carrying with him "precious stones and the odiferous essences of that country".The stories that the travellers brought back with them varied little: all said how in India, St Thomas was universally believed to have arrived in AD 52 from Palestine by boat; that he had travelled down the Red Sea and across the Persian Gulf, and that he landed at the great Keralan port of Cranganore, the spice trading centre to which the Roman Red Sea merchant fleet would head each year, to buy pepper and Indian slave girls for the Mediterranean market.In Kerala, St Thomas was said to have converted the local Brahmins with the aid of miracles and to have built seven churches. He then headed eastwards to the ancient temple town of Mylapore, now in the suburbs of Madras. There the saint was opposed by the orthodox Brahmins of the temple, and finally martyred. His followers built a tomb and monastery over his grave which, said the travellers, was now a pilgrimage centre for Muslims and Hindus, as well as Christians in southern India.
We can get on with the work of improving our epistemic environment.
But I’ve become increasingly worried that science’s replication crises might pale in comparison to what happens all the time in history, which is not just a replication crisis but a reproducibility crisis.[snip]Historical myths, often based on mere misunderstanding, but occasionally on bias or fraud, spread like wildfire. People just love to share unusual and interesting facts, and history is replete with things that are both unusual and true. So much that is surprising or shocking has happened, that it can take only years or decades of familiarity with a particular niche of history in order to smell a rat. Not only do myths spread rapidly, but they survive — far longer, I suspect, than in scientific fields.Take the oft-repeated idea that more troops were sent to quash the Luddites in 1812 than to fight Napoleon in the Peninsular War in 1808. Utter nonsense, as I set out in 2017, though it has been cited again and again and again as fact ever since Eric Hobsbawm first misled everyone back in 1964. Before me, only a handful of niche military history experts seem to have noticed and were largely ignored. Despite being busted, it continues to spread. Terry Deary (of Horrible Histories fame), to give just one of many recent examples, repeated the myth in a 2020 book. Historical myths are especially zombie-like. Even when disproven, they just. won’t. die.Or take the case of the 12,000-franc prize instituted by Napoleon for an improved method of preserving food for the use of his armies, which prompted Nicolas Appert to invent canned food. It’s frequently cited to show the how prizes can have a significant impact. Except that, despite being repeated hundreds of times, it literally never happened. Appert was given money by the French government, but it was a mere reward in recognition of his achievement, given over a decade after he had invented the method. The myth of the food canning innovation prize is a truly ancient one, which I traced back to a mis-translation of a vaguely-worded French source all the way back in 1869. That’s over 150 years of repeated falsehood, and I see no signs of it slowing.
This lack of effective institutions or incentives was really brought home to me recently by the publication of a paper in the prestigious journal History & Technology by Jenny Bulstrode of UCL, in which she claimed that the inventor Henry Cort had stolen his famous 1783 iron-rolling process from Reeder’s iron mill in Jamaica, where it had been developed by 76 black metallurgists by passing iron through grooved sugar rollers. It was a widely-publicised paper, receiving 22,756 views — eleven times as many views as the journal’s next most most read paper, and frankly unheard of for most academic papers — along with a huge amount of press coverage.Bulstrode argued that Cort had heard of the invention via a relative, the master of the ship Abby, who had been in Jamaica and in November 1781 visited him in Portsmouth; that in March-May 1782 Reeder’s mill was destroyed by the British army on the pretext that it might be used for weapons in a slave revolt during wartime, but that this was really at the behest of Cort to destroy the competition; and that the grooved rolling machines at Reeder’s mill were dismantled and sent to Portsmouth where Cort could use them.
History
A #Roman mummy portrait of a young woman, with her hair up & decked out in some beautiful jewellery, including a double string of pearls around her neck. Sadly, we don't know what her name was, as this would have been written elsewhere on her mummy #RomanEgypt #Archaeology pic.twitter.com/wRawRBJtWy
— Dr Jo Ball (@DrJEBall) July 1, 2023
Academic studies - guilty till proven innocent.
Let's talk about statistical manipulation of results in clinical trials.
— Alexandros Marinos π΄☠️ (@alexandrosM) August 29, 2023
Some times it can be so devious that it takes years to be noticed.
I want to walk you through something I **just** noticed in the ACTIV-6 trial for (what else) ivermectin.
Please stick with me.
An Insight
“Occasionally I laugh, joke, and play, and if I wanted to claim all of the parts of my harmless leisure, I would say I am human.”
— sententiae antiquae (@sentantiq) July 8, 2023
aliquando praeterea rideo iocor ludo, utque omnia innoxiae remissionis genera breviter amplectar, homo sum #Pliny
I see wonderful things
Foraminifera are single-celled marine organisms with shells made of calcium carbonate. In Bermuda, one particular species, Homotrema rubrum gives beaches a pink tint with its shells
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) August 6, 2023
[read more: https://t.co/8NbTiXYvqw]
[πΉ Hendrick Hartono]pic.twitter.com/ahrsqDxiqf
Offbeat Humor
Inventor of the beer hat.
— Rachel Morley (@MorleyRA) July 8, 2023
Early C16 misericord at Beaumaris church, Anglesey. pic.twitter.com/kD09emQh6J
Data Talks
The big "triangles" of American growth over the last decade:
— Arpit Gupta (@arpitrage) July 7, 2023
Sunbelt:
- Florida from Tampa-Orlando-Palm Beach-Naples. Miami actually slightly losing.
- Southern Triangle: Nashville-Atlanta-Charlotte-Raleigh
- Texas Triangle
- Southern Atlantic from Wilmington to Jacksonville https://t.co/gxpvdr7Fpy pic.twitter.com/x8lWTZWe1Q
Monday, August 28, 2023
It appears that there is little substantive discrimination based on citizenship status
In today's episode of "selection is everywhere", many people claim based on observational studies that naturalization improves the integration of immigrants, but this study based on a random lottery finds no effect on either economic and non-economic dimensions of integration 𧡠pic.twitter.com/gKYyNn5zKv
— Philippe Lemoine (@phl43) July 13, 2023
Based on observational studies, conventional wisdom suggests that citizenship carries economic benefits. We leverage a randomized experiment from New York where low-income registrants who wanted to become citizens entered a lottery to receive fee vouchers to naturalize. Voucher recipients were about 36 percentage points more likely to naturalize. Yet, we find no discernible effects of access to citizenship on several economic outcomes, including income, credit scores, access to credit, financial distress, and employment. Leveraging a multi-dimensional immigrant integration index, we similarly find no measurable effects on non-economic integration. However, we do find that citizenship reduces fears of deportation. Explaining our divergence from past studies, our results also reveal evidence of positive selection into citizenship, suggesting that observational studies of citizenship are susceptible to selection bias.
Gun deaths mapped
Murders are very unevenly distributed with some neighborhoods having a lot and some having none.In my neighborhood, and its adjacent neighborhoods, there have been no murders since 2014. Touch on wood that it stays that way.The murders tend to be most concentrated in the inner most city neighborhoods.If you zoom out a little, you quickly see that murders tend to be concentrated along particular road systems. Presumably due to bars and similar establishments.For my location, the nearest murders are three neighborhoods away, and are along busy city roads lined with bars, tattoo parlors, vape stores, peep shows and the like.At first order of approximation, all Atlanta's murders tend to be concentrated in the southwestern neighborhoods and the northeastern neighborhoods tend to be absent gun violence other than a few select drinking streets.As you keep zooming out to a state, regional, and national level, it takes on the feel of those night time pictures of North and South Korea - South Korea, with its prosperity, is lit up whereas North Korea is dark save a few candles in Pyongyang. Same here except in terms of gun deaths. The cities shine out as meccas of gun death. Outside the cities, there are places you can drive to for an hour or two where there have been no gun deaths for 25 miles either side of the highway for a decade.
History
Let's push the envelope for - Cyrene was an ancient #Greek and later #Roman city near present-day Shahhat, #Libya. It was the oldest and most important of the five Greek cities, known as the pentapolis, in the region.#RomanSiteSaturday #RomanArchaeology #History pic.twitter.com/1UqD6atGV9
— Jon Hawke (@HawkeJon) July 1, 2023
An Insight
"Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire."
— Mark W. (@DurhamWASP) July 7, 2023
Gustav Mahler, born 7th July 1860 pic.twitter.com/hOKel6SMuv
I see wonderful things
Giant Hand Axes Discovered in England Point to Prehistoric Humans' 'Strength and Skill' | Smart News| Smithsonian Magazine https://t.co/s9AE078oxn
— Allen Mendenhall (@allenmendenhall) July 11, 2023
Offbeat Humor
What have we come to? https://t.co/32alVel0R7
— Roger Pilon (@Roger_Pilon) July 7, 2023
Data Talks
Really interesting thread, including the nugget on why Ban the Box laws that cities like Berkeley passed have been largely ineffective https://t.co/b9VPFeo8e6
— Alex Sharenko (@AlexSharenko) July 6, 2023
Seriously versus literally - the same MSM mistake being made again
"Any time they file an indictment, we go way up in the polls," Trump boasted during a Republican Party dinner in Montgomery, Alabama, earlier this month. "We need one more indictment to close out this election. One more indictment, and this election is closed out."
Everything I am reading is more subtle than that and comes back to Salena Zito's key observation during the 2016 campaign. That Trump's supporters take him seriously but not literally. That his opponents take him literally but not seriously
At the same time, Trump remains the clear favorite so far for the Republican presidential nomination according to FiveThirtyEight’s polling average, with a nearly 40-point lead nationally over nearest rival Ron DeSantis
According to FiveThirtyEight, the former president did see a primary polling boost after his first indictment, in New York. His fundraising in the second quarter of 2023, amid his mounting legal troubles, was also nearly double the previous period.
Early this month, 49% of adults said in the ABC News/Ipsos poll that Trump should suspend his campaign -- and 50% say the same in the most recent survey. Only about a third of Americans in these polls don’t think Trump should suspend his campaign, with the rest undecided.
The more my Democratic opponents use the institutions of government to indict me on obviously frivolous charges which I will eventually defeat; the more my Democratic opponents behave like banana republic autocrats by obviously trying to jail their political opposition; the more the Democrats appear to ignore the interests and issues of a plurality or majority of Americans, the more likely it is that I will win both the Republican nomination and win the general election.
By focusing on the emotionalism of the story, they miss the substance
Texas has sent a 10th bus with migrants to Los Angeles on Saturday, days after its mayor harshly criticized the southern state for sending migrants.According to FOX Los Angeles, the bus had a total of 39 migrants, which included 12 families and 21 children.The 10th bus was sent five days after the previous bus, according to the outlet.[snip]The Los Angeles City Council voted in June to make the city a sanctuary city for immigrants.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass criticized Texas Governor Greg Abbott when the ninth bus was sent when Tropical Storm Hillary was impacting the city, saying "LA has not extended an invitation asking for people to come. This is a political act."
Sunday, August 27, 2023
History
Cycled to the beautiful medieval St. Oswald in Kirkoswald, Cumbria this week. To unmuffle the bells they built the bell tower on top of the hill adjacent. pic.twitter.com/RNbS9kzUG7
— Andy Marshall πΈ (@fotofacade) July 1, 2023
An Insight
One of my favorite time management essays is “Maker’s Schedule, Manager’s Schedule” by Paul Graham (@paulg) of Y Combinator fame. Give it a read.
— Tim Ferriss (@tferriss) July 7, 2023
As Brad Feld (@bfeld) and many others have observed, great creative work isn’t possible if you’re trying to piece together 30 minutes…
I see wonderful things
Thanks to Harvard University, you can now virtually enter the Great Pyramid of Giza in 3D and 360ΒΊ.
— Michael Warburton (@MichaelWarbur17) July 11, 2023
Mind-blowingly wonderful.https://t.co/ij7EgnHtVG
pic.twitter.com/JlVhxqjicM
Offbeat Humor
Kinda feels like a Friday pic.twitter.com/qMrwYNu86Z
— Rudy Havenstein, a mound of freedom. (@RudyHavenstein) August 28, 2020
Data Talks
The first commentary on Gregory Clark's PNAS paper has been published!
— CrΓ©mieux (@cremieuxrecueil) July 5, 2023
James J. Lee is the author. If you know the name, you know he's serious, so let's read what he said!
First: He described what a feat @GregoryClarkUCD's work represents. pic.twitter.com/DcgwKzB9kM
Saturday, August 26, 2023
History
In parts of the medieval Holy Roman Empire, husbands and wives could have a legal fight, called a marital duel, to solve their arguments.
— Fascinating (@fasc1nate) June 30, 2023
Interestingly, the husband had to fight in a hole and with one arm tied. The wife could move around freely but had to carry weighted cloth.… pic.twitter.com/oL1NR7t9On
An Insight
How to discourage recidivism? Interesting paper by @jenniferdoleac summarizes the existing empirical evidence, and evaluates a wide range of interventions—classified in 5 categories—through an economic lens. https://t.co/EcU40ebzuW pic.twitter.com/nGgOkQAvyI
— Koenfucius π (@koenfucius) July 7, 2023
I see wonderful things
Millions of years of evolution engineered honey bee brains to make lightning fast decisions and reduce their risks. https://t.co/FNxapyxEZ9
— Popular Science (@PopSci) July 11, 2023
Offbeat Humor
The Coolidge Effect is the observation that males have greater sexual responsiveness to and lower sexual refractory periods for multiple females.
— CrΓ©mieux (@cremieuxrecueil) July 5, 2023
The name comes from an old joke:
President Coolidge and his wife were being separately toured around a government farm. Mrs.… pic.twitter.com/YHw2G97jQx
Data Talks
Wow!
— CrΓ©mieux (@cremieuxrecueil) July 4, 2023
This study documents two exceptions to the global invariance of the age-crime curve: in South Korea and Taiwan, the adolescent crime peak just isn't there.
Instead, their peaks are shifted to much later ages and their overall age-crime relationship is comparatively flat. https://t.co/OXkeTZJbDx pic.twitter.com/rGSSdxFdiR
Friday, August 25, 2023
History
Desmond Doss was a non-combatant medic who served in World War 2. At the Battle of Okinawa in 1945, he single-handedly saved 75 lives, one at a time, whilst under gunfire. He is the only conscientious objector to receive the Medal of Honor for his actions.
— Fascinating (@fasc1nate) July 1, 2023
Below is his Medal… pic.twitter.com/HnbLUwN0vQ
An Insight
WATCH: Once evidence of US government censorship online became overwhelming, establishment Dems had to switch from denying it was happening to openly endorsing it.@GGreenwald: "This is demented. I cannot believe that any person thinks this way let alone a member of Congress,… pic.twitter.com/oi33uxrDbZ
— System Update (@SystemUpdate_) July 6, 2023
I see wonderful things
Mosaic depictions of ‘guard dogs’ were popular placed at the entrance of wealthy homes in Pompeii.
— Alison Fisk (@AlisonFisk) July 10, 2023
Here’s a closer look at the sleeping ‘guard dog’. Awww, even seems to be smiling! π pic.twitter.com/0aNvmbVkDa
Offbeat Humor
Updated Death Certificates Require Choosing Between COVID, Climate Change, Or Systemic Racism As Cause Of Death https://t.co/uqPh3EOlwl pic.twitter.com/fg9GGenrAK
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) July 5, 2023
Data Talks
The death rate from COVID for those aged 0-19 years is 0.0003%.
— Kevin Bass PhD MS (@kevinnbass) July 4, 2023
A 1-in-333,333 chance of dying.
They shut down schools for that.
Many children still cannot speak or socialize properly.
They sacrificed large numbers of the young for a tiny minority of very old.
Catastrophic.
Thursday, August 24, 2023
History
Roman stonework from Hadrian's Wall was reused at the medieval Lanercost Priory for hundreds of years. This centurial stone, naming the century of Cassius Priscus, was discovered at the Roman fort of Birdoswald in the early 18th century. It was recycled at Lanercost during… pic.twitter.com/ho3Mq7DWRi
— Following Hadrian (@carolemadge) July 1, 2023
An Insight
Social class is the elephant in the room with every American conversation.
— Wilfred Reilly (@wil_da_beast630) July 1, 2023
Almost literally 0 Black, Caucasian, OR Asian Harvard students are "oppressed." Across these races and others, 70% of them are ~rich. No plans to change THIS are in the works. https://t.co/WdL4Yuzwuo
I see wonderful things
This cameo of the #Roman Emperor Claudius is the largest surviving portrait cameo in the care of the @RCT . It depicts the emperor both cuirassed but also aspiring to be seen as Jupiter/Zeus, showcasing his merit both as a soldier & as a divine authority. Dating c. AD 43-45. pic.twitter.com/mv5KkfrHs8
— Trimontium Trust (@TrimontiumTrust) July 8, 2023
Offbeat Humor
Absolutely love this π€£π§‘π€£ pic.twitter.com/lTbmgxfYwp
— Keswick boot co (@keswickbootco) June 30, 2023
Data Talks
During the first year of COVID-19 in New York City, the intubation rate closely tracked the mortality rate.
— Kevin Bass PhD MS (@kevinnbass) July 1, 2023
The intubation rate plummeted as doctors rapidly discovered that patients survived better with delayed intubation.https://t.co/5KgKkEuT30 pic.twitter.com/xj54HOyMOt
Escaping Criticism, 1874 by Pere Borrell del Caso (Spanish/Catalan artist, 1835–1910)
Wednesday, August 23, 2023
History
In parts of the medieval Holy Roman Empire, husbands and wives could have a legal fight, called a marital duel, to solve their arguments.
— Fascinating (@fasc1nate) June 30, 2023
Interestingly, the husband had to fight in a hole and with one arm tied. The wife could move around freely but had to carry weighted cloth.… pic.twitter.com/oL1NR7t9On
An Insight
As equality of opportunity increases, so too does heritability, because what's left over when environmental inequalities are out of the picture is your genes.
— CrΓ©mieux (@cremieuxrecueil) June 30, 2023
Places with greater parent-child social mobility have more heritable (A) edutainment, with less family influence (C). pic.twitter.com/E2MqVvMVy2
I see wonderful things
That time a drawing instructor made a chalk drawing on a horse to show the articulation of a horse's skeleton
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 7, 2023
[πΉ Hannah Diazart]pic.twitter.com/aqNVJjpHGP
Offbeat Humor
Elizabeth Warren Says Without Affirmative Action, A Native American Girl Like Herself Would Never Have Been Accepted To Rutgers https://t.co/opLV0nGEpt
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) July 1, 2023
Data Talks
Compared to Democrats with a college degree, Democrats without a degree are nearly twice as likely to report that crime is "a very big problem."
— Rob Henderson (@robkhenderson) July 2, 2023
Luxury beliefs are ideas and opinions that confer status on the upper class, while inflicting costs on the lower classes. pic.twitter.com/DxgaEFbTFs
Marseille Porte de l'Afrique du Nord, poster 1920-1932, designed by Roger Broders, (France, 1883-1953)
Tuesday, August 22, 2023
History
"Herodotus was an expert, but not on cats. Rather, he was a great listener, a world traveler, a lore collector...The ‘cats on fire’ passage is one of those moments where we scratch our heads: 'Huh? What happened there?" On one of Herodotus' Egyptian tales:https://t.co/VnKNoJhX79
— Antigone Journal (@AntigoneJournal) July 8, 2023
History
Charlemagne's Joyeuse—
— The Chivalry Guild (@ChivalryGuild) May 28, 2023
The Sword of France
The hilt and handle were decorated with gold and jewels, and the pommel was said to have contained the head of the Spear of Longinus, the same point that pierced Jesus’ side. The famous blacksmith Galas spent three years fashioning it. pic.twitter.com/JIhKQQoanZ
An Insight
It’s amazing how many pages the liberal justices spend discussing historical racial wrongs without ever really touching the history of Asian Americans, the actual plaintiffs in the affirmative action case. The only justice to do that is Justice Thomas, in his concurrence. pic.twitter.com/qJqTwGzQk9
— Lee Fang (@lhfang) July 1, 2023
I see wonderful things
Tallis's Spem in alium performed by the choirs of Christ Church, Magdalen and New College in Tom Quad, Christ Church.
— Dinah Rose (@DinahGLRoseKC) July 6, 2023
Sound on, please. You won't regret it. pic.twitter.com/zGC1ZQtOqO
Offbeat Humor
Elizabeth Warren Says Without Affirmative Action, A Native American Girl Like Herself Would Never Have Been Accepted To Rutgers https://t.co/opLV0nGEpt
— The Babylon Bee (@TheBabylonBee) July 1, 2023
Data Talks
Where Europeans lay claim to neighbouring countries. pic.twitter.com/kXtQ8wXRs4
— Xavi Ruiz (@xruiztru) July 1, 2023
Monday, August 21, 2023
History
Basra, the famed city from which Sinbad set off on his voyages, was one of the jewels of Iraq and one of the most important centers for the Indian Ocean trade under the Abbasids. Thread. pic.twitter.com/bl4fLZs82y
— Byzantine Emporia (@byzantinemporia) June 30, 2023
An Insight
I teach a class here at @WheatonCollege on the history of Christianity, focused on the first thousand years. One thought haunts me. We are right to look with shock and disappointment at the way medieval Christians accepted violence as a norm. 1/
— John Dickson (@johnpauldickson) June 30, 2023
I see wonderful things
A hidden garden by Cannon Street station! ππ pic.twitter.com/TvqhBHjSuO
— Living London History | Jack (@livinglondonhis) July 2, 2023