Link list: Articles and other links of interest
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Richardson (continued)
“Just as there is a blueprint for destroying democracy, there is also one for rebuilding it. ‘Let us now and here highly resolve to resume the country’s interrupted march along the path of real progress, of real justice, of real equality for all of our citizens, great and small,’ New York governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt said to the delegates at the Democratic National Convention in 1932 as American democracy struggled to resist fascism.“‘Out of every crisis, every tribulation, every disaster, mankind rises with some share of greater knowledge, of higher decency, of purer purpose,’ FDR said. ‘Today we shall have come through a period of loose thinking, descending morals, an era of selfishness, among individual men and women and among Nations…. Let us be frank in acknowledgment of the truth that many amongst us have made obeisance to Mammon, that the profits of speculation, the easy road without toil, have lured us from the old barricades. To return to higher standards we must abandon the false prophets and seek new leaders of our own choosing.’
“‘I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for the American people,’ FDR concluded. ‘Let us all here assembled constitute ourselves prophets of a new order of competence and of courage. This is more than a political campaign; it is a call to arms. Give me your help, not to win votes alone, but to win in this crusade to restore America to its own people
“I think talented journalists like Ronan Farrow had a chance to do some new reporting on where AI is now, what impact it will have on the economy and society, and they instead wrote an article about personality quirks and office drama.”
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“I think talented journalists like Ronan Farrow had a chance to do some new reporting on where AI is now, what impact it will have on the economy and society, and they instead wrote an article about personality quirks and office drama.”
In praise of (some) compartmentalization — Cory Doctorow @pluralistic on how he gets so much work done, living with chronic pain, living with global anxiety, flow, Derek Thompson’s theory of familiar surprises, AI and its fundamental conservatism — “… by definition, AI tries to make a future that is similar to the past, because all it can do is extrapolate from previous data” — “passive flow”/“shitty flow”/“zombie flow” and “social media scroll-trances.”
Cory: “These are anxious times. I don't know anyone who feels good right now. Particularly this week, as the Strait of Epstein emergency gets progressively worse, and there's this January 2020 sense of the crisis on the horizon, hitting one country after another. Last week, Australia got its last shipment of fossil fuels. This week, restaurants in India are all shuttered because of gas rationing. People who understand these things better than I do tell me that even if Trump strokes out tonight and Hegseth overdoes the autoerotic asphyxiation, it'll be months, possibly years, before things get back to ‘normal’ (‘normal!’).
“Any time I think about this stuff for even a few minutes, I start to feel that covid-a-comin', early-2020 feeling, only it's worse this time around, because I literally couldn't imagine what covid would mean when it got here, and now I know.”
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In praise of (some) compartmentalization — Cory Doctorow @pluralistic on how he gets so much work done, living with chronic pain, living with global anxiety, flow, Derek Thompson’s theory of familiar surprises, AI and its fundamental conservatism — “… by definition, AI tries to make a future that is similar to the past, because all it can do is extrapolate from previous data” — “passive flow”/“shitty flow”/“zombie flow” and “social media scroll-trances.”
Cory: “These are anxious times. I don't know anyone who feels good right now. Particularly this week, as the Strait of Epstein emergency gets progressively worse, and there's this January 2020 sense of the crisis on the horizon, hitting one country after another. Last week, Australia got its last shipment of fossil fuels. This week, restaurants in India are all shuttered because of gas rationing. People who understand these things better than I do tell me that even if Trump strokes out tonight and Hegseth overdoes the autoerotic asphyxiation, it'll be months, possibly years, before things get back to ‘normal’ (‘normal!’).
“Any time I think about this stuff for even a few minutes, I start to feel that covid-a-comin', early-2020 feeling, only it's worse this time around, because I literally couldn't imagine what covid would mean when it got here, and now I know.”
Outstanding reporting and writing by my colleague Monica Alleven about how Dish’s exit from the wireless industry leaves small, family-owned businesses on the hook for crippling property damage. Monica talks to small business owners left struggling after Dish’s maneuvers.
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Outstanding reporting and writing by my colleague Monica Alleven about how Dish’s exit from the wireless industry leaves small, family-owned businesses on the hook for crippling property damage. Monica talks to small business owners left struggling after Dish’s maneuvers.
Amazon to acquire Globalstar for $11.57 billion (Monica (again))
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Amazon to acquire Globalstar for $11.57 billion (Monica (again))
Data center construction is moving to the midwest in search of power. By my colleague Diana Goovaerts.
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Data center construction is moving to the midwest in search of power. By my colleague Diana Goovaerts.
Two Visions: Politics of love, or politics of fear? — Hamilton Nolan writes about a labor rally in New York and the underlying ethic of solidarity.
“Your fight is mine, and my fight is yours, and we will stand together. We are all family. We will support one another. More simply, it is a vision that rests on love. Love as the guiding force in our interactions with one another. The solidarity, and the organizing, and the political action, and the policy choices are all downstream of the foundation of love. If you decide that you will love humanity then the choices that follow will make themselves.
“This is one of two fundamental ethics that give rise to the politics of the world. The other one is fear. If fear is your guiding principle, your dominant emotion, your primary motivating force, then your interactions with mankind will follow a separate but equally understandable path. You will barricade yourself from others, you will guard what you have, you will protect your own people from other people that you perceive not as comrades but as threats. You will build walls and buy guns and hire soldiers and hoard money and close your fist instead of open your arms. You will seek to dominate others as a way to get ahead of them dominating you. If fear is the basis of your vision, then all of these things become common sense, and the things that are motivated by love come to be seen as silly, utopian, unrealistic, openings to be exploited by the more steely-eyed people like you who understand how dangerous this world really is.
“Starting from a place of love produces one set of politics, and starting from a place of fear produces another. You can recognize the two sets of policies that arise just by looking at the world today.
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Two Visions: Politics of love, or politics of fear? — Hamilton Nolan writes about a labor rally in New York and the underlying ethic of solidarity.
“Your fight is mine, and my fight is yours, and we will stand together. We are all family. We will support one another. More simply, it is a vision that rests on love. Love as the guiding force in our interactions with one another. The solidarity, and the organizing, and the political action, and the policy choices are all downstream of the foundation of love. If you decide that you will love humanity then the choices that follow will make themselves.
“This is one of two fundamental ethics that give rise to the politics of the world. The other one is fear. If fear is your guiding principle, your dominant emotion, your primary motivating force, then your interactions with mankind will follow a separate but equally understandable path. You will barricade yourself from others, you will guard what you have, you will protect your own people from other people that you perceive not as comrades but as threats. You will build walls and buy guns and hire soldiers and hoard money and close your fist instead of open your arms. You will seek to dominate others as a way to get ahead of them dominating you. If fear is the basis of your vision, then all of these things become common sense, and the things that are motivated by love come to be seen as silly, utopian, unrealistic, openings to be exploited by the more steely-eyed people like you who understand how dangerous this world really is.
“Starting from a place of love produces one set of politics, and starting from a place of fear produces another. You can recognize the two sets of policies that arise just by looking at the world today.
Nolan, continued: “It is worth noting that which one of these starting points you choose is not an observation about how the world is—it is a choice about how you want the world to be. To settle on a politics of love is not to deny that the world can be a scary place. It is to decide that the way to make it better is to love one another rather than to kill one another. Solidarity does not arise because nobody is rude, selfish, angry, or annoying. It arises out of the understanding that we are all that way. The fact that people have bad qualities does not have to mean that our entire orientation towards life must be guided by those qualities. It can mean instead that we adopt the opposite qualities, and watch the force of the good unravel the bad.
“This is not a modern quandary. Wise people for thousands of years have understood these dynamics.”
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In praise of (some) compartmentalization — Cory Doctorow @pluralistic on how he gets so much work done, living with chronic pain, living with global anxiety, flow, Derek Thompson’s theory of familiar surprises, AI and its fundamental conservatism — “… by definition, AI tries to make a future that is similar to the past, because all it can do is extrapolate from previous data” — “passive flow”/“shitty flow”/“zombie flow” and “social media scroll-trances.”
Cory: “These are anxious times. I don't know anyone who feels good right now. Particularly this week, as the Strait of Epstein emergency gets progressively worse, and there's this January 2020 sense of the crisis on the horizon, hitting one country after another. Last week, Australia got its last shipment of fossil fuels. This week, restaurants in India are all shuttered because of gas rationing. People who understand these things better than I do tell me that even if Trump strokes out tonight and Hegseth overdoes the autoerotic asphyxiation, it'll be months, possibly years, before things get back to ‘normal’ (‘normal!’).
“Any time I think about this stuff for even a few minutes, I start to feel that covid-a-comin', early-2020 feeling, only it's worse this time around, because I literally couldn't imagine what covid would mean when it got here, and now I know.”
I just read Trump and autoerotic asphyxiation in am eyeball flyby.
But really, in Germany I don't really notice the the effects of the situation.
I don't need to drive often, so don't directly give a shit about gas prices. Many do tho.
My car wrangler has not raised prices since Iran was attacked.
And other stuff didn't get more expensive immediately regarding shipping cost.
But I buy less things than average I guess. -
I just read Trump and autoerotic asphyxiation in am eyeball flyby.
But really, in Germany I don't really notice the the effects of the situation.
I don't need to drive often, so don't directly give a shit about gas prices. Many do tho.
My car wrangler has not raised prices since Iran was attacked.
And other stuff didn't get more expensive immediately regarding shipping cost.
But I buy less things than average I guess.@lasagne @pluralistic Here in the US, for me, the effects are limited to news headlines — for now. But Cory's metaphor for the approach of Covid is apt; more precisely, it feels like February 2020, when nothing has changed for me personally — yet — but something is coming and it's going to be bad.
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Richardson (continued)
“Just as there is a blueprint for destroying democracy, there is also one for rebuilding it. ‘Let us now and here highly resolve to resume the country’s interrupted march along the path of real progress, of real justice, of real equality for all of our citizens, great and small,’ New York governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt said to the delegates at the Democratic National Convention in 1932 as American democracy struggled to resist fascism.“‘Out of every crisis, every tribulation, every disaster, mankind rises with some share of greater knowledge, of higher decency, of purer purpose,’ FDR said. ‘Today we shall have come through a period of loose thinking, descending morals, an era of selfishness, among individual men and women and among Nations…. Let us be frank in acknowledgment of the truth that many amongst us have made obeisance to Mammon, that the profits of speculation, the easy road without toil, have lured us from the old barricades. To return to higher standards we must abandon the false prophets and seek new leaders of our own choosing.’
“‘I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for the American people,’ FDR concluded. ‘Let us all here assembled constitute ourselves prophets of a new order of competence and of courage. This is more than a political campaign; it is a call to arms. Give me your help, not to win votes alone, but to win in this crusade to restore America to its own people
@mitch It's absolutely worth remembering that FDR's administration faced a real threat of a fascist takeover financed and planned by oligarchs, one of whom was Prescott Bush, the father of one future president and grandfather on another.
These people don't think in terms of political changes. They think in GENERATIONAL terms. Their children, and their children's children, have been involved in the same project for over a century now: to take completely control of the U.S. by controlling money.
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@mitch It's absolutely worth remembering that FDR's administration faced a real threat of a fascist takeover financed and planned by oligarchs, one of whom was Prescott Bush, the father of one future president and grandfather on another.
These people don't think in terms of political changes. They think in GENERATIONAL terms. Their children, and their children's children, have been involved in the same project for over a century now: to take completely control of the U.S. by controlling money.
@mitch https://www.openculture.com/2019/05/when-american-financiers-and-business-leaders-plotted-to-overthrow-franklin-d-roosevelt.html
None of these wealthy/connected people (like Prescott Bush, a Senator with established Nazi business connections) were prosecuted for plotting a fascist takeover. Their money kept piling up; the heirs of the people and corporations involved have now succeeded in their fascist takeover.
If the United States survives this, we MUST prosecute this time. All of them. Otherwise, their heirs, like the Trump spawn, will just put the U.S. through all of this again.
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“I think talented journalists like Ronan Farrow had a chance to do some new reporting on where AI is now, what impact it will have on the economy and society, and they instead wrote an article about personality quirks and office drama.”
@mitch both. Writers are doing BOTH.
The expose gathered extensive documentation of Sam Altman’s lying at critical ethical junctures. Calling it ‘personality quirks and office drama’ is itself trying to undo the strength of their article’s case against Altman.
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@lasagne @pluralistic Here in the US, for me, the effects are limited to news headlines — for now. But Cory's metaphor for the approach of Covid is apt; more precisely, it feels like February 2020, when nothing has changed for me personally — yet — but something is coming and it's going to be bad.
@mitch @lasagne @pluralistic It's bad. My wife has a significant birthday coming up in September and we'd been planning a trip to Japan (we haven't been there since 2010). Only now, it ain't gonna happen unless there's a miracle because the price of aviation fuel is already through the roof and if this goes on the cost of flights will be 3x to 5x what it was at the same time last year.
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@mitch @lasagne @pluralistic It's bad. My wife has a significant birthday coming up in September and we'd been planning a trip to Japan (we haven't been there since 2010). Only now, it ain't gonna happen unless there's a miracle because the price of aviation fuel is already through the roof and if this goes on the cost of flights will be 3x to 5x what it was at the same time last year.
@cstross @lasagne @pluralistic I'm sorry you will have to miss your trip. From what I'm reading, there's no "if this goes on." As I understand it, the last ships to have crossed the Strait of Hormuz are now reaching Europe. I'd love to be wrong about all this, and maybe I am. The last 25 years have made me humble about no longer being the guy who reads a lot of news and thinks that makes me an expert.
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@cstross @lasagne @pluralistic I'm sorry you will have to miss your trip. From what I'm reading, there's no "if this goes on." As I understand it, the last ships to have crossed the Strait of Hormuz are now reaching Europe. I'd love to be wrong about all this, and maybe I am. The last 25 years have made me humble about no longer being the guy who reads a lot of news and thinks that makes me an expert.
@mitch @lasagne @pluralistic Four months is *in principle* long enough for the crisis to plateau and begin to ramp back down *if* all sides come to an agreement in the next couple of weeks. Which is all I can hope for at this point. Spoiler: I don't expect anything within spitting distance of sane from the Trump administration these days, even if it's something as obvious as putting down the baseball bat they're whacking themselves in the nuts with.
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@mitch @lasagne @pluralistic Four months is *in principle* long enough for the crisis to plateau and begin to ramp back down *if* all sides come to an agreement in the next couple of weeks. Which is all I can hope for at this point. Spoiler: I don't expect anything within spitting distance of sane from the Trump administration these days, even if it's something as obvious as putting down the baseball bat they're whacking themselves in the nuts with.
@cstross @mitch @lasagne @pluralistic I think Trump's next strategy is to hold his breath until he turns blue,
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@mitch @lasagne @pluralistic It's bad. My wife has a significant birthday coming up in September and we'd been planning a trip to Japan (we haven't been there since 2010). Only now, it ain't gonna happen unless there's a miracle because the price of aviation fuel is already through the roof and if this goes on the cost of flights will be 3x to 5x what it was at the same time last year.
@cstross @mitch @lasagne @pluralistic My wife and I are also trying to get to Japan this fall for our delayed honeymoon but yeah the prices are insane...she's pretty set on it though so I guess we're just going to pay for it (lucky for us she makes decent money...i do not.)
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@cstross @mitch @lasagne @pluralistic I think Trump's next strategy is to hold his breath until he turns blue,
@rrb @cstross @mitch @lasagne @pluralistic He'll pass out before he dies. He always does.
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@cstross @mitch @lasagne @pluralistic I think Trump's next strategy is to hold his breath until he turns blue,
@rrb @cstross @mitch @lasagne @pluralistic going Avatar?
( Or Smurf?) -
@rrb @cstross @mitch @lasagne @pluralistic He'll pass out before he dies. He always does.