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How Twitter Rigged the Covid Debate [David Zweig, The Free Press]

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  • Twitter suppressed true information from doctors and public-health experts that was at odds with U.S. government policy.
  • The Trump and Biden administrations directly pressed Twitter executives to moderate the platform’s content according to their wishes.
  • Twitter acted as a kind of FBI subsidiary, re-writing the platform’s policies on the fly to accommodate political bias and pressure.
  • Twitter suppressed views and even scientific evidence that ran to the contrary.
  • Bots and contractors were used to moderate content, leading to a significant error rate.
  • Higher level employees at Twitter chose the inputs for the bots and decision trees, and determined suspensions.
  • Content that was contrarian but true, and the people who conveyed that content, were still subject to getting flagged and suppressed.
  • Twitter propped up the official government line that prioritizing mitigation over other concerns was the best approach to the pandemic.
  • If Twitter had allowed the kind of open forum for debate that it claimed to believe in, could any of this have turned out differently?

Click HERE for original. Published December 26, 2022

December 25, 2022 [Heather Cox Richardson, Letters From An American]

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  • In July 1776, the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence, but the British responded with military might.
  • By December, the Continental Army was demoralized and the Continental Congress had abandoned Philadelphia.
  • Thomas Paine published a pamphlet urging people to stand by their country and help drive the enemy back.
  • On Christmas night, Washington and his troops crossed the Delaware River and surprised the Hessians at Trenton, restoring confidence in the Revolutionary cause.
  • The Battles of Trenton and Princeton saved the Revolutionary cause and showed that tyranny could be conquered.

Click HERE for original. Published December 25, 2022

I Was Taught ‘God Hates Christmas.’ Now, I Love It. [Megan Phelps-Roper, The Free Press]

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  • Megan Phelps-Roper grew up in the Westboro Baptist Church, where Christmas was seen as a pagan farce and public celebrations were an opportunity to set themselves apart from others.
  • She was taught to hate Christmas, but now, as an adult, she has come to appreciate the beauty of the holiday.
  • She has found a way to bridge her past and present without burning it all down, by recognizing the beauty of Christmas traditions and the joy of coming together with family and friends.
  • She has also come to understand that we can choose the meaning we assign to our experiences, and that they need not be tethered forever to the evils of an unchanging past.

Click HERE for original. Published December 25, 2022

We Need to Talk About Nepo Babies Because We Live in a “Just Deserts” Culture [Freddie deBoer]

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  • Nepotism in Hollywood is a product of chance and has been a problem for a long time.
  • Complaining about nepo babies is not just a result of jealousy, but also an acknowledgement that they were given an unfair advantage.
  • The odds of two members of the same immediate family both independently making it in Hollywood are very low.
  • Ancillary benefits of nepotism include access to resources and financial stability.
  • Responses to criticisms of nepotism should involve recognizing and being grateful for privileges while still taking advantage of them.
  • We should use this opportunity to remind people that the myth of the self-made man is false, and that socioeconomic class is the greatest barrier to success.

Click HERE for original. Published December 22, 2022

“The First Amendment Isn’t Absolute.” Sure, But So What? [Ken White, Serious Matters]

  • The First Amendment has established limits, but these limits are well-defined and narrowly limited.
  • The Supreme Court has repeatedly listed the First Amendment exceptions, which include obscenity, defamation, fraud, incitement, and speech integral to criminal conduct.
  • The Supreme Court has stated that it will not create new exceptions to the First Amendment by balancing the harm of speech against its value.
  • The established First Amendment exceptions must be interpreted according to existing law, and cannot be used to mean whatever one wants them to mean.

Click HERE for original. Published December 24, 2022

Was Santa Actually a Mushroom-Tripping Reindeer Herder? [Leighton Woodhouse, The Free Press]

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  • The traditional explanation of Santa Claus is an ancient fable about Christian virtue which spread across medieval Europe and then, upon landing in the United States, was promptly commercialized.
  • The revisionist version is a tale of pre-Christian, indigenous pagan spirituality that was somehow smuggled into our modern Christian/consumerist holiday.
  • The traditional explanation is the story of Saint Nicholas, a Greek bishop who was persecuted for his faith by the Romans and gave away his inheritance to the poor.
  • The revisionist version starts with the Amanita muscaria, a psychoactive mushroom that gives humans the sensation of flying.
  • The indigenous people of Lapland used to consume the drug safely by drinking the reindeers’ urine and shamans would dress in its likeness, in a red and white costume, and visit prominent Sámi households to pass along the insights that they achieved through their hallucinogenic trips.
  • It’s possible that, like Easter, our Christmas traditions are a blend of Christian and pagan themes.
  • Maybe the mushroom is even more connected to the birth of Jesus than to Santa Claus.

Click HERE for original. Published December 24, 2022

Fact Check: Do All Healthy People Have Mystical Experiences? [Astral Codex Ten]

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  • The tweet claiming that all healthy people have mystical experiences is false.
  • Only 17% of very mentally healthy people reported having a spiritual experience, compared to 21% of all respondents.
  • The difference was significant at p < 0.001.

Click HERE for original. Published December 23, 2022

How Did Sam Bankman-Fried Get Bail? [Ken White, Serious Matters]

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  • Sam Bankman-Fried was released on bail shortly after agreeing to extradition to the US.
  • The bail terms include home detention with an ankle monitor, intensive pretrial supervision, surrendering of passport, and financial restrictions.
  • A total bond of $250 million was set, with his parents co-signing and two non-parent sureties to follow.
  • His parents must also post their home equity by January 12th.
  • The bail is a surprisingly good deal for a person accused of a multi-billion dollar fraud, and is consistent with federal bail laws.

Click HERE for original. Published December 23, 2022

In Defense Of Free Speech Pedantry [Ken White, The Popehat Report]

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  • Free speech values can be divided into three categories: free speech rights (FSR), free speech culture (FSC), and speech decency (SD).
  • Clarity in distinguishing between these three values helps to clarify the different rights and interests in play.
  • Being precise about which free speech value is being discussed is important and can lead to a better understanding of the law and to more effective debates about cultural issues.

Click HERE for original. Published December 18, 2022

December 23, 2022 [Heather Cox Richardson, Letters From An American]

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  • In a 225-201 vote, the House passed a 4,155-page omnibus spending bill, which the Senate passed the day before.
  • The bill funds the government through September 30, 2023 and increases spending for defense, education, childcare, healthcare, mental health programs, the opioid crisis, food security programs, housing and heating assistance programs, the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Park Service, and the National Science Foundation.
  • The bill also provides supplemental funding for Ukraine aid, disaster relief, and investigations into the January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol.
  • The bill was passed with bipartisan support, despite refusal from House Republicans to participate in negotiations.
  • The passage of the bill was particularly fitting, as it coincided with the day in 1783 that George Washington resigned his commission after the Revolutionary War.

Click HERE for original. Published December 23, 2022

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