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Prince Harry Proves One Thing: The Tabloids Were Right [Martin Clarke, The Free Press]

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• Martin Clarke, former Editor-in-Chief of Mail Online, weighs in on Prince Harry and Meghan’s recent media deals and the Sussexes of Montecito.
• Prince Harry has a deep hatred of the media, blaming them for everything.
• Clarke argues that much of the reporting Harry has objected to over the years turns out to be substantially true.
• Harry conflates social media and The Media, and resurrects his mother’s memory to blame the press for her death.
• Diana was smart and manipulated the press to her advantage.
• Harry fails to mention the yards of hysterical, gushing coverage that surrounded his wedding.
• Harry believes he hasn’t increased the terrorist threat to his family by revealing his 25 “kills” in Afghanistan.
• Harry has little understanding of how his own country works and is pushing at a dangerously open door with his intolerance of the free press.

Published January 15, 2023

Visit The Free Press to read Martin Clarke’s original post Prince Harry Proves One Thing: The Tabloids Were Right

Conspiracies of Cognition, Conspiracies Of Emotion [Scott Alexander, Astral Codex Ten]

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• Conspiracy theories can be divided into two types: those that are used to explain away anomalies in a narrative, and those that are used to explain away emotions.
• The first type of conspiracy theory is often used to explain away anomalies in a narrative, such as the bullet trajectory in the Kennedy assassination or the Great Pyramid’s latitude matching the speed of light.
• The second type of conspiracy theory is often used to explain away emotions, such as hatred of the global elite or anger at a partner.
• These conspiracy theories are often driven by emotions such as anxiety, depression, and anger, which can lead to biased processing of information.
• In the case of Trump-Russiagate, the conspiracy theory was appealing because it provided a single, irrefutable reason to hate Trump.
• In the case of the Global Adrenochrome Pedophile Cabal, the conspiracy theory was appealing because it provided a way to justify intense antipathy towards the global elite.

Published January 13, 2023. Visit Astral Codex Ten to read Scott Alexander’s original post.

Can I Wear a MAGA Hat To My Government Job? [Ken White, Popehat]

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• The Ninth Circuit recently ruled in Dodge v. Evergreen School District that Eric Dodge, a sixth-grade teacher from Vancouver, Washington, was entitled to a trial on his claim that school district officials violated his First Amendment rights by threatening to discipline him for wearing a MAGA hat to teacher training.
• The First Amendment protects public employees differently depending on whether the government is wearing its sovereign hat or its employer hat.
• To show a violation of the First Amendment, a public employee must show that the state actor engaged in an “adverse employment action” against the plaintiff as a result of their speech.
• The government must establish that it had a legitimate administrative interest in preventing or punishing the speech that outweighed the employee’s interest in exercising their First Amendment rights.
• The more the employee’s speech resembles core First Amendment expression (like political speech), the harder it is for the government to make this showing.
• Even when First Amendment rights are violated, there may not be a remedy due to the judicially created doctrine of “qualified immunity.”

Published January 12, 2023. Visit Popehat to read Ken White’s original post.

ChatGPT and Winograd’s Dilemma [Freddie deBoer, Freddie deBoer’s Substack]

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• ChatGPT is a recently-unveiled AI chatbot that has been met with mixed reviews.
• Microsoft has invested $10 billion in its developer.
• Terry Winograd proposed two sentences to test AI’s ability to parse natural language.
• Coindexing is an essential step to decoding sentences, and it is dependent on the verb.
• AI must have a theory of the world in order to understand language.
• ChatGPT has passed Winograd’s test, but it is not basing its coindexing on a theory of the world.
• Douglas Hofstadter’s work on creating a machine that thinks the way a human thinks is still in its infancy.

Published January 12, 2023. Visit Freddie deBoer’s Substack to read Freddie deBoer’s original post.

Got (Raw) Milk? How the Cow Became a Culture Warrior [Suzy Weiss, The Free Press]

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• Kale Hyder, a 23-year-old Morgan Stanley analyst, has shifted away from plant-based milk and meat replicas to whole foods, including sirloin, raw butter, grass-fed raw milk cottage cheese, and raw milk.
• Raw milk has become increasingly popular in the past few years, as people seek to regain control over their food and break with convention.
• Raw milk is illegal to sell for human consumption in most states, but there are loopholes and legal gray areas that allow people to access it.
• The appeal of raw milk is twofold: it represents a time before everything got screwed up, and it’s a challenge and a way of raging against the machine.
• The raw milk movement has been bolstered by the likes of Joshua Rainer, who moved from California to Colorado to become a farmhand, and Connor, who created the website GetRawMilk.
• The latest flashpoint in the raw milk wars is Amos Miller Organic Farm, which is being sued for $305,000 by the federal government.

Published January 11, 2023. Visit The Free Press to read Suzy Weiss’s original post.

A new plan to get around the debt ceiling hostage [Matthew Yglesias, Slow Boring]

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• The Treasury Department can use a bond yield trick to raise money without increasing the face value of the debt, which would help them get around the debt ceiling issue.
• This involves offering a bond with a high interest rate and seeing how much money people will give them for it.
• This would slow the pace at which the face value of debt accumulates and even start to reduce the face value of the debt over time.
• This would be done by swapping out old bonds with high face values and low interest rates for equivalent-yielding bonds with low face values and high interest rates.
• The Treasury Department has proposed issuing high-yield bonds to avoid a debt ceiling fight with Republicans.
• This would be a way to avoid doing something flagrantly illegal, as the executive branch has an obligation to pay what it owes according to the laws that exist.
• The biggest practical problem is that troublemakers only need to find one insane district court judge somewhere in the country to order a national injunction and create at least a temporary crisis.
• Joe Biden and his cabinet secretaries do not have the legal authority to blow off the law and not spend what Congress has told them to spend.
• The importance of shooting the hostage is to take the debt ceiling issue off the table and separate the debate over the debt ceiling from the debate over fiscal policy.
• Biden should do a big speech calling for a bipartisan commission on deficit reduction and have the Treasury start working on some high-yield bonds.

Published January 11, 2023. Visit Slow Boring to read Matthew Yglesias’s original post.

We Have a Tripledemic. Not of Disease, But of Fear. [Vinay Prasad, The Free Press]

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• The media has been filled with stories about the “tripledemic” of Covid-19, influenza, and RSV, which is being blamed for high rates of illness and hospitalizations, especially among children.
• The best available evidence contradicts the narrative from the media and many public health officials, and the insistence on never-ending precautions in the face of inevitable exposure to germs is not only medically misguided, it also threatens to stigmatize the most mundane human interactions.
• There is limited evidence that the tripledemic exists, and no evidence that prolonged precautions delay the inevitable.
• There is no avoiding respiratory viruses, and it is natural, healthy, and necessary for young children to be exposed to many viruses in order to build immunity.
• The evidence to support masking was thin before Covid-19, and there is no evidence that masking young children for Covid-19, flu, and RSV viruses is effective.
• Covid-19 disrupted all aspects of life, and as the disruptions fade, other viruses have inevitably returned. Hospitals should prepare for this, and federal reimbursement should pay for pediatric beds.

Published January 10, 2023. Visit The Free Press to read the original post.

The Creative Underclass is Still Raging [Freddie deBoer]

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• The internet is full of negative emotion, and the creative underclass is still raging.
• People with unrealized dreams in creative industries are often angry due to thwarted ambition and the sense that they were meant for more than comfort.
• These people are often college-educated and gainfully employed, yet they are still resentful of those who have succeeded in creative fields.
• They are often jealous of those who have achieved success despite no clear advantage in talent, worth, or effort.
• Nate Silver is an example of someone who is conspicuously successful and enviable, and thus a target of the creative underclass.
• The economics of media and publishing have shifted since the heyday of Gawker, making it impossible for a new Gawker to emerge today.
• Professional writing is still enviable, but the rewards are far more humble than in the past.
• It’s difficult to have an appropriate perspective on the anger from those who don’t have the same opportunities as the creative underclass.
• Bullshit jobs aren’t that bad, and most people would kill to have them.
• We need to shatter the myth of just deserts and remind people that they don’t control their own destinies.
• We can never achieve a world where everyone enjoys public acclaim, and people need to find a way to deal with that.

Published January 9, 2023. Visit Freddie deBoer’s substack to read the original post.

How DEI Is Supplanting Truth as the Mission of American Universities [John Sailer, The Free Press]

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• UCLA accounting lecturer Gordon Klein was placed on leave and banned from campus after refusing to grade black students more leniently in the wake of the George Floyd protests.
• After a counter-petition signed by more than 76,000 people, Klein was allowed to return to the classroom.
• The principles of “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) have become guiding principles in higher education, valued as equal to or even more important than the basic function of the university.
• DEI has become a priority for many of the organizations that accredit universities, and universities are pressured to adopt DEI measures.
• College students are now required to take DEI, anti-racism, or social justice courses, and DEI is becoming a de facto academic discipline.
• Faculty position listings at universities across the country illustrate how a focus on race, gender, social justice, and critical theory can be crucial to landing a job.
• DEI initiatives are becoming increasingly prevalent in higher education, with many universities now considering faculty members’ contributions to DEI as a criterion for hiring, promotion, and tenure.
• The federal government is also doing its part to infuse DEI into the sciences, with the Department of Energy’s Office of Science mandating that all new research proposals include a Promoting Inclusive and Equitable Research (PIER) Plan.
• This fixation on DEI can have a stultifying effect on medical research, and eventually medical care, as it crowds out other, more consequential areas of scientific research.
• Jonathan Haidt, a professor of ethical leadership at New York University’s Stern School of Business, has warned about this redefinition of racism and the rise of ideological groupthink in academia.
• Organizations such as the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) and the National Association of Scholars have issued numerous statements opposing DEI requirements that violate the First Amendment.

Published January 9, 2023. Visit The Free Press to read the original post.

In defense of “The West Wing” [Matthew Yglesias, Slow Boring]

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• Bernie Sanders praised the show “The West Wing” for its accurate portrayal of the White House, but it has since become an article of faith in the Berniesphere that the show is reflective of everything wrong with the Democratic Party.
• The show accurately conveys the idea that there are a lot of sincere people in politics who are committed to their ideas and to advancing public policy in better directions.
• It also illustrates that Americans like outsiders in presidential politics, but not radicals, and that presidents have a big impact on the national mood, even if they don’t accomplish much legislatively.
• The show also highlights some odd and neglected aspects of the American political system, such as the order of succession problem and the potential for debt ceiling mischief.
• However, the show has one major flaw in that it has a small cast of characters, which underrates the actual complexity of the American federal government.

Published January 9, 2023. Visit Slow Boring to read Matthew Yglesias’s original post.

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