Members of Congress have serious, urgent concerns
Pelosi Announces Vote to Limit Trump’s War-Making Power Against Iran
The New York Times reports: Republicans signaled they were inclined to support it
On Left Straussianism
We might therefore say that the left intellectual becomes the left Straussian when they decide that, in addition to sometimes filtering their own public speech to advance an ideological agenda, they’re additionally responsible for “protecting” the public from being exposed to conversations not disciplined by political strategy. To the extent that their own ideas are not already disciplined by such a strategy, they limit discussion of them to close friends and sympathetic colleagues.
And:
In each case, thoughtful criticism of an author’s argument—for being confused, or incomplete—was overshadowed by the left-Straussian assertion that, regardless of whether the argument was true or reasonable, it was “irresponsible” for the author to make it in public.
And:
Those who engage in such tactics would never endorse Strauss’s hard distinction between the elect few and the unthinking many—at least not explicitly. But the care they take to pre-screen intellectual material indicates that they share his dark foreboding about the “costs” of public intellectual conversations reflecting rather than repressing the complexities of private ones. Attempting to marginalize or disqualify intellectual arguments itself implies a gap between the commentator, who trusts themselves to evaluate the arguments in question, and their imagined audience, who is assumed to lack either the tools or the ability to do so unaided. Left Straussians may not believe that they are philosopher-kings but they repudiate, in practice and increasingly even in theory, the possibility of the philosopher-reader.
UK Tory fact of the day
In the UK, Conservative party membership has been dwindling for decades. At its peak, in the early 50s, it was 2.8 million. Last year, it was 124,000 and the party received twice as much money from dead members, through wills, as from the living.
That is from a longer Andy Bennett piece on the deepening crisis in conservatism.
The Dan Wang year-end letter
This year I want to discuss mostly science and technology. First, some thoughts on China’s technology efforts. Then I’ll present a few reflections on science fiction, with a focus on Philip K. Dick and Liu Cixin. Next I’ll discuss books I read on American industrial history. I save personal reflections for the end.
What to think about Modi these days
The Modi administration has also done a better job than previous governments in pushing big anti-poverty initiatives, such as building 100 million toilets to help stop open defecation and the spread of deadly disease.
An Easier Way Ken can Showcase “the Receipts”!
When I told my Mom I was trying to contact
Ken Klippenstein. She remarked “That sounds
like a Russian-Mennonite name!” I told her
he’s a nepo baby, but I don’t care because he
brings the receipts
.
Building Reader Trust
I’m working on an App to help writers to build
trust with readers who are skeptical of their
journalism, but persuadable. The App showcases
the context of their sources in a visible way,
differentiating their work from “mainstream” media.
The App doesn’t require the reader to leave the
existing article and visit a new page to read the
documentation or video. The App reads
YouTube video transcripts and enables
writers to include an unlimited number of citations
per article, whereas there is limited space to embed
videos or document within an article.
Jack Nicholson: Familiar Quotes!
Besides bringing the receipts, writers can also
use the tool expressively:
Imagine citing a Jack Nicholson quote that
(many) people are already familiar with:
You can’t handle the truth
!
Electronic writing has added emoticons,
animated GIFs, audio and video to the new writing
medium.
I’m seeking to get feedback from readers and from
writers. I’m especially interested in hearing
from Ken because his practice of journalism
already brings “the receipts” and has someone
edit his work. 1
About me
I’m a computer programmer and History major, (and Russian-Mennnonite) working on a citation tool I call CiteIt .
Short Video for Ken: (1 min 22 sec)
Here’s a short video I made for you, Ken:
The Design Features of CiteIt: It does not require:
- Readers having to go to a new page, which introduces page-flipping friction and requires the reader to locate the quote start within the document and
- Writers having to limit the number “receipts” they post within an article to conserve space, as there is limited space within an article to display videos and document
- Putting “the receipts” at the bottom of the page where they are only visible after an article has been read.
- Copying the Quote context. CiteIt looks up the context, given a link URL.
- Computer Programming to script the popup windows.
Examples:
- CiteIt homepage
- Matt Taibbi: Nordstream article
- Ken Klippenstein: Biden on College Protests
This page: https://demo.citeit.net/2024/05/25/bring-the-receipts
I have 5 interview questions for Ken. An important part is understanding whether I need change anything to take into account his Workflow and Editorial process.↩
Emoticons
The corporate media is happy for more money in politics, but most American voters are disgusted. 🤮
The tech CEOs’ year of reckoning
Engadget says:
People started asking questions, and the answers weren’t what tech promised.
Inline Test
Mills married Clara Cleveland Carper, the daughter of Homer Carper and Catherine Welch, on August 28, 1883 in Delaware, Ohio.