WaPo | Welcome to — brace yourself for — the post-truth presidency.
“Facts are stubborn things,”said John Adams in 1770, defending British soldiers accused in the Boston Massacre, “and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
Or so we thought, until we elected to the presidency a man consistently heedless of truth and impervious to fact-checking.
WaPo | It should be obvious that without the so-called mainstream media, especially newspapers such as the New York Times and The Post, no one would know anything that has any basis in objective fact — and yes there is such a thing. We will rue the day we forgot that newsgathering is a profession with demanding standards regarding performance and ethics. Notwithstanding the billion-member global newsroom, it’s nice to have smart, well-educated, experienced reporters and editors to pluck the pearls from the muck.
Therefore, the highest service the president of the United States could perform would be to actively engage the media in the national interest of nurturing an informed populace, without which a 8democratic Republic cannot long survive.
WaPo | You may think you are prepared for a post-truth world, in which political appeals to emotion count for more than statements of verifiable fact.
But now it’s time to cross another bridge — into a world without facts. Or, more precisely, where facts do not matter a whit.
WaPo | “I think that’s out of Trump’s hands. He should leave it to the Justice Department, and she should be prosecuted.”
His wife agreed, adding: “It was a debate. . . . He doesn’t always think. He’s not a politician. He just says it.”
Still, at Trump’s first mention of Clinton during the rally that night, the whole arena began chanting: “Lock her up! Lock her up! Lock her up!”
Trump stood by and smiled.
Sitting one section over from the Meyers was another couple in their 70s who were convinced that Trump’s change in tone on Clinton is just a strategic act.
thesaker | Let me begin by immediately say that I have the utmost respect for F.
William Engdahl and that I consider him a person far more knowledgeable
of US politics than myself. Furthermore, I want to also make it clear
that I am not going to refute a single argument Engdahl makes in support
of his thesis simply because I believe that his arguments are
fact-based and logical. I strongly urge everybody to read Engdahl’s
article “The Dangerous Deception Called The Trump Presidency” in the New Eastern Outlook
and carefully consider each of his arguments. Of course, Engdahl only
offers indirect, circumstantial, evidence and only time will really show
whether he is right or wrong. What I propose to do today is to
consider the other possibility, that in spite of all the evidence
presented by Engdahl, Trump might not be a fraud and a showman. You
will see that this conclusion is not necessarily more optimistic than
Engdahl’s.
My main argument is much more primitive than Engdahl’s and even more
circumstantial: I see clear signs of a *real* struggle taking place
inside the US elites and if, indeed, such a struggle is taking place,
then I conclude that Trump is not a showman who has been “selected” (to use Engdahl’s words) by the US elites but that quite to the contrary, his election is a nightmare for these elites.
My subsidiary argument is that even if Engdahl is right and if Trump
is a showman, the ploy of the US elites to save the Empire and prepare
for war will fail.
Guardian |Through the US Export-Import Bank, Barack Obama’s administration has spent nearly $34bn supporting 70 fossil fuel projects around the world, work by Columbia Journalism School’sEnergyand Environment Reporting Project and the Guardian has revealed.
This unprecedented backing of oil, coal and gas projects is an unexpected footnote to Obama’s own climate change legacy. The president has called global warming “terrifying” and helped broker the world’s first proper agreement to tackle it, yet his administration has poured money into developments that will push the planet even closer to climate disaster.
For people living next to US-funded mines and power stations the impacts are even more starkly immediate.
Guardian and Columbiareporters have spent time at American-backed projects inIndia, South Africa and Australia to document the sickness, upheavals and environmental harm that come with huge dirty fuel developments.
In India, we heard complaints about coal ash blowing into villages, contaminated water and respiratory and stomach problems, all linked to a project that has had more than $650m in backing from the Obama administration.
In South Africa, another huge project is set to exacerbate existing air pollution problems, deforestation and water shortages. And in Australia, an enormous US-backed gas development is linked to a glut of fracking activity that has divided communities and brought a new wave of industrialization next to the cherished Great Barrier Reef.
While Obama can claim the US is the world’s leader on climate change – at least until Donald Trump enters the White House – it is also clear that it has become a major funder of fossil fuels that are having a serious impact upon people’s lives. This is the unexpected story of how Obama’s legacy is playing out overseas.
phys.org | In the UK, the poverty premium—the idea that poorer people pay more for essential goods and services—is an important and relevant social policy concern for low-income families.
A timely new study from the Personal Finance Research Centre (PFRC) at the University of Bristol revisits and advances earlier research conducted in 2010 by Save the Children.
The 2016 study reflects markets and household behaviour as it exists today, and, for the first time, explores how manylow-income households are actually affected by the poverty premium, and by how much.
The new research reveals:
The average cost of the poverty premium is £490 per household each year. This is lower than the previous estimate of around £1,300 per year and this difference largely derives from the way that the average premium for each of the eight poverty premium components takes into account the proportion of households incurring it.
Not all low-income households experience all components of the premium. The research identifies seven distinct groups (or clusters) representing the most dominant combinations of poverty premiums experienced by low-income households. This exposure ranges from experiencing an average of only three types of premiums, to an average of eight. Based on these combinations of exposure, the cost incurred ranged from an average of £350 among the 'premium minimisers' to £750 among the more 'highly exposed'.
The largest share of the average premium incurred by low-income households related directly to low-income households that had not switched household fuel tariff. This was compounded by other smaller premiums associated with households' fuel payment methods. And even a household that had switched to the best prepayment meter tariff could still expect to incur an estimated premium of £227 compared to the best deals available to those who pay by monthly direct debit.
The new research suggests that there is still scope for the poverty premium to be reduced, and there is clearly role for providers, government and regulators to help address it. Central to the solution may be striking a better balance between cost-reflective pricing and cross-subsidy (where cross-subsidy is possible) and roles for greater partnerships and involvement of trusted intermediaries. The clearest priorities for action relate to insurance, higher-cost credit, and fuel.
Sara Davies, Research Fellow at PFRC, said: "This study provides an important and timely update to previous research.
"While the average poverty premium we have calculated is lower than the previous estimate, it is important to bear in mind that averages mask significant variation in the lived experience of the poverty premium. For example, one highly exposed family is estimated to incur a premium of over £1,600 each year, considerably more than the average premium of £750 for their cluster."
Yvette Hartfree, Research Fellow at PFRC, added: "It is also important to remember that the poverty premium only reflects the additional costs low-income households pay compared to higher-income households. It doesn't take into account the extent to which low-income households avoid paying poverty premiums simply because they can't afford to and instead go without."
WaPo | The raw, lingering emotion of the 2016 presidential campaign
erupted into a shouting match here Thursday as top strategists of
Hillary Clinton’s campaign accused their Republican counterparts of
fueling and legitimizing racism to elect Donald Trump.
The
extraordinary exchange came at a postmortem session sponsored by
Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, where top operatives
from both campaigns sat across a conference table from each other.
As
Trump’s team basked in the glow of its victory and singled out for
praise its campaign’s chief executive, Stephen K. Bannon, who was
absent, the row of grim-faced Clinton aides who sat opposite them
bristled.
Clinton communications director Jennifer
Palmieri condemned Bannon, who previously ran Breitbart, a news site
popular with the alt-right, a small movement known for espousing racist
views.
“If providing a platform
for white supremacists makes me a brilliant tactician, I am proud to
have lost,” she said. “I would rather lose than win the way you guys
did.”
Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s campaign manager, fumed: “Do you think I ran a campaign where white supremacists had a platform?”
“You did, Kellyanne. You did,” interjected Palmieri, who choked up at various points of the session.
“Do
you think you could have just had a decent message for white,
working-class voters?” Conway asked. “How about, it’s Hillary Clinton,
she doesn’t connect with people? How about, they have nothing in common
with her? How about, she doesn’t have an economic message?”
It is perhaps easiest to quote the hive-mind at Wikipedia to clear things up. Here’s how it defines white supremacy:
White supremacyorwhite supremacismis aracist ideologycentered upon the belief, and promotion of the belief, thatwhite peopleare superior in certain characteristics, traits, and attributes to people of otherracial backgroundsand that thereforewhite peopleshould politically, economically and socially rule non-white people. The term is also typically used to describe apolitical ideologythat perpetuates and maintains thesocial,political,historicaland/orindustrialdomination by white people (as evidenced by historical and contemporary sociopolitical structures such as theAtlantic slave trade,Jim Crow lawsin theUnited States, andapartheidinSouth Africa). Different forms of white supremacism put forth different conceptions of who is considered white...
Next is this crucial-for-our-purposes addition:
In academic usage, particularly in usage drawing oncritical race theory, the term "white supremacy" can also refer to a political or socio-economic system where white people enjoy a structural advantage (privilege) over other ethnic groups, both at a collective and an individual level.
The subsection on the academic usage adds:
The termwhite supremacyis used in academic studies of racial power to denote a system of structural orsocietal racismwhich privileges white people over others, regardless of the presence or absence of racial hatred. White racial advantages occur both at a collective and an individual level. Legal scholar Frances Lee Ansley explains this definition as follows: “By ‘white supremacy’ I do not mean to allude only to the self-conscious racism of white supremacisthate groups. I refer instead to a political, economic and cultural system in which whites overwhelmingly control power and material resources, conscious and unconscious ideas of white superiority and entitlement are widespread, and relations of white dominance and non-white subordination are daily reenacted across a broad array of institutions and social settings.”
This and similar definitions are adopted or proposed by Charles Mills,bell hooks, David Gillborn, Jessie Daniels and Neely Fuller Jr, and are widely used incritical race theoryandintersectionalfeminism. ...Academic users of the term sometimes prefer it toracismbecause it allows for a disconnection between racist feelings and white racial advantage orprivilege.
Readers will be unsurprised that a term has a common meaning and many diverging academic meanings as members of the academy contest it across fields of scholarship. Adjudicating the best definition within an academic field is not our concern.
Rather, this small, obscure exchange illustrates a larger point: It is awful to stigmatize people as cringeworthy for failing to speak in the vernacular of a tiny, insular subculture. Neither journalists nor academics speaking to a general audience can insist a term’s only meaning is a contested usage so little known that it confounds a longtime employee ofMother Jonesand many residents of the Upper West Side. And it is deeply counterproductive to stigmatize those who use the common meaning of a well-known term with words like “embarrassing,” and “mortifying.”
The insularity and biases at work here are a significant reason that the academy, and growing parts of the press who mistake its subculture for conventional wisdom, are increasingly unable to reach anyone that doesn’t share an educational background many intellectuals now think of as normal but that is, in fact, unusualeven among college students in the U.S., never mind the rest of the world. Why does this insular subculture think stigmatization of this sort will succeed beyond it?
In the weeks since Donald Trump’s election, many journalists and close observers of mainstream journalism have been grappling with how best to cover the president-elect, and furiously critiquing headlines in theNew York TimesandWashington Postthat allegedly engage in “false equivalence,” or fail to adequately call out misinformation that is verifiably false. I have no objection to that sort of media criticism. Hashing these matters out in open debate is a strength, not a weakness.
unz | The US Government of the people, for the people no longer exists.
With the help of the 7 “blind” men however the shadow government can now
be illuminated; the invisible government can now be discerned and the
double government can now be identified.
The totality of truths is that the US “elephant” consists of a power
elite hierarchy overseeing a corporatocracy, directing a deep state that
has gradually subverted the visible government and taken over the
“levers of power.” Henceforth in stark contrast to Scott and Lofgren it
shall not be known as the disparate deep-state, nor as Sach’s
corporatocracy, but more aptly as the amalgamated corporate-deep-state.
The Holy Grail of the science branch of physics is to find what
Einstein called a Unified Field Theory, also known as “a theory of
everything.” This is quite simply one idea, one set of equations that
could explain the entire physical universe.
Similarly the corporate-deep-state theory is the Holy Grail of
political science and builds on the work of the giants, called “blind”
men in this paper, diving deeper into what Lofgren calls the red thread
that runs throughout the past 40 years of US government and politics.
The US’s founding fathers went to great lengths in their Constitution
to separate the powers between the three visible branches of the US
federal government, ensuring that no single branch could dominate.
What they failed to plan for was the separation of corporation and
state. A failure highlighted by President Woodrow Wilson in 1913, under
whose leadership the corporate Pandora’s box was first opened with the
establishment of the Federal Reserve: “We are at the parting of the
ways. We have, not one or two or three, but many, established and
formidable monopolies in the United States. We have, not one or two, but
many, fields of endeavor into which it is difficult, if not impossible,
for the independent man to enter. We have restricted credit, we have
restricted opportunity, we have controlled development, and we have come
to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and
dominated, governments in the civilized world—no longer a government by
free opinion, no longer a government by conviction and the vote of the
majority, but a government by the opinion and the duress of small groups
of dominant men.”
archive | The history of libraries is one of loss. The Library of Alexandria is best known for its disappearance.
Libraries like ours are susceptible to different fault lines:
Earthquakes,
Legal regimes,
Institutional failure.
So this year, we have set a new goal: to create a copy of Internet
Archive’s digital collections in another country. We are building the Internet Archive of Canada
because, to quote our friends at LOCKSS, “lots of copies keep stuff
safe.” This project will cost millions. So this is the one time of the
year I will ask you: please make a tax-deductible donation to help make sure the Internet Archive lasts forever.
On November 9th in America, we woke up to a new
administration promising radical change. It was a firm reminder that
institutions like ours, built for the long-term, need to design for
change.
For us, it means keeping our cultural materials safe, private and
perpetually accessible. It means preparing for a Web that may face
greater restrictions.
wikipedia | The Five Eyes, often abbreviated as FVEY, is an intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. These countries are bound by the multilateral UKUSA Agreement, a treaty for joint cooperation in signals intelligence.
reddit | Now, the transition is getting an assist from Heritage Foundation
officials including Becky Norton Dunlop, a distinguished fellow at the
foundation; former Reagan Attorney General Ed Meese, a distinguished
fellow emeritus at Heritage; Heritage national security expert James Carafano; and Ed Feulner, who helped found Heritage.
Rebekah Mercer, a Heritage board member and major pro-Trump donor, is
on the transition team’s 16-member executive committee, and a transition
team source said she is working with Heritage to recruit appointees for
positions at the undersecretary level and below (though she has
struggled to find people interested in taking lower-level jobs,
according to a New York Times report).
The transition team also includes other prominent activists and
thinkers with close ties to Heritage, such as former Ohio Secretary of
State Ken Blackwell, the activist involved with several
conservative groups who is running Trump’s domestic transition team. He
has written for Heritage and has personal relationships with many at
the organization. Fist tap Dale.
David Malpass, Jesuit-trained from Georgetown, Vice President of the Council for National Policy, leading appointment selections for positions involving economic issues
At least FRPI is willing to let people know who it is and who is
running the joint. In contrast, the other of Timberg’s sources,
PropOrNot, an organization with a website, PropOrNot.com,
founded only several months ago, remains totally secret, providing no
information on its site about its origins, its funding, its leadership
or its staff. And yet Timberg confidently claims its information about
Russia’s alleged epic propaganda effort was the result of the
painstaking analytical work of these “experts.” In fact Timberg says the
organization’s executive director, whom he quotes, asked for and
received anonymity along with all his staff because they wanted to
“avoid being targeted by Russia’s legions of skilled hackers.”
And the Post’s editors allow him to get away with this gutlessness and lack of transparency. To get the full picture of how credulous and unprofessional — or willfully biased — Timberg’s editors at the Washington Post (often still considered one of the nation’s top “newspapers of record”), were in not vetting his article, read the Intercept’s article Washington Post Disgracefully Promotes a McCarthyite Blacklist from a New, Hidden and Very Shady Group, which devastatingly eviscerates both PropOrNot and the Post.
Suffice to say that besides allowing Timberg to use as the key source
of his article and dramatic media blacklist an anonymous and clearly
partisan group, PropOrNot, the Post’s editors also never
required their supposedly crack “technology reporter” to even attempt to
contact a single editor or journalist at any of the named alleged
purveyors or “useful idiots” he was accusing of secretly spreading
Russian-sourced “false news.” There’s not even a perfunctory: “Efforts
to contact the editors at Counterpunch were unsuccessful” in the entire
piece. Timberg and the editors of a paper that once gave us the
Watergate story that brought down President Richard Nixon clearly didn’t
even consider such basics of journalism important!
slashdot |After a little over a month of learning more languages to translate beyond Spanish, Google'srecently announced Neural Machine Translation systemhas used deep learning todevelop its own internal language. TechCrunch reports:GNMT's creators were curious about something. If you teach the translation system to translate English to Korean and vice versa, and also English to Japanese and vice versa... could it translate Korean to Japanese, without resorting to English as a bridge between them? They made thishelpful gifto illustrate the idea of what they call "zero-shot translation" (it's the orange one).As it turns out-- yes! It produces "reasonable" translations between two languages that it has not explicitly linked in any way. Remember, no English allowed. But this raised a second question. If the computer is able to make connections between concepts and words that have not been formally linked... does that mean that the computer has formed a concept of shared meaning for those words, meaning at a deeper level than simply that one word or phrase is the equivalent of another? In other words, has the computer developed its own internal language to represent the concepts it uses to translate between other languages? Based on how various sentences are related to one another in the memory space of the neural network, Google's language and AI boffins think that it has. The paper describing the researchers' work (primarily on efficient multi-language translation but touching on the mysterious interlingua)can be read at Arxiv.
scientificamerican | Howard J. Wilk is a long-term unemployed synthetic organic chemist living in Philadelphia. Like many pharmaceutical researchers, he has suffered through the drug industry’s R&D downsizing in recent years and now is underemployed in a nonscience job. With extra time on his hands, Wilk has been tracking the progress of a New Jersey-based company called Brilliant Light Power (BLP).
The company is one of several that are developing processes that collectively fall into the category of new energy technologies. This movement is largely a reincarnation of cold fusion, the short-lived, quickly dismissed phenomenon from the late 1980s of achieving nuclear fusion in a simple benchtop electrolysis device.
In 1991, BLP’s founder, Randell L. Mills, announced at a press conference in Lancaster, Pa., that he had devised a theory in which the electron in hydrogen could transition from its normal ground energy state to previously unknown lower and more stable states, liberating copious amount of energy in the process. Mills named this curious new type of shrunken hydrogen the hydrino, and he has been at work ever since to develop a commercial device to harness its power and make it available to the world.
Wilk has studied Mills’s theory, read Mills’s papers and patents, and carried out his own calculations on the hydrino. Wilk has gone so far as to attend a demonstration at BLP’s facility in Cranbury, N.J., where he discussed the hydrino with Mills. After all that, Wilk says he still can’t tell if Mills is a titanic genius, is self-delusional, or is something in between.
futurism |Researchers from the U.S. DOE’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) and Princeton University may havesolved the mysterysurrounding magnetic reconnection, bringing us one step closer to better solar flare prediction and (pmost notably) problems surrounding nuclear fusion containment. Ultimately, this means that nuclear fusion, and the limitless energy it could provide, may be one step closer to reality.
stateofthenation | If Stein was truly so concerned about getting to an accurate vote count of legal and legitimate voters, wouldn’t she also look at the other 47 states where voting irregularities were rife.
Wouldn’t she want to eliminate:
all the dead voters,
all the illegal alien voters,
all the unregistered voters,
all the double, triple and quadruple voters,
all the stuffed ballot boxes with nonexistent voters.
Then there are the many instances where a vote for Trump was flipped to a vote for Clinton.
This incomplete list of actual examples of vote fraud and election theft was always working to the advantage of Candidate Clinton on November 8th. Why isn’t Stein concerned about these myriad cases of vote fraud?
The financial angle with Stein is quite HUGE!
There is perhaps no better advice for a super sleuth trying to figure out Stein’s game that to“Follow the money!”
Here’s a presidential candidate who only raised $3,509,477 in campaign contributions during the entire 2016 election cycle. Then, she goes out and raises well over $5,400,000 in but a few days and won’t even guarantee that the donations will fund the recount.
PCR | The “war on terror” has simultaneously been a war on truth. For fifteen years—from 9/11 to Saddam Hussein’s “weapons of mass destruction” and “al Qaeda connections,” “Iranian nukes,” “Assad’s use of chemical weapons,” endless lies about Gadaffi, “Russian invasion of Ukraine”—the governments of the so-called Western democracies have found it essential to align themselves firmly with lies in order to pursue their agendas. Now these Western governments are attempting to discredit the truthtellers who challenge their lies.
Russian news services are under attack from the EU and Western presstitutes as purveyors of “fake news.”http://www.globalresearch.ca/moscow-accused-of-propagating-fake-news-eu-resolution-on-russian-propaganda/5558835Abiding by its Washington master’s orders, the EU actually passed a resolution against Russian media for not following Washington’s line. Russian President Putin said that the resolution is a “visible sign of degradation of Western society’s idea of democracy.”
As George Orwell predicted, telling the truth is now regarded by Western “democratic” governments as a hostile act. A brand new website, propornot.com, has just made its appearance condemning a list of 200 Internet websites that provide news and views at variance with the presstitute media that serves the governments’ agendas.http://www.propornot.com/p/the-list.htmlDoes propornot.com’s funding come from the CIA, the National Endowment for Democracy, George Soros?
I am proud to say that paulcraigroberts.org is on the list.
What we see here is the West adopting Zionist Israel’s way of dealing with critics. Anyone who objects to Israel’s cruel and inhuman treatment of Palestinians is demonized as “anti-semitic.” In the West those who disagree with the murderous and reckless policies of public officials are demonized as “Russian agents.” The president-elect of the United States himself has been designated a “Russian agent.”
ineteconomics | Grappling with the shock of Donald Trump’s election victory, most analysts focus on his appeal to those in the United States who feel left behind, wish to retrieve a lost social order, and sought to rebuke establishment politicians who do not serve their interests. In this respect, the recent American revolt echoes the shock of the Brexit vote in the United Kingdom, but it is of far greater significance because it promises to reshape the entire global order, and the complaisant forms of thought that accompanied it.
Ideas played an important role in creating the conditions that produced Brexit and Trump. The ‘social sciences’ — especially economics — legitimated a set of ideas about the economy that were aggressively peddled and became the conventional wisdom in the policies of mainstream political parties, to the extent that the central theme of the age came to be that there was no alternative. The victory of these ideas in politics in turn strengthened the iron-handed enforcers of the same ideas in academic orthodoxy.
It is never clear whether ideas or interests are the prime mover in shaping historical events, but only ideas and interests together can sustain a ruling consensus for a lengthy interval, such as the historic period of financialization and globalization running over the last 35 years. The role of economics in furnishing the now-rebuked narratives that have reigned for decades in mainstream political parties can be seen in three areas.
Tennessean | In a nutshell, Trump’s Access Hollywood tape was obscene, but almost as obscene to me was the WikiLeaks revelation that Clinton Foundation money had helped pay for Chelsea Clinton’s wedding and living expenses for a decade.
More
broadly, the Democratic Party has become, like Bill Maher says, a
“boutique” party, a party of flashiness and glitz with its Lady Gagas
and Katy Perrys and Beyonces, and with its non-stop debates on race,
gender and sexuality. These issues are important, but they came at the
expense of talking about bread-and-butter issues, which is why the Rust
Belt voters bolted.
Liberals and the Democratic Party have some
serious work to do. Among them: Don’t condescend to rural voters, the
non-college-educated, and conservative Christians, and don’t paint them
in a single dimension. At the very least, extend them the same courtesy
you do to immigrants, Muslims, gay people. And don’t judge their groups
by their worst members, the thing you – we – say about Muslims.
Further,the
Democratic Party’s identity politics makes it hard for Americans to
talk honestly about Islamic extremism, undocumented immigration, and
many other issues.
Most of all, I mourn that the Democratic Party
(and millions of Democratic voters) that prides itself on being an
evidence-based party has lost its way and ignored the evidence that
their candidate was deeply flawed.
In the
Electoral-College-versus-popular-vote, my take is that Trump’s Electoral
College victory is a more representative victory nationwide than
Clinton’s popular vote victory. If we went by only popular vote tallies,
in the future, populous states like California, New York and Texas may
decide elections. I know this isn’t a perfect argument, though.
I’m
not happy Trump won, but I’m glad Clintonism lost. The Democratic Party
deserved to lose for many reasons, but especially because it had gotten
annoyingly complacent about its demographic “coalition,” and smug in
its convictions of its moral superiority.
unz | As a Swedish journalist, educated in large part on Anglo-Saxon literature, I had together with many of my peers seenThe New York Timesas a guiding star in standards of journalism. Its feat in publishing the Pentagon Papers- the proof that the United States had fabricated the reasons for going to war with Vietnam- was something that we read about in school, and it inspired me to want to work in the profession and uncover the dirty deals of my own government. Imagine my surprise when I saw that the very same paper had these special floors, off-limits to journalists, where the dodgiest deals with the dodgiest figures were being brokered, and that the heads of this newspaper were not even embarrassed about it. Rather, quite the contrary, they seemed to gloat.
After meeting with Keller and Sulzberger atThe New York Times, I felt a heavy sense of sadness about what I had witnessed. I felt sad for the staff of the newspaper, many of whom had gone through great risks for their profession and their audience. I felt sad for my generation of journalists who had been robbed of a role-model in journalism. And I felt sad for the American readers, many of whom still had no idea of what was happening on the top floors ofThe New York TimesBuilding on 8th Avenue.
Since the last few months I am however no longer sad about any of this, for during the current election cycle in the United States,The New York Timeshas so clearly abandoned all rudimentary standards of journalism and alienated its readership so badly, that it has sentenced itself to wither away into irrelevance. Remembered only in history books as a relic of the Cold War, much like its sister newspaper Pravda of the Soviet Union.
As a Swedish reader ofThe New York Times, I may be surprised that the paper has ignored election rigging in the governing party of the United States serious enough to cause its top five officials to resign. But it doesn’t really matter, since I can read the source material on it via WikiLeaks. As a foreign journalist I may be surprised that the paper has chosen to downplay the political bribes of the Clinton Foundation, but it makes little difference because the Associated Press has made the investigation available for me to report on. As a citizen of a western democracy I may be surprised thatThe New York Timesso clearly campaigns against Trump and for Clinton, rather than reports on the policy issues of the candidates, but I can ignore this since I can read and listen to what they say themselves, while I can get a variety of more enlightened and entertaining campaigns all over the blogosphere. If I were a US citizen however, I would be more than just surprised.
And this is whereThe New York Timeshas lost it. By dropping its veneer and abandoning its self acclaimed standards of journalism, it has sentenced itself into irrelevance. Because even if the newspaper has steadily been outflanked by many blogs when it comes to audience size, it was until recently considered to be an important platform from which the US elites formed their world-view. But a newspaper with such a small reach, that is no longer taken seriously even by the main presidential candidates of its own country, a newspaper that doesn’t abide by the most fundamental journalistic standards, namely publishing rather than hiding newsworthy, correct information, has very little to offer either any powerful people or its own readers. Because even propaganda has to be good, for it to have any value.
libertyblitzkrieg |What’s particularly interesting about this list, isn’t the fact that a bunch of anonymous whiners decided to demonize successful critics of insane, inhumane and ethically indefensible U.S. government policy, but rather the fact that theWashington Postdecided to craftan entire articlearound such a laughably ridiculous list. This just further proves a point that is rapidly becoming common knowledge amongst U.S. citizens with more than a couple of brain cells to rub together.
The fake mainstream news media is completely failing. It is failing because rather than informing the public and criticizing the powerful, it has become merely a giant public relations organ for the U.S. government. The American public clearly sees through the bullshit, in large part due to the efforts of alternative news media. Think about it. Liberty Blitzkrieg doesn’t have a single outside employee. Other than the heroic efforts of my tech person (who spends very little of his time on this site), there’s really no one else contributing in any material way to the operation of this blog. So for a website run by a relatively unknown person to have made it onto this slanderous list (subsequently highlighted by theWashington Post), is not only a great honor,but a testament to the impact one person can have in an environment dominated by a transparently fake and desperate mainstream media.
WaPo | Lawrence Lessig is a professor at Harvard Law School and the author of “Republic, Lost: Version 2.0.” In 2015, he was a candidate in the Democratic presidential primary.
Conventional wisdom tells us that the electoral college requires that the person who lost the popular vote this year must nonetheless become our president. That view is an insult to our framers. It is compelled by nothing in our Constitution. It should be rejected by anyone with any understanding of our democratic traditions — most important, the electors themselves.
The framers believed, asAlexander Hamilton put it, that “the sense of the people should operate in the choice of the [president].” But no nation had ever tried that idea before. So the framers created a safety valve on the people’s choice. Like a judge reviewing a jury verdict, where the people voted, the electoral college was intended to confirm — or not — the people’s choice. Electors were to apply, in Hamilton’s words, “a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice” — and then decide. The Constitution says nothing about “winner take all.” It says nothing to suggest that electors’ freedom should be constrained in any way. Instead, their wisdom — about whether to overrule “the people” or not — was to be free of political control yet guided by democratic values. They were to be citizens exercising judgment, not cogs turning a wheel.
But the question today is which precedent should govern today — Tammany Hall andBush v. Gore, or one person, one vote?
The framers left the electors free to choose. They should exercise that choice by leaving the election as the people decided it: in Clinton’s favor.
thefederalist | I have to admit, I was surprised to read this particular rant by Paul Krugman, the Nobel-winning economist and columnist for the New York Times (he won the Nobel for his work on economics, not his writing). Having read a New York Magazine piece
that theorizes that some state election machines may have been
“hacked,” thereby costing Clinton the election, Krugman declared:
[N]ow
that it’s out there, I’d say that an independent investigation is
called for…Without an investigation, the suspicion of a hacked election
will never go away.
Really: “never?” Well. Krugman quickly backed off after Nate Cohn challenged this thesis (so much for “never”), but a number of hours later he shared a Vox piece: “The election probably wasn’t hacked. But Clinton should request recounts just in case.” Just in case!
It
might be fair to say that Trump’s election kind of broke the brains of
many people both left, right and center: nobody expected it and a great
many people really didn’t want it to happen. But the Left seems to be
taking it the hardest, and this is perfectly exemplified by Paul
Krugman, a genuinely brilliant fellow who has started to sound like a
tinfoil-hat-wearing neighborhood crank.
Just so
we’re clear, the “suspicion of a hacked election” that Krugman latched
onto—the one that “will never go away”—was spelled out this way:
While it’s important to note [the Center for Computer Security and Society] has not found proof of hacking or manipulation, they
are arguing to the campaign that the suspicious pattern merits an
independent review — especially in light of the fact that the Obama
White House has accused the Russian government of hacking the Democratic
National Committee.
Yes, it is
surely “important to note” that there has been no “proof of hacking or
manipulation.” But that doesn’t go far enough by half: there isn’t even
any evidence of such, except for some voting patterns that, as Nate Cohn points out, vanish when you control for certain variables. Gabriel Sherman mixes up the cause and effect: proof is demonstrated after an investigation, the latter of which is undertaken only on the basis of strong-enough evidence—which doesn’t exist here (unless you’re an aggrieved liberal pundit, I guess).
quillette | The difference between the specifics of BillC-16 and the actual sweep of control it exerts over language is worrisome, especially now, when subjectivity rules and the definition of a hate crime can be decided by anyone who says they are a victim. If the past is any indication of the future, special interest groups — like those Cossman and Bryson support — will use that sweep, and the mob power behind it, either to expand the scope of the law or to make its words mean exactly what they want. This is what Peterson has been saying: not using the correct gender pronouns, especially in a government run institution like a university,can (and likely will) be classified as a hate crime, whether that crime is handled by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, which is expensive and can result in financial ruin, or the criminal courts, which can result in a criminal record and jail time.
Cossman’s dissembling over these dangers is part of an established pattern of dissembling that many professors of Women Studies believe is necessary. For them, creative lying is compensation for the injustices women have endured for centuries. It’s a shady brand of feminism that gained momentum in the late 80s and receded in the 90s. However, judging by the vigour and confusion of the protesters supporting it now, it’s made a very successful, if malignant, comeback.
The real tragedy? Minority rights are worth protecting, but the configuration of suffering put forth by professors Cossman and Bryson is idiosyncratic, belonging to an incestuous academic sphere spinning on its own nepotism. When Bryson tries to refute decades of empirical data with her unfalsifiable social-constructionist theories it is a sign the incest has gone too far. A “body of work” may indeed suggest that biological sex isn’t an accurate reflection of everyone’s reality. But the real question is, is this body of work actually worth anything?
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