Trump said at his Thursday news conference that his conclusion that diversity had something to do with the crash was âcommon senseâ.
But common sense tells us he was being racist.
â âItâs probably a black personâs fault this bad thing happenedâ as a reflexive explanation is just a racist statement, thereâs not a level of substantiation that makes it not racist,â Atlantic staff writer Adam Serwer posted on Bluesky.
âHe's not blaming DEI, he's blaming women and non white people,â wrote MSNBCâs Chris Hayes.
âThese people are segregationists and their position is that no one who isnât a white man is qualified to do skilled work of any kind,â New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie wrote on Bluesky. He then added: "i think it is important to say that the open and explicit racism of the president and the vice president isnât just uncouth or âcontroversialâ but a direct attack on tens of millions of americans and a dereliction of their duty to represent the entire country."
Linkage
Things Katy is reading.
Political reporters are actively covering up Trumpâs racism
The Western Way of Genocide
The world is breaking down under the onslaught of the climate crisis, which is triggering mass migrations, failed states and catastrophic wildfires, hurricanes, storms, flooding and droughts. As global stability unravels, the terrifying machine of industrial violence, which is decimating the Palestinians, will become ubiquitous. These assaults will be committed, as they are in Gaza, in the name of progress, Western civilization and our supposed âvirtuesâ to crush the aspirations of those, mostly poor people of color, who have been dehumanized and dismissed as human animals.
Israelâs annihilation of Gaza marks the death of a global order guided by internationally agreed upon laws and rules, one often violated by the U.S. in its imperial wars in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan, but one that was at least acknowledged as a utopian vision. The U.S. and its Western allies not only supply the weaponry to sustain the genocide, but obstruct the demand by most nations for an adherence to humanitarian law.
The message this sends is clear: You, and the rules that you thought might protect you, do not matter. We have everything. If you try and take it away from us we will kill you.
The militarized drones, helicopter gunships, walls and barriers, checkpoints, coils of concertina wire, watch towers, detention centers, deportations, brutality and torture, denial of entry visas, apartheid existence that comes with being undocumented, loss of individual rights and electronic surveillance are as familiar to the desperate migrants along the Mexican border or attempting to enter Europe as they are to the Palestinians.
Defending Trans Lives In a Deep-Red State | "Seat 31" (Oscar Shortlisted)
in The New Yorker for YouTubeYou'll need a box of tissues or three.
Can Uber Ever Deliver? Part Thirty-Four â Tony Westâs Calamitous Legacy at Uber and with the Kamala Harris Campaign
in Naked CapitalismWestâs work at Uber and the Harris campaign illustrates his dedication to the people holding this worldview. He reduced his work in both places to simple games (find returns for Uber investors; raise more cash than the Republicans) where determining the âwinnerâ was a simple matter of counting the money.
In both cases it was critical to complete control of funding and the narratives used to describe the game. No one at Uber had any real-world business accomplishments and no one had any idea how the business model could ever produce sustainable profits, but since they controlled the $13 billion in external funding neither repeated scandals or $32 billion in losses could threaten their control. Anyone who attacked them (or pointed to the huge losses) was denigrated as a unrepentant unionist set on fighting the inevitable tide of technological progress.
Democratic Party insiders fiercely controlled funding even though they no longer had the ability to develop candidates who could win competitive elections or messages and policies with appeal outside elite/PMC circles. Worsening election results were blamed on to Russian interference and the failure of media companies to aggressively censor âmisinformationâ.
Uber subverted the idea that corporations served the larger economy through risky investments that produced meaningful productivity/efficiency advances whose value was demonstrated in competitive markets. It successfully convinced capital markets to ignore their total lack of competitiveness and profitability, and to only pay attention to their narratives about powerful technological innovation and Amazon-like growth potential.
California Party insiders abandoned the belief that Democrats should serve the concrete interests of a broad range of voters and needed to assemble a broad coalition of interests in order to win elections. The Harris campaign raised a billion dollars from companies and investors who were openly working to capture political processes so they could personally profit from market rigging and directly harm the many Democrats who benefitted from Biden Administration antitrust enforcement.
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The Harris-West decision to ignore elite/non-elite issues and center the campaign on fundraising also helped ensure that it would be impossible for the national Democratic Party to recover from a Trump victory and establish any meaningful opposition to Trump policies. Some billionaire/corporate donors might have had some preference for a Democratic win, believing that (as with Obama) a this would neutralize opposition to pro-oligarchic policies from the left and offered more stability than a Trump victory. But the interest of the donors who contributed $1.1 billion to Harris was always purely transactional and (as events have proven) they rapidly switched their allegiance to Trump. So the national Democrats have absolutely no one that can serve as a plausible opponent to any Trump policies, the Partyâs historic pro-working class branding has been destroyed, and the Party totally lacks the money and infrastructure needed to move forward.
Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens
for Cambridge University PressEach of four theoretical traditions in the study of American politicsâwhich can be characterized as theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy, Economic-Elite Domination, and two types of interest-group pluralism, Majoritarian Pluralism and Biased Pluralismâoffers different predictions about which sets of actors have how much influence over public policy: average citizens; economic elites; and organized interest groups, mass-based or business-oriented.
A great deal of empirical research speaks to the policy influence of one or another set of actors, but until recently it has not been possible to test these contrasting theoretical predictions against each other within a single statistical model. We report on an effort to do so, using a unique data set that includes measures of the key variables for 1,779 policy issues.
Multivariate analysis indicates that economic elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while average citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no independent influence. The results provide substantial support for theories of Economic-Elite Domination and for theories of Biased Pluralism, but not for theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy or Majoritarian Pluralism.
The US Govt Spread Anti-Vaxx COVID Disinformation
for YouTubeNo way this could rebound in bad waysâŠ
The Gender War Is A Forever War, Continued
As Iâve written before, itâs hard to imagine a world in which this onslaught of restrictions and censorship remains exclusively focused on the small minority of people who call themselves transgender. Among Musk, Trump, and all their failsons, anti-transgender animus is a patriarchal desire for control and purity paired with misogynistic and racial dreams of a white and masculine re-ascendancy, the dawning of a walled-in golden age free of alien influences, deviant impulses, or human empathy. Those of us who reject our gender assignment are convenient scapegoats, vulnerable to misrepresentation and public shaming. But ultimately the rules we break are broken by all people to one extent or another, and the tighter those rules are enforcedâby Trump or those he can successfully deputize as snitches, informants, and recruitsâthe more people will captured in their dragnet.
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The essentialist definitions provided by the Trump administration for âsex,â âman,â and âwomanâ are an effort to suggest they have no concern or regard for the categories of behavior and aesthetics that might come to mind when you hear the word âgenderââas one White House official unconvincingly told a reporter last week, âI donât think anyoneâs trying to do a dress code or anything like that.â But sex is not simply whatâs between your legs and gender is not simply what you wear. The physical characteristics we associate with âmaleâ and âfemaleâ are themselves broad, malleable, and overlapping. Particularly in the age of transvestigatorsâwhen the gender identity of women of color, in particular, is challenged if they fall outside the thin, European, and white idealâsuch a judgment is clearly aimed at nothing as abstract as an âideologyâ but against people and their deviant, literally non-binary bodies.
They do so not only out of an individualized hatred against a clearly labeled sexual minority but in defense of a faux-naturalized ideal, a vision of perfect manhood and womanhood born of nature yet clearly nonexistent without a police state enforcing it. This is why, as I wrote when a CPAC speaker called for âeradicating transgenderism from public life entirely,â the gender war is a forever war. They likely know this mythical ideal is beyond their reach. But by demonizing those who fall furthest from itâor, as trans people do, challenge the very notion of its inevitabilityâthey can justify a permanent state of fear and persecution.
The Gender War Is A Forever War
for SubstackIn this instance and this instance only, letâs take Michael Knowles at his word. Shortly after telling a roaring crowd heâd like to âeradicate transgenderism from public life entirely,â he began threatening legal action against media outlets that characterized his demand as aimed at transgender people.
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Trump unveiled last month a sweeping plan to âend left-wing gender insanity,â ranging from bans on gender-affirming care, a Constitutional amendment legally defining âsexâ and implicitly defining âtransgenderâ out of existence, and the establishment of an accreditation agency that will require teachers to provide students a âpositive education about the nuclear familyâ and threaten prosecution against any who refuse. Combined with the 2023 state legislative session thus far, defeating this âtransgenderismâ is no slight project, requiring a lot of persecution, censorship, and punishment aimed at controlling behavior and speech which flouts the anti-gender rightâs standards for how good boys and girls are supposed to conduct themselves.
In truth, however, even this totalizing approach to gender nonconformity is still too narrow. As Knowles himself has acknowledged, the focus of conservatismâs construction of cisgender, heterosexual gender identities must be far more ambitious than simply taking the country back to the relatively recent time period when a frequently bipartisan consensus enforced transgender peopleâs absence from public life; the first mistake was, in his telling, failing to sufficiently oppose second wave feminism.
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The vagueness and ubiquity of gender norms leaves this project with no certain end point or rubric for victory. While transgender people flout more of these rules than cisgender peopleârevealing them for the construct they areâmost people break them in one way or another, and even our elimination (were such a thing even possible) wouldnât suffice. We are all gender non-conforming in ways big or small, ranging from our relationship to reproductive labor and capitalism to how we present ourselves to the world. A campaign enforcing gender conformity, then, will expand well past the relatively small fraction of the population that calls themselves âtransgender.â Labeling the anti-gender right as genocidal against trans people is, believe it or not, letting them off too easy.
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The experience of defying gender norms for amusement, convenience, or survival is a universal one even as specific populations are forced to do so more frequently and punished more harshly for it. Thus, a war against gender nonconformity holds all the promise for the authoritarian personality as a âwar on terror,â a âwar on drugs,â or a âwar on crimeââan endless excuse for policing, surveillance, censorship, and violence.
Everyone knows your location: tracking myself down through in-app ads
After more than couple dozen hours of trying, here are the main takeaways:
- I found a couple requests sent by my phone with my location + 5 requests that leak my IP address, which can be turned into geolocation using reverse DNS.
- Learned a lot about the RTB (real-time bidding) auctions and OpenRTB protocol and was shocked by the amount and types of data sent with the bids to ad exchanges.
- Gave up on the idea to buy my location data from a data broker or a tracking service, because I don't have a big enough company to take a trial or $10-50k to buy a huge database with the data of millions of people + me. Well maybe I do, but such expense seems a bit irrational. Turns out that EU-based peoples` data is almost the most expensive.
But still, I know my location data was collected and I know where to buy it!
Peter Thielâs Apocalypse Dreams
Thiel makes it exceedingly clear that this movement should be viewed through the lens of religion, and we should oblige him. Only then can we understand its true aims. Hereâs my take: This emerging tech cult admires religion for its rigid hierarchies. But unlike traditional conservative power structures where God sits atop the pyramid, these tech prophets place technology at the summit, with themselves as its high priests. Instead of divine authority flowing from God through patriarchal figures, authority flows from technology through its billionaire interpreters, who see themselves as humanity's saviors.
Itâs a clever sleight of hand: by positioning technology as the ultimate authority, they position themselves â technologyâs creators and controllers â as its earthly representatives. And by slowly melding their bodies with technology, they slouch toward some kind of high-tech transubstantiation in which they hope to rise above mortality and claim godlike powers.
As I have written before, this belief system maintains many elements of the conservative belief system that cognitive scientist George Lakoff calls âStrict Father Morality.â It includes familiar hierarchies: men above women, whites above other races, wealthy above poor, and employers above employees. But it adds new dimensions: the technologically enhanced above the unenhanced, the algorithmically optimized above the naturally evolved â and the trillionaires above the billionaires above the millionaires above everyone else.