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Freedom of speech is the cornerstone of all freedom. But not all speech is the same, and not all speech qualifies as “free speech.”

As the indictments pile up against Trump and his co-conspirators for their efforts to overturn the 2020 election, we have seen a concerted effort by Trump to claim a ridiculous defense based on “freedom of speech.”

Free speech, according to his cockamamie theory, means he can say whatever he wants to say, regardless of the consequences. He falsely equates his leadership of the criminal conspiracy to destroy American democracy with the act of having a mere opinion or belief.

This defense is unlikely to hold up in a court of law — and it doesn’t hold up in the field of cognitive linguistics, either. Cognitive linguists have long understood that there are different kinds of speech, and that some kinds of speech constitute “speech acts.”

More at FrameLab:
framelab.substack.com/p/trumps

Things every reporter knows but none will mention:

—Congress has no constitutional authority over a state prosecutor.
—Jim Jordan has no factual basis for any of his nasty insinuations.

thehill.com/regulation/court-b

Do you ever come up with advice for your enemies, that you would absolutely withhold if you thought there was any chance they'd hear it

Just published
When a nasal vaccine provides superior immune response compared with a shot (2 doses of each). Results from a randomized clinical trial, including vs Omicron, and with less local and systemic adverse effects
nature.com/articles/s41541-023

“The imperial Supreme Court is something new and dangerous … [W]e must consider more radical options to protect the American form of government.”

harvardlawreview.org/forum/vol
#SCOTUS

I agree 100 percent with ICE-T regarding Sinead O’Connor when contrasted with people in general: most people in the world do not stand for anything at all. The vast majority of us stand for our own existence and survival, and not too much else. This is the painful, human truth. If we could see outside and beyond ourselves more often…🙏🏿

#Mastodon #BlackMastodon #SineadOConnor #Sinead

Two hotels, two sets of conspirators, all working toward the same goal: overturning the 2020 election. Jack Smith’s team has pierced the silence around the Willard Hotel and possibly the Trump International Hotel. And that has far reaching consequences. I delve into the deets in today’s piece. statuskuo.substack.com/p/consp

Has anyone looked into possible Cambridge Analytica-style skulduggery in spreading covid disinfo and propaganda among public institutions? "Let's make every school board in the U.S. believe and behave as though covid is no big deal," that sort of thing?

#Covid #Covid19 #LongCovid @longcovid @novid

Kudos to all the librarians holding the line against fascism. 👏🏾

NYT:
They Checked Out Pride Books in Protest. It Backfired.

Ms. Peterson … was taken aback when she read an email last month from two neighborhood residents. They informed her that they had checked out nearly all of the books in the Pride display and would not return them unless the library permanently removed what they considered “inappropriate content.”

#LGBTQ #BlackMastodon

Gift link: nytimes.com/2023/07/22/us/prid

45 years ago today
Can't Stand the Rezillos is the debut studio album by Edinburgh-based punk band the Rezillos, released on this day in 1978.

#punk #punks #punkrock #Rezillos #history #punkrockhistory #otd

@historyofpunkrock This is a really fun album. I learned about The Rezillos from a blog post mention by @rudytheelder several years ago.
I usually describe them as if the B-52s had been a Scottish guitar band.

We had a grifter and fraud as president for four years. This is the kind of thing that happens. What’s crazy is that he’s still at large. rollingstone.com/politics/poli

If an effect of covid on the whole human race is that we lost say 20% of our ability to smell, do colognes and perfumes sell less because they "aren't as good as they used to be," or sell more because the users have to slather on a bigger dose just to smell anything?

Found something remarkable (and also quite sad).

In 1997, Wired published "The Long Boom", a hyper-optimistic article about how we'd achieve Utopia by 2020.

The authors included notes on some "scenario spoilers"—negative events that might send is in a worse direction.

...and those spoilers turned out to be almost spookily accurate.

wired.com/1997/07/longboom/

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QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
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