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After the Ohio rail disaster, Buttigieg is silent on restoring the safety standards Trump repealed. Civil War-era brake systems were good enough for General Sherman…

@pluralistic

pluralistic.net/2023/02/11/din

Remember all the speculative BS from the #COVID19 deniers that suggested pulling kids into online learning was adding to teen suicides. That was absolutely wrong. In fact, school attendance RAISES teen suicide rates.

“Returning from online to in-person schooling was associated with a 12-to-18 percent increase in teen suicides.”

I'm not advocating against in-person education, but
1) the COVID deniers were wrong AGAIN, and
2) We need to make education safer for kids.

nber.org/system/files/working_

RT @AttorneyCrump
Born a slave, Robert Smalls hijacked a Confederate ship, sailing its passengers – including his family – to freedom. He went on to become a Reconstruction-era leader, an advocate for public education, and served 5 terms in the House of Representatives. #BlackHistoryMonth

Threads with content wrappers (9/8) 

I originally published this thread two weeks ago. Sorry if you already saw it. I put a CW around it so as not to clutter people's timelines -- but I was concerned that using the same CW for every post had hidden the content and looked like I was just reposting the same thing again and again. So I'm reposting with more descriptive headers for the CW.

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US Politics 8/8 - Everything Trump tried would have been a coup 

Overall, every path that Trump pursued would have resulted in a coup; he only needed the endorsement of a few elite government officials to give the veneer of legitimacy that could have been used to rally regular people to support his claim to power (leaving aside the fascist street-fighters he rallied on Jan 6). We are lucky that they stood firm in face of Trump’s pressure; we are lucky that the election was not close enough that any of them thought that they could flip the results on their own. Finally, the fact that Trump did not follow through with his coup plot does not exonerate him of any crimes nor does it mean that he’s a normal politician – it only means that he won’t be executed. 8/8

#2024

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US Politics 7/8 - State Secretaries of State were invited to join coup 

4. State Secretary of State. The GA Secretary of State does not have the power to change how votes are counted simply because the results don’t smell right to him. If Brad Raffensperger (or other officials) had revoked his certification of the results, any claim to power by Trump after his term would have been a coup. 7/8

#2024

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US Politics 6/8 - State legistarors were invited to join coup 

3. State legislators: State legislatures do not have the power to change election law after election day and essentially nullify election outcomes that they dislike. Even though Trump, Eastman, and many individual legislators (at state and Federal levels) made this absurd claim, no state legislature (as a body) endorsed it. Even if a legislature had claimed to nullify the election results from it’s state, any claim to power after Trump’s term ended would have been a coup. 6/8
cato.org/blog/state-legislatur

#2024

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US Politics 5/8 - Pence was invited to join coup 

2. Vice-President Pence: The Vice-President does not have the power to pick and choose electors for President (and Vice-President). This is obvious to everyone, except proto-fascists like Trump and his advisor John Eastman. Pence recognized the absurdity of this claim and followed his Constitutional duty; if he had done otherwise and Trump had claimed power after his term ended, it would have been a coup. 5/8
politico.com/news/2022/03/11/p

Eastman, by the way, before the election used mass media to argue for revoking the citizenship of many thousands of Americans who were born to immigrants in America – in a naked attempt to eliminate Kamala Harris as a political opponent.

#2024

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US Politics 4/8 - Judges were invited to join coup 

1. Judges: Trump immediately made unfounded claims that widespread election fraud had cost him the election. Trump’s team made no serious effort to distinguish serious claims from utter bullshit, leaving me to believe that they had no reasonable basis for the fraud claims (see the Navarro Report, for example, which is full of completely asinine claims). Consequently, Trump and his lawyers have been sanctioned for bringing frivolous lawsuits before multiple courts. It’s unclear whether Trump intended these lawsuits simply as political stunts to support his anti-election propaganda campaign, or if he thought that some judges would put partisan and personal loyalty above their Constitutional duty; but regardless, even if judges had used these bullshit claims as an excuse to invalidate election results, this still would have been a coup. 4/8
Sanctions in CO: reuters.com/legal/legalindustr
Sanctions in FL: reuters.com/legal/trump-lawyer
Summary of legal results: brookings.edu/blog/fixgov/2021
americanbar.org/groups/public_

#2024

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US Politics 3/8 - Elite endorsement was first step in Trump's coup 

Trump made several appeals for support from elite government officials. All were couched in bogus factual or legal claims, so even if those government officials had endorsed his claims, any attempt by Trump to stay in office for a second term would have been a coup. Some of the major appeals went to various judges, VP Pence, state legislators, and state Secretaries of State. (details below with references) 3/8
#2024

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US Politics 2/8 - Trump's coup plot would destroy America 

When I say Trump openly plotted a coup, I mean is that he was recruiting members of the political elite to publicly endorse a coup attempt, which would lend a veneer of legitimacy of a subsequent coup. He may have never 'pulled the trigger', and it may not be possible to convict him of any crimes, but that doesn’t change the political fact that he was claiming the powers of the President despite clearly losing the election. If he had won that elite support, many of his appointees probably would have ignored legal orders from President Biden and obeyed illegal orders from Trump, leaving it to the military, civil service, and law enforcement to decide whose orders to follow; we’d be in the middle of a civil war right now. 2/8

#2024

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US Politics 1/8 - fools still endorse Trump 

Any political leader who even considers supporting Trump can't be trusted. Trump openly plotted a coup to overthrow the government of the USA, and yet people like Dave Wilson of the "Palmetto Family Council" in South Carolina are still willing to back him under the right circumstances, while NPR reporters treat this basically as normal politics (though the reporter did insert the comment "we all know who Trump is by now").

Wilson is either hopelessly ignorant and confused, or a tyrant at heart. Either way, he's not someone any serious citizen should listen to. 1/8

npr.org/2023/01/27/1152140562/

#2024

In my experience, I estimate that 1-5% of medical prescriptions get botched at the 'legal authorization' phase -- getting the right piece of paper/fax from the doctor's office and tracking it at the pharmacy. Another 5% of prescriptions get botched due to insurance authorization or pharmacy logistics.

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Note: I was under the impression that the complaints were about Rowling's real-life bigoted statements, but there's apparently a bit of bigotry in the game itself
wired.com/review/hogwarts-lega

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Of course, everyone is free to do as they wish, but they shouldn't expect to be taken seriously.

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Adult culture should be focused on adult topics -- these still leave plenty of room for escapism, whether they are 'academic' topics (e.g. science, technology, nature, adult literature, art, history) or craft activities. My impression is that this is the way in many countries, and used to be true in the USA

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I'm baffled by the bru-ha-ha over the Hogwarts Legacy boycott. It's not the superficial topics that everyone talks about that confuse me (bigotry, boycotts, etc), and it's not that I dislike the Harry Potter stories (I enjoyed them, though they are far from great literature or even exceptional kids lit) -- what I don't get is that adults think it's worthwhile to repeatedly revisit this fictional world and repeatedly shell out $$ for the privilege. I don't think I can take any of this seriously. The same goes for Star Wars, etc. So much of our 'culture wars' is focused on topics where, win or lose, the culture will remain degenerate. It's really idiotic.

Amarillo’s plan for broadband in El Barrio could be a playbook for other Texas communities without internet

texastribune.org/2023/02/07/te

I, a lowly adjunct, just publicly called out a tenured professor for using a student’s work (a tutorial she made) as the basis of a project in his class, without any mention of her.

So… I’m probably going to be looking for a new place to teach soon. If anyone needs an experienced teacher for a library school, hit me up 💜

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