Is Reading a Vice? No.

  • Adam Kirsch at The Atlantic suggests that reading is a vice;
  • Paul Krugman on the Heritage Foundation;
  • Robert Reich on the Trump administration’s policy of hate;
  • Short items about everyone laughing at Trump; a measles outbreak at the Noah’s Ark Museum; how the Trump administration admits to stealing artists’ work; and how CBS is going MAGA.
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Beginning with a counter-intuitive think piece.

The Atlantic, Adam Kirsch, 2 Jan 2026: Reading Is a Vice, subtitled “Being a reader means cultivating a relationship with the world that, by most standards, can seem pointless and counterproductive.”
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Ethnic Cleansing and Collective Effervescence

  • The Department of Homeland Security imagines a future in which 1/3 of the American population is deported;
  • The idea of “collective effervescence”;
  • Brief posts about the dirty 1970s; Trump and aspirin; Florida giving God citations passes; and items from JMG.
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This is going around on Facebook today.

This is bonkers — they want to deport almost 1/3 of the nation?? — but also revealing. MAGA and the Trump aren’t just racists and xenophobes and white supremacists, they’re itching to ethnically cleanse the United States. Who at DHS is responsible for this??

Here’s an item about it here at Huffington Post.

The US is reverting to primitive, tribal human nature.

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Where We Are, Here at the End of 2025

  • How Trump has made the government smaller, but not more efficient or dependable;
  • Example of shutting down NASA’s library;
  • Example of cuts to science research;
  • How Trump prefers “vibes” to data;
  • New Yorker’s Susan B. Glasser wonders how people let this happen;
  • And a collage of lists about 2025.
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NY Times, Eileen Sullivan, 30 Dec 2025: Trump Upended the Federal Government. The Full Scope of the Impact Is Still Unclear., subtitled “President Trump achieved his goal of shrinking the work force. But many current and former officials say the government is less dependable and efficient than it was a year ago.” [gift link]
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Return from Holiday Trip

We were in SoCal the past few days, beginning Christmas Day, visiting Sue and Steve, Michael and Honey, Gary and Lynne, Funyun and family, Alan and Ian, Suzanne and extended family; chatting with Vivien and Barry, Alex and Francis, many others. Visiting the Petersen Auto Museum, an item on my bucket list. Dining at the Fairmont Santa Monica and the Georgian and at our hotel’s Penthouse and at Water Grill and Top Island and Scrambled Eggs and Yagul Cafe, and on the way home, Ventana Grill in Pismo Beach.

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Good News, Two Ways

Progress, and Christmas songs.

First, let’s note this.

Vox, Bryan Walsh, 22 Dec 2025: 2025 felt like a disaster — but the numbers tell a very different story, subtitled “From a CRISPR baby to a closing ozone hole, 5 actually good things from 2025.”

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Steady Encroachment

Quick takes today.

Robert Reich, 22 Dec 2025: Farewell to “60 Minutes”, subtitled “It just went the way of the Washington Post’s editorial page”

Once you begin surrendering to Trump, he always wants more. You can’t appease a tyrant.

David Ellison’s CBS — after gutting DEI policies there, appointing right-wing hack Kenneth R. Weinstein to a new “ombudsman” role, and making anti-“woke” opinion journalist Bari Weiss editor-in-chief of CBS News (despite her lack of experience in either broadcasting or newsrooms) — yesterday removed a segment from “60 Minutes” featuring stories of Venezuelan men deported by the Trump administration to what the program called a “brutal” prison in El Salvador. Bari Weiss had demanded changes to the segment.

The Ellisons — fils et père — have been seeking Trump’s support for their hostile bid to acquire Warner Bros Discovery, but Trump has been unhappy with recent episodes of “60 Minutes,” even under its new management. Hence, the segment’s removal.

That’s how these people work.

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Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 6

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Posts about this book: Post 1; Post 2Post 3Post 4Post 5; Post 6.

The final chapter considers humanism as the agent for deploying reason and science and thus producing progress. Pinker defines humanism, considers why some oppose it, and explores the two main alternatives: religion, and authoritarianism, with a particular call-out against the ideas of Nietzsche. As he sums up, Pinker warns against blaming problems (which will always occur) on evildoers, wrecking institutions, and “empowering a leader who will restore the country to its rightful greatness.” Finally, he closes with a page-long summary of the story of human progress: the crooked timber of human nature with its resources to redeem its flaws; how we combine ideas recursively and spread them with language and developed norms and institutions of reason; how we’re penetrating the mysterious of the cosmos; how the human condition has greatly improved, and how this is a heroic story that is true, because we have reasons to believe it.
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Government Suppression, and Dr. Noc

  • CBS, now controlled by a Trump acolyte, pulled a story from last night’s 60 Minutes at the last moment;
  • Dr. Noc on Facebook, a new reliable source;
  • Short items about Trump’s favorite excuse, Republicans again taking credit for funding due to Biden, Trump’s antipathy toward wind farms, why Denmark’s vaccine schedule won’t work in the US, and how Christians resist following civil law.
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The big news today is how CBS just pulled a story from last night’s 60 Minutes, a story that criticized the Trump administration’s deportment policy, at the last minute. Because control of CBS has been given over to a Trump supporter. Something similar is also happening at CNN, apparently. Because the Trump-supporting billionaires are buying up the big, formerly independent, media outlets.

NY Times, 21 Dec 2025: 60 Minutes’ Pulled a Segment. A Correspondent Calls It ‘Political.’, subtitled “Sharyn Alfonsi, a ’60 Minutes’ correspondent, criticized the network’s decision to remove her reporting from Sunday’s edition of the show.”

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Steven Pinker, ENLIGHTENMENT NOW, post 5

Subtitled “The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress”
(Viking, Feb. 2018, xix+556pp, including 102pp of notes, references, and index.)

Posts about this book: Post 1; Post 2Post 3Post 4; Post 5. Expanded below.

Part I of this book outlined the ideas of the Enlightenment; Part II showed how those ideas worked. Part III defends the three other themes of this book against surprising enemies.

This post covers two of the three chapters in Part III.

The chapter on Reason addresses questions of why, since we *can* reason, we are so easily led into folly. Not so much from ignorance as affiliations with religions or other ideologies, and motivated reasoning, in-group thinking. Conservatives seem to doubt progress is even desirable, let alone possible; the certainties of traditional Christendom are preferable; Pinker rejects this resoundingly. But the left too rejects caricatures of certain ideas. Key idea: the test of empirical rationality is prediction. Some pundits are always wrong. And conservative politics is increasingly know-nothing. How to improve reasoning powers? Teach critical thinking, but it has to be hands-on teaching.

The chapter on Science exalts it as “the proudest accomplishment of our species.” Why the disdain, even from intellectuals? The fear of ‘scientism,’ the idea that science can have anything to say about CP Snow’s second culture, the humanities. But the practices of science are designed to make up for the flaws of individual human beings, and to rely on two key ideas: the world is intelligible, and we allow the world to tell us whether our ideas about it our correct. Most people are happy to accept the practical benefits of science, but reject science’s implications about the lack of truth of the world’s traditional religions and cultures — with quotes of two long paragraphs about what we know about the world through science, how many traditional ideas, from fate and karma to answered prayers, simply aren’t true, and how this underlying scientific understanding of the world necessarily grounds our approach to morality and our responsibility to take care of ourselves and our planet. With final comments about how science is treated in academia, how opponents resist quantification in favor of intuition, and how ideas of E.O. Wilson’s consilience offer more hope than the pre-Darwinian, pre-Copernican worldviews of people like Leon Wieseltier.

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An Antebellum Constitution, Christianity, and Christmas

  • Adam Serwer on how conservatives want an Antebellum Constitution;
  • David French on why Christianity is a dangerous faith;
  • Nicholas Kristof and Bart Ehrman on what Jesus would think of Christmas 2025.
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Undoing progress and dragging us back to the past.

The Atlantic, Adam Serwer, 21 Dec 2025: Conservatives Want the Antebellum Constitution Back, subtitled “The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are in trouble.”
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