Proselytism, Manifest Destiny, Arvo Pärt

  • Let Federal employees proselytize!
  • Heather Cox Richardson on manifest destiny;
  • Arvo Pärt.
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As with that notion about regulating AI to be non-woke, have they thought this one through?

Washington Post, 28 Jul 2025: Trump administration urges federal employees to talk religion at work, subtitled “In a shift, the guidance from the Office of Personnel Management encourages religious expression among federal employees.” (Via)

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More Items from the Authoritarian Playbook

  • About the conservative agenda concerning colleges, and education;
  • Charlie Kirk thinks you don’t need college; just watch YouTube videos, especially his own online courses;
  • Education Secretary Linda McMahon admits her political motivations for dismantling her department;
  • Brief items about a TN school district that wants kids in school even if they’re sick; how migrant farm worker should be replace by children; and how Trump wants to discredit mainstream media.
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So what is the conservative agenda concerning colleges?

Vox, Sean Illing, 26 Jul 2025: What the right’s war on college is really about, subtitled “Wesleyan President Michael Roth details the conservative agenda targeting American universities.”
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Conservative Thinking Means Whitewashing the Past

  • A take-down of David Brooks, as an example of a conservative white-washing and distorting American history;
  • How National Park gift shops are removing books about that same history for the same reasons;
  • A religious rant bout Obama and Russia, and Noah’s Flood and “The Watchers”;
  • Once again, crime is falling remarkably in recent years, with the example of Baltimore and the conclusion that many factors are involved, not particular policies of either party.
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I note and quote NYT opinion columnist David Brooks here fairly regularly, because though he’s nominally conservative, he isn’t MAGA or populist and he often makes points about, oh, how to live a meaningful life, that are worth thinking about. Though I have noted that, for my tastes, he’s a little too concerned with how other people live what is a meaningful life according to *him*. As conservatives are wont to do; they don’t quite trust other people to make their own decisions about life, especially if those decisions are different than what conservatives think are good and proper.

Today Salon posts a take-down.

Salon, Mike Lofgren, 26 Jul 2025: David Brooks faces the truth of US history — and runs away, subtitled “NY Times’ pet conservative offers a lengthy apologia for America — and gets pretty much everything wrong”

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How Can AI Tell the Truth? Whose Truth?

  • More about AI, and how (from Steven Levy) there’s no such thing as a bias-free AI;
  • Speculation on what a MAGA ideologically correct AI would be;
  • Following up on Harari: how would an AI handle inconsistencies among, and within, religious texts?
  • How the administration is hiding information about the USAID cuts;
  • Why MAGA evangelicals are obsessed with “sexual deviants”;
  • And why do people accuse powerful women of being men?
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There’s much about AI that I haven’t explored, but my understanding is that the models, the various Chat apps and so on, are, as Paul Krugman wrote a couple days ago, “a souped-up version of autocorrect.” I’ve seen it in Microsoft Word for two or three years now. As you type into a Word document, the software “predicts” which words you will type in next, on the bases of probable word combinations from the vast amount of data (including newspapers, magazines, and books) in the context of the words you’ve just typed. It works fairly well fairly often. The predicted words show up in gray past the location of your cursor, and if you want to accept those works, you just hit tab. OTOH, it hasn’t helped me from having to type the entire word “totalitarianism” into my notes several times today, as I’m reading the Harari book.

An AI is not a fount of fixed wisdom. Or any kind of truth. It’s feeding you answers based on what it thinks you want to hear.

So who’s to determine what’s biased or not?

Wired, Steven Levy, 25 Jul 2025: Trump’s Anti-Bias AI Order Is Just More Bias, subtitled “The Trump administration says it wants AI models free from ideological bias, as it pressures their developers to reflect the president’s worldview.”
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“American” Intelligence?

  • Trump wants AI to be not “woke”; how will he enforce that? And he doesn’t like the word “artificial”;
  • A reel by Yuval Noah Harari about a realistic threat of AI;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on the various deflections Republicans are bringing up to stall release of the Epstein files.
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So Trump issued executive orders today to fund AI and to make sure it’s not “woke.” Oh, and he doesn’t like the term “artificial” intelligence.

NY Times, 23 Jul 2025: Trump Plans to Give A.I. Developers a Free Hand [gift link]

Subtitled: With executive orders and an “A.I. Action Plan” to promote American dominance of the technology, President Trump declared that the United States needed to win the A.I. race.
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I visit you in another dream

  • How conspiracy theorists think most people agree with them;
  • How Trump’s administration is purging climate data;
  • How JD Vance thinks some Americans are more worthy citizens than others;
  • Paul Krugman on ICE and New York City;
  • Three items from JMG: repealing greenhouse gas regulations; how Homan doesn’t believe the polls; how a confirmed judge has an agenda at odds with the Constitution.
  • And Bruce Springsteen’s “Paradise.”
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This is interesting. Why would this be? Because these people live in bubbles? Put another way, because they don’t get out much — of their bubbles? They don’t read books or any media outside what their bubble endorses?

Ars Technica, Jennifer Ouellette, 22 Jul 2024: Conspiracy theorists don’t realize they’re on the fringe, subtitled “Gordon Pennycook: ‘It might be one of the biggest false consensus effects that’s been observed.'”
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It’s Always About the Gap Between Ideology and Religion, and Reality

And whether humanity can “grow up” and thrive by living in reality and not fantasy.

  • Infrastructure note about More tags;
  • Paul Krugman on why the right would see AI as “communist” — because it’s reality-based;
  • (Aside: another arc of history is how the discoveries of objective facts about the universe have steadily undermined the religious and ideological fantasies that humans have lived by)
  • Should people cut off contact with their MAGA relatives? (With a perspective of my own.)
  • Amanda Marcotte on MAGA’s tantrum about the new Superman being woke;
  • How Stephen Miller thinks immigrants didn’t build the Empire State Building (he’s wrong).
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Today I spent more time than I expected to insert “more” tags into posts that I had not already done so… without realizing I had not done so since April. It took a surprisingly long time, because I also discovered that some image links had gone bad — ones from Salon. I went back to the original articles and got revised image links and updated my posts. Why would they change the image links…? Anyway, I fixed quite a few, but I’m sure there are others I didn’t see.

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A Paul Krugman piece from a few days ago about whether AI would be communist.

Paul Krugman, 17 Jul 2025: The Road to MechaHitler, subtitled “Reality still has a well-known liberal bias”

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Sciency Things, and Presidential Pettiness

  • Tom Nichols on presidential pettiness;
  • How the Trump administration is using a strength of science to discredit it;
  • Ethan Siegel on what we’ve learned for 35 years of the Hubble Space Telescope;
  • A breakthrough in a grand unified theory of mathematics;
  • How brain scans reveal optimists are alike, and pessimists are unique; and my thoughts on whether this maps to conservative/progressive values.
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Some sciency things today. Oh, OK, and a couple about Trump.

From Tom Nichols (whom I’ve reviewed and mentioned many times).

The Atlantic, Tom Nichols, 21 Jul 2025: Presidential Pettiness, subtitled “Donald Trump seems to have no theory of governance beyond personal gain and retribution.”

Years pass, Trump keeps doing the same thing, the commentators comment, pointing out the same things, and his fans don’t care, and nothing changes. But we can’t become complacent. People in the future will look back on this generation and see which people let Trump get away with all this. They will look back the same way they look back at the “good Germans” who supported Hitler.

So I will offer several paragraphs by Tom Nichols, and leave it at that.

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Pat Frank: ALAS, BABYLON

(First published 1959. Edition here: HarperCollins/Perennial Classics, 1999, 323pp, including author biography and publication history by Hal Hager)

Next up in the group of apocalyptic novels I read in June, following Butler’s PARABLE OF THE SOWER, is this. It isn’t as famous as two other near-contemporaneous novels, ON THE BEACH from 1957 and FAIL-SAFE from 1962, since popular movies were made from both of them. (I think there was a TV version of this one.) The author was a journalist whose work took him into contact with military people who strategized various nuclear war scenarios. He was asked what would happen if nuclear war broke out. He said, “Oh, I think they’d kill fifty or sixty million Americans–but I think we’d win the war.” This was in the 1950s. Frank was similar to George R. Stewart, author of EARTH ABIDES (my review here), in that while both wrote other books and were moderately well-known in their day, they are remembered decades later only for one book each.

The previous time I read this it reminded me of a Stephen King novel. Continue reading

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Stories Mislead You About the Reality of the World

  • Crime on TV v crime in reality;
  • Conspiracy theories on TV v conspiracy theories in reality;
  • If stories mislead about reality, then what is science fiction about?
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I’ve mentioned before that my understanding is that there are more crimes depicted in movies and TV shows, especially the latter, than there are in real life, though I don’t have citations for relevant statistics. But here’s an item from today’s NYT Magazine that, offhandedly, supports the notion.

NY Times Magazine, John J. Lennon, 16 Jul 2025: Everyone’s Obsessed With True Crime. Even Prisoners Like Me., subtitled “As the genre has boomed on cable, the incarcerated have found themselves watching more and more of it.”

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