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To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

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OR here's a link generator. The one I had posted died, then Akhilleus found one, but it too bit the dust. He found yet another, which I've linked here, and as of September 23, 2024, it's working.

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

Marie: Sorry, my countdown clock was unreliable; then it became completely unreliable. I can't keep up with it. Maybe I'll try another one later.

 

Public Service Announcement

Zoë Schlanger in the Atlantic: "Throw out your black plastic spatula. In a world of plastic consumer goods, avoiding the material entirely requires the fervor of a religious conversion. But getting rid of black plastic kitchen utensils is a low-stakes move, and worth it. Cooking with any plastic is a dubious enterprise, because heat encourages potentially harmful plastic compounds to migrate out of the polymers and potentially into the food. But, as Andrew Turner, a biochemist at the University of Plymouth recently told me, black plastic is particularly crucial to avoid." This is a gift link from laura h.

Mashable: "Following the 2024 presidential election results and [Elon] Musk's support for ... Donald Trump, users have been deactivating en masse. And this time, it appears most everyone has settled on one particular X alternative: Bluesky.... Bluesky has gained more than 100,000 new sign ups per day since the U.S. election on Nov. 5. It now has over 15 million users. It's enjoyed a prolonged stay on the very top of Apple's App Store charts as well. Ready to join? Here's how to get started on Bluesky[.]"

Washington Post: "Americans can again order free rapid coronavirus tests by mail, the Biden administration announced Thursday. People can request four free at-home tests per household through covidtests.gov. They will begin shipping Monday. The move comes ahead of an expected winter wave of coronavirus cases. The September revival of the free testing program is in line with the Biden administration’s strategy to respond to the coronavirus as part of a broader public health campaign to protect Americans from respiratory viruses, including influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), that surge every fall and winter. But free tests were not mailed during the summer wave, which wastewater surveillance data shows is now receding."

NPR lists all of the 2025 Pulitzer Prize winners. Poynter lists the prizes awarded in journalism as well as the finalists in these categories.

Wherein Michael McIntyre explains how Americans adapted English to their needs. With examples:

Beat the Buzzer. Some amazing young athletes:

     ~~~ Here's the WashPo story (March 23).

Back when the Washington Post had an owner/publisher who dared to stand up to a president:

Prime video is carrying the documentary. If you watch it, I suggest watching the Spielberg film "The Post" afterwards. There is currently a free copy (type "the post full movie" in the YouTube search box) on YouTube (or you can rent it on YouTube, on Prime & [I think] on Hulu). Near the end, Daniel Ellsberg (played by Matthew Rhys), says "I was struck in fact by the way President Johnson's reaction to these revelations was [that they were] 'close to treason,' because it reflected to me the sense that what was damaging to the reputation of a particular administration or a particular individual was in itself treason, which is very close to saying, 'I am the state.'" Sound familiar?

Out with the Black. In with the White. New York Times: “Lester Holt, the veteran NBC newscaster and anchor of the 'NBC Nightly News' over the last decade, announced on Monday that he will step down from the flagship evening newscast in the coming months. Mr. Holt told colleagues that he would remain at NBC, expanding his duties at 'Dateline,' where he serves as the show’s anchor.... He said that he would continue anchoring the evening news until 'the start of summer.' The network did not immediately name a successor.” ~~~

~~~ New York Times: “MSNBC said on Monday that Jen Psaki, the former White House press secretary who has become one of the most prominent hosts at the network, would anchor a nightly weekday show in prime time. Ms. Psaki, 46, will host a show at 9 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, replacing Alex Wagner, a longtime political journalist who has anchored that hour since 2022, according to a memo to staff from Rebecca Kutler, MSNBC’s president. Ms. Wagner will remain at MSNBC as an on-air correspondent. Rachel Maddow, MSNBC’s biggest star, has been anchoring the 9 p.m. hour on weeknights for the early days of ... [Donald] Trump’s administration but will return to hosting one night a week at the end of April.”

 

Contact Marie

Email Marie at constantweader@gmail.com

Monday
Mar282011

Our Mister Brooks Goes to College

David Brooks went to a symposium, then he wrote about some stuff people said there in a format he evidently thinks is a newspaper column. Somewhere toward the end of the sentences he strung together he writes, "Public life would be vastly improved if people relied more on the concept of emergence. Many contributors to the Edge symposium hit on this point." He tries, fairly unsuccessfully, to explain what "emergence" is.* Not surprisingly, the New York Times moderators chose not to publish my comment on Brooks' column, which follows (also, terrific update below):


Like Jerry Seinfeld's proposal for a "show about nothing," this is a column about nothing. There's no unifying theme other than, "Once I went to a symposium where scholars said stuff." Ticking off broad glosses of some of the stuff the scholars said does not an essay make.

Maybe if you thought of an essay as an "emergent system," you could write a coherent column. By your definition an "emergent system" (which is, to say the least, an awkward label for what you describe) is "bottom-up and top-down simultaneously." Emergent systems "have to be studied differently, as wholes and as nested networks of relationships." Your column is neither a "whole" nor do you make a connection to create a "nested network of relationships." Instead, your column reads more like class notes -- unrelated topics you will think about when it's time to study for the test.

You have valuable real estate here on the pages of the New York Times -- so valuable, in fact, I will now have to pay for the pleasures and pains of reading what you construct on that parcel of real estate. Next time, give me my money's worth.


* Evidently, "emergence" is an old concept going back to the Greeks. According to Wikipedia, pioneeringy psychologist G. S. Lewes first coined the term in the 1870s to apply to the general concept. Lewes doesn't explain it much more clearly than Brooks does, but at least I think I get it now:

Every resultant is either a sum or a difference of the co-operant forces; their sum, when their directions are the same -- their difference, when their directions are contrary. Further, every resultant is clearly traceable in its components, because these are homogeneous and commensurable. It is otherwise with emergents, when, instead of adding measurable motion to measurable motion, or things of one kind to other individuals of their kind, there is a co-operation of things of unlike kinds. The emergent is unlike its components insofar as these are incommensurable, and it cannot be reduced to their sum or their difference.

(This footnote on Lewes was not part of my comment to Brooks' column.)


After reading my comment, a friend who also comments on New York Times columns (don't try to guess who; you'll be wrong) sent me this e-mail. I've edited out some unrelated portions of the e-mail (which were hilarious but I'm not sharing 'em):


Nothing in life is as important as you think it is while you are thinking about it. -- David Brooks

Oh yeah? Spoken like someone who has never been hungry, or out of a job, or afraid for his life. "I'm worried about being able to feed my kids and pay the rent." "Oh...not to worry, stop thinking about it and it won't seem nearly as important."

Sez you.

This is the sort of ivory tower think-tank speak that makes it clear how disconnected people like Brooks are from the real world most of the rest of us inhabit. Oh, not his buddies on the right. They're all very well off. Like the Kochs in that Greenwald piece, their biggest worries are that people say mean (and well deserved) things about them, not that they're scared to go out at night because their neighborhood no longer has adequate lighting or police protection or that the local school has been closed by cutbacks demanded by well-off white right-wingers who need that money in the form of even more tax breaks for themselves, so now the boarded up school has become a shooting gallery for heroin addicts and a hangout for thugs.

The rest is just pure pseudo-intellectual wanking. And not even good wanking. If you're gonna jerk off for 1,500 words, make it worthwhile, make it fun at least. Not boring, repetitious, and needlessly recondite. And not quite so stupid.

(Reproduced with permission from the author.)