Monday, April 10, 2023

Media coverage of Donald Trump’s arraignment was exhaustive … and exhausting

 It bothers me that in this society, it's OK seeing a guy blow another's head off, but a child seeing Janet Jackson's boob at the Super Bowl is the worst thing that could happen. It's not the end of the world! It's just a breast!

CHARLIZE THERON


I hunted down the reviewer who was trashing my books on Amazon https://thetimes.co.uk/article/be4be71e-d61b-11ed-a747-57887c44a580?shareToken=a88ace27940a0effb4f516550347cc56… #EalingLibraries is employing a “historian” who trashes other authors’ books out of envy. Nice.


Donald Trump was not the only individual to be indicted by a grand jury over the weekend. A US Federal grand jury returned an indictment against three Austal USA LLC employees, a wholly owned subsidiary of Australian listed shipbuilder Austal Ltd, for orchestrating an accounting fraud. 

The SEC alleges that Austal USA’s former president, the former director of the Littoral Combat Ship program, and the director of financial analysis co-conspired to artificially reduce the cost of specific projects by tens of millions of dollars and that the parent company prematurely recognised revenues. 

Why we shorted Austal: 9 warning signs that signalled choppy waters ahead


Media coverage of Donald Trump’s arraignment was exhaustive … and exhausting

There were points of intrigue, flashes of activity, a few moments of significance. And, in between, coverage was all over the place.


  1. “Behold this table, if you can / Its parts assembled to a plan. / But parts can be, without a whole: / Try summing candy with a mole…” — “Composition as Fiction,” a poem by Brad Skow (MIT)
  2. “No matter how wonderful these online events can be, many of the good things that come with travelling to workshops and conferences are not part of online events” — one consideration among many taken up in a discussion by Ingrid Robeyns (Utrecht) on whether academics should fly at all
  3. Brief reflections on ChatGPT and its threat to academia, from a dozen philosophers — collected by Ahmed Bouzid
  4. “Trying to extinguish racism while shoring up race is like trying to put out a fire by pouring gasoline on it. It can only make matters worse” — Subrema Smith (New Hampshire) and David Livingstone Smith (New England) on why “to get rid of racism we have to get rid of race”
  5. The debate over the authorship of letters attributed to Plato — “enormous reverence for Plato” has unduly influenced it, argues James Romm (Bard)
  6. “Her philosophy professor is called to the witness stand and counters that it is ‘rather odd, an African woman interested in an Austrian philosopher from the early 20th century. Why not choose someone closer to her own culture?’” — Francey Russell (Barnard/Columbia) reviews a movie based on a true story that “needed to be rerouted and mediated through the alchemical powers of narrative film”
  7. “A guide to AI and technical  in the university classroom. What works, what doesn’t, and why. Written by professors, for professors” — check out “AutomatED”, a project from philosophy PhD Graham Clay