Congress forced Silicon Valley to answer for its misdeeds. It was a glorious sightMatt Stoller, Guardian
I Tried to Live Without the Tech Giants. It Was Impossible. NYT
Australia now has a template for forcing Facebook and Google to pay for news Ars Technica
How a Police Spy’s Stunning Testimony Threatens the Official Buenos Aires Bombing Story Consortium News
No need for a new Cold War. Fiona Hill on Italy, Russia and China (interview) Formiche
Brookings – The following is the preamble to “Lift Every Voice: The Urgency of Universal Civic Duty Voting,” a report from the Working Group on Universal Voting convened by The Brookings Institution and The Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at Harvard Kennedy School. Download the full PDF report here. “Imagine an American democracy remade by its citizens in the very image of its promise, a society where the election system is designed to allow citizens to perform their most basic civic duty with ease.
As P.J. O’Rourke wrote in his 1995 book, Age and Guile Beat Youth, Innocence, and a Bad Haircut,In 1970, “I got a job. It wasn’t much of a job. I was a messenger. But it brought in $150 a week and that was wealth as far as I was concerned. We were paid fortnightly. I waited greedily for my $300. But when my pay envelope arrived I found, after federal, state, and city taxes had been deducted and social security, health insurance, and pension plan payments had been made, only $160 was left. I began yelling. ‘I’m a revolutionary! I’ve been a revolutionary since I went to college! I’ve demonstrated! I’ve rioted! I’ve done everything I could to overthrow capitalism! And what do I find when I get my first paycheck from a capitalist company? COMMUNISM!!!’ Of course, it was several years before the implications of what I yelled sank in. At that age I wasn’t listening to anyone, myself included.”
In other contexts, we would rather that the state not take sides in contested moral and political disputes. But taking a stand is inevitable in symbolic state speech” — Jacob Levy (McGill) on statues honoring “the dishonorable dead”
“If you’re not a fan of seeing scientists’ views attributed to personal racism, transphobia or misogyny, then nor should you tolerate commentary about scientists supposedly being biased by their feminist motives” — Cordelia Fine (Melbourne) on bias and objectivity in science
Oxford University Press is launching a book series on Philosophy, Politics, and Economics — co-edited by Ryan Muldoon, Carmen Pavel, Geoff Sayre-McCord, Eric Schliesser, and Itai Sher
Does “the phenomenological interpretation of quantum physics deserves to be rescued from history and considered on its own merits”? — Steven French (Leeds) thinks so
“Academic freedom must continue to protect much research that is immoral in one or another way” — “This immorality needs to be recognized and discussed, but not punished,” says Elizabeth Harman (Princeton)
“Here’s a peculiar thing about people: often what they do doesn’t match what they say they believe” — a week of posts on the philosophy and psychology of implicit bias, starting off with one by Gabbrielle Johnson (NYU)
What are the 233 most-cited works in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy? — a list from Eric Schwitzgebel (Riverside
Offshore wind in Europe won’t need subsidies much longer ars technica
Michael Cranston - The Sell: Liam Hemsworth’s building project for Byron Bay home by Jonathan Chancellor
Hollywood heart-throb Liam Hemsworth has building plans for his private Byron Bay estate. Nothing as grand as his big brother Chris, but the next task is constructing a yoga studio. . .
Cranston on a move but stays in Shire
Former ATO Deputy Commissioner has taken a downsize in the Sutherland Shire with a move from Menai to Gymea.
Cranston on a move but stays in Shire
Former ATO Deputy Commissioner has taken a downsize in the Sutherland Shire with a move from Menai to Gymea.