- Almanac: Virgil Thomson on journalists“Journalists are plentiful everywhere and entertaining too, full of jokes and stories. Only their jokes are not very funny and their stories not quite true. Their information is always incomplete, because nobody tells them the truth about anything.” Virgil Thomson, The State of Music Continue reading Almanac: Virgil Thomson on journalists... Read moreSunlight is the best disinfectant both in private as well as public enterprises as Vernon Louis Parrington warned us not so long ago ... Even under communism socialising losses and privatising profits took place as the suggestion that we were all equal was destoyed by cunning boys and girls inner circle clubs"Eager souls, mystics and revolutionaries, may propose to refashion the world in accordance with their dreams; but evil remains, and so long as it lurks in the secret places of the heart, Utopia is only the shadow of a dream."
Pity the author whose book was reviewed by Jenny Diski. Her first response was to be incredulous that the work even existed Diskir or Cowardly Dorrstopper ;-)
Forthcoming from Marc Levinson, the author of The Box, is a new book Outside the Box: How Globalization Changed from Moving Stuff to Spreading Ideas, a more general history of globalization
Chris Coward, EDxSnoIsleLibraries: “To make sense of the information streaming to and at us through media and social-media, we need to be able to detect and identify misinformation, misleading information, and disinformation.
Australia’s long-awaited cybersecurity strategy, released on the weekend, pledges to spend A$1.67 billion over the next ten years to improve online protection for businesses, individuals and the country as a whole.
The lion’s share of the cash will go towards policing and intelligence, with smaller amounts set aside for a grab bag of programs from cybersecurity training to digital ID. Much detail remains to be revealed, and whether the strategy succeeds in improving in the safety of all Australians will depend on how well it is executed over the coming decade.
Australia’s cybersecurity strategy: cash for cyberpolice and training, but the cyberdevil is in the cyberdetail
How Poetry Can Guide Us Through Trauma
Audre Lorde’s 1977 piece “Poetry Is not a Luxury” seems prescient right now. “Poems have alchemized death and imagined the continuation of lives cut short by racist violence. They’ve given texture to the ‘sudden strangeness’ of life brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, offering comfort to countless readers. In moments of uncertainty, poetry has illuminated bridges to the past—and shown how the act of remembering might alter the future.” – The Atlantic
Fast-food wrappers at McDonald’s, Burger King may harbor toxic chemicals: report
AND WITH BREXIT, TOO. WHEN THEY NEED HIM MOST. CIVIL SERVANTS THESE DAYS! Paws for reflection: British Foreign Office cat To retire
Record Scratch Airmail. There’s a paywall but one can register for access to some pieces each week. which is what I did. Not sure this is yet worth the price of a subscription – nor if it will ever be. Vanity Fair under Carter used to be something I’d flip through when getting my hair styled, rather than buying for its online or deadtreee content. Especially now that Christopher Hitchens is no more.
Appeals court rules 10¢-a-page charge for court documents is too high Ars Technica
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway grew profits by 86% last quarter as its stock portfolio soared in value Business Insider
Slovakia expels three Russian diplomats, cites abuse of visas
The expulsions are connected with the murder of a former Chechen rebel with Georgian citizenship in Berlin last summer.