Category: Politics

  • There’s No Such Thing As a Smart Fascist

    This post is a couple of years old now, so it is framed on Ron DeSantis who was at the time struggling to launch his campaign to be the Republican candidate for 2024.

    Ronald was supposed to be that great man of myth and legend, the darkest fear of the left and deepest dream of the right: the Competent Fascist. The Smart Trump. The one who deeply understood the system and thus could manipulate it to his liking. The one who really and truly did play 5D chess while the rest of us dinked around with checkers.

    Catherynne M. Valente

    There’s No Such Thing As a Smart Fascist (Welcome to Garbagetown)

  • This is How Universities Die

    If American universities remain the envy of the world in 2025, the question must be: for how long?

    William C. Kirby

    This is How Universities Die (Harvard Magazine)

  • An All-American Surveillance System

    Jacob Ward discusses how the US government is contracting Palantir in order to process information on residents and compares it to Estonia’s digital identification. A key difference is that Estonia is focused on keeping the data siloed while here a goal seems to be removing barriers to data access.

    An All-American Surveillance System Is Coming (The Rip Current)

  • The Myth of Bloated School Administration

    One of the central arguments made by opponents of public education is that North Carolina taxpayers spend too much on their children and schools. Even as the state continues to rank near-bottom in the nation for school spending, some on the political right charge that the number is still too high. Specifically, opponents blame “administrative bloat” in North Carolina’s public school system for soaking up resources that should go to classrooms instead.

    In but one example, failed Republican candidate Michelle Morrow claimed that there had been a 265% increase in funding for “administrative and bureaucratic stuff” (what time frame she was referring to was left unclear). Failed Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson repeatedly decried a “bloated bureaucracy” in the school system, which he said needed to “cut the fat.”

    But like much of what Robinson and Morrow had to say, these claims do not survive the first contact with evidence.

    Miles Kirkpatrick

    The Myth of Bloated School Administration (Carolina Forward)

  • Why Speed Limits Don’t Matter

    We set speed limits, we put them on signs, and we expect people to follow them. But in reality, it plays out a little differently. People don’t really drive based on what a sign tells them. So if signs don’t work, what does?

    Justine Underhill

    Why speed limits don’t matter (Justine Underhill – YouTube)

  • GERM

    A new song from Kate Nash that I think is worth a listen.

    Girl listen up,

    You’re not radical

    Exclusionary, regressive, misogynist

    Germ! Germ

    Nah you’re not rad at all

    Kate Nash

    The music video is age-restricted due to nudity, so I can’t embed it here. You can watch on YouTube: Kate Nash – GERM (Official Lyric Video) (Kate Nash – YouTube)

  • The Who Cares Era

    In the Who Cares Era, the most radical thing you can do is care.

    Dan Sinker

    The Who Cares Era (Dan Sinker /blog)

  • Ideas for a New North Carolina Constitution

    Carolina Forward takes a look at potential changes to North Carolina’s Constitution that could help reduce some of the dysfunction seen in the state’s government:

    1. Unifying the executive branch
    2. Reforming the redistricting process
    3. Staggering Senate terms & limiting time in leadership

    Does North Carolina’s constitution need a re-write? (Carolina Forward)

  • Screwworm

    This was an interesting video from Sarah Taber. I had never heard of screwworm before or how they were eradicated within the United States and the rest of North America.

    Screwworm: MAGA is bringing back flesh-eating maggots 😦 (Farm to Taber – YouTube)

    Cochliomyia hominivorax (Wikipedia)

  • 2024 NC Elections Finally Over

    After spending over six months vigorously contesting his narrow loss in the 2024 North Carolina Supreme Court election, Jefferson Griffin conceded the race on Wednesday following a federal judge’s ruling against him.

    Griffin, a Republican judge on the state Court of Appeals, lost the election to Democratic incumbent Allison Riggs by 734 votes. But he and the state Republican Party refused to accept the results, instead embarking on an unprecedented campaign to challenge over 65,000 votes in a legal battle that has roiled the state and drawn national rebuke.

    Earlier this week, Chief U.S. District Judge Richard E. Myers, an appointee of President Donald Trump, decisively ruled against Griffin’s efforts, saying that he sought to “change the rules of the game after it had been played.”

    Kyle Ingram

    Griffin concedes NC Supreme Court race, ending unprecedented effort to overturn election (The News & Observer)