@xankarn@mastodon.online
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xankarn

@xankarn@mastodon.online

Associate Professor at SLAC. (NY, USA) and #Histodon working on #HistoricalJustice and #HistoricalDialogue. Personal acct, not representing employer. Interests: #HumanRights #Reconciliation #Restitution #Reparations

Social democracy when I can. Liberal democracy when I must.

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xankarn, to random
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Today in my politics of history course we discussed how historical thinking features in political rhetoric.

I asked students to read two political speeches:

Trump’s inaugural address (Jan 20, 2017)

and

Biden’s inaugural address (Jan 20, 2021)

🧵 A few observations…

xankarn, to histodons
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@histodons

Cultural history class this week includes the bicycle boom of the 1890s.

Newspapers from this period are filled with the complaints of men who say bicycles ruined their marriages, since wives only care to ride and no longer tend to their "duties."

The Rev. Thomas Gregory saw the bike as a threat to his parishioners' intellect and health.

"It annihilates the reading habit. The libraries are deserted. It is a menace to domestic virtues. It breaks up and destroys the home."

🚲

xankarn, to books
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I chair the campus committee that selects the annual “Community Read.” This book is assigned to all incoming first-year students, but faculty, staff, alumni, and the entire learning community are encouraged to engage. It’s one of the cooler parts of my job.

This year, we’ve narrowed things down to these three:

Clint Smith, How the Word Is Passed

Matthew Desmond, Poverty, By America

Kristen Radtke, Seek You

Final selection today!

xankarn, to random
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One of the tragedies of the two-party system is the way it reduces every issue and collective challenge to a partisan binary.

Like cancer and heart disease, poverty doesn’t care a shred about red v blue.

Journal of the American Medical Association cites poverty as the fourth leading cause of death in the USA (2023).

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/article-abstract/2804032

xankarn, to random
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Intro to cultural history once again.

We're doing a unit on sub-culture and counter culture. Earlier this week, we focused on jazz hipsters and beatniks. Today we looked at Teds, Mods, Hippies, and Punks.

One of the key points in today's discussion was the absence of girls and women in histories of postwar counter-culture. (I told them about Kathleen Hanna's new memoir, which was reviewed positively in the NYT yesterday).

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/23/arts/music/kathleen-hanna-rebel-girl-memoir.html

xankarn, to histodons
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Sorry, US @histodons. Looks like you’ve been scooped.

xankarn, to random
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Today in fake outrage.

Claudine Gay had to go because…plagiarism.

Meanwhile…

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2016/07/19/politics/melania-trump-michelle-obama-speech/index.html

xankarn, to random
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Dec 2023 issue of The Atlantic, devoted to Reconstruction, “America’s most radical experiment,” is essential reading.

Peniel Joseph (U Texas) kicks things off w an essay that challenges the idea that Reconstruction ended w the withdrawal of Union troops from the South: “We should consider a long Reconstruction—one that stretches well beyond 1877, and offers a view that transcends false binaries of political failure and success.”

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/

xankarn, to random
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Adam Gopnik review of Tim Ryback’s new book, Takeover: Hitler’s Final Rise to Power in March 25 New Yorker:

“What was once callled the petite bourgeoisie was key to his support—not people feeling the brunt of economic precarity but people feeling the possibility of it. Having nothing to fear but fear itself is having something significant to fear.”

xankarn, to history
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Like caffeine, alcohol, heroin, and cannabis, history and historical knowledge are psychotropic. 1/

xankarn, to random
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MAGA and the new GOP complain about the burdens of "political correctness," but they’re fully prepared to make “woke-ness” into a prosecutable thought crime.

#uspol #fascism #CivilLiberties #democracy #MAGA #GOP

https://literaryactivism.substack.com/p/louisiana-hb-777-would-criminalize?utm_campaign=email-half-post&r=dy9km&utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

xankarn, to random
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In No Exit by Sartre, the condemned must live for all of eternity without mirrors, which they depended on during the course of their lives to maintain their self-image.

In hell, they will only be allowed to know themselves as they are seen and comprehended by others.

That’s what I suspect these long days in court are like for Trump. 1/

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/21/us/politics/trump-trial-analysis.html?unlocked_article_code=1.mE0.s_6B.jsgLo7pP1Ijq&smid=url-share

xankarn, to random
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Mass intoxication first requires small, private capitulations. The force of the group substitutes for the weakness of the individual.

xankarn, to journalism
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content to let Bret Stephens spout utter shite about US withdrawal from and how must bear ultimate responsibility for making the world a more dangerous place. Basic fact-check would have underscored that admin negotiated the withdrawal terms as well as the fact that troop levels had been reduced from 13K to 2.5K before the Nov 2020 election.

https://www.factcheck.org/2021/08/timeline-of-u-s-withdrawal-from-afghanistan/

xankarn, to fediverse
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question for the experts.

I have two Mastodon accounts (personal and org).

Is there an easy way for me to import/export followers so that the folks I read in one place will also appear in the other?

xankarn, to random
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Just did a mic check with Maria Ressa for tonight’s event!

Streaming live at 6:30 pm (New York). Link below.

I gave her the sticker I made!

xankarn, to random
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Roberts court to hear Trump’s “immunity” case at some point…maybe.

Meanwhile, one of the SCOTUS justices flies an insurrection flag which would disqualify any potential juror.

xankarn, to random
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Pulitzer winner Matthew Desmond:

“Poverty is often material scarcity piled on chronic pain piled on incarceration piled on depression piled on addiction—on and on it goes. Poverty isn't a line. It's a tight knot of social maladies. It is connected to every social problem we care about - crime, health, education, housing - and its persistence in American life means that millions of families are denied safety and security and dignity in one of the richest nations in the history of the world.”

xankarn, to ukteachers
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The most recent Brookings Survey of American Attitudes has some interesting data for @histodons.

Asked whether “We should teach our children both the good and bad aspects of our history so that they can learn from the past,” 94% of respondents answered positively.

The book ban people, the Moms for Liberty types, the anti-CRT clique is minuscule and WAY out of touch with the cultural mainstream.

So, feel free to call them on their bullshit.

https://www.prri.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/2023-AVS-Presentation.pdf

xankarn, to random
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For fuck’s sake, David, it isn’t moral decay and it isn’t loss of virtue that’s ailing our democracy. It’s the rigged economy, an information ecosystem that undercuts fact-based discourse, and a refusal to look squarely at (let alone remediate) a long history of racial inequality and injustice. That’s where the meanness and narrow self-interest originate.

@tzimmer_history

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/09/us-culture-moral-education-formation/674765/

xankarn, to random
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Pod Save America interview w former Trump aide Cassidy Hutchinson is interesting.

She talks abt her blue collar upbringing and her strong belief in the value of public service. She also describes things that she “pushed to the back of [her] mind” beginning with 2016 campaign events.

I’m not sure if this is a failure of critical thinking (missed the hypocrisy/dishonesty?) or too-clever-by-half rationalization (a balance sheet approach that moves morality to the side).

https://crooked.com/podcast/could-trump-become-speaker/

xankarn, to random
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I can understand why people would choose to remain anonymous online. It’s a hellscape (at times) filled w bad actors, bigots, trolls, etc.

But can we also admit that anonymity changes/degrades the info ecosystem since it gives us no chance to weigh the credentials of the writer behind the content?

There are some great blogs out there. But if you’re unwilling to attach your name to what you’ve written, doesn’t basic info literacy suggest that your writing should be discounted to some degree?

xankarn, to random
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Is there a party that wants to control what you read?

A party that wants to strip women of the right to choose?

A party that rejects LGBTQ+ people and denies them equal citizenship?

A party that denies racial inequalities?

A party that gives tax breaks to mega-corps and the super rich?

A party that seeks to wipe out Medicare and Social Security?

A party that rejects climate science?

A party that views violence as an option?

If there is, would it be worthwhile to stop these things?

xankarn, to cycling
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Ridiculously dangerous conditions at yesterday’s TTT. Several squads sent out in near darkness and start ramp was a skating rink thanks to torrential downpour. Lots of kms ahead, but riders deserve better.

xankarn, to random
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“In 1992, those whites scoring at the top of the authoritarianism scale split their two-party vote almost evenly between Bush and Clinton (51 to 49). In 2000 and 2004, the difference becomes statistically significant but still pretty small.

By 2012, those high-authoritarianism white voters went 68 to 32 for Romney over Obama. In both Trump elections it was 80 to 20 among those voters.

So from 50 Republican-50 Democrat to 80 Republican-20 Democrat in 24 years.“

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/15/opinion/trump-authoritarianism-democracy.html?unlocked_article_code=1.sU0.OOs2.Py-ND3D--YE1&smid=url-share

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