Saturday, 26 September 2020
Good news stories
2. "It took decades, but Chuck Feeney, the former billionaire cofounder of retail giant Duty Free Shoppers has finally given all his money away to charity. He has nothing left now—and he couldn’t be happier." Full story here, but you have the gist of it from that quotation: happy man does good deeds.
3. How Women Won the Gender Self-ID War. "Even though a great many politicians privately came to see the flaws and risks of the self-ID proposal, very few of them engaged with this topic publicly. The real political opposition to self-ID came from 'ordinary' women who saw the proposal as a potential threat to their legal rights and standing. Some of them came to the issue via Mumsnet <waves to FWR board>. Others attended townhall meetings of A Woman’s Place UK, a group set up by women with their roots in the trade union movement. // This grassroots movement deserves a lot of attention and study. It shows how, even when politicians aren’t doing their job properly and listening to all sides, people with determination and organisation can make themselves heard." (Here's a sort of meta-question: how do you think Sir Keir would like you to think he reacted to hearing the news that gender self-ID is not going ahead? My guess is that he would like to think that he brushed it aside impatiently, saying, "OK, that's that - now let's concentrate on important things that affect serious numbers of people, not culture war distractions like that". And that's plausibly true. Which means he is going a decent job.)
4. Not exactly news, but here is a rather joyous performance of 'Sex Bomb' by an enthusiastic Russian military choir. Rather cheering.
And here are a couple which are not told as good news stories, but in many ways are:
5. This is about meritocracy from the Northcote-Trevelyan reforms to modern day America. It is both an entertaining read and, ultimately, a cheering way to think about both the past and the future. Replacing wholesale patronage by competitive exams, competence and professionalism was a good thing, wasn't it? But those who opposed it had good reason too. Our current rules for selecting our rulers are no doubt a similar mixture of good and bad.
6. This, again, is not told as a good news story but as a story about a mother's worry about race sensitivity in America. But it is also the story of Black-Jewish children being brought up in a welcoming environment. There are few times or places in history better for such families.
Monday, 21 September 2020
Why are we arguing?
"Trigger warnings were initially endorsed specifically for the good of those who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, a specific and potentially debilitating medical issue that afflicts a very small percentage of people. Triggers were not broad categories of potential offense that provoked vague feelings of discomfort, but very specific situations that resulted in deeply painful experiences that stemmed from narrowly-defined traumatic episodes.
Now, triggers are everywhere, lurking behind every corner, endorsed by people in all manner of situations for all manner of reasons, and subject to appropriation by those who would use them for cynical ends — such as the students at other institutions my academic friends tell me about, who use talk of triggers as an all-encompassing excuse to get out of doing work or experiencing viewpoints they don’t like. Some of the most privileged college students in the world now feel no compunction against invoking triggers at any time they find it convenient. Anyone who questions whether they actually deserve to invoke that claim, meanwhile, is regarded as inherently a bad ally and bad person. This, in turn, compels some people to think that all talk of triggers and trigger warnings is academic lefty bullshit that leaves us unable to educate, unable to ever bring students to encounter any remotely challenging or controversial opinions, and makes conservative backlash that much more likely. This is classic critique drift."
Friday, 18 September 2020
Hot off the press: sometimes the law is not an ass at all
This is the beginning to the judgment in a genuine case decided today:
"1. Cheryl Pile brings this appeal to establish the liberty of inebriated English subjects to be allowed to lie undisturbed overnight in their own vomit soaked clothing. Of course, such a right, although perhaps of dubious practical utility, will generally extend to all adults of sound mind who are intoxicated at home. Ms Pile, however, was not at home. She was at a police station in Liverpool having been arrested for the offence of being drunk and disorderly. She had emptied the contents of her stomach all over herself and was too insensible with drink to have much idea of either where she was or what she was doing there. Rather than leave the vulnerable claimant to marinade overnight in her own bodily fluids, four female police officers removed her outer clothing and provided her with a clean dry outfit to wear. The claimant was so drunk that she later had no recollection of these events.
2. It is against this colourful background that she brought a claim against the police in trespass to the person and assault alleging that they should have left her squalidly and unhygienically soaking in vomit. Fortunately, because this appeal will be dismissed, the challenge of assessing damages for this lost opportunity will remain unmet."
Read more, if you dare, here.
Tuesday, 15 September 2020
The estate agent's art
"It's hard to know where to start with this incredibly alternative home", starts this description, giving us a glimpse into the writer's creative dilemma. But start s/he does, and once started there is no stopping.
Saturday, 12 September 2020
Ten+ interesting and somewhat varied links
1. This is an interesting piece about what happened to Corbyn and Corbynism, written from the inside and therefore sympathetically, but sane and sensible. If that is your sort of thing, recommended.
2. Here is Lord Sumption: "“If you are going to inaugurate the greatest invasion of personal liberty in our entire history, even including wartime measures, if you dare to do that, then you have to move straight into justification mode.
“The government has now found itself trapped in a position where, first of all, it has to exaggerate the extent of the problem in order to justify its past actions. "And secondly, by exaggerating the scale of the problem, it is contributing to the difficulty that it now faces in persuading people to go back to school and back to work, because naturally what people ask is, well, what has changed since?”
He added: “The use of fear has, of course, been noticed by many people. And some members of Sage have made public statements since then saying that this was perhaps overdone, but it was a matter of deliberate policy, as it quite clearly was.
“What you have to remember is that when societies lose liberty, it is not because liberty has been crushed under the boot of some tyrant. It’s usually because they’ve been frightened into giving it up voluntarily.”" Well, here is Anders Tegnell in the FT.
3. In a similar vein, the Guardian tells me that "Covid lockdown rules more divisive than Brexit, survey finds". And there's a class angle too. What fun.
4. Taiwan. Oh dear. Is Switzerland like this, secretly?
5. This is a cool science thing - upside-down floating.
6. BoJo and the rule of law. And here is what he says about it.
7. Are you interested in Nikola? "In Order to Continue the Appearance of Progress, Nikola Posted a YouTube Video of Its Nikola One “In Motion” on the Road. // Text Messages from a Former Employee Reveal the Truck Was Simply Filmed Rolling Down a Big Hill."
8. Your next lockdown project - claiming Bir Tawil.
9. This is where to follow European covid statistics. I don't see anyone congratulating BoJo and criticising Macron given the recent figures, nor should they. This thing is not over yet.
10. This Yglesias-Cowen conversation was nicely done, I thought.