Thursday, 31 July 2014

Links, Wednesday 30th July

"A sweeping gagging order issued in Australia to block reporting of any bribery allegations involving several international political leaders in the region has been exposed by WikiLeaks." Guardian

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I'm gonna join the chorus of people expressing shock and disappointment at this. Requiring people to submit to contraception... does nothing strike them as wrong about this? IOL

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Interesting piece about identifying as black American as opposed to African American.

"... the rise of black nationalism in the ’60s and ‘70s coincided with a growing emphasis, among white Americans, on the idea of America as a “nation of immigrants.” He argues the two phenomena are not unrelated:

This blunted the charges of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements and eased the conscience of a nation that had just barely begun to reckon with the harshest contours of its history forged in white supremacism.

Americans who traced their ancestries to the Great Wave of immigrants who arrived at Ellis Island at the turn of the 20th century couldn’t be blamed for the horrors of slavery or Reconstruction, or so the thinking went." Slate

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Holy hell. Greek farmers who admit to shooting and seriously injuring Bangladeshi migrant workers who were demanding back pay are... acquitted. Guardian

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Links, Tuesday 29th July

Very interesting interview with a former IRA bomber.

""You can't expect 16-, 17-, 18-year-olds, the main fodder of the campaign, to have a depth of morality beyond the crude teenage desire to get back at their enemy. Get revenge for the murders of their friends. I'm not going to attribute any retroactive moral depth for it. The breakfast meeting for IRA kids at the time was 'How many can we kill before they kill us?'"" Cracked

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"“It’s as if prostitutes don’t want to be saved,” said a surprised manager of a Rescue Foundation shelter in India. The rescuers had once again made a raid on a brothel, after which the women had been forced into a shelter they weren’t allowed to leave. Again and again women escaped, continually protested their imprisonment in the shelters, and returned to their old workplaces as soon as they were able to make a run for it. It was as if the women were working as prostitutes of their own accord, didn’t view themselves as victims, thought of the rescue missions as threats to their human rights and livelihoods and for the most part felt victimized by the rescue industry." Link

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Bonobos: a more complicated story than the one we usually hear.

"The bonobo had lost the race, Hohmann said, but if it had laid a hand on the duiker in its first lunge the results would have been bloody. Hohmann has witnessed a number of kills, and the dismembering, nearly always by females, that follows. Bonobos start with the abdomen; they eat the intestines first, in a process that can leave a duiker alive for a long while after it has been captured." New Yorker

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"The literal othering of Palestine: Washington Post subhead reads, “13 Israeli soldiers, 70 others killed.”" Jacobin

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This is fascinating mainly for the details of how diplomacy actually plays out in private. New Republic

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I'm not convinced by claims that the IDF used to be all that great, but this piece reminds me somewhat of the history of Allied bombings raids in WWII. Roughly: Start with strict focus on military targets, then accept some damage to civilian targets, then attack specific civilian targets, then drop bombs indiscriminately on cities, then drop atom bombs on cities. Guardian

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This is a useful point, though perhaps I don't understand enough about the context to have a detailed sense of what other practices she has in mind.

"...trigger warnings cannot be viewed in isolation. Rather, they are part of a larger complex of practices designed to de-privatize and collective healing. They came out of the recognition that we are not unaffected by the political and intellectual work that we do. These practices also recognized that the labor of healing has to be shared by all. Trigger warnings are one of many practices that insist that one does not have to be silent about one’s healing journey – that one’s healing can occupy public and collective spaces. And healing can only truly happen when we take collective responsibility for creating structures and practices that enable healing." Link

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"Of all of the symptoms of head trauma, this has to be the one the patient's friends and family are the least prepared for. When Augusto's friends came to visit, he would whip his dick out and show it to them. And yes, this is a symptom of a head injury, not something he always secretly wanted to do...

Incredibly, this is a common symptom -- a lot of patients become sexually uninhibited following such an injury. Becoming a dick-flasher falls on the more extreme end of the scale, so Augusto has that going for him. But he's also far from the most extreme case -- there are rare head trauma cases where heterosexual patients have woken up after a brain injury identifying as gay, and vice versa. And while you'd presumably adjust to that, it pales in comparison to the truly horrifying situations where survivors of brain trauma come out at the other end as pedophiles." Cracked


Friday, 25 July 2014

Links, Friday 25th July

Related to the earlier article about Sweden, essentially accusing US charter schools like KIPP of "teaching to the test" at the expense of more substantive learning.

"With few exceptions, the curriculum was characterized by a narrow interpretation of state standards at the expense of all other material. Students rarely learned local history or current events. Instead, science and social studies were relegated to ancillary classes in the elementary school and reduced to the accumulation of vocabulary and lists of facts at the middle school. Teachers stopped introducing new material a month prior to state assessments in order to begin review." Jacobin

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"New research published in the Lancet found decriminalising sex work would have the greatest effect on the course of the HIV epidemic of all the interventions modelled, averting between a third and 46% of HIV infections among sex workers and their clients in the next 10 years." Business Day

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A good 101 about public sexual harassment. Robot Hugs

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Some shocking statistics about gender-based violence in Africa (and elsewhere)

"A 2013 report developed by the World Health Organization, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the South African Medical Research Council, presents further data on violence by an intimate partner. In terms of a lifetime prevalence of physical and/or sexual violence among women in a relationship, sub-Saharan Africa was third with 36.6% of women abused, just behind South East Asia with 37.7% and the Eastern Meditteranean region with 37% - the Eastern Meditteranean includes Africa’s northern countries." M&G Africa

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"big companies are good at recruiting the best workers from all demographic cohorts and that's part of the reason they pay more. But a lot of the wage increases remain. The exact same worker can earn an approximately 10 percent raise (11 percent for high school graduates, 9 percent for those with at least some college) by moving from a small company to a large one.

Moving from a small store to a big store has an even bigger effect — 19 percent for high school graduates and 28 percent for those with some college." Vox

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A really great resource for sex and relationship education, aimed at high school level. UCT

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A kind of obvious point, but worth making - emotional intelligence is also a prerequisite for effective emotional manipulation. 

"Recognizing the power of emotions, another one of the most influential leaders of the 20th century spent years studying the emotional effects of his body language. Practicing his hand gestures and analyzing images of his movements allowed him to become “an absolutely spellbinding public speaker,” says the historian Roger Moorhouse—“it was something he worked very hard on.” His name was Adolf Hitler." Atlantic

Thursday, 24 July 2014

Links, Thursday 24th July

A summary of "The Invention of the White Race", for anyone who is interested. Link

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Now here's a great idea: vegan cheese made from actual milk protein Slate

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This is applicable to the issue of sharing domestic labour more generally (even if you don't have kids), and gets at some of the issues around gendered division of labour.

"When I ask my happily married parents, who both worked while raising three children in the 1970s and 1980s, about division of labor, my father says, “I was always willing to do whatever your mother told me to do.” That’s exactly the problem: I don’t want to be the Captain. My mom was the Captain for our family, and now she organizes compulsively, unable to get rid of the habit. I’m the Captain in my house already when it comes to boring inventory-related things like remembering whether or not we have paper towels, and I don’t much like the feeling. When I hear somebody referring to a “honey do” list—a common cultural artifact of women’s captaincy—I want to puke." Slate

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A good little comic about how the "narratives" around sexual assault get in the way of calling it what it is [TW] Medium

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"Helsinki aims to transcend conventional public transport by allowing people to purchase mobility in real time, straight from their smartphones. The hope is to furnish riders with an array of options so cheap, flexible and well-coordinated that it becomes competitive with private car ownership not merely on cost, but on convenience and ease of use." Guardian

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"To a sociologist, the reason people drink alcohol is that they have been socially taught to. That is, we like alcohol because we’ve been taught to overlook the negative side effects or we have redefined them as positive." Sociological Images

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"if we are measuring by the risk of premature death, then 79% of the people we currently shame for being overweight or obese would be recategorized as perfectly fine. Ideal, even. Pleased to be plump, let’s say, knowing that a body that is a happy balance of soft and strong is the kind of body that will carry them through a lifetime." Sociological Images

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School choice is not a panacea - by all objective measures, the Free School experiment in Sweden has led to worse student outcomes. Slate

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"Going to the bathroom in space is awesome" Cracked

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"By 2000, airline travel [in the United States] (3,892 BTU per passenger mile) officially became greener than driving (3,926 BTU per person, per mile.) The trend has continued so that in 2010, flying burned just 2,691 BTU per passenger mile—an improvement of 74 percent since 1970. That was 57 percent better than driving the average car, which gets about 21.5 miles per gallon (4,218 BTU per passenger mile). It was better than buses as well." Slate

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"At the time, ideas of race in America were quite literally black and white. In some places, if you could pass yourself off as something other than black, you could circumvent some amount of discrimination. People of color — both foreigners and African-Americans — employed this to their advantage. Some did it just to get by in a racist society, some to make a political statement, and others — performers and businessmen — to gain access to fame and money they wouldn't have otherwise had." NPR

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"Over 2,000 Palestinians were killed in all three military operations in Gaza, not including the Second Intifada. Most of them were civilians. I’ve exchanged emails with people in Gaza in the past few days. These are people who don’t care much for Hamas in their everyday lives, whether due to its fundamental ideology, political oppression or other aspects of its rule. But they do support Hamas in its war against Israel; for them, fighting the siege is their war of independence. Or at least one part of it." 972

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"There was one fatal flaw in the Stanford prison experiment: The guy in charge was stage directing the whole thing. Zimbardo didn't step back and watch the events unfold as an observer; he played the part of head guard, even going so far as using these totally scientifically unbiased instructions to his student guards: "In general, what all this should create in them is a sense of powerlessness. We have total power in the situation. They have none."

And remember, Zimbardo wasn't just the researcher/fake guard/sadistic mastermind of the experiment; he was a teacher, therefore an authority figure. There was pressure on students to please the researcher -- they were getting paid $15 a day for the experiment, and the department had clearly spent a lot of money building the fake prison. They were acting like sadistic guards because they wanted to please, not because their mock professional role emboldened them to do so. They knew what they were there to do. Oh, and a former San Quentin prisoner who served as a consultant on the experiment later admitted to feeding Zimbardo and his students suggestions on how to abuse their prisoners. So much for assuming decent, upstanding people spontaneously invented ways to be abusive." Cracked

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Saturday, 19 July 2014

Links, Monday 14th July

"Everyone knows the story of the early 20th-century ANC leadership, with so many of them coming from this mission-school rural background, and all these connections between them. That’s why I use the term “kinsmen” – the families were all intermarried. These elite networks are still really important. Half of today’s Constitutional Court judges were Bantustan-educated." M&G

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"Researchers at the Centre for Law, Race and Gender at the University of Cape Town have referred to this as the “reBantustanisation” or Balkanisation of rural society: the boundaries of the old homelands are being reinscribed. Increased powers are being given to traditional leaders, for instance by customary law provisions, which risk creating parallel legal systems for rural communities living under their jurisdiction and strengthening patriarchy while exacerbating gender inequalities." M&G

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Because punishing foreigners for lacking proper paperwork is clearly a more important goal than allowing them access to basic medical treatment. Guardian


Friday, 11 July 2014

Links, Thursday 10th July

I will make no broader political comments here, simply noting that this is the reality for many black working-class people in South Africa (and that is for those lucky enough to have a job). Daily Vox (note that there are some objections to the fact that the piece was written by a white journalist from the perspective of a black domestic worker)

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Interesting proposals for reforms to sexual assault law coming out of New Zealand. Firstly, and most significantly, once it has shown that sex has occurred, the burden of proof for demonstrating consent would fall on the defendant. Secondly, evidence would be examined under an inquisitorial system - i.e. the complainant would not be subject to cross-examination. I think these sound like pretty solid ideas, but I'd be interested in comments? NZ Herald

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Unreal. This for unlicensed serving of alcohol!

"Only then did masked figures with guns storm the crowd, shouting, “Get on the fucking ground! Get down, get down!” ... Some forty Detroit police officers dressed in commando gear ordered the gallery attendees to line up on their knees, then took their car keys and confiscated their vehicles, largely on the grounds that the gallery lacked the proper permits for dancing and drinking." New Yorker

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They don't mention institutional racism and classism much, but otherwise Cracked is doing a pretty good job of reporting on the increasing militarisation of US police forces. Cracked

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How the electric car-sharing scheme in Paris works. Definitely the wave of the future, especially as self-driving cars start to come online! Guardian

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An interesting example of white, middle-class, developed world feminists attempting to characterise the issues that affect themselves specifically as "women's issues", and so side-lining the problems affecting other women. Not the only place where this comes up...

"After the 1995 Nairobi Conference of the United Nations Decade for Women, Hassim writes, an anti-feminism attitude within the ANC was fuelled...This was because there was a push from some international feminists there ... to de-politicise the conference to keep it focused on pure women’s issues. The US delegation, led by Maureen Reagan, opposed a resolution against Apartheid, for instance." Daily Maverick

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The case against privatisation is not so universal as made out here - it has  tended to work out rather well in telecommunications, for instance. But a clear look at the evidence should demonstrate that it also has failed in many circumstances. Should we have been able to predict these failures in advance with proper economic analysis? Guardian

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Outrageous

"A 17 year-old Virginia teenager who is under investigation for sending a consensual sext to his 15-year-old girlfriend may be forced to have an erection in front of police as evidence in the case." Think Progress

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"“When I was a prosecutor in DC in the early ’90s, the jurors in DC were mainly African-American,” he explains. “It was commonplace in the prosecutor’s office that if we had a young black defendant and it was a nonviolent drug crime, the jury was not going to send him to jail. They would acquit him.” Butler says that such juries recognize the overrepresentation of African-Americans in the criminal justice system, and decide that, as long as there is no violent threat, they will not send another black person to prison. “Those are political acts by jurors, even if they’re not explicitly political,” he says." The Nation











Wednesday, 9 July 2014

Links, Tuesday 8th July

"In the most, ahem, shocking study, subjects were wired up and given the chance to shock themselves during the thinking period if they desired. They’d all had a chance to try out the device to see how painful it was. And yet, even among those who said they would pay money not to feel the shock again, a quarter of the women and two thirds of the men gave themselves a zap when left with their own thoughts. (One outlier pressed the button 190 times in the 15 minutes.) Commenting on the sudden appeal of electricity coursing through one’s body, Wilson said, “I’m still just puzzled by that.” Atlantic

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Gosh, how unexpected. It turns out that if you give refugees the right to participate in normal economic activities, they're largely able to support themselves. Voices of Africa

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"They have been told to "disrupt and upset" them – in other words, bullying. That's officially described, in Orwellian fashion, as "offering further support". As all ESA claimants approach the target deadline of 65 weeks on benefits – advisers are told to report them all to the fraud department for maximum pressure. In this manager's area 16% are "sanctioned" or cut off benefits.

Of course it's not written down anywhere, but it's in the development plans of individual advisers or "work coaches". Managers repeatedly question them on why more people haven't been sanctioned. Letters are sent to the vulnerable who don't legally have to come in, but in such ambiguous wording that they look like an order to attend. Tricks are played: those ending their contributory entitlement to a year on ESA need to fill in a form for income-based ESA. But jobcentres are forbidden to stock those forms." Guardian

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There is a gross under-allocation of resources to treating mental illness in South Africa, despite the vast scale of the problem. This is Africa

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"Far too often, exhortations to reject “identity politics” in favor of “class” amount to an insistence that the unmarked worker be taken as the definitive example of the genre. Appeals to class thus degenerate into a kind of cultural populism, more comfortable visualizing the typical worker as a white coal miner rather than a black woman in an elementary school or behind a McDonald’s counter. Higher wages can be a “class” issue but abortion or police brutality cannot, because the latter are too closely identified with the part of the working class that is marked by gender and race." Jacobin

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"Israeli police, intelligence officials and Netanyahu knew within hours of the kidnapping and murder of the three teens that they had been killed. And they knew who the prime suspects were less than a day after the kidnapping was reported.

Rather than reveal these details to the public, Israel’s Shin Bet intelligence agency imposed a gag order on the national media, barring news outlets from reporting that the teens had almost certainly been killed, and forbidding them from revealing the identities of their suspected killers. The Shin Bet even lied to the parents of the kidnapped teens, deceiving them into believing their sons were alive.

Instead of mounting a limited action to capture the suspected perpetrators and retrieve the teens’ bodies, Netanyahu staged an aggressive international public relations campaign, demanding sympathy and outrage from world leaders, who were also given the impression that the missing teens were still alive." Electronic Intifada

Thursday, 3 July 2014

Links, Wednesday 2nd July

"while it's not surprising that Martin's epic has spawned fan websites (even exhaustive ones like Garcia's Westeros.org), what's remarkable is that when George R.R. Martin wants to know some detail about the ASoIaF universe, he fucking asks Garcia. By virtue of having maintained an exhaustive database of every single character, location, and event in the series over the last 17 years, he's become the man Martin calls when he's forgotten some element of his own goddamned story:

"[Martin calls] when [he] has an idea and he wants to make sure that he hasn't used this character before, or he hasn't mentioned this particular detail previously, because he doesn't want to contradict himself or trap himself."" Cracked

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"In the last 10 months, dozens have been arrested and at least 18 homosexual and transgender people have been jailed under the country’s draconian legislation criminalizing “sexual deviance,” “debauchery” and “insulting public morals.”   The prison sentences have ranged from 3 to 12 years...

Abdel-Hamid thinks it’s part of a PR campaign by new President Abdel-Fattah Sisi’s administration, to prove it is more “Islamic than the Islamists” and to curry favor with the population, that sees homosexuality as a sin. It’s also a handy tactic to distract people during election time." Daily Beast

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Interesting piece about the off-label use of misoprostol as a safe abortion drug in Latin America and now in areas of Texas where abortion access has been cut off.

"As miso became more popular, Latin American doctors from Peru to Brazil started noticing a trend: They were seeing, it seemed, a dramatic decrease in abortion-related complications. Fewer women were carted through hospital doors with gruesome infections from back-alley botched abortions, and ob-gyns saw a reduction in the grisly abortion complications that had so frequently plagued providers, including perforated uteruses, heavy bleeding, and fallen intestines, according to a 2012 study by the global health organization Ipas.

The only explanation “was the mass distribution of miso at the community level,” concluded a Colombian ob-gyn in the Ipas study. In the same report, other doctors note that the discovery and circulation all took place outside hospital walls. Word of misoprostol spread at the grassroots level, working its way up from Brazil and snaking from one Latin American country to another." Atlantic

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I lack the expertise to evaluate this intelligently...

"In a groundbreaking experiment, the Paris researchers used the droplet setup to demonstrate single- and double-slit interference. They discovered that when a droplet bounces toward a pair of openings in a damlike barrier, it passes through only one slit or the other, while the pilot wave passes through both. Repeated trials show that the overlapping wavefronts of the pilot wave steer the droplets to certain places and never to locations in between — an apparent replication of the interference pattern in the quantum double-slit experiment that Feynman described as “impossible … to explain in any classical way.” And just as measuring the trajectories of particles seems to “collapse” their simultaneous realities, disturbing the pilot wave in the bouncing-droplet experiment destroys the interference pattern." Wired

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Unbelievable that the speaker allowed things to escalate to this point. Is it really intolerable to just let the EFF have a minor propaganda victory?

"The EFF still refused to budge, so police officers spoke to them, but the MPLs vowed to stage a sit-in and even sleep there overnight if necessary.

A scuffle broke out when the police tried to physically remove the offending MPLs, with one EFF member shouting “Let them do what they did in Marikana”." IOL

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Single female non-celebrities were turned away from the lounge of the New Yorker hotel, even if they were paying guests, and “hen parties” attracted horrified disdain from the guardians of glamour. Women could meet their female friends in dull, obscure restaurants, but they couldn’t hunt in “Sex and the City”-style packs. So what was a single girl to do when the best tables were behind closed doors? ... Ted Peckham, a foppish Midwestern arriviste in his early twenties, spotted this opening in the market soon after he arrived in New York. In 1935, he founded the Guide Escort Service—essentially, a way for women to rent out men." New Yorker

Tuesday, 1 July 2014

Links, Tuesday 1st July

"In the wake of decades of financial scandal—much of it linked to creative accounting, or to no accounting all—the Dutch tradition of accounting art suggests it might be us, not the Dutch, who have misjudged accounting’s importance in the world. Accounting in the modern sense was still a new idea in the 1500s, one with a weight that carried beyond the business world. A proper accounting invoked the idea of debts paid, the obligation of nightly personal reckonings, and even calling to account the wealthy and powerful through audits." Boston Globe

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Techno-utopianism goes to work on food. A very interesting movement.

"Soylent-producing algae would make food a little like that: there would be no more wars over farmland, much less resource competition. To help a village full of malnourished people, “you could just drop in a shipping container” full of Soylent-producing algae. “It would take in the sun’s energy and water and air, and produce food.” Mankind’s oldest problem would be solved. Then, he added, all we’d have to do is fix the world’s housing problem, “and people could be free.”" New Yorker

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"To me, there’s nothing creepier than a man who is bothered about how you modify your body, or how much make-up you wear. Of course, no one should be pressured to make changes to their physical appearance. So if a guy wants to personally challenge a system in which women feel that pressure, the most effective thing he can do is to stop talking about the way her face looks. Go and write to the cosmetics giants if you must. But stop telling me that my smoky eyes are holding back the sisterhood." Telegraph

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Ah, a nice level-headed, factual discussion of the current situation with respect to Gauteng e-tolling. EWN

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Yikes. 

"In 2010, doctors performed 62.8 million of these routine pelvic examinations on women across America. In total, gynecological screenings cost the U.S. $2.6 billion every year. And yet, a new study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine reports that there is no established medical justification for the annual procedure. After scouring nearly 70 years of pelvic exam studies, conducted from 1946 to 2014, the researchers found no evidence that they lead to any reduction in “morbidity or mortality of any condition” among women." Slate

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"Since the detention facility was set up, Israeli immigration police have imprisoned more than 2,500 African asylum seekers under the country's so-called "Infiltrators Law", which allows Israel to detain, without charge or trial, migrants who have entered the country without legal documentation.

The Israeli Ministry of Interior does not process individual asylum requests; according to human rights groups, the country has recognised less than 200 asylum seekers as refugees since its creation in 1948." Al Jazeera

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"Airplanes have to keep the cabin artificially pressurized -- to keep your brain from swelling and leaking out of your ears. The problem is that, according to modern research, the cabin's pressurization combined with the plane's white noise can numb your taste buds, suppressing your ability to taste salt and sugar in non-fatal doses.

Obviously, airlines tend to use the cheapest ingredients possible in their in-flight meals, but even a steak with a 10-minute-old kill date would still taste like ass when your senses are literally and figuratively so high, they can hardly feel their face. Cabin air is another problem. It's usually recycled every two to three minutes with the humidity kept below 20 percent, drying not only the food but also your nose, which further impacts your sense of taste... But as luck would have it, airplanes don't affect your ability to taste bitterness or umami. It would explain why people usually go for bloody Marys or tonic water inside planes: Oftentimes it's the only thing their bodies recognize as having a taste." Cracked



Monday, 30 June 2014

Privilege, humour and "good faith": How to avoid telling offensive jokes

On several recent occasions I've witnessed acquaintances making offensive and oppressive remarks, often intended as jokes. This has been extremely annoying and disappointing. Nevertheless, because I have often ended up being called upon to explain to these acquaintances why these remarks caused so much offence and turmoil, I think I have gained some general insights which I’d like to share here. Of course, none of these insights are particularly original – I'm drawing much of my analysis from people less privileged than myself, who I've cited frequently on this blog before. However, I hope my own take on the matter will be helpful to at least a few people.

Let's start from the very beginning, by defining some terms. When I describe someone as “privileged” in some respect, all I mean is that they are not oppressed. To be oppressed is to be treated badly in some systematic way and for no good reason. What counts as a “good reason” is, of course, up for debate. I would argue that prisoners in general constitute an oppressed group, but many other people would argue that the way prisoners are treated is justifiable as punishment for crimes. I will simply be assuming that the examples of poor treatment I cite here are not justifiable and thus count as oppressive. The word “systematically” is also important. To constitute oppression, poor treatment must be sufficiently frequent and/or predictable to undermine the oppressed person’s sense of safety or ability to function effectively in a particular context. Someone who is treated badly only on rare occasions is not oppressed.

People can be oppressed because of something to do with their social or public identity, including their gender identity, their race, their sexual orientation, whether or not they satisfy gendered beauty ideals, whether or not they have a disability, their religious or other ideological views, their level of education, their physical or mental health status, their occupation and so on. People can also be oppressed on an individual level – we can say that a person in an abusive relationship, for instance, is oppressed by their partner. For present purposes, I’ll focus on oppression that arises from social identities.

The major point I want make in this post is that a person’s interpretation of a remark concerning some aspect of their identity will, quite justifiably, depend on whether they have a history of being oppressed because of it. To take a straightforward example, I was recently approached in public by a woman who suggested I should get a haircut (obviously she disapproved of men with long hair). I thought this was rude and strange, but it did not particularly upset me. My partner, in contrast, was deeply offended on my behalf. We soon realised my partner was imagining the way that she would feel if a remark of that sort had been directed towards her. You see, it is simply a fact of our society that women are frequently subject to rude unsolicited remarks about their appearance, often from strangers. However, I, as a man, am very seldom subject to such remarks. In this respect, I am privileged and my partner, a woman, is oppressed. For me, this stranger’s comment was merely a curiosity, whereas for her it would constitute part of a pattern of behaviour that forces her to be continuously self-conscious about her appearance and thus undermines her comfort in public spaces.

I am deeply fortunate in that pretty much every interpersonal slight I experience has the character of a once-off occurrence like that one. People are, of course, occasionally rude or unpleasant to me, but it is never systematic. It does not threaten to undermine by public standing in a given context. Being largely immune to the impact of oppressive language can make it difficult for people with levels of privilege to my own to empathise with the apparent “touchiness” of people who have suffered oppression. The point to remember is that, if you’re a member of an oppressed group, it is implicit that your social standing is constantly in question.

This quickly becomes apparent in the context of humour, since many jokes are essentially instances of intentional rudeness. When friends tease each other, this surface-level rudeness is neutralised by a general presumption that the “offending party” does not genuinely hold the other in contempt and has no intention to offend or call the other’s standing into question. For instance, because I am a philosopher, friends often make jokes implying or presupposing that I am lazy or unworldly. I, in turn, might accuse a friend who works in business of being excessively concerned with money. And so on.

Because neither philosophers nor businesspeople constitute an oppressed class, a relatively small presumption of good faith goes a long way in interpreting these sorts of jokes as inoffensive. I would be surprised if someone genuinely felt that my being a philosopher was grounds for treating me poorly, and so I’m inclined to interpret apparent rudeness as a joke, even when it comes from someone whose opinions about philosophers are not well known to me. In contrast, a person who is oppressed on the grounds of her race, for instance, encounters mistreatment on a regular basis and so is more likely to interpret apparently racist remarks as reflecting genuinely racist attitudes.  

This is not to say that apparently oppressive remarks can never reasonably be interpreted as harmless, even affectionate, instances of humour. All manner of bad language is appreciated in private between close friends, where the basic presupposition of mutual respect has been established. The point is that this is an extraordinary circumstance: in a society where oppressive attitudes towards a particular group are entrenched, it is usually reasonable to interpret apparent expressions of such attitudes as actual expressions.

To bring this point home, it is worth drawing attention to one of the few circumstances under which privileged people actually do bear some risk of being marked with a social stigma, namely when they are accused of bigotry. It is telling, and deeply ironic, that this is one area where privileged people tend to be rather “touchy” indeed. I have seen white people airily dismiss objections to racist remarks – “some people have no sense of humour” – and then react with indignant fury when accused (even in a joking tone) of racism. Rather than indulging our immediate defensive reactions to this sort of accusation, our instinctive responses in these cases should alert us to how difficult it is to “laugh off” what another person is saying when we feel that our social standing is genuinely at risk.

So this is my practical advice to anyone who understands themselves as unprejudiced (I disregard, in several senses of the word, the openly prejudiced), but who nevertheless feel tempted to tell jokes that imply or presuppose offensive attitudes towards particular groups of people. Firstly, are you sure you don’t have these attitudes? I have to ask, because many forms of bigotry are extremely common. And some of these are more-or-less officially sanctioned. To take one indicator, mainstream comedy films are – these days, at least – unlikely to attempt overt racism against black people, but still get a good deal of mileage out of mocking people from less politically powerful ethnic minorities, not to mention trans people, fat people, people who use illegal drugs, sex workers and so on. It is likely that many of us simply laugh along, and indeed gain some social capital by sharing these jokes with other privileged people, without seriously thinking about how they serve to oppress. Being a good person doesn't simply involve good intentions, but some degree of self-examination. We all have prejudices acquired from the broader culture. It is worth doing the work of examining yours.


Secondly, even if you really, really don’t have any bigoted attitudes, realise that it might nevertheless be reasonable for the audience of your joke to interpret it as expressing such attitudes. Just because you, in your privilege, are normally able to assume that the people surrounding you are acting in good faith doesn't mean that everyone will (or would be sensible to) operate with that assumption. Rather than simply assuming that you’ll be interpreted as acting in good faith, consider whether you've adequately demonstrated good faith in your past interactions with this particular audience. And, even then, err on the side of caution. A single joke which signals that a widespread oppressive attitude is in play can colour an oppressed person’s perception of the context to a much greater extent than is obvious to an outsider. Is that joke really so funny that it’s worth even a small risk of undermining someone’s sense of being respected and thus their ability to engage fully in the conversation?

Sunday, 29 June 2014

Links, Sunday 29th June

Apologies. This represents a long (but sparse) backlog - with my various travels, I haven't had time to read much.

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"By accepting so few applicants, Finnish teacher colleges accomplish two goals—one practical, one spiritual: First, the policy ensures that teachers-to-be like Stenfors are more likely to have the education, experience, and drive to do their jobs well. Second (and this part matters even more), this selectivity sends a message to everyone in the country that education is important—and that teaching is damn hard to do. Instead of just repeating these claims over and over like Americans, the Finns act like they mean it." Slate

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"Conducted in downtown Portland, the ... study found that twice as many drivers failed to yield for black pedestrians than those who were white. Meanwhile, black pedestrians typically had to wait a third longer for cars to stop for them when they had the legal right of way." Oregon Live

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"To focus on accountability implies that one accepts that there is a verifiable phenomenon to be accountable about, to espouse the fundamental propositions about human trafficking promoted by government, moral entrepreneurs, and the media which cry that trafficking, especially the kind where women sell sex, is the great scourge of our time. To focus on accountability assumes that the dominant narrative is based on reality, and all we have to do is quibble about individual ethics and demand high standards. This is all wrong." Jacobin

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"What is the first thing Ramatlhodi has done with his empty office? He has proposed that the best way to deal with protracted strikes is to ban them. Put less kindly, he has advocated that if poor black people make trouble, their rights should be curtailed. He has done this in the context of the oldest and unhappiest of the industries apartheid bequeathed to us, on behalf of multinational corporations run largely by white people earning multimillion-rand salaries.

If ever there was evidence that Ramatlhodi was talking nonsense when he said that the constitution was for rich white people, this is it. Ramatlhodi is for rich white people and the poor have the constitution to thank for the protection it affords them against him and his ilk." Business Day

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"Visibility was intended as a stopping-off point in a much larger political project to destroy the patriarchal family as the incubator of oppressive gender roles. “Coming out” and Pride were tactics to build that movement, not end-goals in their own right, necessarily. Visibility alone would not lead to liberation.

Today those transitional demands have become not only the constituent, necessary parts of a gay identity, they’ve also erased the further structural criticisms and demands they were intended to further. Visibility and legal rights are what makes up the political demands of contemporary Pride politics (as far as they exist at all). Once you have reached the bar of being out and proud, any further structural or material concerns are a private matter, and unrelated to your sexual identity or politics." Open Democracy

Also, generally, fuck the police.




Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Links, Tuesday 10th June

"Often times the education, call-outs, reminders, and tips we give cis-men do not resonate. Often times they do, but only for a little while. Often times, it appears that the ‘male feminist’ relies on the labour of women in the same way his non-feminist counterpart does. Is there a major philosophical difference between relying on women for domestic chores and relying on them for call-outs? In both cases, cis-men are using the labour of women to do things that, really, they should be able to do on their own." Medium

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I always find it somewhat difficult to get a handle on what exactly is meant by "neoliberalism", but this is a helpful point:

"Joining a long line of thinkers, most famously Karl Polanyi, Mirowski insists that a key error of the Left has been its failure to see that markets are always embedded in other social institutions. Neoliberals, by contrast, grasp this point with both hands — and therefore seek to reshape all of the institutions of society, including and especially the state, to promote markets. Neoliberal ascendancy has meant not the retreat of the state so much as its remaking." Jacobin

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Some good interviews with drug dealers.

"C's husband had no criminal record aside from drug charges -- no violent crimes, no reason to believe he had weapons; he'd never even been in a bar fight. But it didn't matter, because the cops wanted to show off how big their truck-muscles were -- and apparently that's not that weird. Imagine yourself in the SWAT team's position: You have all this intensive training, crazy body armor, friggin' black urban tanks ... and they're all just sitting around gathering dust, because not every day can be a bank heist day. They're probably just bored, and as a drug dealer, you're today's entertainment." Cracked

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"In an attempt to keep the workers from truly understanding what Sartre meant by "hell is other people," the profession of "lector" came into being. Originating in Cuba, the job of the lector was to read aloud ... and that was it. Before the invention of television and radio, lectors would take a seat at the front of the factory and, with a loud and clear voice, read the daily newspaper, or a novel, or some erotic Edith Roosevelt fan fiction, to the factory workers." Cracked

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Cracked is on a roll today! How movies and TV inaccurately depict the physics of space. Cracked


Monday, 9 June 2014

Links, Monday 9th June

This in many ways validates common sense. Unclear how relevant it would be to a South African context though.

"When it comes to the chronically homeless, you don't need to fix everything to improve their lives. You don't even really need new public money. What you need to do is target those resources at the core of the problem — a lack of housing — and deliver the housing, rather than spending twice as much on sporadic legal and medical interventions." Vox

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Sometimes you've just gotta love the directness with which an economist will approach a problem.

"Ta-Nehisi Coates' essay on "The Case for Reparations" is much more a call for a moral reckoning with the legacy of white supremacy in America than it is a detailed accounting of what a reparations policy would look like. The more wonkishly inclined might prefer a specific proposal, so here's a place to start: we could close the wealth gap between black households and white households by directing the Federal Reserve to print $55 billion a month for 25 months and divide the proceeds evenly among every African-American." Vox

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"Studies show that my experience of sex trafficking isn’t uncommon. In a research project called the Bad Encounter Line, the Young Women’s Empowerment Project tracked violence in the lives of girls in the sex trade. The results showed that 30 percent of violent encounters were with police, 6 percent with DCFS, and 1 percent with shelters. Pimps accounted for only 4 percent of violent encounters. Sexual violence by police officers made up 11 percent of the total reports—almost three times as much as pimps, and overall there was seven and a half times more violence from police than pimps." Vice

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Golden Dawn in Greece is both a) unabashedly fascist; and b) steadily increasing it's support. This is very bad. Guardian

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A great piece by my friend Simone about the ongoing Khayelitsha policing enquiry. M&G

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An interesting snapshot of the workings of a magistrate's court. What is striking is a) how petty the various crimes being prosecuted are - often a few pounds worth of goods that have been shoplifted; b) how many state resources are expended to punish these crimes (the concept of "guard labour" is useful here - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guard_labor); and c) the gap between the amount of harm actually inflicted by the perpretators compared to the harm meted out to them. Simply increasing incomes at the lower end would probably eliminate a lot of the shoplifting, at least, and would avert all the social harms that come with the criminal process. Guardian

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A useful provocation.

"The only way to deal with the housing crisis is to desegregate Cape Town completely, expropriating land and mansions from Bishopscourt to Camps Bay and building public housing on large areas of unused land such as the Mowbray Golf Course (owned by the city) and the presidential estate in Rondebosch (national land)." M&G

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The irrationality of UK law around sex work, as viewed from the perspective of taxation. New Statesman

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A well-deserved and scathing attack on the British government's support for faith schools. The state should not by supporting religious indoctrination, whatever particular flavour it comes in. Guardian

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"This is the problem with cultural-appropriation critiques. They depend on reductive binaries—“high culture” and “low culture,” and oftentimes, “first world” and “third world”—that preserve the hierarchical relations between the fashion industry and the cultures being appropriated. This is related to the problem with cultural-appreciation defenses. Producers and consumers of culturally appropriated objects often present them as examples of healthy cosmopolitanism, of an openness to diverse global sources of inspiration. But the Indonesian plaid example shows that such production and consumption of “diversity” can often—intentionally or accidentally—obscure the actual diversity and complexity of the cultural object being copied." The Atlantic

Thursday, 5 June 2014

Links, Thursday 5th June

"[M]any black professionals experience racial mixing as a process not of affirmation but of constant belittling. And so the result is not more tolerance and the happy racial mixing featured in beer ads but anger at what is seen as the persistence of the white attitudes which underpinned apartheid." SACSIS

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"folks who gave their reasons for being right were just as convinced of their convictions after the experiment as they were beforehand.

But the people who had to explain the mechanics of implementation had suddenly softer views. Not only that — they also gave themselves a lower rating on their understanding of the subject." Business Insider

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The importance of proper sanitation.

"Dean Spears at Delhi School of Economics had been studying the effects of open defecation in India, which led him to a solution for the "Asian enigma"—why are Indian children shorter, on average, than African children, even though people are poorer, on average, in Africa. The height of children is one of the most important measures of their wellbeing, and Spears and his colleagues found that it is severely affected by open defecation." Ars Technica

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Wealth (as opposed to income) inequality in Sweden.

"The upper classes in Sweden retain a disproportional hold on wealth and power. The formal nobility in Sweden constitutes around 0.2% of the population. A couple of years ago I looked through the list of the wealthies Swedes. Fully 10% of the richest Swedes are members of the nobility. By contrast not a single one of the richest Swedes was a non-European immigrant. Of Sweden’s prime-ministers Sweden during the modern era 20% belonged to the nobility." Super-Economy

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"St. Mary's Church is the most ambiguous term on Wikipedia, followed by Communist Party, and Aliabad, which is apparently a common Persian town name. Now if only we could get one of the many Communist Parties to hold a group meeting at a St. Mary's Church in an Aliabad..." Link

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An article about having sexual consent classes at university. One point to be made is that we can support these classes even if we don't believe that the people who are committing sexual assaults are doing so out of "ignorance" or "by accident". The point is rather than predators are able to exploit perceived ambiguity. By laying out clear public standards, you empower people to resist infringements on their boundaries and encourage bystanders to step in. Guardian

Wednesday, 4 June 2014

Links, Wednesday 4th June

"For anyone who knows the tyranny of summertime body-shaming is entirely socially constructed but doesn’t know how to do anything about it, I would recommend a try-and-see process. It’s so easy to get so caught up in the lies about how a woman’s body should look that that we’re too scared to test our personal limits. Giving yourself a chance to go out in public without shaving your legs or without worrying that your fat thighs or your upper arms are on show is the only way to prove to yourself that, in all likelihood, nothing bad will happen to you." Feminist Times

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"For those of you unfamiliar with how, until the 1990s, Ireland dealt with unmarried mothers and their children, here it is: the women were incarcerated in state-funded, church-run institutions called mother and baby homes or Magdalene asylums, where they worked to atone for their sins. Their children were taken from them.

According to Corless, death rates for children in the Tuam mother and baby home, and in similar institutions, were four to five times that of the general population. A health board report from 1944 on the Tuam home describes emaciated, potbellied children, mentally unwell mothers and appalling overcrowding. But, as Corless points out, this was no different to other homes in Ireland. They all had the same mentality: that these women and children should be punished." Guardian

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Lolz.

"Using the plural pronoun for a singular meaning is actually very common in English: the originally-plural you got extended to mean a formal, singular you and ultimately completely annihilated thou, and even we can be used as singular if you’re pretending to be the Queen or Helen Mirren.

But then, in the late 18th century, grammarians started recommending that people use he as a gender nonspecific pronoun because they was ostensibly plural, as part of the grand tradition of awkwardly shoehorning English grammar into Latin which has caused many of your present grammatical insecurities, and which I’m totally sure had nothing whatsoever to do with the patriarchy."

Also a good remark of the communicative rationale for gendered pronouns, namely disambiguating more complicated sentences.

"...You can find lots of people on the internet having writing problems when they don’t have the option of using gendered pronouns to disambiguate between people.

Is feminine/masculine the only possible split you could have here? Nope: we’ve seen that other languages have animate/inanimate or various other gender systems. But if you’re looking for ways to divide humans into two equal-sized groups with a good probability of being represented in a wide variety of contexts, gender of the natural/social kind is a fairly effective means of doing so (although it’s definitely not perfect: more on this later.) It’s at least better than, say, tall people vs short people, or children vs adults, or if you’re Douglas Hofstadter writing satire, white people vs black people." The Toast

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"The huge differences between carrying out scholarship in today’s Britain and in Stalin’s Soviet Union are obvious, not least because formal censorship and direct state repression are not routine consequences of dissent in the UK... Yet the parallels are surprisingly pervasive. They include the imperative for competition between institutions; the subordination of intellectual endeavour to extrinsic metrics; the lurching of departments and institutions from one target to another heedless of coherence; the need to couch research in terms of impact on the economy and social cohesion; the import of industrial performance management tactics; and the echoing of government slogans by funders (of which the Arts and Humanities Research Council’s invocation of the “Big Society” some years ago is only the most crass example)." Times

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"A voice of a policeman could be heard off screen make a callous statement to the miners, “I will shoot you.” When the dust settled, police stood in a line, holding their automatic weapons, taunting the miners lying on the ground and bleeding to death. None of the police officers bothered to call an ambulance, in fact, they did more than not call for it. They ordered the ambulance not to enter until after an hour of the shooting so that their path to being killers is not interfered with. In that hour police hunted other miners who ran up Small Koppie and shot them in cold blood." Africa is a Country

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“The Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court decision brought an end to segregation in schools, and for the first time, Black students were exposed to White teachers. This has not necessarily been positive for Black children. The history that is taught in schools is framed through a lens of White supremacy, with additives like Black History Month being thrown to mask enormous inequalities in education. Today’s students are forced to learn the oppressor’s truth by a white supremacist educational system that presents heavy-handed biases into history, language, and even the arts.” Black Girl Dangerous

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This article is just silly, though it's a standard trick of self-defined agnostics: defining any belief which falls short of total dogmatic certainty (i.e. any reasonable belief) as "agnostic". By this standard, the Pope is probably an agnostic. IO9

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"A letter signed by more than 50 researchers and specialists, including Prof Robert West of University College London, said e-cigarettes had the potential to save millions of lives." Guardian

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"...women “were convinced that actual sluts existed and organized their behaviors to avoid this label”—it’s just that the system was more about policing women’s looks, fashion, and conversational styles than criticizing the notches on their bedposts. And the vagueness and ubiquity of the term “slut” on campus allowed these women to effectively police each other without denying themselves actual sex." Slate

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More anti-cycling helmet propaganda (or, at least, more rebuttals against pro-cycling helmet propaganda). Cyclehelmets.org

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"The real tribalists (and racists) who Mbeki failed to mention are white South Africans, who effectively come together to vote as a bloc for only two political parties: the white-led Democratic Alliance and the smaller white nationalist Freedom Front Plus." Africa is a Country

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A parable of Ian Hacking's idea of "looping effects" (i.e. creating new classes of people by the act of creating the classification). SMBC

Friday, 30 May 2014

Friday, 30th May

"Over and over, we see that deference to armed authority by men who are not black is presumed to be indicative of decency, while even the most willfully misinterpreted "resistance" to armed authority by black men (Jonathan Ferrell, Oscar Grant, et. al.) is presumed to warrant deadly force. These are both deadly assumptions." Shakesville


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"Ending abuse in the sex trade requires action that is less telegenic than a photo op or a gala. Last week, the International Labor Organization issued a new report on forced labor and recommendations to combat it with the collection of accurate data, effective protection of victims, and the support of workers in their own organizing. It’s a broader fight against poverty, inequality and vulnerability that goes far beyond a brothel’s walls." NY Times

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"In interviews, Dr. Angelou used the term “prostitute” to refer to her previous employment without rancor or shame. She spoke candidly to her family about it. She told her mother, brother, and son she would redact the information from the book, but only if they were uncomfortable with it. She had no issue whatsoever with speaking her truth. So why do we not know about it, save for hushed whispers and the occasional salacious reference in reports about and interviews of her? What’s so wrong with our beloved and lovely Maya Angelou having been a sex worker and brothel manager?" Tits and Sass

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This is a good discussion of gentrification, an issue which is often presented in an overly simplified way. 

"In cities, gentrifiers have the political clout - and accompanying racial privilege - to reallocate resources and repair infrastructure. The neighbourhood is "cleaned up" through the removal of its residents. Gentrifiers can then bask in "urban life" - the storied history, the selective nostalgia, the carefully sprinkled grit - while avoiding responsibility to those they displaced." Al Jazeera

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Not sure about the rest of it, but this is a good point.

"The period when capitalism seemed capable of providing broad and spreading prosperity was also, precisely, the period when capitalists felt they were not the only game in town: when they faced a global rival in the Soviet bloc, revolutionary anti-capitalist movements from Uruguay to China, and at least the possibility of workers' uprisings at home. In other words, rather than high rates of growth allowing greater wealth for capitalists to spread around, the fact that capitalists felt the need to buy off at least some portion of the working classes placed more money in ordinary people's hands, creating increasing consumer demand that was itself largely responsible for the remarkable rates of economic growth that marked capitalism's "golden age"." Guardian





Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Wednesday 28th May

This article merely expresses general anxiety about the phenomenon of indirect cultural literacy (i.e. knowing *about* cultural works without ever having actually read, heard or seen them). NY Times

For a more interesting take, get a hold of Pierre Bayard's "How to talk about books you haven't read". Amazon

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"[Google] had for several years been testing everyday cars equipped with sensors, navigation equipment and computers to drive themselves but in the meantime it has secretly developed a prototype from scratch that will have no facility for a human to take control, other than an emergency stop button." Guardian

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A list of some amusing animal names in German. Twenty two words

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Yep. Not something I picked up when I saw the movie for the first time as a kid, but created a major WTF moment when I re-watched it a couple of years ago.

"One of the major plot points of Revenge of the Nerds is Lewis putting on a Darth Vader mask, pretending to be his jock nemesis Stan, and then having sex with Stan’s girlfriend. Initially shocked when she finds out his true identity, she’s so taken by his sexual prowess—“All jocks think about is sports. All nerds think about is sex.”—that the two of them become an item.

Classic nerd fantasy, right? Immensely attractive to the young male audience who saw it. And a stock trope, the “bed trick,” that many of the nerds watching probably knew dates back to the legend of King Arthur.

It’s also, you know, rape." Daily Beast

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Interesting stuff on how parenting styles differ by socioeconomic class, and how "adventure playgrounds" fit into this picture. Link

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An experiment in hygiene via ADDING bacteria to the skin.

"The chairman of the company’s board of directors, Jamie Heywood, lathers up once or twice a month and shampoos just three times a year. The most extreme case is David Whitlock, the M.I.T.-trained chemical engineer who invented AO+. He has not showered for the past 12 years. He occasionally takes a sponge bath to wash away grime but trusts his skin’s bacterial colony to do the rest. I met these men. I got close enough to shake their hands, engage in casual conversation and note that they in no way conveyed a sense of being “unclean” in either the visual or olfactory sense." NY Times

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More stuff about police brutality and unlawful evictions in SA. Con Mag

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I'm not sure this dude totally grapples with his privilege, but it's interesting just to note how differently a parent with serious child care commitments is treated if he happens to be a man.


"No one has ever questioned my work ethic to my face because I’m a father. In fact, one day I was so tired from caring for my two children—at the time a 2-year-old boy and a 3-month-old baby girl with colic—that I simply lost my ability to speak coherently in front of my colleagues. I stood up to talk at a very important meeting and nothing came out. I invoked my exhausted state, apologized, and went home. There were no consequences. If anything, my role as a working dad raised my profile within my institution, even before I started writing about those issues for CNN." Chronicle

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As a clever headline-writer pointed out in reference to the original scandal, the objection of MPs to having an "adult" shop situated near Parliament reveals only that they, ironically, just need to grow up. Sunday Times

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It is true that, if you adopt a "generous" reading of Ariel Levy's book, you can find an argument about the role of cultural representations in shaping women's sexuality, and specifically shaping it so as to support men's sexual entitlement.

HOWEVER, it is unclear (or, actually, it's super clear) why she and other self-declared feminists are so persistent in focusing on the representations produced by the most marginalised people. Why focus on pornography and "the marketing of sex work on the Web" as opposed to, say, Disney or the mainstream film industry in general? In fact, probably the majority of cultural products produced in the Western world, insofar as they relate to sex, express or reproduce men's entitlement to women's bodies.

And attacks on sex work do NOT simply fall into place as part of a broader cultural critique - Disney animators are NOT at risk at having their jobs rendered illegal or being harassed by the police; whiny male novelists are NOT having their work censored or having the conditions of their work dictated by the state. Boston Review

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A summary of what is known about alcohol intoxication generally and hangovers specifically. 

"If it’s correct that cytokines are the key to hangovers, then that would suggest a simple and profound approach to treatment. That is, if the mechanism of hangover is an inflammatory response—as to a wound or illness—then maybe anti-­inflammatories are the way to dispel it." Wired

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Some statistics about the circumstances around cycles deaths in the US. One take-away: watch out for rear-end collisions! Vox

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"I know why people have this attitude. For centuries, books were wisdom in paper form. Without Internet access or even widespread education, destroying books meant destroying perhaps-irreplaceable knowledge and history. And obviously nobody is advocating tossing out copies of the Gutenberg Bible or anything.

People, the world has changed. I feel it in the 75th printing of Fifty Shades of Grey, and I smell it in the local library's moldy copy of Protecting Your Child from Ritual Satanic Abuse. Book printing is now cheap, easy, and completely morally neutral. Just because you've stuck some words on paper, that doesn't mean that paper is sacred or worthy." Cracked

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"That’s when I realized that my moral code in this virtual world was highly situational. When I was safe, clothed, and armed, my instinct was to help the girl that JB shot. When I was naked and alone, I felt no qualms about butchering a guy with a rock if I thought it would help me survive. What did I have to lose? It’s a lot harder to maintain one’s morals when you’re at the bottom of the food chain. I wondered if that rule would also apply if I were to lose everything in real life." Wired

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Some interesting anecdotes about being a doctor (particularly in a system where doctors are placed as gatekeepers for accessing insured care and opiates). Cracked

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A discussion of the AmPlats miners' strike and the broader changes in labour politics currently occurring in SA. Daily Maverick

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"In short, I tend to avoid the “confessional” style of talking about my sexual orientation or my HIV status because I fear that the language of confession tends to erase the singularity of my existence as a human being and sets up a hierarchical opposition between “normal” people and poor “abnormal” me." Daily Maverick

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"Despite several efforts made by ­organisations advocating sex workers’ human rights for progress to be made on Project 107 over the past 13 years – and while sex workers continue to be harassed, raped, assaulted and murdered – our efforts remain fruitless.

We call on you, President Zuma, to take urgent steps to address these ­human rights violations by decriminalising sex work." City Press

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Well, this is very bad. There were rumours when I was at Bishops, but I never took them seriously until now. A gross failure of the school's duty of care towards it's students.

"The Sunday Times has since established that a second incident involving a teacher and a Grade 11 pupil has been kept under wraps since 1990, when the boy's parents lodged a complaint.

Incredibly, the teacher, Leonard Kaplan, was allowed to remain at the school for more than 20 years despite the matter being widely known among the school community. He retired four years ago." Sunday Times

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The drug war is totally out of control. These police basically assaulted a woman because they suspected she was taken illegal drugs. She was, in fact, taking paracetamol, but how could this sort of action possibly be justified even if she WAS taking something illegal? Counter current news


Friday, 23rd May

"What is needed in South Africa, instead, is policy reform which is centred around sex worker rights, one informed by the insights and experiences of sex workers themselves. Considered in this light, full decriminalisation is the policy choice that makes the most sense in the South African context. In our context, Sisonke Sex Worker Movement – a collective of sex workers from across the country – has been advocating for decriminalisation for years." Ground Up

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"What happens in a world, or at least a nation, where most of the population lives semi-comfortably (by historical standards) off a basic income, supplemented by occasional temporary gigs, thanks to the economic output of tomorrow’s technology; a small middle class works at the diminishing number of jobs which can’t be handled by technology; and a smaller-yet minority of the ultra-rich actually design the tech, and/or live off their inheritances a la Piketty? Call it a “low-scarcity” future, as opposed to the full-on Singularitarian “post-scarcity” future." TechCrunch

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More research on sexual assault suffered by men, sometimes at the hands of women. It's a difficult topic to get a good handle on theoretically, particularly in the face of the overwhelming social advantages generally enjoyed by men. So I'd welcome any constructive engagement. Slate

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"Growing up, I assumed that the newspaper on the breakfast table must be assembled by people who truly knew what they were doing; then I got a job at a newspaper. Unconsciously, I transferred my assumptions of competence to (among others) people who worked in government. Then I got to know a few people who did – and who'd admit, after a pint or two, that their jobs involved staggering from crisis to crisis, concocting credible-sounding policies in cars en route to press conferences, exactly as portrayed in The Thick of It.

And even then I found myself assuming, self-hatingly, that this might be explained by a certain bumbling Britishness, the perverse pride we sometimes take in shambling mediocrity. Then I started working in America. Where, it turns out, everyone is totally just winging it." Guardian

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"This past weekend, Ancillary Justice, by American author Ann Leckie, took home the prestigious Nebula Award for best science fiction or fantasy novel... One of the book’s most notable conceits, for a linguist anyway, is its approach to gender and pronouns. The story’s first-person narrator, Breq, speaks a language that doesn't make gender distinctions, and, consequently, refers to all characters by the same default pronoun, rendered she in English. The only exceptions are in dialogue, when Breq is communicating with a person whose language does make gender distinctions, in which case she awkwardly guesses at he or she." Slate

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"With the most aggressive males gone, however, there were far fewer confrontations among the remaining males. This much more benevolent culture persisted for more than a decade, even as new males joined the troop. The newcomers took their cues from those already there and maintained an unusually peaceful culture. “If that can occur in a troop of baboons, you don't have a leg to stand on when claiming the inevitabilities and unchangeability of human societies,” Sapolsky says." Slate

Friday, 23 May 2014

What is love?

The aim of this post is to develop a little idea I've been working on that, I hope, constitutes a contribution to the philosophy of love. For an introduction to the topic, check out the Stanford Encyclopedia entry here.

I begin with a few observations about love that I will take as basic data to accommodate in my account. These are:

  1. To love someone means to have special care or concern for their desires and interests and, often, to wish to have a relationship of intimacy with them.
  2. One can, nevertheless, love someone without wishing to have a relationship of intimacy with them, without particularly enjoying their company or feeling ambivalent towards them. An example would be a person who finds her parent to be obnoxious and unpleasant, but nevertheless rushes to the parent's side when he is seriously in need.
  3. To love someone is to view their opinions, and particularly their opinions towards oneself, as of deep importance. I will be deeply disappointed if my beloved regards me with anger or contempt, and conversely overjoyed if my beloved regards me with affection and concern for my opinions and interests. 
  4. Who we love is at least partly dependent on their properties or characteristics as people. I love someone, at least in part, because of their kindness, their beauty, their sense of humour, their intelligence, and so on.
  5. Who we love is not solely dependent on properties or characteristics. If I love A, who embodies certain characteristics, I need not love B, even if B embodies those characteristics to the same, or even to a a greater, degree. I cannot simply "substitute" B for A or, at least, not without the loss of something important. 
  6. A person can love several people simultaneously. Examples include non-monogamous romantic relationships or, less controversially, the love of a parent for each of several children. 
  7. A person can cease to love another person. 
Having set out these observations, my basic account is as follows. To love someone is to understand them as essentially good, worthy and/or important. That is, the lover adopts a certain kind of interpretative stance towards the personal attributes and behaviour of her beloved, whereby everything the beloved says or does is understood in such a way that is compatible with their fundamental and unique (or very rare) goodness as a person. This accounts for statements 1 and 3. To regard a particular person as uniquely worthy and important is to have a special concern for their interests and desires, and to regard their opinions as uniquely valuable or worthy of attention. The other observations require more elaboration to account for fully.

Accepting both 4 and 5 seems to result in a paradox, and addressing this apparent paradox is one of the major concerns in the existing literature on love. My thought is the following. Coming to love someone is, of course, largely dependent on the appealing characteristics they exhibit. But continuing to love someone is not dependent on the continued exhibition of those same characteristics. Rather, whatever appealing characteristics the beloved exhibits will be interpreted as evidence of the beloved's unique goodness and importance. Conversely, even if one's beloved exhibits unappealing characteristics, these will not be interpreted as resulting from any fundamental weakness of character, but rather from contingent errors of judgement or as responses to external circumstances. Adopting this particular interpretative stance towards a person means that one will attempt, in effect, to elevate their virtues and explain away their vices. 

My model for this account is Kuhn's notion of a "paradigm" in philosophy of science. Kuhn's claim is that scientists do not typically accept scientific theories by themselves, but accept them as part of a "package" of ideas and practices (the paradigm or "disciplinary matrix"). Importantly, part of the package includes certain evaluative standards, i.e. ideas about what problems a theory ought solve and what adequate solutions to these problems would look like. According to Kuhn, this means that scientists who have accepted the paradigm will tend to view it's central theoretical claims more favourably than those who haven't - they tend to regard the areas where it is successful as most relevant in evaluating theoretical success. Conversely, they tend to regard putative problems or anomalies as unimportant, likely to be solved at a later date, and so on. The paradigm only enters a "crisis" - and begins to lose adherents to alternative paradigms - when anomalies accumulate to such a degree that they can no longer be explained away. 

Kuhn's account is aimed at resolving an apparent paradox, that scientists are both responsive to empirical evidence in choosing to accept a theory and yet can be non-responsive to evidence which would seem to contradict a theory they already accept. My account of love aims to resolve an analogous paradox, that who a person loves is both dependent on the qualities of the beloved and yet is not simply a response to those qualities. And my account of love is similar to Kuhn's account of theory acceptance, as I claim that to love someone is also to adopt standards for evaluating their worth that would tend to reinforce the conclusion that they are worthy of special respect and esteem. With this account in hand, I will now try to make sense of some of the remaining observations.

Observation 2, which represents a phenomenon we might call "loving without liking", is one of the most difficult to account for. My current thinking on this is that we all can, and do, switch back and forth between the interpretative stance characteristic of love and a more neutral, or even negative, evaluative stance. Anyone who has been in love has felt that her beloved is the most perfect and wonderful human being in the world and also, perhaps simultaneously, recognised that this feeling does not represent objective reality. Many other people exhibit the qualities she praises in her beloved. This sort of tension animates Bernard Williams' "one thought too many" thought experiment. William's argues that, if forced to choose, most of us would rescue our beloved from death instead of a stranger, and be justified in this choice. And yet we also recognise that this choice would not be justified from the perspective of a neutral observer, who need not conclude that our beloved is any more worthy of rescue than anyone else. 

For one who is fortunate in who she loves, the loving stance and a more neutral evaluation do not pull too much in different directions - her beloved is not manifestly unworthy of the loving treatment he receives. But some of us are unlucky enough to love those who are unworthy - they repay love with scorn, abuse or just consistent unpleasantness. Someone who is unlucky in who she loves will, I think, manifest different behaviour depending on which interpretative stance dominates her thinking at any given time. Sometimes she may avoid her beloved, and sometimes she may seek him out. The "switch" between the two states is, I take it, something like a gestalt switch. Sometimes our beloved is a rabbit, at other times he is a duck. And while both perceptual possibilities are in some sense present at all times, only one can be actively perceived at any given moment. 

Observation 6 is relatively easy to account for - a person who loves multiple others simply adopts the relevant interpretative stance in respect of each of them. This generates no conflict unless our lover is for some reason forced to choose between the irreconcilable interests of those she loves. This, of course, is the dilemma of Sophie's Choice. One thing that is interesting about this story is that, while from a purely evaluative standpoint it might be acceptable to choose which of one's own children is more worthy of rescue, it is utterly devastating from the standpoint of love. Sophie is traumatised, at least in part, because she is forced to consider the worth of her children as if she does not love them. 

Observation 7, finally, is dealt with quite straightforwardly in terms of what has already been said. To stop loving someone is to undergo a more permanent "switch" towards an interpretative stance in which their words and actions are no longer evidence of their unique worth. Their virtues are merely the virtues shared by many other people, and their faults cannot be explained away. Such a switch will often be brought about by something analogous to a Kuhnian "crisis" - the extent to which Alice's beloved is flawed (or at least, not suitable for her) becomes too obvious to continue explaining away, and a competing interpretation of their behaviour becomes appealing. One final observation that links to this broader point is that, often, when a person is in the process of falling out of love, she may adopt an unusually negative interpretation of her beloved. Thus, every vice the once-beloved displays is evidence of his poor character, and every virtue is accidental or otherwise explained away. Perhaps this phenomenon can be thought of as an (overcompensating) attempt by the lover to return to a more neutral stance, in order more dispassionately assess whether it is worth maintaining a relationship with her beloved. 

Kuhn, in discussing the process of adopting a new paradigm (or rejecting a long-held one) frequently compares it to the process of religious (de)conversion. To undergo such a shift is to see the world through new eyes, to have the scales drop from one's eyes. To fall in, and out, of love is, I think, also to undergo an experience something like religious conversion. One who loves sees the world differently to how she did before, with all the emotions and potential traumas that attend such a change.