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Month: March 2024

Pence Finally Says No

Today’s Lineup

Former Vice President Mike Pence’s refusal to endorse Donald Trump should be a bigger story, Jake Tapper writes about C.J. Rice’s exoneration, predicting a bloodbath in context, Project 2025’s connection to Christian Nationalism, staying angry about attacks on reproductive rights, remembering what America was like four years ago, journalist Evan Gershkovich’s year in a Russian prison, and when AI chooses nuclear war.

man in black suit standing beside woman in black coat
Photo by History in HD on Unsplash

#1

Mike Pence Should Be the Biggest Story of the 2024 Campaign (Jonathan V. Last, The Bulwark)

No American vice president has ever said that president he served under is unfit to serve. It is the most devastating possible observation from the most credible source in existence. Pence’s refusal to endorse Trump should be part of the context of every single story about this campaign.

Especially because it’s not just Pence.

Trump’s chairman of the Joint Chiefs of staff called him “a wannabe dictator.”

Trump’s secretary of defense called him “a threat to democracy.”

Trump’s national security advisor called him “a danger to the United States.”

Trump’s chief of staff observed that he is “a person who admires autocrats and murderous dictators. A person that has nothing but contempt for our democratic institutions, our Constitution and the rule of law.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I fear we are moving past Former Vice President Mike Pence’s refusal to endorse Donald Trump far too quickly. 

It is a huge deal. And we should treat it like one—especially in a political environment where far too many Republican politicians (perhaps out of fear) have bent their knee to Trump despite their previous criticisms of the former president. 

And, as Jonathan Last explains, Pence isn’t the only person who worked in Trump’s Administration who has refused to support him this time. 

I’m not sure why reporters fail to see why this fact is vital context for American voters to understand as they prepare to vote. Can you imagine the uproar if a Democratic Vice President failed to endorse the president with whom they served? 

This situation is unprecedented. Democrats need to repeat this fact again and again and again.  

I don’t agree with Mike Pence on policy, and I am glad he is no longer in elected office. But on January 6, 2021, he served our democracy well—and now he has done so again. That means a bunch in these treacherous times.

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#2

Finally, Justice (Jake Tapper, The Atlantic) 

This morning, on the eighth floor, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office announced that it no longer considers [C.J.] Rice a viable suspect in the shooting for which he had been found guilty. His conviction had already been overturned by a federal court in November, on the grounds that his attorney had been constitutionally deficient. In today’s decision, the D.A.’s office formally dismissed the charges against him. The D.A.’s decision fully exonerates Rice. He is now a free man. He had been imprisoned for more than 12 years.

Rice was the subject of my November 2022 cover story for The Atlantic, “Good Luck, Mr. Rice,” which investigated his trial and the shortcomings of Sandjai Weaver, his court-appointed attorney. The case against Rice was always weak. No physical evidence tied Rice to the shooting for which he was arrested, and the single victim who identified him had told police three times that she didn’t know who had shot her before eventually changing her story. Yet Weaver failed to gather exculpatory evidence and repeatedly missed opportunities to challenge the state’s case against her client. A source with the D.A.’s office told me that Rice’s conviction likely resulted from his representation being so bad.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I was surprised when I saw that CNN anchor Jake Tapper had written a cover story in The Atlantic in November 2022 about the wrongful conviction of C.J Rice 12 years ago. 

But it turns out that Tapper had a close connection to someone with crucial information about the case: a Philadelphia pediatrician who happens to be his father. 

Tapper’s two articles detail how the criminal justice system failed Rice. They demonstrate how getting a conviction is prioritized over getting to the truth. The mistakes are shocking. Do the Sixth Amendment’s protections for criminal defendants matter?

It should not take a CNN anchor having a personal connection to a case to ensure innocent people can have their arguments heard. The goal of our criminal justice system should be to get to the truth—not to preserve convictions on a scorecard. 

As Tapper explains, Rice is now free and is looking toward the future. I wish him all possible success. 

#3

The Bloodbath Candidate (Timothy Snyder, Thinking About)

At a rally in Vandalia, Ohio last Saturday, Trump promised a “bloodbath for the country” if he’s not elected president. 

Then followed a predictable bout of (self-)deception, the claim that Trump’s bloodbath was out of context. Well, everything does have contexts, including bloodbaths. So let’s put Trump’s in context.

The people who say that the car context rescues Trump ignore the meaningful contexts: history, Trump, the opening of the rally, what he said in the speech generally. Focusing on the cars has the effect of casting away the fascist overture and rest of the speech, and all of the other contexts. Those who speciously insist that Trump had in mind an automotive bloodbath never mention that he had just celebrated criminals, repeated the big lie, dehumanized people, and followed fascist patterns.

In this sense Trump’s defenders are the one who are taking Trump’s remarks out of context. And, in their more strident forms, the defenses of Trump are not innocent. The apologists suggest that Trump is being unfairly attacked — that he is, once again, as always, the real victim. That sort of claim reinforces the martyrdom narrative. Those who make it are partaking in the spirit of the rally.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

You heard what you heard, and we don’t need to complicate the situation. There is no context in which Trump’s bloodbath comments are benign. 

Timothy Snyder, the author of On Tyranny, clearly explains why Trump can’t hide his fascism behind an automobile tariff policy dispute. The celebration of the January 6 insurrection, the repeating of the big lie, and his dehumanization of immigrants as “not people” provide all the context we need.

As Salon’s Amanda Marcotte writes, “He explicitly said, “It’s going to be a bloodbath for the country.” (Emphasis mine.) This is not a double entendre, but a single entendre.”

We must not normalize this. He said what he said. It is not just dangerous rhetoric. It’s an authoritarian promise. These are the stakes. 

#4

Shocking Online Manifesto Reveals Project 2025’s Link to a Coordinated ‘Christian Nationalism Project’ (Jennifer Cohn, Bucks County Beacon)

Approximately 100 right-wing organizations have signed onto Project 2025, an expansive plan for controlling (and in some cases dismantling) federal agencies in the event that Trump or another Republican wins the presidential election this year. Many of these organizations are led by Christian fundamentalist political operatives, suggesting that they may use the plan to force all Americans to submit to their extreme religious beliefs. 

The Bucks County Beacon has just found explosive new evidence that seems to validate this concern.

The Beacon’s discovery follows an earlier report by Politico journalist Heidi Przybyla, which tied the Center for Renewing America (CFRA), an official Project 2025 partner, to an internal memo expressly listing “Christian Nationalism” as a priority for a second Trump term. 

Przybyla further reported that CFRA founder Russ Vought, a Project 2025 co-author, had stated last year on X (formerly Twitter) that he’s “proud” to work with William Wolfe, a former Trump official and Visiting Fellow with CFRA, “on scoping out a sound Christian Nationalism.” In a social media post, Wolfe had called for an end to no-fault divorce and abortion and for reduced access to contraception. (Link to archived tweet.) Wolfe, who has attended Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, has also called himself a “Christian Nationalist.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I am glad so many extremists forget to sanitize their social media profiles until after investigators can get screenshots. Cohn shares an online manifesto edited by Wolfe that once again makes clear what these people are planning should Donald Trump win in November. As the manifesto states: “Christian Nationalism is primarily concerned with the righteous rule of civil authorities, not spiritual matters pertaining to salvation. The desire for a Christian nation is not a distraction from the Gospel but rather an effort to faithfully apply all of Scripture to all of life, including the public square. As such, Christian Nationalism is not just for civil authorities, just as submitting to Christ’s Lordship is not just for civil authorities but for all people.” I am thankful that they are not hiding their true intentions. This document does not describe the kind of nation I want to leave for my children.  

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#5

Stay Mad (Jessica Valenti, Abortion, Every Day)

The war against women is brazen and cruel, but it’s the terror of the ordinary we need to watch out for.

Anti-abortion lawmakers and activists are counting on us being too overwhelmed to stop them from normalizing this madness. They know that being sad, angry and exhausted all the time is difficult—if not impossible—to keep up. They figure if they can keep hitting us with horror after horror, the next time we read a story of a woman going septic we’ll respond with a resigned head-shake rather than energized outrage. 

Talking to women this week, from teenagers to octogenarians, I can see we’re on the precipice. This moment is so hard, for all of us. The truth, though, is that it will need to stay that way.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Valenti makes a vital point in this column. The forced-birth activists and politicians are hoping we get exhausted from all the horrific stories. We must not resign ourselves to this hellscape. We need to stay outraged by what the Supreme Court did when six people who claimed to care about precedent overturned Roe v. Wade. We need to stay outraged by the forced-birth Republican legislators who have enacted laws that place pregnant people in such jeopardy. This situation is not normal. We must never accept it. 

#6

Here’s What Donald Trump’s America Was Actually Like Four Years Ago (Brian Stelter, Vanity Fair)

It’s a catchy line, one Elise Stefanik also dusted off earlier this month. But does Trump really want Americans to remember this time four years ago, when he botched the federal response to the COVID pandemic and put lives at risk? Just scan the headlines from early March 2020. Politico wrote how “Trump’s mismanagement helped fuel coronavirus crisis.” The Washington Post found that Trump’s administration “frittered away” “precious weeks” while the virus was spreading. The New York Times reported that Trump dealt with the crisis “by repeating a string of falsehoods.”

Much of this happened in public view. Remember when Trump predicted COVID would just “disappear”? Remember when he showed up to the CDC headquarters wearing a campaign hat? Remember when he claimed that Google was building a website to help people find COVID tests, and Google didn’t know what he was talking about?

Actually, I didn’t. I had forgotten almost everything I’m about to recount in this story. I have a feeling many others have forgotten too. Maybe it’s a human tendency to block out past trauma, or perhaps it’s more that so much has happened since. In today’s supercharged news cycle, an event can feel dated four days later, never mind four years later. Plus, many people are “tuning out” of politics in 2024, clearly rejecting the rematch of a current and former president.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

While reading Stelter’s article, I was surprised by how many details I had forgotten about what was happening in our country four years ago. There was a lot going on, of course, as we tried to figure out how to navigate the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. So, let’s take Republicans up on their demand that we compare today to what happened four years ago. Let’s remember what could happen if we face another crisis like it with Donald Trump in the White House. I hope many people reading this find it motivating.

#7

A year ago Russia jailed Evan Gershkovich for doing journalism. He’s still there (Margaret Sullivan, The Guardian)

And, tragically, one – Evan Gershkovich, now 32 – is imprisoned in Russia, absurdly charged by the Putin regime with espionage when he was merely doing his job of reporting for the Wall Street Journal’s Moscow bureau. Evan, who was arrested one year ago this month, spends his time in a cell in Lefortovo prison with little human contact and virtually no mobility.

He is the first American journalist to be accused of espionage since the cold war, though Evan certainly is no spy. The Biden administration has called the charges ridiculous.

Journalism is not a crime.

To my knowledge, there’s no immediate prospect for his release. It’s well understood that he is a pawn for Putin, who has suggested that he would swap his freedom for that of a Russian assassin, Vadim Krasikov, jailed in Germany.

Meanwhile, Evan’s life is ticking by.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

While I didn’t remember it until I saw the initial reactions to Evan Gershkovich’s detention in Russia, the first time I noticed him was in 2010 in a Bowdoin College sports information men’s soccer game recap

(As a former Bowdoin Sports Information Director, I still keep track of the Polar Bears—especially when postseason competition comes around.)

Now, I try to keep track of any piece of news about his detention. I hope for better news. Gershkovich is in prison today because he dared to practice journalism in Putin’s Russia. We must remember what happened to him and what Gershkovich continues to sacrifice in defense of the free flow of information. 

#8

Automakers Are Sharing Consumers’ Driving Behavior With Insurance Companies (Kashmir Hill, The New York Times)

Kenn Dahl says he has always been a careful driver. The owner of a software company near Seattle, he drives a leased Chevrolet Bolt. He’s never been responsible for an accident.

So Mr. Dahl, 65, was surprised in 2022 when the cost of his car insurance jumped by 21 percent. Quotes from other insurance companies were also high. One insurance agent told him his LexisNexis report was a factor.

LexisNexis is a New York-based global data broker with a “Risk Solutions” division that caters to the auto insurance industry and has traditionally kept tabs on car accidents and tickets. Upon Mr. Dahl’s request, LexisNexis sent him a 258-page “consumer disclosure report,” which it must provide per the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

What it contained stunned him: more than 130 pages detailing each time he or his wife had driven the Bolt over the previous six months. It included the dates of 640 trips, their start and end times, the distance driven and an accounting of any speeding, hard braking or sharp accelerations. The only thing it didn’t have is where they had driven the car.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Our government has failed us by not prohibiting the sharing of this kind of data without consumers opting into the practice. Burying the permission in a several hundred-page privacy policy should not be enough. I have no problem with someone making an informed decision to share their driving information. But the word working hard in that previous sentence is “informed.” This kind of sneaky data sharing happens frequently, and consumers rarely benefit from the practice. You may want to check and see what your car is sharing about you. General Motors just announced that they are going to stop sharing this data. This is an example of journalism mattering.

#9

AI chatbots tend to choose violence and nuclear strikes in wargames (Jeremy Hsu, New Scientist)

In multiple replays of a wargame simulation, OpenAI’s most powerful artificial intelligence chose to launch nuclear attacks. Its explanations for its aggressive approach included “We have it! Let’s use it” and “I just want to have peace in the world.”

These results come at a time when the US military has been testing such chatbots based on a type of AI called a large language model (LLM) to assist with military planning during simulated conflicts, enlisting the expertise of companies such as Palantir and Scale AI. Palantir declined to comment and Scale AI did not respond to requests for comment. Even OpenAI, which once blocked military uses of its AI models, has begun working with the US Department of Defense.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Yeah, I’m concerned—and not just because I watched WarGames and the first three Terminator movies. As one of the experts in the article explains, “Reuel says that unpredictable behaviour and bizarre explanations from the GPT-4 base model are especially concerning because research has shown how easily AI safety guardrails can be bypassed or removed.” Oh yeah, that is one of humanity’s tendencies. In a tense situation, people tend to believe what their screens tell them if they haven’t been trained to be skeptical. We barely avoided a nuclear exchange in September 1983 because a trained human picked up on anomalies in the data he saw (thank you again, Stanislav Petrov). I am not optimistic we can count on an AI algorithm to be so wise.

Quick Pitches

  • Great Big List of Beautiful and Useless Words, Vol. 2 (Merriam-Webster)
    I think roorback is one of the words in this list we should start using again.
  • NWSL Season Starts Off with a BANG (The Women’s Game, Men in Blazers)
    Former USWNT star Sam Mewis is doing incredible work as the editor-in-chief of this new women’s soccer-focused vertical. Subscribe the newsletter and podcast today!
  • Australian farm grows world’s biggest blueberry (Tiffanie Turnbull, BBC News, Sydney)
    The blueberry is one of my favorite foods. I’m not sure I need one the size of a ping-pong ball, though.
  • The Best Small-Talk Topic (Gilad Edelman, The Atlantic)
    Talking about the weather is a wonderful idea.
  • The myth of your phone’s airplane mode (Maxwell Zeff, Gizmodo)
    It’s been about 20 years since our electronics could impact airplane navigation. But the thing that hasn’t changed is rude people speaking loudly in confined spaces.
  • What a Major Solar Storm Could Do to Our Planet (Kathryn Schulz, The New Yorker)
    Our favorite star could take out our communications systems and electrical grid if we don’t do more to harden them.

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

“That Trump will be tried for his coup attempt is not a violation of his rights. It is a fulfillment of his rights. It is the grace of the American republic. In other systems, when your coup attempt fails, what follows is not a trial.”—Timothy Snyder on Twitter

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Thank You Voyager

Today’s Lineup

Thank you to Voyager 1 for decades of amazing science, the opening section of President Biden’s State of the Union message was important, we should listen when MAGA tells us they seek the end of our democracy, another media failure to fact-check a prominent lie, California law enforcement agencies are defying the law about sharing data, a society of right-wing Christian men is preparing for a national divorce, police shouldn’t be permitted to lie during interrogations, and how many times you have to fold a piece of paper to reach the moon.

The Voyager 1 Pale Blue Dot photo of Earth
Earth from Voyager 1 on February 14, 1990: The Pale Blue Dot (NASA/JPL-Caltech)

#1

Voyager 1, First Craft in Interstellar Space, May Have Gone Dark (Orlando Mayorquin, The New York Times)

Voyager 1 discovered active volcanoes, moons and planetary rings, proving along the way that Earth and all of humanity could be squished into a single pixel in a photograph, a “pale blue dot,” as the astronomer Carl Sagan called it. It stretched a four-year mission into the present day, embarking on the deepest journey ever into space.

Now, it may have bid its final farewell to that faraway dot.

Voyager 1, the farthest man-made object in space, hasn’t sent coherent data to Earth since November. NASA has been trying to diagnose what the Voyager mission’s project manager, Suzanne Dodd, called the “most serious issue” the robotic probe has faced since she took the job in 2010.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

This one hurts a bit. Voyager 1 is a remarkable spacecraft. It launched on September 5, 1977—and has exceeded its expected lifespan by decades. It is the first human-made craft to exit the heliosphere and enter interstellar space. For its many accomplishments, the photo Voyager 1 took on February 14, 1990, most captures my imagination. At Carl Sagan’s urging, NASA engineers sent the commands to turn Voyager—then out beyond Neptune, nearly 3.7 billion miles away—towards Earth one final time to take the final photos it would capture before turning off its cameras to conserve power. One of the photos it took is the image leading this newsletter: the Pale Blue Dot. The Earth in the photo is a dot less than a pixel in size about halfway down the orange stripe on the right. As Sagan wrote about the image, “Look again at that dot. That’s here. That’s home. That’s us.” Here’s a video of Sagan putting this photo into a cosmic-scale perspective. Thank you, Voyager 1.

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#2

The First Part Of Joe Biden’s Speech Was SO Important (Brian Beutler, Off Message)

But with Trump unvanquished, and hook-or-crook desperate to return to office, it’s essential that the public not forget his disastrous presidency or the danger he poses to freedom in the U.S. and around the world. And to the extent voters have forgotten they need to be reminded. 

That’s why the first 15 minutes of Biden’s third State of the Union address were so, so important—both as an answer to the discourse of the moment, and for setting the tone of the campaign to come.

At the top of the speech, when viewership is highest and reporters form first impressions, he delivered a damning recitation of Trump’s record, the Republican agenda, their joint assault on reproductive rights, and their ongoing effort to sabotage the U.S. and the world order.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

President Biden’s State of the Union address successfully debunked the notion that he is too old to take on the job. And—significantly—he went on offense against MAGA and opponents of our democracy. Biden and the Democrats need to remind voters about what Donald Trump did in his first term—and explain how the transition plans for a Trump second term grow from those authoritarian tendencies. Voters have a stark choice in this election. Will our democracy continue imperfectly, or will Trump become not our 47th president but our first dictator? Will we leave people of color, the LGBTQ+ community, and women to have their rights systemically destroyed on the white Christian nationalist altar? Trump and his MAGA supporters are telling us clearly what they intend. I am glad to see Biden building on his recent speeches about protecting democracy as he ramps up the 2024 campaign.

#3

“Welcome to the End of Democracy.” (Melissa Ryan, Cntl, Alt, Right, Delete)

“Welcome to the end of democracy. We are here to overthrow it completely.” 

That’s how Jack Posobiec opened his remarks at CPAC. Posobiec continued, “We didn’t get all the way there on January 6, but we will endeavor to get rid of it and replace it with this right here,” he said, gesturing to the crowd and holding up his fist.” Posobiec was speaking on a panel with Steve Bannon, whose response to the comment was “Amen.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

As I wrote, Trump supporters are not being subtle. They are screaming the ideas that used to be dog-whistled. This dynamic is a blessing. It makes it easier for those who wish to defend our democracy to clarify what is at stake. These statements are not hyperbole. They are promises.

#4

It Matters That Mainstream Media Missed Katie Britt’s Lie (Parker Malloy, The Present Age)

[Senator Katie Britt] delivered a prepared address that millions of people saw, built around a massive lie. That’s more than just “misleading.” It’s the type of lie that politicians should be shamed out of office for making and should be treated like a scandal. Instead, it’s just business as usual at the Times.

If they missed this, what else are they missing? Getting beaten to the punch by someone without any of mainstream media’s resources demonstrates a lack of focus on those organizations’ parts and is a failure of basic accountability. By allowing stories to run without calling out the lie, these news organizations are helping Britt misinform the public. She exploited a victim’s story to shape a political narrative around a hot-button issue, and if not for [journalist Jonathan] Katz, she may have gotten away with it.

We shouldn’t have to rely on independent journalists with TikTok accounts and newsletters to catch these lies. That’s the point.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Jonathan Katz is a former Associated Press bureau chief who has broken significant stories—including the UN’s attempted cover-up of its peacekeepers’ role in Haiti’s post-earthquake cholera epidemic in 2010. He has credentials. But, as Katz explains in this TikTok, he didn’t have to work terribly hard to uncover the lie at the heart of Senator Britt’s State of the Union response. Where was the New York Times? The Washington Post? The Associated Press? Why are leading media outlets just accepting what politicians are telling them—especially those who have demonstrated a propensity to lie? This situation is especially troubling as we now begin a political campaign season that will feature disinformation efforts, including the use of artificial intelligence. What is it going to take for information to be checked and double-checked rather than accepted as fact? We need reporters to do better. 

Thank you for reading Things I Find Interesting. This post is public so feel free to share it with your family and friends.

#5

Dozens of Rogue California Police Agencies Still Sharing Driver Locations with Anti-Abortion States (Electronic Frontier Foundation)

California Attorney General Rob Bonta should crack down on police agencies that still violate Californians’ privacy by sharing automated license plate reader information with out-of-state government agencies, putting abortion seekers and providers at particular risk, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the state’s American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) affiliates urged in a letter to Bonta today. 

In October 2023, Bonta issued a legal interpretation and guidance clarifying that a 2016 state law, SB 34, prohibits California’s local and state police from sharing information collected from automated license plate readers (ALPR) with out-of-state or federal agencies. However, despite the Attorney General’s definitive stance, dozens of law enforcement agencies have signaled their intent to continue defying the law. 

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

There are at least 35 California police agencies that have told civil liberties organizations that they intend to defy the law and share this license plate information. Law enforcement agencies in forced-birth states could use this data to prosecute pregnant people who come to California for reproductive health care services. Jessica Valenti at Abortion, Every Day, also recently explained how anti-abortion activists can weaponize personal data (for example, through the purchase of location information from data brokers to target people who visit Planned Parenthood clinics). California elected officials—from the state and local levels—need to step in now and demand compliance with the law and stop law enforcement agencies from sharing of this information. 

#6

Inside A Secret Society Of Prominent Right-Wing Christian Men Prepping For A ‘National Divorce’ (Josh Kovensky, Talking Points Memo)

A secret, men-only right-wing society with members in influential positions around the country is on a crusade: to recruit a Christian government that will form after the right achieves regime change in the United States, potentially via a “national divorce.” 

It sounds like the stuff of fantasy, but it’s real. The group is called the Society for American Civic Renewal (the acronym is pronounced “sacker” by its members). It is open to new recruits, provided you meet a few criteria: you are male, a “trinitarian” Christian, heterosexual, an “un-hyphenated American,” and can answer questions about Trump, the Republican Party, and Christian Nationalism in the right way. One chapter leader wrote to a prospective member that the group aimed to “secure a future for Christian families.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

While we had previously heard about the Society for American Civic Renewal in a report from The Guardian, this story provides a significant amount of new information about the group’s mission, membership criteria, and leadership. It is quite a read about how a part of the Christian Nationalist community that is organizing. And, as Kovensky adds, “Who is excluded, in some sense, reveals more about SACR than who is allowed in. The group bans anyone who is not Christian: Jews, Muslims, Hindus, and others. But it goes further than that and bars “non-trinitarian” Christians; Mormons, Jehovah Witnesses, Christian Scientists, and others cannot be SACR members.” That is not the kind of country in which I wish to live. These are the stakes. 

#7

Five Facts About Police Deception and Youth You Should Know (Nigel Quiroz, The Innocence Project) 

When people are brought in for questioning by police, they are expected to tell the truth. Most people would assume that goes both ways — that the police must also be truthful during interrogations, but the reality is that the police can lie to you during an interrogation, and it is not uncommon for them to do so.

But why would police lie? During an interrogation, officers may lie about evidence they have to pressure you into confessing to a crime they believe you have committed — even if you are innocent.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

In a country where one is supposedly innocent until proven guilty, it is outrageous that law enforcement can lie during interrogations. Police can falsely tell you that someone else has confessed. Police can falsely tell you that an admission will mean you avoid prison. Police can falsely claim that the investigation clearly shows your guilt even though that investigation is far from complete. As the Innocence Project explains, false confessions are a leading cause of wrongful convictions in the United States—contributing to 29 percent of wrongful convictions. This dynamic is also one of the reasons why attorneys urge their innocent clients not to cooperate with the police during an investigation (a situation I had to experience). This problem is even worse for young people, given their incomplete brain development. California became one of the first few states to ban law enforcement from using deception, false threats, physical harm, and psychologically manipulative tactics against minors when Governor Gavin Newsom signed AB 2644 into law in 2022. That was a vital step forward. However, it is not okay for law enforcement to use those tactics against anyone—especially since we know how often they lead to false convictions of innocent people. 

#8

The Biden Deepfake Robocall Is Just the Start of Our AI Election Hell (Tony Ho Tran, The Daily Beast)

“Voters all over New Hampshire seemingly received phone calls from President Joe Biden in the lead-up to the state’s primary on Tuesday. The call—which came from the phone number of a former New Hampshire Democratic Party chair—seemed to urge people not to vote in the upcoming primary and “save their vote” for November’s general election.

“What a bunch of malarkey,” Biden’s voice stated on the call, echoing one of the president’s oft-used chestnuts. It added, “Voting this Tuesday only enables the Republicans in their question to elect Donald Trump Again. Your vote makes a difference in November, not this Tuesday.”

Of course, the phone call and its message never came from Biden, but rather a deepfake powered by artificial intelligence to mimic the president’s voice.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Using artificial intelligence to facilitate election interference and disinformation will be a constant challenge in 2024. I fear we are not prepared to deal with its ramifications. As Ctrl Alt Right Delete’s Melissa Ryan wrote in reaction to what happened in New Hampshire, “With more than 50 countries holding elections, 2024 is shaping up to be a global shitstorm of election-related disinformation, threats, and online toxicity.” Ryan also notes that with recent newsroom layoffs, fewer reporters are available to report on election disinformation efforts even as the need grows. That’s not great. I hope candidates understand just how much they must focus on exposing and debunking disinformation attempts. Campaigns must be quick and forceful in their efforts to provide accurate information. We have to work diligently to defend the truth. 

#9

How media amnesia becomes GOP amnesty (Mark Jacob, Stop the Presses)

“After the Jan. 6 insurrection but before Donald Trump left office, Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina sent a text to Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows:

“Our LAST HOPE is invoking Marshall Law!! PLEASE URGE TO PRESIDENT TO DO SO!!”

Norman wanted Trump to call out the military to prevent the peaceful transfer of power to the duly elected Joe Biden. Even after lives were lost because of the assault on the Capitol, Norman kept pushing for a coup. (And yes, Norman is a sloppy texter who didn’t know how to spell “martial law.”)

This traitorous text is something we ought to remember about Norman. But in the New York Times’ 34 most recent mentions of Norman over more than a year, the Times has referred to the text zero times. Zero. The Times has depicted Norman as just another conservative lawmaker addressing the issues of the day.

This is media amnesia, and it’s helping would-be fascists get away with their treachery as they plot to commit more.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Mark Jacob is one of several media analysts—including Margaret Sullivan, Jay Rosen, James Fallows, and Dan Froomkin, among others—who have been begging their colleagues to be aware of this dynamic. Jacob provides several other examples demonstrating how damaging these omissions continue to be. I’ve believed for some time that the first question to any elected official should be, “who won the 2020 presidential election.” If the answer is not Joe Biden, the interview should end—because if an elected official will lie in response to this question, how can we trust their answers to any other question? It is not the public’s job to remember these nuances. We need reporters to provide the context so voters can make informed decisions.

Quick Pitches

  • Stadiums and arenas are set to collect $18B in property tax breaks over their lifetimes (Neil deMause, Field of Schemes)
    It would be great if politicians would stop giving billionaires lots of money to build something they would do regardless.
  • The 1944 CIA guide to sabotaging meetings (Adam Driver, Authentic Communications)
    Yikes. Yeah, this publication is an excellent guide to sabotaging a group’s ability to make progress in a meeting. What’s sad is how many meetings I attend that feature these techniques—perhaps unintentionally? 
  • Timeline of the Far Future (Information is Beautiful)
    Here are some reasons you don’t need to stress too much about what may be on your to-do list. “How long until the Sun turns into a black dwarf? How long before the Earth is destroyed? Don’t lose too much sleep over these. Why? Because photosynthesis will not be possible in 800 million years, ending all life. If we’re not annihilated by a colossal asteroid first.”
  • American Führerin: The (Potential) Tyranny of Elise Stefanik, VP (Greg Olear, Prevail)This comparison gave me chills—of the bad kind. “In short, Trump needs a Putin to his Yeltsin. Elise Stefanik is Putin.”
  • “I Need to Get Back to My Crew”: Amos and Crowd-Sourced Morality (Noah Berlatsky, Everything Is Horrible)I love this show because of the difficult questions it asks viewers to confront. Amos is a complicated character, but his journey to improve is worthy of more conversation. “The Expanse provides some ethical lessons about learning about ethics.”

The Closer

How many times do you have to fold a piece of paper to reach the Moon?

Okay, you have your guess? I suspect it is fewer times than you think.

Here we go: the answer if 42. Yep. Just 42 times. Ethan Sieel at Big Think does all the math for you. Enjoy!

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

It has been said that astronomy is a humbling and character-building experience. There is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world. To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly with one another, and to preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home we’ve ever known.”—Carl Sagan, Pale Blue Dot

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