A MAGA Feed, and DST

  • A MAGA feed;
  • A solution to the Daylight Saving Time debate.
– – –

For today, I want to examine this piece closely. The polarization of American society may mean that the two sides disagree, but perhaps also that they don’t even understand each other, and may perhaps seal themselves off from each other’s points of view.

Slate, Luke Winkie, 8 Mar 2025: I Wanted One Day of Peace on the Internet, subtitled “So I swapped my feeds for a dose of what it’s like to live in the certainty of MAGA land.”

The word “certainty” strikes me immediately. How are they so certain? Because they live in their bubble, I’d guess, and conservatives tend toward black and white thinking. But I’ll begin at the beginning.

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Tyson & Walker, TO INFINITY AND BEYOND

Neil deGrasse Tyson and Lindsey Nyx Walker
Subtitled “A Journey of Cosmic Discovery”
(National Geographic, Sep. 2023, 319pp, including 16pp acknowledgements, further reading, illustrations credits, and index.)

This is literally a heavier-than-usual book that is nevertheless a light-weight read (even if some of its subject matter isn’t light-weight itself). The coauthor is a senior producer and head writer at StarTalk, a podcast I see snippets of on Facebook but have never listened to regularly. The book is heavily illustrated, both with photographs and artist conceptions, and the subject matter is fairly basic, so that I could compare this on both counts to the Dawkins book I wrote up here last month.

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Simplicity and Idiocy

  • American idiocy;
  • War images flagged for removal in Pentagon DEI purge;
  • Why are conservatives obsessed with the debunked link between vaccines and autism?
  • Trump and Musk are ungoverning;

I admit that I follow a Facebook group called America’s Cultural Decline Into Idiocy. It consists of group members posting examples (by others) of what they take as idiocy, for example someone who did not understand the movie:

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Tom Nichols, OUR OWN WORST ENEMY

Subtitled “The Assault From Within on Modern Democracy”
(Oxford, August 2021, xvii + 245pp, including 25pp notes and index)

Here’s the last of several books about current issues that I read in December and January. I read this one because I liked the author’s previous book, THE DEATH OF EXPERTISE (reviewed here). And this one has an unexpected counter-intuitive thesis: that the discontent in the modern world is derived from how successful we’ve been in creating it.

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As with previous reviews, my complete notes are below, following this summary set of bullets. Continue reading

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Back and Forth, On and Off

  • CDC recalls fired workers;
  • Tariffs are delayed again;
  • Why would Trump want to destabilize the country?
  • Texas would make identifying as transgender a felon;
  • Trump blames the victims;
  • TN names July a month of “fasting and prayer”;
  • Miracles are happening every day because Trump is listening to the prophets.
– – –

Trump has no plan. He has bluster, and a magic toy he’s discovered that he thinks can solve everything: tariffs. But he can’t make up his mind. On again, off again. Even his supporters are becoming discontent.

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AP News, 5 Mar 2025: ‘Read this e-mail immediately’: CDC tells about 180 fired employees to come back to work

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Annalee Newitz, STORIES ARE WEAPONS

Subtitled: “Psychological Warfare and the American Mind”
(Norton, June 2024, xxv + 246pp, including 42pp of acknowledgements, notes, and notes.)

Here’s a book that offers a different spin on the ideas of misinformation, fake news, and narratives, than earlier books I’ve read on these subjects. The author is a journalist and science fiction novelist, with now three books each of nonfiction and fiction.

Broadly, as the subtitle says, this is about the idea of psychological warfare, of deliberately spinning the truth or telling alternative narratives for political purposes. Its techniques go way back before social media. From the perspective the modern ideas of fake news, psychological warfare isn’t about conspiracy theories; it’s about misinformation spread deliberately to sway people’s ideas and opinions. One surprising player in this history is one Paul Linebarger, who wrote science fiction under the name Cordwainer Smith mostly in the 1950s and 60s. It’s long been known that Smith worked for the US government and spent his early life in China, but I’ve never seen the extent of his work in psychological warfare spelled out as Newitz does in this book.

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Many Lies, No Coherent Plan

  • Commentaries and fact-checks about Trump’s speech to Congress last night.
  • Dana Milbank on how Trump has set the country back 100 years;
  • Fred Kaplan on Trump’s unhinged plans for the rest of the world;
  • And Heather Digby Parton and David Frum;
  • Trump still claims 150-year-old people are getting Social Security; and he doesn’t know “transgenic” from “transgender”;
  • Fox News pivots to blaming Biden;
  • Thomas L. Friedman on what an actual process for improving the government might be like.
– – –

I did not watch the speech last night (Trump to Congress, in the spot on the calendar where the State of the Union speech would usually be), nor have I even read the commentaries and fact-checks closely. But I will list some of the headlines, which are not surprising, and excerpt a quotation or two.

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Stepping Outward, from Tariffs to Globalization

  • Rationales for tariffs against Canada and Mexico: perhaps Trump just hates Canadian decency, how his rationales keep changing, and in any case they’re foolish;
  • With my thoughts about two possible motivations;
  • How Trump is losing the 21st century: by alienating friends, destroying the business environment, and undermining science and research;
  • How Trump is undoing the revitalization of US society set by FDR;
  • About the backlash to globalization;
  • And brief items about white men, town halls, and education.
– – –

Trump doesn’t seem to have reasons for doing anything except for childish petulance.

Paul Krugman, 4 Mar 2025: Trump Hates Canada for its Decency, subtitled “The president lacks basic decency, and loathes people who do”

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Steven Sloman and Philip Fernbach, THE KNOWLEDGE ILLUSION

Subtitled “Why We Never Think Alone”
(Riverhead Books, March 2017, 296pp including 30pp acknowledgements, notes, and index.)

This is a book that I’ve thought of as a companion to the O’Connor/Weatherall book I just reviewed ever since they’ve been sitting together on my TBR shelves for the 6 or 7 years since they were published. Their themes seemed adjacent, their dustjackets are similar, and  each has two coauthors, none of whom I’d heard of before.

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Triage, and Kittens

Busy weekend, so I’m behind and have three days of political links to catch up on. I’ll triage.

  • Reactions to the meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky and Trump/Vance/et al;
  • Conservatives react by projecting;
  • And links without comments about corruption, witchcraft, getting worse, contempt, taking credit, chaos, WSJ, and price of eggs.

Beginning with: The Trump/Vance/Zelensky meeting was a setup.

Slate, Jim Newell: Volodymyr Zelensky, subtitled “A setup.”

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