Tuesday, January 07, 2025

ANS -- from FB -- the Future Will Prevail

Found this on FaceBook.  
The best January 6, 2021, essay, by Anand Giridharadas:
It's scary out there right now. It's going to be scary for some time to come. What has been unleashed, what has been revealed, is ugly. It is what makes democracies die.
In the despair, it is easy to lose perspective. I certainly do all the time. But from time to time, I step back and try to remember where we are as a country on the arc of things.
And I see then that this is both a very dark time and, potentially, a very bright time. It's important to hold these truths together.
When I look down at the ground of the present right now, I feel depressed. If I lift my head to the horizon, I see a different picture.
This is not the chaos of the beginning of something. This is the chaos of the end of something.
The.Ink is a reader-supported publication about money, power, and culture. Both free and paid subscriptions are available. If you want to support my work, the best way is by taking out a paid subscription.
Because the 40 years of this plutocratic takeover — of the ideology that said if you're torn between doing what's good for money and what's good for people, always do what's good for money; these stories about lazy workers and welfare queens; and any number of other fraudulent tales that were meant to justify life in the Hamptons — if I allow myself to feel this way on a good day, it all actually feels like it's burning down.
And on matters of race and identity, likewise, the Trump era doesn't have the crackle of a launch. It has been a mourning. A mourning for white power. A mourning for a time when simply to be white and show up was enough. A mourning for an era in which simply to be a man, and not necessarily an especially capable one, could get you ahead of other people. A mourning for a time when you could be the default idea of an American and not have to share your toys.
We must understand that what we've been living through is backlash. Backlash. It's not the engine of history. It is the revolt against the engine of history. Then we might remember — just to pat ourselves on the back for a second — that what we are actually endeavoring to do right now is to become a kind of society that has seldom, if ever, existed in history. Which is become a majority-minority, democratic superpower.
I have a lot of love for my friends in Europe, but actually none of you all have your immigration rates and naturalization rates at a high enough level to get there anytime soon. And you all may never get there.
Look at India and China. I love India. My parents are from India. India is never going to be a nation of immigrants. It's never going to be a country of people from all the world. It can barely get unity with people just from India. China is never going to be a nation of immigrants. No shade. That's just not their history. It's not who they are.
We are falling on our face because we are jumping very high right now. We are trying to do something that does not work in theory.
To be a country of all the world, a country made up of all the countries, a country without a center of identity, without a default idea of what a human being is or looks like, without a shared religious belief, without a shared language that is people's first language at home. And what we're trying to do is awesome. It is literally awesome in the correct sense of that word.
And, therefore, that we are having insurrections on the Mall or four years of an autocratic attempt or racism oozing through the television and social media portals is both terrifying and a completely predictable, inevitable result of people in power exploiting these transitional anxieties for their own pecuniary gain.
And what we have to do is get smarter than those powerful people. Get more organized than them, and understand that there is a different story to tell those who mistakenly went to the Mall and the 12 percent of Americans who actually supported that terrorist attack, and everybody else — a story to tell them about something great we are trying to do. We will actually create a country that's better for every single person. But we have to be willing to tell that story forcefully. We have to be willing to fight those people tooth and nail, and we have to fight to win.
We are living through a revolt against the future. The future will prevail.

Wednesday, January 01, 2025

Fwd: link from Sandra



---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Joyce Segal <joyceck10@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Jan 1, 2025 at 4:22 PM
Subject: link from Sandra
To: Kim Cooper <kimc0240@gmail.com>

ANS group -- here's a brief video from a comedian. 
--Kim

Monday, December 30, 2024

Fwd: EV news



---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Joyce Segal <joyceck10@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Dec 27, 2024 at 11:28 PM
Subject: EV news
To: <eric.lewis@runbox.com>
ANS Group -- Here's an article about EVs versus hybrids, from Joyce.

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

ANS -- A list of quality News sources

This, written by Rebecca Solnit, the writer, was on my Facebook page today.  I think it's a good list of news sources for today.  
--Kim
So! Here are my go-to news sources, since a lot of mainstream media never were very helpful and a lot got worse, and I've been meaning to share recommendations for better sources. You learn in your civics classes (if you ever had them) that we have three branches of government; the news as the Fourth Estate is kind of the fourth branch in good ways, when it holds the first three accountable and contributes to an informed public, and in bad ways when it ignores, normalizes, or misrepresents corruption, lies, and trouble. Which it's done a lot lately, or big legacy media has and right-wing media always did.
Democracy requires an informed and engaged public, which is work that a lot of us can and do do individually, but the corruption and failures of both right-wing and mainstream news media has contributed to the crisis of democracy, and I have to add that a number of left-wing outlets seem to be stuck in old frameworks. So most of us are cobbling together a news diet out of an assortment of stuff.
Staying informed and engaged yourself is part of what you can do to defend democracy; supporting some of these newsletters and magazines below is also part of the work (Silicon Valley has eaten into the advertising income that supported the news industry and cannibalized the product itself). Maybe you want to give some subscriptions for that holiday coming up?
So here's my own news diet and recommendations:
--The Guardian, of course (and yes I write for them; yes I'm proud to do so and yes I go there every day for updates and opinions). Not US-based but more US coverage than all but the biggest newspapers, not afraid to have a solid progressive orientation which means they don't have to pretend there are two sides to stuff like whether women are people who deserve rights.
Longtime Guardian journalist Carole Cadwalladr, who was one of the first to raise the alarm about tech-driven election interference in Brexit and the US and beyond, has started a newsletter, but she's also still at the Guardian. Her newsletter: https://broligarchy.substack.com
--The Washington Post (still, and yeah, Bezos quashed their Harris endorsement and sometimes they publish headlines or have coverage almost as horrible as the NY Times, but there's a lot of good, solid coverage of news there; I also check it/read it daily. And yeah, I do go to the NYT periodically because their huge staff includes some superb journalists doing coverage that no one else is, but they're a big part of the problem overall and likely going to get worse, because they never met a power they didn't want to bow before, so I don't read the NYT regularly). Remember that even when you hate management decisions, you might still love some of the good journalists at a newspaper or network. (And remember we mostly don't write our own headlines.)
--@Heather Cox Richardson's Substack newsletter, also available as email to you and posted on her FB page (proud to have started following her right after she started these news/history analysis/summary essays in the fall of 2019; thrilled to see a historian have such impact).
--The New Yorker still has superb reporting on everything from sexual abuse (thank you Ronan Farrow) to Syria to Bill McKibben on climate and some of the best investigative journalists out there (thank you on everything Jane Mayer).
--The New Republic has good politics, good editorials (not that I always agree with any publication) and I really like former NYT columnist Greg Sargent's Daily Blast for podcast political updates https://newrepublic.com/podc.../the-daily-blast-greg-sargent
--Waging Nonviolence is an online newspaper that provides really thoughtful and often soulful takes on political problems and solutions, often centering, yeah, nonviolent activism and organizing strategy: https://wagingnonviolence.org
--Anand Giridharadas writes a Substack newsletter called The.Ink that has thoughtful and insightful political commentary. Like Anand's newsletter, Wajahat Ali's thelefthook.substack.com provides insightful progressive and yes, feminist, political commentary from men inflected by their status as brown sons of South Asian immigrants.
--There are a bunch of media critics online, including Greg Sargent above, Aaron Rupar of Public Notice, Paul Waldman, Mark Jacobs, a former Chicago Tribune editor who has a newsletter, and several others who I found particularly helpful when the press went into its Biden Must Go (but Trump can stay) herd stampede. I follow them mostly on BlueSky (used to on Twitter). Talking Points Memo is also a good progressive political news source/media criticism site.
--Jessica Valenti's Substack newsletter Abortion Every Day provides crucial reproductive rights coverage. Also on Substack, which I do not love as a corporation for various reasons--if you're starting a newsletter, Ghost and other options exist!
--Speaking of which, science fiction writer and trans rights champion Charlie Jane Anders has a non-substack newsletter full of wit and hope and good ideas
--Brian Merchant's Blood in the Machine is a brilliant Substack newsletter focused on tech and its corrosiveness. Brian was at the L.A. Times but got laid off and went independent.
--Here at home Mission Local provides San Francisco news coverage that's reliable, smart, and not kissing up to tech billionaires and the broligarchy.
--On the Media has great radio shows/podcasts talking about how the media failed us/how a story is being presented, week by week. https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/otm
CLIMATE
--Most mainstream sources don't do enough coverage, though some newspapers have good climate journalists. Here climate-specific news sources can be really great, and there are lots of them including:
and of course Bill McKibben's newsletter The Crucial Years, one of three climate newsletters on Substack I'll recommend here; the other two being Emily Atkins's Heated (good overall coverage with a fair amount of fun snark) and David Roberts's Volts, which is primarily a free podcast focusing on renewable energy technology. You can follow almost anything on Substack for free, though I support a handful of writers there with paid subscriptions.
The Rocky Mountain Institute sends out really amazing news/ analysis focused on the renewable revolution. The International Energy Agency does the same. Oil Change International



, on whose board I serve, sends out periodic updates and reports. Any climate organization you join will send news and updates.
In the old days, I followed a lot of climate scientists, journalists, progressive elected politicians (notably AOC), and organizers on Twitter, but I'm off Twitter and slowly rebuilding those sources on BlueSky. It was actually a great place to follow breaking news and discussion of news, including by most of the people mentioned above. BlueSky is coming to be that source for us--had great live reporting on the coup attempt in South Korea and the regime collapse in Syria.
Will add to this as I think of stuff (and no I don't go to all these things every day because there are only 24 hours in a day, but I do go to them all regularly). What's your news diet?