1,170,763 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2024
    1. An integrated system of mental elements (beliefs, values, worldview, attitudes, norms), the behaviors motivated by those mental elements, and the material items created by those behaviors; A system shared by the members of the society; 100 percent learned, not innate; Based on symbolic systems, the most important of which is language; Humankind’s most important adaptive mechanism, and Dynamic, constantly changing.

      It is amazing how much culture impacts our outlook on life and how we respond to events, big or small

    1. It seems to be a rule of wisdom never to rely on your memory alone

      The law does this a lot, you can't trust only your memory.

    2. terror that scares us from self-trust is our consistency;

      Depends on the person

    3. the forced smile which we put on in company where we do not feel at ease in answer to conversation which does not interest us.

      Being nice gets you way more things than being mean, just saying.

    4. but the great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of solitude.

      As long as you stay true to yourself you can/will be great

    5. not what the people think.

      Again he doesn't care about others, only what is true to himself.

    6. manhood to withhold.

      Would he say the same towards modern day things like charities and small buisnesses?

    7. rude truth

      Because people dont like to hear the truth sometimes

    8. Good and bad are but names very readily transferable to that or this; the only right is what is after my constitution, the only wrong what is against it.

      Good and bad are concepts that change based on the person, I really like this.

    9. They do not seem to me to be such; but if I am the Devil’s child, I will live then from the Devil

      Okay he really is proving that he will follow his own thoughts even if its the devil.

    10. Society is a joint-stock company, in which the members agree, for the better securing of his bread to each shareholder, to surrender the liberty and culture of the eater.

      Capitalism, but it depends on the situation, nowadays people want to be different while still fitiing in.

    11. He would utter opinions on all passing affairs, which being seen to be not private, but necessary, would sink like darts into the ear of men, and put them in fear.

      In order to bring up issues that need to be changed you need to be able to speak them out

    12. Lethe

      Magic river, reminds me of the magic mountain.

    13. But the man is, as it were, clapped into jail by his consciousness.

      This is all in his mind.

    14. A boy

      What about the woman youth?

    15. Do not think the youth has no force, because he cannot speak to you and me. Hark! in the next room his voice is sufficiently clear and emphatic. It seems he knows how to speak to his contemporaries. Bashful or bold, then, he will know how to make us seniors very unnecessary.

      Young people will always have the power to change the future no matter what period you are in.

    16. advancing on Chaos and the Dark.

      The natives?

    17. the absolutely trustworthy

      God? If not nobody is absolutely trustworthy

    18. God will not have his work made manifest by cowards

      Are the cowards the ones who dont believe in themselves?

    19. bestowed on that plot of ground which is given to him to till.

      If he is given something he forgets about all the other things up for the taking?

    20. abide by our spontaneous impression with good-humored inflexibility then most when the whole cry of voices is on the other side.

      He really wants us to be ourselves no matter what.

    21. To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in your private heart is true for all men, — that is genius. Speak your latent conviction, and it shall be the universal sense; for the inmost in due time becomes the outmost, — and our first thought is rendered back to us by the trumpets of the Last Judgment. Familiar as the voice of the mind is to each

      Be who you are, and that is strengthened by the bible.

    22. Columbus found the New World

      so this is nottttt what we're gonna say!

    23. They cannot imagine how you aliens have any right to see, — how you can see; ‘It must be somehow that you stole the light from us.’

      Who are they referring to as aliens...

    24. The gods love him because men hated him.

      hmmmm

    25. it is infirmity of will. Regret calamities, if you can thereby help the sufferer; if not, attend your own work, and already the evil begins to be repaired.

      If it cannot be changed, then leave it in the past and continue on, it'll change itself

    26. The prayer of the farmer kneeling in his field to weed it,

      Farmer James

    27. As soon as the man is at one with God, he will not beg. He will then see prayer in all action.

      As soon as someone is devoted to God, God will be present in their life.

    28. for he does not postpone his life, but lives already

      Lives in the present, as Emerson said before is the way of living fully.

    29. all influence

      The perfect man doesn't need anyone other than himself.

    30. Ne te quaesiveris extra.”

      Look within yourself, make sense considering the title

    31. I must be myself. I cannot break myself any longer for you, or you. If you can love me for what I am, we shall be the happier. If you cannot, I will still seek to deserve that you should. I will not hide my tastes or aversions.

      good one Emerson

    32. The power men possess to annoy me

      lol same

    33. I like the silent church before the service begins, better than any preaching

      this is reasonable, and I actually agree with this about many things

    34. divine fact

      what is the divine fact?

    35. the Supreme Cause,

      which is....

    36. But man postpones or remembers; he does not live in the present, but with reverted eye laments the past, or, heedless of the riches that surround him, stands on tiptoe to foresee the future. He cannot be happy and strong until he too lives with nature in the present, above time.

      its common to dwell on past experiences, but you will feel the must human. in the present.

    37. It must be that when God speaketh he should communicate, not one thing, but all things; should fill the world with his voice; should scatter forth light, nature, time, souls, from the centre of the present thought; and new date and new create the whole.

      how can God do that

    38. Green- wich

      i wonder why there is a dash in the middle

    39. antinomianism;

      is the belief that people are not bound by laws or rules, especially religious ones

    40. This is the ultimate fact

      is this referring to the essay itself?

    41. what is called life, and what is called death.

      the circle of life

    42. in the full-blown flowe

      this means something that is at its best or most beautiful state

    43. Do not think the youth has no force

      gen z has more of an impact nowadays than adults ever did

    44. the absolutely trustworthy was

      I am confused who is being talked about here

    45. by coward

      confused about who the cowards are in this sentence

    46. lustre of the firmament

      this phrase means the sky or "bright heaven" also can describe starts in the sky

    47. admonition

      giving someone a gentle warning or advice. can also be a reminder to do the right thing

    48. Not so, O friends! will the God deign to enter and inhabit you, but by a method precisely the reverse.

      ...we can inhabit God?

    49. The Democrats from New Hampshire!

      Was this written before or after the party switch?

    50. Columbus found the New World

      Side-eyeing this one...

    51. For every Stoic was a Stoic; but in Christendom where is the Christian?

      What a line!!

    52. Where is the master who could have taught Shakspeare? Where is the master who could have instructed Franklin, or Washington, or Bacon, or Newton? Every great man is a unique.

      This is ignoring a lot of progress and people who learned from those who came before them...everything we have right now has been steadily built up over time.

    53. Swedenborgism

      Never heard of this until now - I looked it up, and it's a religion referred to as The New Church and seems to be related to Christianity?

    54. As men’s prayers are a disease of the will, so are their creeds a disease of the intellect.

      This sounds very discrediting to those who find strength through prayer and their religious doctrine.

    55. But prayer as a means to effect a private end is meanness and theft.

      What about prayer for personal protection? Where does that fall in the realm of the as mentioned goodness and selfishness?

    56. for he does not postpone his life, but lives already

      I feel like the idea of postponing living how you want to for the sake of something else, like getting married/getting a degree/etc. is around a lot today as well.

    57. We shun the rugged battle of fate, where strength is born.

      Weirdly enough, this reminds me of the Illiad & the Odyssey.

    58. I like the silent church before the service begins, better than any preaching.

      For whatever reason, this was really powerful to me. It really is a certain feeling to be standing alone in a silent church - the architecture itself, stained glass and wood, feels more powerful than any preaching I've heard.

    59. Truth and Right

      Especially because of the capitalization, I'd like to see what Emerson defines "truth" and "right" as.

    1. The earliest printed book, AD 868.

      Wouldn't that be considered a scroll, rather than a book?

    2. Mechanics was the pioneer among the modern sciences

      Mechanics to this day are crucial to our society.

    3. We don't know exactly when paper was first used in China but evidence from archaeological records indicate that it was prior to the first century AD.  In China, the most common source for paper was the bark of the paper mulberry tree (Gies & Gies 1994 p 182). Paper is made by tearing up rags, or the bark of trees or certain grasses and putting them into a large pot with water. The mixture is boiled and the pulplike mass that lies at the bottom is removed, strained and spread out to dry. Originally, paper was rough but, eventually over time, the making of paper was improved with sizing, dyes, and the use of molds made out of bamboo strips. Paper was first used by the Chinese for wrapping and it was not until the 3rd century that paper replaced bamboo, silk, and wood as a writing medium.

      The whole idea inn how paper was first used was interesting to me we don't really here that now days

    1. One of the most important 15th century applications for the waterwheel was to pump out mine shafts.

      I am curious as to how water was used in order to abstract golds.

    2. He also notes that the clock served as a model for many other types of mechanical products.

      I can understand as to why clocks are heavily referenced, mainly because of their longevity of relevance.

    3. About 725 AD, a Chinese engineer, Liang Ling-Tsan invented the mechanical escapement, which is a key device in all mechanical clocks.

      I find it super interesting that an invention from way back then, is still essential in todays society.

    4. One of the most important developments in the Middle Ages was the experimentation and developments in iron production. As noted by Bert Hall in his essay, "Iron is one of the most useful metals ever discovered, but it is also one of the more difficult metals to understand in history, especially in medieval history. Iron comes in several forms, and the complications involved in producing each of them fosters further confusion."

      I didn't know about this experimentation and development.

    5. One of the most elaborate clock towers was built by Su Sung and his associates in 1088 A.D.

      its interesting to know the clock towers werre built and b whoom

    1. Drip drop drip drop drop drop drop But there is no water

      In his annotation from last year, Parth draws a very interesting parallel between the onomatopoeic dripping of water and atonal music: “this onomatopoeia…lacks a concrete framework with which the notes—"drip" and "drop"—arrange themselves, nor does it have a "triad" that the notes "drip" and "drop" must return to.” Parth goes on to interpret the atonality of water as related to purity and constancy. Building on-bending, if you will-Parth’s analysis, an interesting added dimension here is that, if the grounded reality of this section is atonal, the portions where water is hypothetically present induces a more perplexing state because we are goaded with the almost tangible yet unrealizable presence of abundant water. Music traditionally has key because it is pleasant and reassuring for eon-conditioned human ears and consciousnesses. So, by creating tension between atonally dripping water and the promise of abundant water, Eliot casts the presence of water as a more abstract and less certain entity.

      This interpretation has some logical basis because, unlike atonal music which is characterizable despite being disorienting at first, the water here only exists in the mind of the speaker who is yearning for hydration, ostensibly beyond the absolute comprehension of even the most astute scholar in a similar way to how the water is beyond the speaker’s scope of consumption. This taunting absence is extended even to sweat, which is somehow “dry” and “sterile” thunder which offers the promise of torrential rain and salvation but never actually offers such a luxury. Also, in analyzing the promise of water, the contrast between it–the most essential substance for human life and rocks–rather useless objects–is also quite interesting. Rocks are quite abundant but “Amongst the rock one cannot stop or think.” Thus, at an obvious level, a broader interpretation here is that Eliot is highlighting the criticality of certain substances to human existence and vividly illustrating the unique torture of not having access to them through the creation of a hypothetical. However, an added layer of nuance can be unlocked by contrasting Eliot with Keats.

      Of course, Keats’ work is a more optimistic one in that it casts nature as offering realizable solace while Eliot creates a dynamic verging on torture. More interesting, however, is the contrasting messages on renewal that emerge. Despite not necessarily providing detailed reasoning, indeed rejecting convoluted thought processes generally–as he writes to “fret not after knowledge–I have none”–Keats suggests the presence of some larger force that will assure renewal and ensure that “spring will be a harvest-time.” Eliot, on the other hand, offers an abundance of twisting, looping, and otherwise confusing thoughts on water’s presence, or the lack thereof, and by extension suggests that renewal, which requires water, is not guaranteed. In TWL, there is only the rawness of nature and the speaker, no larger force that allows one to exist in the bliss of having no knowledge and believing in external forces.

      Tying this message on optimism back into my preceding analysis on Eliot’s gauding with water in a wasteland where there is no water–interspersing comfort-inducing tone-into atonal music–the more profound commentary of this section seems to be that humans exist in an inherently frail state where the lack of even the simplest substance of water–that is taken for granted with increasing frequency as development grows–can render us impotent and open to the emotional manipulation that the speaker in this section suffers as he yearns for water, a reflection of his physical suffering.

    2. whirlpool

      The belief that humans are meant for greater pursuits intertwines with the inevitability of death. Despite Eliot’s lack of appreciation for Tennyson’s narrative, this idea seems to have been inspired by Tennyson’s poem. The final line of “Ulysses” becomes the most striking and seemingly summarizes its entire purpose as Ulysses states “to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.” For Ulysses, life’s meaning lies in this quest for knowledge and purpose, despite the certainty of death.

      Dante’s description offers a deeper insight into this theme. When Ulysses describes his story he explains how he encouraged his comrades to embark on a journey, declaring “you were not made to live like brutes or beasts, but to pursue virtue and knowledge.” The comparison to inhumane and violent creatures further signifies a human aspiration to seek meaning beyond mere survival. This pursuit, however, is deemed ineffective: as Ulysses describes, “the whirlwind" stroke the boat “the sea closed over” them, describing how human ambition becomes futile in the face of inescapable fate.

      Eliot reiterates the same theme for Phlebas, who is merely a product of Eliot’s imagination. The readers have no idea of the life of the character and it never becomes important: this meaningless life of a made-up character, however, leads to the same outcome, which Eliot underscores by invoking a similar image of a whirlpool. Furthermore, Eliot’s choice to introduce a character without a rich backstory underscores this notion: all lives, regardless of their perceived significance, converge on the same fate, where death, as an unyielding current, eventually claims every life. A change from whirlwind, which is caused by instability of wind can happen anywhere, to whirlpool, which are results of an intersection of two opposing currents, becomes particularly interesting. Instead of focusing on unpredictability, Eliot uses this image to highlight the result of opposing a sort of “life’s current.”

      The title of this section, a reiteration of Madame Sosostris’s prophecy to “fear death by water,” adds a layer of irony to this opposition: what is the point of fearing this death if Eliot had already predetermined it, had already written both the readers’ and the characters’ fates within the poem? This pathology serves as a direct analogy to reality, where no matter the fear or attempts to battle the circumstances, the outcome remains unchanged.

      In a sense, it appears that Eliot encourages readers to resign to circumstances, as he contrasts the previous Fire Sermon with this Death by Water. The struggles, dissociations, and pleas of the Fire Sermon are juxtaposed with the calm detached description of the Death by Water.

      In contrasting these two sections, Eliot presents two different responses to existential challenges. Whether with Philomela, who attempts to voice her pain as a nightingale with “tereu,” however, as a female nightingale is unable to produce sound, the unnamed female who desperately asks her partner “Why do you never speak to me,” or the five burnings that might relate to disconnection from the five senses in response to the character’s final plea: “O lorg thou pluckst me out”, the characters in "The Fire Sermon" grapple with external circumstances. Whether relationships, disconnection, or the chaos of modern life, their attempts to fight against these forces prove ineffective. Instead, their search for meanings only reveals the futility of their resistance.

      In contrast, "Death by Water" offers a sense of acceptance of mortality. Phlebas has been dead for two weeks – a “fortnight,” when there is nothing to be done anymore. Instead, external circumstances, like “a current under the sea,” carry his body. Eliot reiterates its overarching nature, drawing a comparison between Phlebas, “Gentile or Jew” and the readers.

      The effectiveness of this acceptance is further reflected through form: Death by Water becomes straightforward and concise, while the Fire Sermon constantly grapples with dissonance, contrasting voices, and changes in form.

      Whether in life or in death, external circumstances, like a “current under the sea” seem to carry us to the final destination that remains unchanged despite the life pursuits. Death by Water, thus, invokes a question: maybe it is in the acceptance of the certainty of death and refusal to fight these external circumstances that lies a potential for peace amid this chaos of life?

    3. But dry sterile thunder without rain

      I was intrigued in this passage about Eliot’s use of sound and silence in this passage. The most significant sound here is the “dry sterile thunder without rain.” Normally, thunder typically signals an impending storm, a force of nature that is associated with rain and renewal and strength, particularly in desert landscapes where water brings life. In many religious and mythological traditions, thunder also represents divine intervention or communication—I’m thinking of the thunderclap accompanying the voice of God in the Old Testament or Zeus being the God of thunder in Greek mythology. However, in TWL, thunder is hollow: “dry” and “sterile,” literally incapable of life and disconnected from the vitalizing rain. This use of sound subverts its typical associations: rather than bringing life, the thunder is a dissonant echo of power without substance. The sterile thunder further amplifies the futility of hope, as it gives off some potential and hope (rain, renewal, salvation), but denies fulfillment.

      Silence in this passage does not equal to stillness, but instead to an oppressive absence that heightens the sense of despair. “There is not even silence in the mountains” suggests that even the expected silence of a remote and secluded natural landscape has been perverted. In most literature, silence in nature is often portrayed as peaceful, meditative, or even holy. But the lack of silence in TWL is different. The silence here is almost anti-silence—a void. It emphasizes what should be present but isn’t: vitality and meaning. Eliot’s use of “not even silence” introduces a double negation that reflects the endless waiting for something that will never come. The silence is, in essence, louder than the thunder, because it is filled with the weight of absence. It is not a moment of peace or reflection, but one of desolation and the failure of human and divine communication.

    4. 'That corpse you planted last year in your garden, 'Has it begun to sprout? Will it bloom this year?

      These lines speak to the idea of rebirth/remaking, which is also present in one of Gerard De Nerval's descriptions of his dreams. He contemplates a remake of the world, and has the idea that "There was a massive conspiracy among all living creatures to re-establish the world in its original harmony" (De Nerval, 9). This is similar to Eliot's lines in the sense that something is being reborn/remade as a result of the contributions of living creatures. In these lines from "The Waste Land", a living person had to die in order to get planted (by presumably another living person) and contribute to life that grows from the ground, so the corpse is reborn in the sense that it's contributing to and likely a part of new life. Meanwhile, De Nerval's dream is more obvious with this idea, as it literally says that the remaking of the world was a plan by "all living creatures". Though not quite the same as rebirth, remaking something is still very similar because rebirth and remaking are both different types of renewal.

    1. "astronaut" beautifully translates to "star sailor."
    2. true roots of "helicopter" are "helix" (meaning spiral, as in double helix) and "pteron" (meaning wing, as in pterodactyl, wing finger). So, "helicopter" literally means "spiral wing" – how perfect!
    1. He prayeth well, who loveth well Both man and bird and beast. He prayeth best, who loveth best All things both great and small; For the dear God who loveth us, He made and loveth all.

      Theme (and message) of treating all lives with love and kindness, which comes from the other theme that all lives are valuable, since they were created by God. -MH

    2. He singeth loud his godly hymns That he makes in the wood. He'll shrieve my soul, he'll wash away The Albatross's blood.

      Theme of redemption and forgiveness, specifically the redeeming and healing power of prayer/God. -MH

    3. Like one that on a lonesome road Doth walk in fear and dread, And having once turned round walks on, And turns no more his head ; Because he knows, a frightful fiend Doth close behind him tread.

      Theme of being haunted by guilt/past sins, as well as the Isolation, Fear, and Control that the continued memory of its causal event still brings/has upon its sufferer's life, even after progress towards redemption has been made. This also connects with the theme of redemption itself, as it is that shadowing regret that compels one to overcome and dissipate it through redemption.

      Also, as a fun, semi-related note, this stanza was repurposed in Frankenstein. -MH

    1. patient can keep producing insulin naturally in the coming years, s

      DUDE...Fucking B cell depletion CAR T therapy to cure the autoimmune disease. Autologous stem cells to regenerate the organ.

    2. Two and a half months later, the woman's lifelong dependence on injected insulin came to an end – completely reversing her long-term, hard-to-control diabetes.

      HOLY SHIT

    1. achieved complete B-cell depletion, including B cells implicated in the pathophysiology of their autoimmune disorders.

      WOW..... That's a cure to AA disease.

    1. The stereoscope was a device that spliced together two views of the same image

      Very good example! It swiftly depicts the correlation between Du Bois's charts and photographs, how they work together to uncover a panoramic view of individual lives of black people for us.

    1. Why I do not expect research in artificial intelli-gence to help in building reliable military software;

      Parnas says that they do not expect A.I to build military software, and while they may not use it entirely, they likely will use it to some degree. Artificial intelligence is getting smarter everyday and keeps showing more and more power with each and every update. One day we ask "I wonder if it will be able to do this" and the next update it just that with ease. A.I is getting much stronger than ever before and will likely be used in military software if it is not already.

    2. Worsening the differences between software and other areas of teclinology is a personnel problem. Most de- signers in traditional engineering disciplines have been educated to understand the mathematical tools that are available to them. Most programmers cannot even be- gin to use the meager tools that are available to soft- ware engineers.

      As software development/programming has grown as a discipline more standardized learning methods have become available, leading to better education outcomes and expected knowledge base.

    3. Heuristic programs are de-veloped by a trial and error process in which a newrule is added whenever one finds a case that is nothandled by the old rules. This approach usually yieldsa program whose behavior is poorly understood andhard to predict. AI-Z researchers accept this evolution-ary approach to programming as normal and proper. Itrust such programs even less than I trust unstructuredconventional programs. One never knows when theprogram will fail.

      Since 1985, AI has vastly improved in terms of reliability and understanding of program behavior. Modern AI systems use complex machine learning models rather than simple rule-based heuristics. Techniques like neural networks and reinforcement learning have made it possible for AI to handle tasks like image recognition, speech processing, and even medical diagnosis with much greater accuracy and predictability than the heuristic-based AI of the 1980s.

    4. It is not unusual for software modifications to bemade in the field. Programmers are transported by heli-copter to Navy ships:

      As technology advance, many programming work can be done remotely, Therefore, programmers doesn't need to transport around the fields for software modification. Instead, they could work anywhere they want.

    1. somewhat

      There is an intent of causing fear and harm to the reader and they are trying to convince them of a claim that is not backed up by science and the research behind that science.

    2. makes you slightly more likely

      This tone and wording indicates that the author does not fully know the information/misinformation they are writing and that causes uncertainty to the reader.

    3. The shot is crap.

      This is an example of disinformation. One could tell that this information is disinformation because it is an unreliable source that does not have proper knowledge behind their argument. This opinion and disinformation manipulates a public opinion with not much thought and research behind. This was very identifiable as disinformation because of the informal tone and word usage.

    1. Is the conduct of a criminal prosecution (and of an investigation to decidewhether to prosecute) the exercise of purely executive power?

      The conduct of a criminal prosecution and the decision to investigate whether to prosecute involves the exercise of executive power, but it is not purely executive in nature.

    Annotators

    1. "It ain't a question of his being a good boy," Mama said, "nor of his having good sense. It ain't only the bad ones, nor yet the dumb ones that gets sucked under."

      This is one of my favorite quotes from the story. This is because it is true that anyone can get "sucked under", not just specific types of people.

    2. Then they all gathered around Sonny and Sonny played. Every now and again one of them seemed to say, amen. Sonny's fingers filled the air with life, his life. But that life contained so many others.

      I like this quote because it shows the importance of music for Sonny. It gives him a way to cope with the negative emotions he is feeling.

    1. makes you slightly more likely

      This tone and wording indicates that the author does not fully know the information/misinformation they are writing and that causes uncertainty to the reader.

    2. The shot is crap.

      This is an example of disinformation. One could tell that this information is disinformation because it is an unreliable source that does not have proper knowledge behind their argument. This opinion and disinformation manipulates a public opinion with not much thought and research behind. This was very identifiable as disinformation because of the informal tone and word usage.

    1. There are a number of things I could do. I could set fire to the house, forinstance. I could bundle up some of my clothes, and the sheets, and strike myone hidden match. If it didn't catch, that would be that. But if it did, therewould at least be an event, a signal of some kind to mark my exit. A fewflames, easily put out. In the meantime I could let loose clouds of smoke anddie by suffocation.

      The longest consideration -- resembling Moira, and a sense of power in her demise and death.

    2. I could go to Nick's room, over the garage, as we have done before. Icould wonder whether or not he would let me in, give me shelter. Now thatthe need is real.

      The most tempting option -- especially with her newfound fear of death. Nick's provides the most humanity.

    Annotators

    1. the second national Klan was composed largely of middle-class members.

      what made the second Klan largely composed of middle-class members? Did their ideologies evolve to appeal more to middle class people?

    2. We wish to escape

      A century later, the idea of wanting to escape still hasn't changed. Its crazy to think of how some ideas change vastly from past to present, while others barley change or don't even change at all.

    3. By 1925, Ford’s factories were turning out a Model-T every ten seconds.

      This is nuts and shows just how effective Ford's assembly belts really were. The ability to make so many products in one day at the time, makes the amount of products that are churned out today even crazier with the technological advancements today.

    4. A number of eyewitness accounts described private aircraft being used to shoot into black crowds and drop turpentine firebombs onto black-owned buildings, suggesting the well-organized attack might have been planned in advance.

      I find this very weird. To have access to private aircraft at the time is unheard of unless you were part of the very top of the economic classes. On top of that they had turpentine fire bombs? Not only did this have to planned in advance, people would have to spend tons and tons of money just for the set up to this plan, so to me it feels like either super rich people or tons of people grouped money together just for this.

    1. to reduce its size and scope back to something resembling the original constitutional intent.

      Environmental speaking, the original constitution included no reference to public lands including parks. The clear implication in this call to "dismantle the administrative state" back to its scope is that public lands of all sorts, our national parks as well as forests and monuments, will have to be commercialized, subcontracted, or sold off. The "human flourishing" nourished by visiting today's public lands will then only be available with those who have the money to buy them. While national park abolition occasional surfaced as a cause among leaders of the 1970s/80s neoconservative movement like Georgia Congressman and John Birch Society leader Larry McDonald (Chapter 7, https://ugapress.org/book/9780820344089/race-and-the-greening-of-atlanta/) it had waned by the early 2000s. Yet by 2016, an "anti-parks caucus" had consolidated among 20 Republicans in the US House of Representatives. https://www.americanprogress.org/article/the-rise-to-power-of-the-congressional-anti-parks-caucus/

    2. Congress passes intentionally vague laws that delegate decision-making over a given issue to a federal agency. That agency’s bureaucrats—not just unelected but seemingly un-fireable—then leap at the chance to fill the vacuum created by Congress’s preening cowardice.

      Missing here is how, for instance in the Clean Air or Water Act, precisely this "vagueness" enables Congression legislation to articulate broad protections for American lives and livelihoods, for instance, against the threat of pollution. Also missing here is the necessary reliance of environmental and other agencies on scientific expertise, to determine the reality and certainty of health and environmental dangers. That is an expertise that most Congresspeople and judges can, at best, only pretend to have. If the last Trump Administration is any indication, the silence or constraining messages about science in conservative plans for the administrative state translate into aggressive efforts to shred federal scientfic workforces and funds when these conservatives do come to power. https://envirodatagov.org/embattled-landscape-series-part-2b-the-declining-capacity-of-federal-environmental-science/

    3. By contrast, in countries with a high degree of economic freedom, elites are not in charge because everyone is in charge. People work, build, invest, save, and create according to their own interests and in service to the common good of their fellow citizens.

      What example does the author have of a country with a "high degree of economic freedom"? The author was quite specific about the failures of command economies. It is suggestive that he cannot provide a single example of an economy that works. The author might be interested to learn that Sweden is in fact one of the countries with the fewest regulations on economic activity, rating #9 among all nations according to the Heritage Foundation itself. https://www.heritage.org/index/pages/country-pages/sweden At the same time, according to the International Monetary Fund, "the 'Swedish model'—is marked by the use of big, centralized institutions and large-scale transfers, commonly provided on a universal basis (rather than being income related) with a view to reducing inequality, alleviating poverty, and insuring against social risks." https://www.elibrary.imf.org/display/book/9781589061583/ch001.xml

    4. Government control of the economy can ensure equal outcomes for all people.

      Abundant historical and economic literature now attributes the growth of America's middle class over the middle of the 20th century to the New Deal and other liberal policy-making that favored that growth.  Many scholars have also amassed abundant evidence connecting the middle-class struggles and pooling of wealth at the top since the 1970s to the  neoliberal, wealth-favoring policies that Heritage and other conservatives quie succesfully advocated for. https://scalar.usc.edu/works/growing-apart-a-political-history-of-american-inequality/index

    5. promise of socialism—Communism, Marxism, progressivism, Fascism

      This sentence establishes a demonstrably false equivalence between socialism and four other very different visions for government. It also insinuates ("whatever name it chooses") there is no meaningful difference between any of these "-isms", that socialists, for instance, might just as well refer to themselves as Communists, or Marxists, or progressives, or Fascists. This claim is not only false, it suggest a deep intellectual unseriousness, an unwillingness even to consider any of these political programs as historical realities. As historians know, the lumping together of many enemies into a monoliithic opponent is nothing new, reviving conservative narratives of subversion like that during Second Red Scare after World War II, highlighted in the anti-Constitutional activities of the House UnAmerican Affairs Committee.

    6. This pursuit of the good life is found primarily in family—marriage, children, Thanksgiving dinners, and the like. Many find happiness through their work. Think of dedicated teachers or health care professionals you know, entrepreneurs or plumbers throwing themselves into their businesses—anyone who sees a job well done as a personal reward. Religious devotion and spirituality are the greatest sources of happiness around the world.

      The celebration of market freedom is still here, but now tucked within visions of all Americans achieving "happiness" by adhering to social and moral norms as well as "religious devotion and spirituality." Another instance in this document of "reshaping the past to change the present." http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3998/mpub.11760539.7.

    7. Abandoning confidence in human resilience and creativity in responding to the challenges of the future would raise impediments to the most meaningful human activities.

      The document accuses environmentalism of "abandoning confidence in human resiliency and creativity." To the contrary, much actually existing environmentalism hopes for and demands human ingenuity, especially to craft and implement those manifold new solutions - not just governmenal but economic, technological and cultural - that together can mount an adequate, just, and empathic reponse to the ongoing and future realities of climate change.

      Project 2025, in its insistence on not seeing climate change but instead simply preserving a fossil-fuel-only global economy, remains mired in the past. It fails to see recognize what's under its authors' noses, the current economic trends and positive shifts in energy productivity. For impacts of the shifts to clean energy, see https://www.the-big-green-machine.com/

    8. environmental extremism is decidedly anti-human

      Project 2025 relies here on an inconsistent and oddly contradictory argument. They accuse "the left" of "cheap grace," which they define as "publicly promoting one's own virtue without risking any personal inconvenience." Yet the "environmental extremism" being castigated here sounds like quite the opposite: involving a radical willingness to sacrifice one's own and others' "personal conveniences," even to the point of "standing human affairs on their head."

      By contrast, there's also a favorable invocation here of "stewardwardship and conservation" as less extreme, presumably because not concerned about curbing "the fuels that run almost all." In later chapters, however, notably that on the Department of Interior, the ethics of "stewardship and conservation" are hard to find.

      That this lead Project 2025 defines environmentali extremism sm as "anti-human" seems curiously consonant with asides depicting "the left" as not actually human, mere "beasts." Such framings leave little room or sympathy for how so many environmental policies actually center concern for all life on the planet, including human life. Conservative causes like the anti-vaccine movement and restricting women's health options, though, are fundamentally detrimental to human life.

    9. Those who suffer most from the policies environmentalism would have us enact are the aged, poor, and vulnerable.

      No evidence is given for this statement, but environmentalists have long recognized that poor and communities of color suffer disproportionately from the burdens of pollution and environmental crises. https://exhibits.lib.unc.edu/exhibits/show/we-birthed/item/7444 https://nyupress.org/9781479861781/toxic-communities/ The very construction of white as "clean" and people of color as "dirty" has its roots in racism and constructions of types of work and living. https://nyupress.org/9781479826940/clean-and-white/

      In addition, civil rights activists have for over a century dedicated their focus to improving environmental conditions. Black women worked to educate neighborhoods about germs and the dangers of flies and to clean up neighborhoods during the Progressive Era. In the 1968, black workers in Memphis, Tennessee organized a strike against poor working conditions for sanitation workers. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, a neighborhood in Houston, Texas organized against a pending sanitary landfill. Not long after, citizens in Warren County, North Carolina mobilized against construction of a landfill. https://upittpress.org/books/9780822958994/ https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/transforming-environmentalism/9780813546780/

      Under Ronald Reagan, the GAO conducted a nationwide study which confirmed activists' complaints. The report, https://www.gao.gov/products/rced-83-168, found that of four landfills that accepted hazardous waste, 3 of them were located in majority African American communities. All four communities had at least a 26% poverty rate.

      Attempts to alleviate environmental injustice have been taken under both Republican and Democratic administrations in the past. In 1990 under George H.W. Bush, the EPA created the Environmental Equity Workgroup, which he elevated to the Office of Environmental Equity. Under William Clinton, the office name was changed to the Office of Environmental Justice in 1994 and he also directed all federal agencies to work toward policies to alleviate the issue through executive order. https://www.archives.gov/files/federal-register/executive-orders/pdf/12898.pdf<br /> More recently, under Barack Obama, the EPA worked to make data about environmental justice more transparent through EJSCREEN.

    10. “cheap grace”—publicly promoting one’s own virtue without risking any personal inconvenience.

      This comment distorts Bonhoeffer's views and lacks context. Bonhoeffer formulated the notion of "cheap grace" in his 1937 The Cost of Disciplineship in Nazi Germany, in important part to criticize the complacency of German Christians who attempted to legitimizethe Nazi state. He opposed "cheap grace" to its "costly" counterpart, involving not just statements of Christian belief but actions in accordance with those beliefs. Elsewhere, Bonhoeffer also offered an acutely moral analysis of how Nazism worked that better suggests how his concepts might be applied today: "petty tyrants... destroy a nation at its core…They slip through your fingers when you want to grab them, for they are smooth and cowardly. They are like a contagious disease. When such a tyrant sucks the vital strength from his victim he simultaneously infects him with his spirit; and as soon as this tyrant's victim gets hold of the least bit of power himself, he takes revenge for what has happened to him. But this revenge--this is the horror—is not directed against the guilty, but against the innocent, defenseless victims." https://www.jstor.org/stable/23917808

    11. Intellectual sophistication, advanced degrees, financial success, and all other markers of elite status have no bearing on a person’s knowledge of the one thing most necessary for governance: what it means to live well.

      This comment points out one of the foundational ironies of the document. Out of the list of 36 authors and editors for Project 2025, 4 have Ph.Ds (2 from Harvard); 1 has a medical degree; 20 have law degrees; and 13 masters degrees. The list of universities where they've been educated reads like a who's who of the world's most elite institutions - Oxford, the Sorbonne, MIT, Harvard, Yale, University of Virginia, George Washington, Columbia. They represent a highly educated, elite group. Yet here, Project 2025's lead author claims that people educated at such institutions lack the knowledge necessary for good governance.

      In addition, the authors of Project 2025 comment on matters where they clearly lack expertise. The vast majority are either lawyers, economists, political scientists, or policy analysts. None are scientists, environmental or otherwise, unless you count Benjamin Carson, a medical doctor. The only one with an advanced degree in history is Dustin J. Carmack, who received a masters degrees from Tel Aviv University.

    12. Those who run our so-called American corporations have bent to the will of the woke agenda and care more for their foreign investors and organizations than their American workers and customers. Today, nearly every top-tier U.S. university president or Wall Street hedge fund manager has more in common with a socialist, European head of state than with the parents at a high school football game in Waco, Texas.

      These comments signal a historically significant departure in the conservative agenda vis-a-vis corporations . In the neoconservative agenda from the 1970s-early 2010s, they and allied "hedge fund managers" were portrayed as iconic exemplars of market freedom, with former hedge fund manger Mitt Romney receiving the Republican nomination for president in 2012. Now the alleged corporate embrace of a "woke agenda" and dependence on "foreign investors" provide grounds for turning on them and "their sense of superiority." Instead, this new "populist" version of conservativism itself borrows from the rhetoric of the labor movement, seeking to align its cause with "workers who shower after work instead of before."

      These conservatives' turn against the modern corporate world also proceeds along another front. Rather than seeing corporations as valid actors in their own right, the authors now present "woke" companies as duped or manipulated in some way by a shadowy "Left" to adopt "illegitimate" values. According to this line of critique, those running corporations lost the ability to make legitimate decisions.

    13. they believe in a kind of 21st century Wilsonian order

      The Heritage Foundation's narrative of history in this document sets up Reagan's policies and beliefs against Wilson's, ignoring the pivotal importance of Franklin Roosevelt as a standard-bearer for Democrats. Presumably, they chose Wilson to represent his internationalism, although he failed in his efforts to establish the League of Nations after World War I. Their choice also ignores Roosevelt's establishment of the New Deal order, as well as the international institution-building after World War II. Both of those worked to avoid a resurgence of a fascist Axis and to counter the USSR and other communist powers - factual and important contexts that the Heritage Foundation ignores here.

      That Democratic. liberal politicians led much of this more historically proximate push AGAINST communism and also proved manifestly favorable to America's working class, elevating worker rights and pay: all these well-known historical truths clash with many other elements of this author's arguments as well.

    14. The term Administrative State refers to the policymaking work done by the bureaucracies of all the federal government’s departments, agencies, and millions of employees.

      The level of abstraction here--"policymaking work done by the bureaucracies"--avoids any consideration of what this policy-making is supposed to do, how it works, or how it can actually improve Americans' lives. The strictly legalistic desciption here avoids any mention of the scientific study, technical know-how, and data-gathering that are so essential for agencies to operate fairly and effectively. For environmental arenas, this vague description poorly captures all the oversight and work that goes in to maintaining and protecting public lands. Nor does it offer any hint of how an agency like the EPA protects Americans from the predations of private polluters. For a more evidence-based discussion and contextualization of this rhetoric, see https://www.amacad.org/daedalus/administrative-state

    15. socialism of 1970s liberals, and the predatory deviancy of cultural elites. Reagan defeated these beasts by ignoring their tentacles and striking instead at their hearts

      Here the author slides into what political scientists who have studied it term "blatant dehumanization," high on those scales by which scholars seek to rank the different degrees of dehumanization. While the scholarship finds this kind of move among liberals as well as conservatives, "a change from the minimum to maximum value on the dehumanization measure [i.e., as here] is associated with a significant increase in perceived moral distance between the parties." Accusing their opponents of "predatory deviancy," Project 2025 authors express "moral distance" in a way that actively seems to cultivate and enhance that distance. https://link-springer-com.proxy.library.stonybrook.edu/article/10.1007/s11109-019-09545-w

    16. the Soviet Union

      The Soviet Union is mentioned here several times, in the context of a victory for Reagan over communism. But later on, when authors posit China as America's great contemporary rival and "global threat," Russia and its war with Ukraine go conspicuously unmentioned.

    17. Restore the family as the centerpiece of American life and protect our children

      Language about "protecting children" is ubiquitous among all political parties. Conservatives' failure to substantially address climate change is a gaping hole in this rhetoric. Young people are disproportionately affected by the harms of climate change. They suffer emotional harm from witnessing places they love destroyed or threatened by sea rise, wildfires, hurricanes or other natural disasters. They suffer physical harm through losing access to recreational areas, especially winter sports. In addition, children are more susceptible to health harms from environmental crises like wildfire smoke.

      After learning about climate change in school, young people are also more politically involved and visible since the 2010s. Millions marched worldwide in the 2019 Climate March. The UN has recognized them at the Conference-of-the-Parties (COP) meetings on climate change. They've also joined lawsuits like the Juliana vs. United States case to attempt to hold government to account https://climatecasechart.com/case/juliana-v-united-states/. Successful cases in Hawaii and Montana have done just that. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02592-8 https://apnews.com/article/hawaii-youth-climate-lawsuit-things-to-know-bcb791b6f23c7dc798bf9e3cd2b67f97<br /> They've formed youth-led and organized groups like Sunrise.

      Conservative reaction to children is less about protection and more about control. They fail to recognize young people as citizens and political actors in their own right.

      These tropes often frequently reflect adult worries and anxieties rather than real problems facing young people, something aptly demonstrated in conservative policies like book bans, banning subjects in schools (including climate change), and fearmongering over drag shows and the trans community. Youth activists face severe backlash from conservatives in the form of denigration to threats of violence.

    18. Mandate for Leadership

      Heritage has indeed been successful in getting Republican presidents' attention, and their recommendations have often been heeded, especially during the administrations of Ronald Reagan and of Donald Trump but also to some extent in Bill Clinton's presidency. https://www.influencewatch.org/non-profit/heritage-foundation/

    19. the totalitarian cult known today as “The Great Awokening.”

      The author assumes that for his audience this concept ("the Great Awokening") and this claim about it (that is a "totalitarian cult") need no further explication or evidence. The concept originated in certain discussions of the Black Lives Matter Movement, as initially interpreted in 2019 by the journalist Matthew Yglesias at Vox as well as a public "discussion" at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, featuring Eric Kaufman, a British politics scholar explicitly opposed "to what he calls the 'anti-white ideology of the cultural left.'" Kaufman argues, as one reviewer of his 2018 book put it, that "white racial self-interest...is legitimate and ignoring it is what fuels populism." Early coinages of a "Great Awokening" mainly mocked causes associated with the Black Lives Matter Movement like defunding the police. However, Project 2025 authors have distended its derogatory scope out to include many environmental concerns, especially climate change, https://www.vox.com/2019/3/22/18259865/great-awokening-white-liberals-race-polling-trump-2020 https://manhattan.institute/event/the-great-awokening https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/a-political-scientist-defends-white-identity-politics-eric-kaufmann-whiteshift-book https://www.jstor.org/stable/26931378

    20. Contemporary elites have even repurposed the worst ingredients of 1970s “radical chic”

      A phrase coined by Tom Wolfe in a 1970 article in New York magazine about a fund-raising party thrown by Leonard Berstein and his well-to-do New York City circle to support the Black Panthers https://nymag.com/article/tom-wolfe-radical-chic-that-party-at-lennys.html. The focus here only on the agency of presumably white elites, past as well as present, simply ignores any Black activism or the problems and perspectives it has sought to highlight.

    21. ow-income communities are drowning in addiction and government dependence

      An extremely thin account of the problems of low-income communities, eliding nearly all the accumulating socioeconomic and environmental forces that scholarship has illuminated as grounding their travails. These include white flight from downtowns, decades of growing income inequality, structural forms of racism, as well as environmental factors as well as the concentration of polluters and pollution in many disadvantaged communities. For instance: https://www.urban.org/urban-wire/poverty-results-structural-barriers-not-personal-choices-safety-net-programs-should-reflect-fact

    1. It is instead historically founded and grounded, a productof the histories in which it is entangled and interwoven, and which giveliteracy its meanings.

      This shows what they think about how history has shaped literacy to where it is today.

    1. entral-place foragers

      Central-place foragers is referring to an animal that gathers food based on distance and energy acquired for the maximum yield that they can specifically bring back home to a nest or base for consumption.

    2. Introduced predators kill adult penguins or eat theireggs and young,

      I did a presentation in Bio 2 about the Fiordland Crested Penguins of New Zealand who live in jungles and rocky coastlines. One of their biggest predators was dogs that are unaccompanied and kill the penguins or eggs. It is also important to add that humans can be cruel and smash laid eggs too.

    3. Threats, such as harvesting and egging, are largely ofhistorical significance

      There was very little information I could find online about evidence of early-human penguin consumption (however it can be inferred that humans would eat what is available, especially in such climates). However I did find this paper on a few known men to eat penguins during their explorations. It is important to note it is illegal for Americans to eat penguins because every species is now protected. https://www.ends-of-earth.com/history/pass-the-penguin/

    1. At least, southern Populism woke up the Democratic power structure so that after 1900, in the Progressive period, the South firmly supported agrarian programs at the same time that racial segregation laws became stricter.

      would like to know more about this.

    1. kneeling before the closed door

      domesticity

    2. And yet she had loved him--sometimes. Often she had not.

      Was this feeling all grief, or was part of it relieved for herself? She seemed to not enjoy being around him like you would someone you would love. She was now free from someone she only loved sometimes. The idea of domesticity could play a huge role in this. No one knew what was happening in the privacy of her own home.

    3. storm of grief

      Personification, her emotions and grief are dramatized, a storm is a strong force, the author is comparing her feelings to this

    4. There was something coming to her and she was waiting for it, fearfully. What was it? She did not know; it was too subtle and elusive to name. But she felt it

      Personification of her feelings and thoughts as she processes his death. Was she waiting for guilt? Doubt? Was she just waiting for this to be a lie and for him to come back? Was she waiting to be okay with his death?

    1. Everyone will agree that Tailor swift has absolutely ZERO Talent and makes the most TERRIBLE and Cringe Music

      This is an example of Mal-information, due to its hateful message and harassment on Taylor Swift. Unlike misinformation that is a result of good intentions this message has intent for harm. This message contains harsh and rude language. I recognized this as mal information because of the harmful content. In any context these words would be seen as harmful to the recipient. This can cause a lot of mental harm and posts like this can also be seen as cyberbullying and sharing information/messages that cause harm. It is important to make sure you are aware of what you are reading online and be proactive with reporting information that create harm.

    1. the majority of the population was homogeneous, white, and native-born, but it also included sizeable minorities of blacks in the South, Asians and Indians in the West, and immigrants in eastern and midwestern cities.

      Important for your paper.

    1. But—if itdoesn’t, ’'ll half-suspect that someonehas hid the book.

      I really love this closing line. The author just spent a good amount of time thoroughly rehearsing how he tackles a research problem. The list of sources is wide and some may benefit a certain issue more than another. I think the point to be made is that even in seemingly undiscoverable cases, a thorough research structure will usually get the lawyer to a point where they can make a strong argument. They may not find the case exactly like what they need, but with the proper steps, if they couldn't find anything, then someone hid the book.

    2. From G.J.S. I note the case cita-tions, then turn to the reference inC.J]. for the earlier cases. Next the ruleand cases are taken from Am. Jur.; ifacase-note from A.L.R.-L.R.A. is given,this is examined carefully.

      I think this series of events is quite interesting. As I have begun learning about legal researching and after going on the library tour, I was extremely overwhelmed by the amount of resources. I really like how the author breaks down his step by step process on how he tackles his research problems. He makes it seem like every lawyer can make a series of steps that works for them and apply it to different cases. Once you become proficient, you can build a routine that is most useful to your style.

    3. These must be restated in terms oflegal concepts before legal learningcan be brought to bear upon theproblem. Lawyers sometimes fail tomake their clients see the “legal ques-tion” involved and, more rarely, theythemselves fail to see it in its fullimplications.

      This seems easier said than done. Learning to distill the question using the correct terms of art helps narrow the search within the vast body of law needed to be search. It feels especially high stakes, though, because if your phrasing is just a bit off you might miss the exact case or authority you're looking for.

    4. It does have the advan-tage of leading systematically fromtextbooks through the encyclepedias,the annotated cases, the Digest Systemand the law reviews, with an inciden-tal check of the “Index to Case-Notes”and Shepard’s Citators.

      It does seem like a good rule of thumb in most cases is to cast a wide net through secondary sources before zeroing in on specific cases. Another benefit to this system seems to be that there are built in checks to verify the authorities being cited remain relevant and won't get you embarrassed in front of a judge.

    1. Completely destroyed my hair.

      This is an example of Misinformation. This hair product was told to help the bonds in your hair to make it stronger. But after reading the reviews there were several reviews giving the product 1 star. This product was not intended cause harm but as the reviews has proven its product is not doing what its original purpose was. This is a perfect example of misinformation because its definition is "false information that is disseminated in good faith" which is what is happening here. The way I recognized this misinformation is when companies have very strong claims regarding the beauty industry. That is why after I saw claims of hair growth solely on this spray it flagged signs of mis-information.

    1. We understand that the 15 year old boy received a letter from Brother Augustine a choir master of Lyne's community in norwich. In this letter Augustine described how he feels about the 15 boy year old. The boy seems as an angel that he can worship and it seems like there is a deep connection between the two . it has been noticed that the letter has a "sexually queer content" and they wrote about it in the newspaper. It was not common a choir to have such a "sexually queer" behaviour at that moment.

    1. Set students up for success with clear directions of what to do next.

      I think this is the most important things for teachers to know and do because it's all about setting our students up for success!

    2. Observable: Actions you can see.

      I feel like this is important especially in a PE setting because most of the time during class I will observing and making sure my students are doing and make sure they are staying on task

    1. Money laundering networks
      • 30% are believed to be involved in money laundering activities

      • One of the means in which OCGs launder money is through coercing or recruiting external professionals such as lawyers

    2. Methamphetamine networks
      • Over 300 OCGs are involved in the meth market
      • These OCGs produce meth domestically and internationally
      • Meth superlabs are dominant in BC, Quebec, and Ontario
    3. Street gangs
      • Very violent; in fact, out of all organized crime groups, they're the ones who are the most likely to commit violence to fulfill their own interests or the interests of other organized groups who contract them(eg. mafia)

      • Constantly changing as some are becoming more formal groups

    4. Extortion
      • The crime of using force to obtain a desired object, typically money

      • Sextortion: The use of fake profiles in dating apps or pornographic sites to lure an unsuspecting individual to a relationship or make them commit sexual acts.

      • Often characterized by threat as the perpetrator threatens to post the sexual videos to the public to coerce the survivor to complying with their demands

    5. Counterfeiting

      *The illegal importing of fake products disguising as certain brands

      • A subset of this crime is currency counterfeiting, which involves the illegal importing of fake money
    6. Money Laundering
      • The process wherein the illegal acquisition of money is disguised to conceal its illicit origins and thus becomes "legitimate"

    Annotators

  2. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. also reflected in Orange County schools. Consider two high schools chat "input" measures (see Table 4.1) suggest are sur-prisingly similar: Troy High School in Fullerton and Santa Ana High School. Spending per pupil at the two schools is comparable, for exam-ple, as are the student-teacher ratios, the number of guidance counselors, and two standard measures of teacher quality: formal education and experience. Troy offers a richer menu of extracurricular activities than Santa Ana, but, as we shall see, private fund-raising explains chat differ-ence, not unequal investment by the school districts. On the measures most obviously controlled by school systems-spending

      It certainly makes sense of the community involvement and resources to determine extra-curricular options for students. In this analogy, if the key levers manipulated by school districts – such as pupil-per-child spending, ratios of students to teachers, and teacher credentials – provide a backbone, then the reinforcement that private fundraising can bring to the students’ education is a tremendous positive addition. The relationship reflects the crucial role of community resources and funding channels in enhancing what the school district delivers.

    2. Most Latinos in Orange County live in the impoverished cities of the inland valleys of the northern half of the county, among them Santa Ana. A 2004 report by rhe Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government identified Santa Ana as the Most Troubled City in America because of its high unemployment, high poverty rate, undereducated population, and crowded housing. Latinos in Orange County are more likely to live not only in poverty bur also amidst street violence and gang activity. Santa Ana alone is home co 29 street gangs.

      These circumstances are reflective of the persisting struggle faced by Latinos in Orange County – including in neighborhoods such as Santa Ana. Unemployment, poverty, educational inequalities, all of this do indeed leave a tough climate for citizens to succeed. Then there’s street violence and gangs that just make it all the more aggravating, rendering daily living and upward mobility harder for Latino people. This knowledge is critical in the quest to understand the root causes of these problems and seek a better life for these communities. Problems such as education, employment, and public safety could do a lot to mitigate some of those concerns.

    1. however, the distinction is not as clear at it may at first seem, for asource designed for one purpose may come to have very different uses forhistorians. For example, a film taken to record one event but which inad-vertently captured another

      Some scholars believe that materials intentionally recorded are specifically created for use in history or other academic fields, while those unintentionally created were not designed for scholarly purposes.

    1. There also are negative effects of witnessing sexual harassment, referred to as ambient sexual harassment. Witnesses realize that they work in a culture in which they are neither supported nor protected from sexual harassment.

      This is an interesting term that I haven’t seen before, but I have felt before. It’s such a striking feeling to know that it wasn’t you, but could have been, and your organization does nothing about it. You feel both a deep sadness for your peer/coworker/friend, and a conscious/subconscious fear of the same thing happening to you. It’s interesting that there is a term for it.

    2. Women also are more likely than men to be employed in part-time positions. In 2013, 24% of employed women held part-time jobs compared to 12% of men (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2019d). However, this figure really represents a comparison of White and Hispanic women to White and Hispanic men. Black and Asian women are somewhat less likely to work part-time (19% and 20%) than White and Hispanic women (both 25%).

      This is an interesting statistic that I hadn’t thought about before! Part-time work does not get you the same benefits as full-time, so this could contribute to health later on. I also appreciated the intersectional view, including race in these statistics.

    3. When we compare men who do and do not work outside the home, we are typically studying the effect of unemployment on health. This may explain why we often find greater benefits of paid work for men than for women. When we compare women who do and do not work outside the home, we are comparing employed women to two groups of nonemployed women—unemployed women, and women who choose not to work outside the home. The two groups are not the same.

      This finding is really interesting to me, as I’ve never thought about the difference in groups. While men don’t usually have an example of doing non-paid work as a full time job (like raising a child and tending to the house), women do, and do not think of themselves as unemployed. I do still want to point out that it is a changing standard that men do not hold this role, as there is an emerging group of men who are working as caregivers for their families, rather than in paid work. Still, the generalization the book made is not an incorrect one, and very intriguing to me.

    1. Booleans (True / False)

      I once learned about binary in the csp course of ap. I think this design is great. Only the two numbers 0 and 1 have created a lot of great programs.

    2. Booleans (True / False)

      I once learned about Booleans in the CSP course of AP. I think this design is great. Only the two numbers 0 and 1 have created a lot of great programs.

    3. Fig. 4.5 The number of replies, retweets, and likes can be represented as integer numbers (197.8K can be stored as a whole number like 197,800).

      The number of likes and comments on social media posts can provide valuable insights into user engagement and content popularity. These metrics often serve as indicators of a post's reach and impact, reflecting how well the content resonates with the audience⁠ However, it's important to note that while these numbers can be easily quantified (for example, 197,800 likes), their true meaning goes beyond mere statistics. They represent real people interacting with and responding to the content, potentially influencing opinions and sparking conversations⁠

    4. H”, “A”, “P”, “P”, “Y”, ” “, “B”, “I”, “R”, “T”, “H”, “D”, “A”, “Y”.

      It's interesting that from the human perspective we are just spelling out the word "Happy Birthday" as a whole, but never come to realize or pay attention to the fact that the string is actually a combination of the different letters taht make up the word.

    5. Computers typically store text by dividing the text into characters (the individual letters, spaces, numerals, punctuation marks, emojis, and other symbols). These characters are then stored in order and called strings (that is a bunch of characters strung together, like in Fig. 4.6 below).

      This reminds me of the Java language I learned in CSE class. In Java, a series of characters is also called a string. But in Java, if you want to enter some specific symbols such as brackets and quotation marks in a string, you need to add "\" to make the machine recognize it smoothly.

    6. When computers store numbers, there are limits to how much space is can be used to save each number. This limits how big (or small) the numbers can be, and causes rounding with floating-point numbers. Additionally, programming languages might include other ways of storing numbers, such as fractions, complex numbers, or limited number sets (like only positive integers).

      This reminds me that computers have a similar problem when dealing with characters. This is because computers use an encoding set that can only contain a limited number of symbols and characters. Overall, computers, as powerful as they are, still have limitations in storing and processing numbers and symbols. These limitations come from the underlying hardware design and coding methods, not because the computer “doesn't want” to recognize everything, but more from technical trade-offs and design decisions.

    1. The Dictionary data type allows programmers to combine several pieces of data by naming each piece.

      I am not very familiar with this data type but I find it fascinating how it can store a variety of different data types and the efficiency it offers when it comes to looking up pieces of information from a big list.

    1. It has been host to white-supremacist, neo-nazi and other hate content

      This is one reason I have found that has pushed me away from libertarian ideas. Oftentimes, I agree with the sentiment of a group but the members who support that group reflect much more on the group than the actual principles and thus when people like white-supremacists are your colleagues you know you are on the wrong side.

    1. Bill Gates talking about how he wants an AI program that bans harmful speech...that caused people to not get a vaccination... They want to take your freedom AND they want to inject you with poison to k!ll you.

      This is an example of Dis-Information. Dis-information should have false content, fabricated content, and manipulation content. This post of X has all of these things. This account is providing false information regarding vaccines and that it is filled with " poison to kill you". This information is manipulating the viewer and spreading false information. As I read this post i noticed the aggression in the accounts text which flagged the post to have information that would most likely be inaccurate. After reading the full post I noticed just how harmful this could be if taken out of the wrong context.

    1. Uninterrupted time that is reserved to work on job tasks is beneficial to those who have difficulty reorienting after being interrupted.

      It can take me a long time to get in the zone only to be interrupted.

    1. Separating tasks is an accommodation when an individual has difficulty managing more than one task at a time. This strategy can be implemented by the individual or the individual's manager. Tasks should be prioritized and a new project may be assigned when the previous project is complete.

      Written prioritization of tasks helps me decide what to work on.

    1. Job restructuring as a reasonable accommodation may involve reallocating or redistributing the marginal functions of a job.
    1. point-in-time recovery

      According to Anthropic's Claude LLM:

      Point-in-time recovery refers to the ability to restore a database or system to a specific moment in the past. This feature allows administrators to recover data to a precise point before a failure, corruption, or unintended change occurred.

      Key aspects of point-in-time recovery include:

      1. Continuous backups: The system regularly captures changes to data.
      2. Granular restoration: Allows recovery to any specific time within the backup window.
      3. Minimal data loss: Helps reduce the amount of data lost between backups.
      4. Flexibility: Useful for various scenarios like correcting human errors or recovering from cyberattacks.

      This capability is especially valuable in database management systems and cloud storage solutions, providing a safety net for data integrity and business continuity.

    1. In a closed group, only members can send messages to the group

      А разве это не то же самое, что и source addressing?

    2. If in this case FIFO (orcausal) ordering had been used, it might have happened that the servers applied the updates indifferent orders, resulting in inconsistent replicas.

      Что-то я совсем не понял почему так? И как. это достигается в total order? Если в FIFO добавить еще какой-то сравнимый идентификатор, кроме времени отправки, то можно же сортировать по двум ключам: время и (например) хэш сообщения. И тогда будет конкретный порядок у этих 2 сообщений

    1. Metadata is information about some data. So we often think about a dataset as consisting of the main pieces of data (whatever those are in a specific situation), and whatever other information we have about that data (metadata).

      I have never heard of the term Metadata previously, but I can see how it makes data interpretation much more simplified. It is important to know the context behind the data that is being collected.

    2. Metadata is information about some data. So we often think about a dataset as consisting of the main pieces of data (whatever those are in a specific situation), and whatever other information we have about that data (metadata).

      I find this to be interesting. I never thought of splitting the data types in a post to understand it better, but it makes sense now. The Metadata is less about the tweet and more about the background information of the post, while the Data is the main tweet and the point the person is trying to make.

      1. The Future of Autonomous Vehicles

        How autonomous cars will reshape urban transportation. Ethical implications of self-driving vehicles. The potential for autonomous public transport systems.

      2. Electric Vehicles (EVs) and Sustainability

        The role of electric vehicles in reducing carbon emissions. The challenges and opportunities in EV infrastructure development. Comparison between EVs and traditional fuel-powered vehicles: environmental and economic perspectives.

      3. Hyperloop Technology and Its Impact on Long-Distance Travel

        How Hyperloop could revolutionize intercity transportation. Technological and financial challenges in implementing Hyperloop systems. Environmental benefits of ultra-high-speed transport.

      4. Urban Mobility Innovations

        How e-scooters, bikes, and ride-sharing apps are changing urban commuting. The future of smart cities and the role of connected transportation systems. Policy challenges surrounding micromobility in congested cities.

      5. AI and Machine Learning in Transportation

        How AI is optimizing traffic flow and reducing congestion. Predictive maintenance in transportation through machine learning. AI-driven logistics: revolutionizing freight and delivery systems.

      6. Drones and Aerial Transportation

        The use of drones for delivery services: possibilities and challenges. The future of passenger drones and urban air mobility. Regulatory and safety concerns surrounding the widespread use of drones.

      7. Sustainable Transport Solutions

        Innovations in public transport to make it more sustainable. The role of hydrogen fuel cells in the future of transportation. The importance of integrating renewable energy sources into transportation infrastructure.

      8. The Role of Big Data in Transportation

        How data analytics can improve traffic management and reduce congestion. The impact of big data on the logistics and freight industry. Privacy concerns and the use of personal data in smart transportation systems.

    1. Here is what ChatGPT said to my question:

      There isn't a universally agreed-upon definition of a "Smart City," but the concept generally refers to an urban area that uses technology and data-driven solutions to improve the quality of life for its citizens, enhance sustainability, and optimize the efficiency of city services.

      A common definition of a Smart City typically includes the following elements:

      1. Use of Technology and IoT (Internet of Things)

      • Smart cities leverage connected devices and sensors to gather data in real-time. These technologies are used to monitor various aspects of urban life, such as traffic flow, energy consumption, and public safety.

      2. Data-Driven Decision-Making

      • The data collected from IoT devices and other sources is analyzed to make informed decisions and improve the delivery of public services. This data helps city administrators optimize resources, reduce waste, and respond more quickly to emerging issues.

      3. Sustainability and Efficiency

      • Smart cities aim to reduce environmental impact by improving energy efficiency, reducing pollution, and promoting sustainable transportation. This often includes initiatives like smart grids, electric vehicle infrastructure, and waste management systems.

      4. Citizen Engagement and Quality of Life

      • A key feature of smart cities is the use of digital platforms and apps to engage citizens directly in decision-making and to improve their experience with city services. This could range from real-time public transportation updates to platforms that allow residents to report issues like streetlight outages.

      5. Integrated Infrastructure

      • Smart cities focus on creating seamless systems that integrate transportation, energy, healthcare, public safety, and other key services into a unified, technology-driven network. This improves efficiency and reduces redundancies in city operations.

      6. Resilience and Flexibility

      • A smart city is often designed to be adaptable and resilient, using predictive analytics to anticipate challenges such as extreme weather events, infrastructure failures, or population growth, and to respond proactively.

      In summary, a Smart City uses advanced technology and data to create more efficient, sustainable, and citizen-centered urban environments. Some examples include cities like Barcelona, Singapore, and Amsterdam, which have adopted smart city technologies to improve urban living.

    1. Because all data is a simplification of reality, those simplifications work well for some people and some situations but can cause problems for other people and other situations.

      I think this is a great way to describe data and the benefits it has on simplifying the findings of our reality. It is also important to note that there are benefits and drawbacks to the collection of data as it may help us collect intel for future development, but also can cause a breach in privacy.

    2. Data collection and storage can go wrong in other ways as well, with incorrect or erroneous options. Here are some screenshots from a thread of people collecting strange gender selection forms:

      Data collection practices should prioritize inclusivity and respect for diverse gender identities. It's crucial to offer comprehensive and sensitive options that accurately represent the full spectrum of gender expressions. Thoughtful design of gender selection forms not only improves data accuracy but also demonstrates respect for all individuals, fostering a more inclusive environment.

    1. The good and the bad.We have given each otherAll that we have.

      This reminds me of anytime I hear someone describe something they have interest in. For instance, my mom really enjoys gardening but there are also times where she doesn't like to do it. That doesn't necessarily take away any of her love for that hobby. I think this helps the average person realize that Kobe isn't just a celebrity player but also a person that shares the same complex emotions as regular people.

    2. I played through the sweat and hurtNot because challenge called meBut because YOU called me.

      Shows his dedication to play basketball because of his love for it

    3. clock

      Tends to place somewhat similarly sounding or spelt words together at the ends of lines every so often, words like socks and clock, together and other.

    4. 5 … 4 … 3 … 2 … 1

      Places periods and a line specifically for numbers at the for effect

    5. I’ll always be that kid

      Loops back to memories of his youth when he was just a kid excited to play, making another connection with the addressed audience

    6. As a six-year-old boy

      Bringing up a memory of being a young child and aspiring to become successful in what they love which can create a connection with the addressed audience

    1. I found it interesting how the different datatypes are represented in Python. This is because I have been learning Java in case 121, and it gets tedious to specify the datatype on every variable you create. I also found it interesting to reflect on how social media posts affect the people who haven’t consented to being in them. An example that was given was about taking a selfie with a minor and posting it on social media without their consent. This is important to think about because a lot of people have been affected negatively by being put in social media posts that they didn’t consent to be in, so I believe it is important to ask for consent before filming someone and then posting it.

    2. Now, there are many reasons one might be suspicious about utilitarianism as a cheat code for acting morally, but let’s assume for a moment that utilitarianism is the best way to go. When you undertake your utility calculus, you are, in essence, gathering and responding to data about the projected outcomes of a situation. This means that how you gather your data will affect what data you come up with. If you have really comprehensive data about potential outcomes, then your utility calculus will be more complicated, but will also be more realistic. On the other hand, if you have only partial data, the results of your utility calculus may become skewed. If you think about the potential impact of a set of actions on all the people you know and like, but fail to consider the impact on people you do not happen to know, then you might think those actions would lead to a huge gain in utility, or happiness.

      This reminds me most of measuring value of life in systems such as trolley problems or AI car decision making. Is a doctor more worthy of being saved than a musician? Or a depressed person? Or a felon? Where do you draw the line? If you draw a line, how many "felon lives" equals one doctor life? Utilitarianism to me isn't a morality system itself but a coping mechanism to allow humans to rationalize tough decisions. But when humans put the same logic in computers, it's not a coping strategy for a computer's feelings, but just a flawed series of priorities.

    3. Can you think of an example of pernicious ignorance in social media interaction? What’s something that we might often prefer to overlook when deciding what is important?

      When charitable organization raising funds for patients suffering form specific illness, they may interview these patients and relatives of the patients to evoke empathy. However, they overlook the feeling of patients and their relatives. Letting patients recall their pains and speak in front of camera aggravates the pains of patients.

    4. One classic example is the tendency to overlook the interests of children and/or people abroad when we post about travels, especially when fundraising for ‘charity tourism’. One could go abroad, and take a picture of a cute kid running through a field, or a selfie with kids one had traveled to help out. It was easy, in such situations, to decide the likely utility of posting the photo on social media based on the interest it would generate for us, without thinking about the ethics of using photos of minors without their consent. This was called out by The Onion in a parody article, titled “6-Day Visit To Rural African Village Completely Changes Woman’s Facebook Profile Picture”.

      This paragraph makes a point that I really agree with. It is something that I have not considered before, but I have experienced personally. More specifically, many elders around me like to use their children's pictures as their social media profile pictures, and I didn't care about their behavior when I was young because I didn't use social media at all. But now I think it was really inappropriate, because it was really embarrassing to watch my childhood self wearing some funny clothes and being seen by everyone on social media. I think you need to be careful before using a particular image, or get permission from the people in the image.

    5. Now, there are many reasons one might be suspicious about utilitarianism as a cheat code for acting morally, but let’s assume for a moment that utilitarianism is the best way to go. When you undertake your utility calculus, you are, in essence, gathering and responding to data about the projected outcomes of a situation. This means that how you gather your data will affect what data you come up with. If you have really comprehensive data about potential outcomes, then your utility calculus will be more complicated, but will also be more realistic. On the other hand, if you have only partial data, the results of your utility calculus may become skewed. If you think about the potential impact of a set of actions on all the people you know and like, but fail to consider the impact on people you do not happen to know, then you might think those actions would lead to a huge gain in utility, or happiness.

      This text points out the impact utilitarianism may have on moral decision-making. In other words, utilitarianism has certain limitations. In detail, if the data is not complete in the process of data collection, then its final result will have a certain bias. For example, only considering the impact of people you know and like on yourself, and ignoring the impact of people you don't know on yourself, then the results of the experiment are not comprehensive enough.

    1. This part makes me wonder if when we place constraints in the python language, how the syntax would look like. Another thing that I wonder about here is what makes a string with letters like "a" different from emojis in the makeup.

    1. Images are created by defining a grid of dots, called pixels. Each pixel has three numbers that define the color (red, green, and blue), and the grid is created as a list (rows) of lists (columns).

      Are these the three primary colors that can make up all colors? This is very clever, only three colors can make up all colors, but I am curious how the computer can mix these colors in the correct proportions to produce the exact color? At the same time, how is white composed?

    2. Images are created by defining a grid of dots, called pixels. Each pixel has three numbers that define the color (red, green, and blue), and the grid is created as a list (rows) of lists (columns).

      This reminds me of every time I try to take a picture of my computer screen with my phone camera. The image always shows tiny red, green, and blue lights, which is probably due to a similar reason. A display is made up of many tiny pixels, and each of these pixels is composed of subpixels that emit red, green, or blue light. When you try to capture the screen, the camera picks up these individual subpixels, revealing the RGB pattern that our eyes don’t normally see. This highlights how the underlying structure of digital displays, just like the limitations of computer storage, affects what we see and how information is processed.

    1. items from the prison have been put in the resistance museum in Glieres,

      Fun fact

    2. There he was tortured by the infamous Gestapo officer Klaus Barbie, and his assistants.

      Look up Barbie

    1. Data points often give the appearance of being concrete and reliable, especially if they are numerical. So when Twitter initially came out with a claim that less than 5% of users are spam bots, it may have been accepted by most people who heard it. Elon Musk then questioned that figure and attempted to back out of buying Twitter, and Twitter is accusing Musk’s complaint of being an invented excuse to back out of the deal, and the case is now in court.

      I think Data and numbers are the type of information humans absorb the most. It simplifies it and makes it easier to understand, but this leaves gaps in the data that people kind of fill in themselves. Since the data doesn't tell the whole story and is more of just the final product, it isn't always reliable, and we shouldn't only focus on that.

    1. Unfortunately, it was entirely avoided by the Germans as their superior Panzer tanks (Panzerkampfwagen) plowed through the "impenetrable" Ardennes forest as part of the Blitzkrieg that characterized early German victories in WWII.

      This makes more sense

    2. historians point to the fatigue of the French citizenry, who were still recovering from the loss of young men killed during WWI.

      I have wondered why Germany was able to so easily march into France, this makes sense.

    3. Pétain headed the new government from the southern spa town of Vichy, but his authority was limited, and many regarded the Vichy regime as a mere puppet government

      Vichy Water - Casablanca

    1. Design a social media site

      (Not designing one myself, but breaking down a funny social media sight that I've seen) Pithee was a sight designed as a way to view and rank "shitposts" at a rapid pace. To accomplish this, the sight is laid out with a banner and 5 blocks in the middle. The banner is small, has the logo and donation links in the corners, and has leaderboard/profile/post in center. The 5 blocks have 4 randomized posts by other users, the "most voted on winner" from the last 15 minutes at the top, and a shuffle button at the bottom.

      This layout prioritizes reading anonymous user's posts, deprioritizes users' personal scores, and makes branding and donation opportunities only for those who want to support the platform.

    1. An authentic audience breathes life into both tech-rich and low-tech tasks

      I really appreciate the author's emphasis on the student environment. Technology isn't the goal in itself; it is a tool for the student to use.

    1. What festivals of atonement, what sacred gamesshall we need to invent?

      atonement: the reconciliation of god and humans with Jesus christ

    2. How were we able to drink up the sea? Whogave us the sponge to wipe away the entire horizon? What did we do when weunchained the earth from its sun?

      how do we witness "gods work" despite killing him?

    3. many of those who did not believe in God were standing together there, he excitedconsiderable laughter

      mocking the "madman" for believing in god in this alternative universe where religion haven't taken a significant place as our world today