1,946 Matching Annotations
  1. Feb 2017
    1. “Judge Gorsuch has outstanding legal skills, a brilliant mind, tremendous discipline and has earned bipartisan support,” Mr. Trump said, standing beside the judge and his wife, Louise, as White House officials and Republican lawmakers looked on. “It is an extraordinary résumé — as good as it gets.”

      This seems questionable.

  2. Jan 2017
    1. Monday’s events have transformed the confirmation of Mr. Sessions into a referendum on Mr. Trump’s immigration order
    1. swallowing its sibling

      Some twins eat the other twin in the womb...

    2. cannibalism was more common in females than in males

      Ooh, watch out!

    1. In 2014, a group of Stanford researchers studied 19,000 SNAP participants and compared whether banning sugary drinks or incentivizing fruits and vegetables would affect obesity rates. The researchers found that the incentive program would not. But banning sugary drinks from SNAP, they said, “would be expected to significantly reduce obesity prevalence and Type 2 diabetes incidence, particularly among ages 18 to 65 and some racial and ethnic minorities.”

      Good for the health but there needs more comprehensive test to why people eat the way they do and teaching them how to eat better. Yes, banning soda would help but then some people may replace soda with something else.

    2. PepsiCo lobbied the federal government to prevent restrictions on food stamp purchases in 2011, 2012 and 2013, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit that tracks money in politics. Coca-Cola, Kraft Foods and the sugar industry lobbied against a Florida bill in 2012

      Should not let big companies have a say on what families eat or drink either.

    3. The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, better known as WIC, and the national school lunch program have strict nutrition standards. Medicare pays for necessary medical procedures but does not reimburse for ones it considers harmful, ineffective or unnecessary. SNAP, Dr. Ludwig said, should be structured similarly.

      The situations of one family should not be applied to another. The WIC program is different because it deals with more single and young mothers. While SNAP may deal with large families who all different needs

    4. One limitation of the report was that it could not always distinguish when SNAP households used their benefits, other money or a combination of the two to pay for transactions.

      This is an important variable/flaw of the study because having the perception that tax payers money is going to soft drinks may make people anger but the study does not distinguish if the food stamps is actually paying for it

    5. the U.S.D.A. said it was unfair to single out food stamp recipients for their soft drink consumption.

      USDA states that non-SNAP families have similar soft drink percentages and that families should not be judged for their purchase.

    6. The findings show that the No. 1 purchases by SNAP households are soft drinks, which accounted for 5 percent of the dollars they spent on food. The category of ‘sweetened beverages,’ which includes soft drinks, fruit juices, energy drinks and sweetened teas, accounted for almost 10 percent of the dollars they spent on food. “In this sense, SNAP

      soft drinks accounted for 5% of dollars spent on food. By knowing this tax payers may be skeptical of SNAP.

    1. “It was a huge crowd, a magnificent crowd. I haven’t seen such a crowd as big as this,” Mr. Hoyer told CNN, quoting Mr. Trump. He added that Mr. Trump did not “spend a lot of time on that, but it was clear that it was still on his mind.”

      Whoa.

    1. Our audience inhabits a complex, polluted information environment; our role is to help them navigate it — not to pretend it doesn’t exist. The need to show our work and earn trust has never been more important, since once reliable official sources are peddling “alternative facts” — as the White House press secretary did Saturday.

      The first half of this statement could be reworked as a pedagogical call for digital literacy.

    2. we trust you to reckon with a messy, sometimes uncertain reality.

      Ideally, yes, but can that be done in practice today?

    1. The first wave of feminists fought for more than 70 years to win their biggest demand; S

      really great examples

    2. They have forgotten — again — that this great nation will endure and will prosper only if we all prosper together.

      this is so important

    3. Or — worse — Mr. Trump’s vow to end “political correctness” and make this, at least rhetorically, the same white man’s America it was in Jackson’s time?

      I don't think that will happen, too many people, civilians, will stand in his way; standing up for what they believe in

    4. I don’t buy it. Hillary Clinton’s campaign wasn’t that bad, and Mr. Trump was exposed enough for any thinking adult to see exactly what he is.

      I agree, people tend to get stuck on useless little issues rather than working on change

    5. a man who says he has never asked God for forgiveness, who refers to the Eucharist with characteristic humility (“I drink my little wine, which is about the only wine I drink, and have my little cracker"), who mocks our military heroes, who lumbers about a stage proclaiming, “I alone can fix it!,” who dismissed a working man after the election with a tweet that read in part, “Spend more time working — less talking”

      definitely not in favor of donald trump - these are some new ones I haven't heard of

    6. I mean a greater, almost spiritual faith that I had in my fellow citizens and their better instincts,

      sounds like a disappointed facebook post

    7. It’s inescapable, considering what we are: the first republic of the modern age, a nation of immigrants, haven to so many peoples from around the world. We have, like no other country, for better and for ill, dominated the modern world through both our hard power and our soft, our weapons but also our ideas.

      This is a really a good sentence and idea/explanation

    8. “let America be America again/The land that never yet has been, and yet must be”

      That really is a statement I think most americans can relate to

    9. NO, I’m not over it.

      Powerful beginning

    1. “There is a real problem with the elite privates and flagship publics in not serving as many low-income students as they should,

      agree

    2. On several dozen of campuses, remarkably, fewer students hail from the entire bottom half of the income distribution than from the top 1 percent.

      That's so so crazy oh my goodness

    3. Lower-income students who attend elite colleges fare even better on average than low-income students elsewhere

      wow thats really interesting

    4. Pavia’s story is the classic story of the American dream.

      cool connection

    5. But the success stories are real, too, and they’re fairly common.

      I like how they show both sides

    6. Improving higher education should be a national priority.

      aggreed

    7. Dropout rates are high, saddling students with debt but no degree.

      DEBT

    8. These students entered college poor. They left on their way to the middle class and often the upper middle class.

      That's really cool wow

    9. encouraging

      good word choice

    10. The most comprehensive study of college graduates yet conducted, based on millions of anonymous tax filings and financial-aid records.

      credible

    11. Lots of data for who is attending HE.

    1. This discourages

      Then what do you propose?

    2. affidavits

      A written statement confirmed by an oath in court

    3. But it will take more than that to fix a police culture where there is almost no accountability.

      So how can this be changed?

    4. wanton

      Deliberate, spiteful, purposeful

    5. the city fails to even investigate a majority of the misconduct cases that it is required by law to examine.

      Thats not really surprising

    1. A new national pride will stir ourselves, lift our sights and heal our divisions.

      National pride stirs many things but it doesn't heal divisions.

    2. We stand at the birth of a new millennium

      Our Christian friends missed that opportunity for a Jubilee during the Clinton admiistration, I doubt it will happen now.

    3. The Bible tells us how good and pleasant it is when God's people live together in unity.

      I don't believe in God and doubt the Abrahamic religions will now start "living in unity."

    4. We will build new roads, and highways, and bridges, and airports, and tunnels, and railways all across our wonderful nation. We will get our people off of welfare and back to work rebuilding our country with American hands and American labor.

      The Republican Congress will not fund a New Deal. Is the new President lying or delusional?

    5. Protection will lead to great prosperity and strength.

      This is the crux of the speech. Economists don't believe it.

    6. But that is the past, and now we are looking only to the future.

      Automation, it's the future.

    7. This American carnage stops right here and stops right now.

      If life expectancy goes up for Trump voters, Ocycontin sales will go down. We'll see.

    8. You came by the tens of millions to become part of an historic movement, the likes of which the world has never seen before. At the center of this movement is a crucial conviction that a nation exists to serve its citizens.

      There is no movement. That was demonstrated by the turnout on the National Mall during the Inauguration.

    9. Jan. 20, 2017, will be remembered as the day the people became the rulers of this nation again.

      Bullshit. See On Bullshit by Harry G. Frankfurt.

    10. The establishment protected itself, but not the citizens of our country.

      Most of the gains from automation went to the corporations, not the workers.

    11. we are transferring power from Washington, D.C. and giving it back to you, the people.

      How would the Trump administration do this?

    12. Every four years, we gather on these steps to carry out the orderly and peaceful transfer of power

      Inaccurate. Only Carter and Bush 41 transferred power after four years, since Hoover in 1933.

    13. a great national effort to rebuild our country

      Not likely from the party that hates the government and obstructs every effort to improve our lives. They are taking apart the Federal government not rebuilding anything.

    14. God bless you and God bless America. Thank you. God bless America.

      God gets the close, as is now traditional.

    15. in the hands of a wealthy minority

      Which he has made his cabinet from.

    16. the same almighty creator

      God again.

    17. We stand at the birth of a new millennium

      A new age? I wonder if the Germans have a word for that.

    18. constantly complaining but never doing anything about it.

      A shot at the Republicans?

    19. we will be protected by God

      God again.

    20. The Bible tells us how good and pleasant it is when God's people live together in unity

      No one comments on any of the religious comments in this speech, all by a man who has never shown a sign of religiosity in his entire life.

    21. There is a bit of a ring here of Reagan

      It hits on "My country right or wrong".

    22. Mr. Trump studied

      Mr. Trump didn't write a word of this, you can be sure.

    23. subsidized the armies of other countries

      Says the guy who wants to give more money to Israel.

    24. Mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities, rusted-out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape of our nation; an education system flush with cash but which leaves our young and beautiful students deprived of all knowledge; and the crime and the gangs and the drugs that have stolen too many lives and robbed our country of so much unrealized potential.

      This is an absurdly bleak picture.

    25. This is literally true

      The first half is true, the second half not so much. Many got wealthier, but it was not sufficiently distributed.

    1. Marilynne Robinson

      At the John Jay Library: Housekeeping, located in the Browsing Collection

    2. I've annotated this page on behalf of the library of John Jay College of Criminal Justice. I've highlighted authors and book titles to note where to find them at John Jay or CUNY. (Not sure how to find and check out books? Tutorial: http://jjay.cc/findbookJJ)

    3. Barbara Kingsolver

      At the John Jay Library:

      • The bean trees, located at Stacks PS3561 .I496 P76 2000
      • Prodigal summer, located at Stacks PS3561 .I496 P76 2000
    4. Mr. Díaz

      [Repeat] At the John Jay Library:

      • The brief wondrous life of Oscar Wao, located at Stacks PS3554 .I259 B75 2007
      • Drown, located at Reserve PS3554 .I259 D76 1997
    5. Zadie Smith

      At the John Jay Library:

      • On Beauty, located at Stacks PR6069.M59 O5 2006b
      • White Teeth, located at Stacks PR6069 .M59 W47 2001 and the Browsing Collection
    6. Mr. Whitehead

      At the John Jay Library: The colossus of New York: a city in thirteen parts, located at Stacks F128.55 .W54 2003

    7. Dave Eggers

      At the John Jay Library: What is the what, located at Stacks PS3605 .G48 W43 2007

    8. Saul Bellow

      At the John Jay Library: Herzog, located at Stacks PS 3503 .E4488 H45 1964

    9. Philip Roth

      At the John Jay Library: American pastoral, located at Stacks PS 3568 .O855 A77 1997

    10. Jhumpa Lahiri

      At the John Jay Library:

      • The namesake, located at Stacks PS3562 .A316 N36 2003
      • Interpreter of maladies: stories, located at Stacks PS3562 .A316 I58 1999
    11. Junot Díaz

      At the John Jay Library:

      • The brief wondrous life of Oscar Wao, located at Stacks PS3554 .I259 B75 2007
      • Drown, located at Reserve PS3554 .I259 D76 1997
    12. A Bend in the River

      At the John Jay Library: located at Stacks PR 9272.9 .N32 B4 1979

    13. The Sixth Extinction

      At the John Jay Library: located at Stacks QE721.2 .E97 K65 2014

    14. Thinking, Fast and Slow

      At the John Jay Library: located at Stacks BF441 .K238 2011

    15. The Underground Railroad

      Located in many CUNY libraries: check locations or request at http://onesearch.cuny.edu/jj:cunywide:CUNY_ALEPH008658768

    16. The Woman Warrior

      At the John Jay Library: The woman warrior: memoirs of a girlhood among ghosts, located at Stacks CT 275 .K5764 A33 1989

    17. The Golden Notebook

      At the John Jay Library: located at Stacks PR6023 .E833 G6 1999 (by Doris Lessing)

    18. One Hundred Years of Solitude

      At the John Jay Library: located at Stacks PQ8180.17 .A73 C513 2006

    19. Niebuhr

      At the John Jay Library: The irony of American history, located at Stacks E744 .N5 2008

    20. Sartre

      At the John Jay Library: Nausea, located at Stacks PQ 2637 .A82 N3 1964

    21. Emerson

      At the John Jay Library:

      • Essays & lectures, located at Stacks PS 1605 1983
      • The works of Ralph Waldo Emerson (essays, lectures, letters), located at Special Collections (open shelves) PS 1600 .E83
    22. Nietzsche

      At the John Jay Library:

      • The Portable Nietzsche (essays, letters, notes), located at Stacks B3312.E52 K3 1968
      • The will to power, located at Stacks B3313 .N5 1968
    23. St. Augustine

      At the John Jay Library: Confessions, located at Stacks BR65 .A6 E5 2008

    24. Malcolm X

      At the John Jay Library: The Autobiography of Malcolm X, located at Stacks E 185.97 .L5 A3 1992 and as an ebook at http://jjay.cc/malcolmxbio

    25. DuBois

      At the John Jay Library:

      • The Souls of Black Folk, located at Stacks E185.6 .D797 1990 and as an ebook at http://jjay.cc/duboissouls
      • Black reconstruction (essay), located at Stacks E668 .D83 1956
    26. Wright

      At the John Jay Library:

      • Native Son, located on Reserve PS3545 .R815 N25 2005
      • Works (several novels and other writing) by Richard Wright, located at Stacks PS 3545 .R815 1991
    27. Hughes

      At the John Jay Library: Selected poems of Langston Hughes, located at Stacks PS 3515 .U274 A6 1990

    28. Ellison

      At the John Jay Library: Invisible Man, located at Stacks PS3555 .L625 I5 1995

    29. Baldwin

      At the John Jay Library:

      • Collected essays, located at Stacks PS 3552 .A45 A16 1998
      • Go tell it on the mountain, located at Stacks PS3552 .A45 G62 2005
    30. “Dreams From My Father,”

      At the John Jay Library: Located at Stacks E185.97 .O23 A3 2004

    31. “The Three-Body Problem”
    32. Gettysburg Address
    33. Nelson Mandela

      At the John Jay Library: Long walk to freedom: the autobiography of Nelson Mandela. Located at Stacks DT 1949 .M35 A3 1995

    34. Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

      At the John Jay Library:

    35. Gandhi

      At the John Jay Library:

      • An autobiography: the story of my experiments with truth by Mahatma Gandhi. Located at Stacks DS 481 .G3 A34813 1983 and as ebook at http://jjay.cc/gandhibio
      • Gandhi in India, in his own words. Located at Stacks DS 481 .G3 A3 1987
    36. Lincoln

      At the John Jay Library: Abraham Lincoln: His Speeches and Writings. Located at Stacks E 457.92 1969

    1. You desperately need a good pitch when you have a bad company. When you have a great company, you don’t need a great pitch.
    1. live out loud.

      Love this!

    2. the privilege and the responsibility of the act of empathy.

      Great line.

    3. An actor’s only job is to enter the lives of people who are different from us, and let you feel what that feels like.

      Really this should be all out jobs. Everyday.

    1. Our writing is more relaxed than it used to be — that’s intentional. I actually think some newspaper writing of a generation ago was too stilted, was too hard to follow, too hard to understand

      Could it be because their audience has gained some younger members?

    2. I sat down with the executive editor, Dean Baquet

      He's obviously a man of power in the NYT, it makes the article worth reading - what we're hearing isn't passed down a chain of people

    3. cannot be edited in the same way

      I like that they're constantly trying to better themselves and acknowledging the changing world around them

    4. a continuing emphasis on video and multimedia online,

      I assume this is very effective in young audience members

    1. “It’s scary to say it, but maybe companies will have to be the standard-bearers for morals right now,”

      Call to action?

    2. Nicholas Reville, a board member of the Participatory Culture Foundation who has worked with the Sleeping Giants

      I like how he brings the Sleeping Giants back in, it ties the story together

    3. it’s about using corporations as shields to protect vulnerable people from bullying and hate crimes.

      I've read many articles about cyberbullying between individuals or a group. It's new to read about such large scale cyber hate.

    4. I expected that other companies would want to trumpet their own Breitbart departures. It seemed an easy win for corporate P.R. to distance itself from Klan-rally-like riffs like this one — “every tree, every rooftop, every picket fence, every telegraph pole in the South should be festooned with the Confederate battle flag.” (Telegraph poles!?)

      This article is interesting but difficult to follow.

    5. Programmatic ads can also follow individuals around the internet, based on their browsing history, as happened with Mr. Philips. A single targeted ad could cost just a fraction of a penny, but the pennies add up to a billion-dollar industry.

      It's very interesting to know how this all works.

    6. “We are trying to stop racist websites by stopping their ad dollars,”

      Outline of exactly what they're doing, clear and concise.

    7. Within hours, they received their first response, and they realized that they had stumbled across a potentially powerful tactic.

      It's interesting to think how anyone can make a change in the world. Just by creating a twitter account these people have started something powerful.

    8. gobsmacked

      interesting vocab that matches the authors tone

    9. “This has been the longest month of my life.”

      Because it was a difficult month or?

    10. ad dollars.

      Using "ad dollars" rather than marketing money or advertisement budget creates a youthful mood.

    11. earth and environmental science professor

      Adding credibility

    1. Mr. President-elect, are you listening?

      calling out President-elect

    2. In the short and medium term, we must step up assistance to climate refugees and sufferers, both to provide relief and to assist with new livelihoods that adjust to new climate realities

      call to action

    3. She broke off cactus pads, scraped off the thorns and boiled them briefly, and the boys ate them — even though they provide little nutrition. “My heart is breaking because I have nothing to give them,” Fideline said. “I have no choice.”

      He doesn't mention himself much, although it was his own story of when he was there he focuses on what will apply to readers emotions.

    4. The World Food Program

      outlining programs that help, how other people can help too

    5. Those of us in the rich world who have emitted most of the carbon bear a special responsibility to help people like these Madagascar villagers who are simultaneously least responsible for climate change and most vulnerable to it.

      I like this statement. It's clear and to the point. Not too wordy

    6. certainly not fretting about American politics — for she has never heard of either President Obama or Donald Trump.

      This shows how self-centered America truly is

    7. the United Nations says.

      credible sources

    8. Trump has repeatedly mocked climate change, once even calling it a hoax fabricated by China.

      This makes Trump look like the bad guy, making it seem like he's working against dying children

    9. overseas governments that don’t want to curb carbon emissions.

      He states "curb carbon emissions" like it's a very simple thing to solve. Is it? I'm not sure but usually a problem of such a large scale cannot be "curbed" with ease

    10. For the next half century or so, we will see students learning less in school and economies held back, because in 2017 we allowed more than a million kids to be malnourished just here in southern Africa, collateral damage from our carbon-intensive way of life.

      More new information

    11. Now they understand there is a far broader toll: When children in utero and in the first few years of life are malnourished, their brains don’t develop properly. As a result, they may suffer permanently impaired brain function

      He presents something new, we know children are starving in Africa. But this is different information readers haven't heard before

    12. Sonjona realizes that it is wrong to marry off a 10-year-old, but he also knows it is wrong to see his daughter starve.

      Such a sad struggle, a decision that a man should not have to make about his daughter.

    13. because no one can afford the bride price of about $32.

      Many people have $32 in their wallets at any given time. Again, we will never know what it's like to live in those conditions.

    14. Not one of the children in the village has ever had a bath.

      This shows the audience that even though they're reading about these impoverished people they will never know what it is actually like to experience these conditions.

    15. In America, climate change costs families beach homes; in poor countries, parents lose their children.

      If I had a beach house I'd feel guilty

    16. The immediate cause of the droughts

      Backstory makes it more credible

    17. a related drought has devastated East Africa and the Horn of Africa and is expected to continue this year. The U.N. World Food Program has urgently appealed for assistance, but only half the money needed has been donated.

      Translation: It's not going away and Americans are selfish, will you be like the rest of them and let these kids die on your watch?

      Reminds me of the "Arms of the Angel" dog commercials. I can't watch them without crying

    18. “I feel so powerless as a mother, because I know how much I love my child,” she said. “But whatever I do just doesn’t work.”

      I am not a mother and this still hits me hard, it must hurt mothers very deeply

    19. Trump should come and feel these children’s ribs and watch them struggle for life.

      Follows up Trump being a bad guy with emotional appeal to readers.

    1. Students need two skills to succeed as lawyers and as professionals: listening and communicating. We must listen with care, which requires patience, focus, eye contact and managing moments of ennui productively — perhaps by double-checking one’s notes instead of a friend’s latest Instagram. Multitasking and the mediation of screens kill empathy.