1,475 Matching Annotations
  1. Jan 2026

    Annotators

    1. ToEnoch was born Irad; and Irad was the fatherof Mehujael, and Mehujael the father ofMethushael, and Methushael the father ofLamech.

      Where did the not adam and eve people come from?

    Annotators

    1. Whether partycoalitions can again be disrupted depends on shifting party dynamics insome fundamental way, by some future partisan coalition- builders, in waysthat we cannot foresee.

      To me the story is this: NE always had some preference for liberal policies and for a while the party to affiliate with was less defined. After Reagan, the base of young and immigrant support FDR had grown was unable to find a home for their progressive mindsets in an increasingly evangelical republican party. Thus, they said: "We dippin" and deserted to the democrats.

    2. dominated by Southerners, and the partywas facing pressures to pursue the policies of cultural conservatives” costingthe GOP support elsewhere as “the Northeast wing was not receptive to thisemphasis”

      I think the push factors were more important than the pull here

    3. Party leaders and their strategic efforts built partisan coalitions in NewEngland during changing circumstances, often by trying to attract particulardemographic groups through outreach, party organization, and issue appeals

      Immigrants and liberalism

    4. Since Reagan, the Republican Party has become even more wed to far-right messages and has moved in an anti- government, even anti-democraticdirection, which swept in conspiracy theorists, while undermining governance(Fried and Harris 2020, 2021). Partisan polarization is increasingly racializedand asymmetric, with Republicans more extreme than Democrats (Mannand Ornstein 2012; Tesler 2016).

      This seems to me a primary factor

    5. New England, bycontrast, continued its tradition of electing mostly moderate Republicanswho were pro-choice, comparatively feminist and, particularly in comingdecades, pro-LGBTQ+ rights.

      In part whats gonna happen is the relative extremism is gonna make people who were once rep. democrats

    6. As this chapter noted at the start, the Democratic Party’s embrace of civilrights in the latter decades of the twentieth century is key to understandingparty transformation in New England.

      Again progressivism rears its beautiful head

    7. Muskie and Reagan: Post-FDR Coalition-Buildersand New England Politics

      We just got the pull factors, now we will get the push. Reagans social conservatism will not be good for his new england base

    8. Franklin Roosevelt’s highly successful NewDeal coalition was to graft more liberal elements— mainly ethnic and urbanliberals— onto the party’s traditional Southern base

      The north was always more progressive, and there was a time when the republican part provided that, but as the population become younger and catholic and immigrant, the democrats were actually the party that had the opportunity for liberalism

    9. Perhaps it was the Democrats’ confirmed status as a nationalminority that made them more risk acceptant by 1928 when they nominateda Tammany Hall- affiliated northerner

      Wonder if we will see parallels in modern politics

    10. New England’ssupport for the GOP was mostly uniform due to the lingering resentmentsof the Civil War and to Republicans’ continuing support of nationalizing,coordinative efforts as they related to commerce.

      But isn't this not analogous to today since the views on states rights would flip which party it found a home under

    11. based in the South, were,among other things, committed to states’ rights and slavery protections.When late Jacksonian era Democrats,

      ironic given that new england almost started the revolution with a want of states rights

    12. New England’s swing in party supporthas been at least as dramatic as what occurred in the former confederacy.

      But hasn't given new england the same voting power as the south

    Annotators

    1. This methodology is called “textual criticism” because itis a way of assessing a text through critical comparisonof its different copies.

      Basically, being ok with the fact that there are differences

    2. n response to this critique of their canonical status,the Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation position wasto declare these works definitively a part of the Bible.The Catholic church to this day maintains the canoni-cal status of Tobit, Judith, the longer version of Esther,1 and 2 Maccabees, the Wisdom of Solomon, Sirach,Baruch (including the Le*er of Jeremiah), and the Addi-tions to Daniel. The Orthodox churches also maintainedthe canonical status of these works, and in addition re-garded some or all of the following books as canonical:1 Esdras, the Prayer of Manasseh, Psalm 151, 3 Maccabees,2 Esdras, and (in an appendix) 4 Maccabees. The NRSVincludes headings within the Apocryphal/Deuteroca-nonical Books calling a*ention to the varying canonicalstatus of these works.

      Canon because they wanted to politically oppose to keep power

    3. continued to cite the Greek Bible, though argu-ing for the superiority of the Hebrew text and canon.

      For people party it was on hand but it must have also been colonial motivations

    4. This is, fundamental-ly, a typical ancient Near Eastern process: Instead of cre-ating a small, highly consistent text, as we perhaps mightnow do, those responsible for the process included manyof the viewpoints in ancient Israel, incorporating differ-ing and even contradictory traditions into this single, andsingular, book—the Hebrew Bible

      DEI

    5. Canonization is fundamentally a process of selection,but we cannot reconstruct why particular texts were can-onized while others were not

      But again gives an opportunity for SELF selection of whats important

    Annotators

  2. Nov 2025
    1. During this period of bipartisan attempts, from 2006 to 2008, deportation of unauthorizedimmigrants increased by 27%, while border apprehensions simultaneously fell by 35%.17

      Part of the problem is that in such an executive heavy political space, the approval ratings or cha nce of reelction can quicly halt reform

    2. the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, and this policy hasremained prominent in immigration enforcement well into the 21st century by allowing local lawenforcement officials to be trained to carry out parts of the detention and deportation processesusually executed by then Immigration and Naturalization Services (INS) and now Immigrationand Customs Enforcement (ICE).

      History review

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  3. Oct 2025
    1. We left Syria when she was in 6th grade.That was the last time she had any schooling. And then the next time she was in school againwas in NJ. She was placed in 10th grade because she was 16 years old. She was very confusedand struggled in school. She eventually dropped out of H.S.

      So not only will there be cultural divides but also a fallout from whatever they were fleeing

    Annotators

    1. A cohesive elite structure is marked by consensus reached by decision-makers acrossall sectors on the agenda and the approach for Chinatown development

      Success of a chinatown isndependent on how well the de facto leaders get along

    Annotators

    1. Participants showed that CBPinconsistently screened or accounted for fear of return,trafficking, or age.

      I wonder how much this represents a mandate from the higher ups

    2. Approximately 51percent reported that CBP did not explain the documentsthey signed (e.g., Form I-770) prior to their repatriationto Mexico, and nearly half reported not knowing whatforms they signed. Fourteen percent reported feelingforced or pressured to sign documents

      They should be given some leniency because they are minors but instead they are taken advantage of

    3. Overall, the results demonstratethat CBP does not comply with the major policies articu-lated in the Flores Settlement, its internal guidelines, orthe TVPRA, as per the detention, screening, or repatria-tion of Mexican UAC.

      Not surprising still wondering why

    4. . As nongovernmental organizations and human rights groups have documented, however, CBP hasrepeatedly violated these legal standards and policies, and subjected UAC to abuses and rights violations

      Why, whats the incentive

    Annotators

  4. Sep 2025
    1. Other research shows thatminorities regard their ethnoracial and national identities as more compatible when they perceivethat the host community values their group

      So they are studying the opposite

    2. n spite of high levels of integration, continuesto navigate contexts in which politics and policies frame Latino ethnicity as “illegal” and fo

      Because its more of a mislabel?

    Annotators

    1. are transferred to DHS and restructured to become three new agencies: USCustoms and Border Protection (CBP), US Immigration and Customs Enforcement(ICE), and US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)

      Which is what we know today and was born from a security decision following 9/11

    2. he law defines a “refugee” as any personoutside the person’s country of nationality who is unable or unwilling to return tothat country because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on accountof race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or particularopinion.

      This is where we accept but still do not ratify international law

    3. The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act (known as the Hart-Cellar Act) (79Stat. 911) abolishes the national-origins quota system and replaces it with a systemwhereby immigrants are admitted based on their relationship to a US citizen orlawful permanent resident family member or US employer. While caps are placedon the total number of immigrants who may be admitted each year in most family-based and employer-based categories, the law provides that there will be no cap onthe number of “immediate relatives” (spouses, parents, and minor children) of UScitizens admitted each year. Like immediate relatives, immigrants from the WesternHemisphere countries are also exempted from the law’s system of “preferencecategories” for those who are admitted. However, the law provides that beginning in1968, there will be a cap of 120,000 on the total number of permanent residents whomay be admitted from the Western Hemisphere.

      System we still use today

    4. by Nazi persecution to immigrate to the United States.The law also states that up to 15,000 individuals residing in the United States as ofApril 1, 1948 who meet the displaced person definition may adjust their status andbecome lawful permanent residents. President Truman signs the law “with very greatreluctance,” expressing concerns that the law’s requirements will exclude many Jewishrefugees

      First instance of refugee assistance

    5. ough the law exempts students, as wellas certain professionals (e.g. teachers, government officers, lawyers, physicians, andchemists), and their wives and children.

      So low skill labor basically

    1. . You hear it all the time but that doesn’t mean it makessense. Whiskey is supposed to be bracing but what it is is awful. I want either teaor beer, no whiskey. Mary nods again and heads into the kitchen

      I'm having anxiety reading it

    2. . An hour later I go back andthe office is empty. When I erase the blackboard nally, I can see where she laidher hands carefully, where the numbers are ghostly and blurred

      Bob dies but why?

    3. You have control over this,” he explains in his professor voice. “You can decidehow long she suffers

      Dog represents the marriage perhaps, but also maybe her own suffering

    4. . “I have to talk to youright now,” he says grimly. “Where are you? I can never nd you.”“Try calling your own house,” I say to the machine. In his second message he hascomposed himself.“I’m ne now,” he says rmly. “Disregard previous message and don’t call me back,please; I have meetings.” Click, dial tone, rewind

      The fuck is his problem

    5. This is an affront to the two younger dogs, who knowthe couch belongs to them; as soon as I settle in they creep up and nd theirplaces between my knees and elbows

      Solitary

    6. Or that the dog at the bottom of the stairs keeps having mild strokes, which causeher to tilt her head inquisitively and also to fall over. She drinks prodigiousamounts of water and pees great volumes onto the folded blankets where shesleeps

      Analogy?

    7. ake up. She’s staring at me with her head slightly tippedto the side, long nose, gazing eyes, toenails clenched to get a purchase on thewood oor. We used to call her the face of love.

      Poetic way to describe owning a dog

    Annotators

    1. It’s not yourfault, but you may choose to take this misfortune as a sign of God’s displeasureand torture yourself with guilt and self-loathing for many years to come.

      Really apparent tone shift bc of the format

    2. We regret to inform you that it will be quite a while before you grow up,and it will take some cataclysmic events in your life before you really begi

      All voice of expierince

    3. We understand why you took refuge in themusic of the Grateful Dead, dancing until you felt yourself leave your body,caught up in their brand of enlightenment.

      Nice line

    4. After all, who knew that the semester you decidedto come to uc Berkeley would be so tumultuous. That unsavory business withJim Jones and his Bay Area followers left us all reeling.

      ?

    Annotators

    1. They conclude that nationalismdepresses support for immigration, national policies to mitigate climate change, andinternational cooperation to that end

      Not surpising, at least the migration piece

    2. or to believe thatthey will suffer, both from climate mitigation policies that raise prices or reduce jobsin the carbon industries and from competition or threat from new immigrants

      Easily manipulated voter base

    3. Research on how to scale up mental health resources to meet theneeds of sudden large numbers of disaster migrants is needed

      Obviously important but doesn't scream to me the way the others do

    4. here is reason to believe that previous regular,measured and successful immigration paves the way for successful integration of refugeesand other immigrants who arrive suddenly and in greater numbers

      Just as an immigrant community can help receive new migrants, they also soften the landing of society around them to be less discriminatory

    5. minorities and became less supportive of anti-immigration parties compared to individ-uals living farther away

      But I think this will somewhat depend on the place and like mindset of where they are being integrated

    6. be concentrated in order to maximize social network ties and co-ethnicsupport, creating an ethnic enclave, or dispersed in order to avoid overburdening receiv-ing communities, and providing more opportunities for immigrants and natives to inter-act?

      How much say does a host country really have

    7. 5000 people relocated to Buffalo.Some went back, but many stayed. In the 2020 US Census Buffalo showed its first popu-lation increase in 70 years (National Academy of Sciences, Medicine and Engineering2024).

      Countries can get benefits from bolstering dying cities

    8. By leveraging what we know about migrants –that they send economic remittances in amounts that dwarf international economicaid, and that they create welcoming communities that ease the integration and furtherthe success of countrymen who follow, the use of visas for strategic migrants can benefi-cially shape future migration and help sending communities hit hardest by climatechange

      This is smart, take advantage of the human disposition already at play

    9. Providing anumber of visas to countries that are experiencing severe climate change will seedfuture migration through social networks and support those unable to move who needto adapt in place through remittances.

      It can be a borderline one time thing

    10. Instead, they would just provide a path to perma-nent migration for a stream of migrants from the sending country, whether or not theindividual migrants report that they are experiencing adverse effects of climate change.

      Who gets to allocate then? Just a lottery system, and how does one verify that it is for climate reasons (although maybe that isn't important)

    11. One avenue forward is that visas could be issued for countriesfacing all three types of migration – disaster, strategic, and managed retreat

      requires so much individual generosity on the part of the country

    12. A new legal and bureaucratic category of a climate migrant would be very difficult, ifnot impossible to administer.

      We need a more strict definition of climate migrant b/c climate change so often works in tandem with other push factors, the scope needs to be narrower

    13. ea level rise and destruc-tion of ecosystems and livelihoods will cause two types of migration: strategic migrationand managed retreat. Strategic migration is a choice made by individuals. It can beeconomically motivated or specifically because of a perception that staying in placewill be impossible or costly because of climate change (Castro 2023). Managed retreatis the organized movement of communities away from hazards. It will become inevitablein some places, like low lying island nations and other places that become uninhabitable,yet it is highly undesirable and often fiercely resisted

      Strategic migration is more economically or individually motivated while managed retreat will happen as that place slowly becomes unlivable (as opposed to rapidly in the case of disaster)

    14. involving ‘conflict, disease, pol-itical change and economic crises’ (Kemp et al. 2022, 6). Should such large scale societaldisruptions occur, migration would surely follow

      Making me want to be a damn climate activist

    15. Estimating the volume of climate migration produces highly varied estimates. Ques-tions about how much the climate will warm, whether the effects will be linear or includetipping points that drastically change climate and cause sea level rise, the role of climatechange as a threat multiplier leading to conflict and government collapse, and the ways inwhich countries will adapt to rising numbers of potential migrants by closing or openingborders are all implicated in these estimates.

      TLDR: It makes everything worse bozos

    16. argue that while climate migration will pose many chal-lenges, it also can be framed positively, and we can use what we know from migrationscholarship to craft policies and to further research that will lead to better outcomesfor both migrants and receiving communities

      What are the good outcomes for receiving communities

    17. successful integration of largenumbers of migrants fleeing climate change should be a toppriority not least because this success will help to preserve thesocial trust that is necessary for successful climate mitigationefforts

      But you are actively fighting against the dominant american thought

    18. is for richcountries to allocate extra visas to poorer countries that aresuffering the effects of climate migration, partly as reparations forclimate injustice.

      Good fucking luck bro

    Tags

    Annotators

    1. TPSis a blanket form of humanitarian relief which allows qualifying nationals of designated countries toremain in the United States and obtain work authorization.

      This I definitely agree with, and it does not seem as reliant on precedented legal definitions

    2. While the asylum and refugeeprotection systems offer protection to some individuals impacted by climate change who have alsosuffered other persecution, there are no formal protection pathways for climate-displaced people underU.S. law. Temporary designations, such as humanitarian parole, do not offer a systemic response toprovide lasting protections to those displaced by climate change

      The counter argument here is that it will sooooooo expand the definition of refugee ironically "opening the floodgates"

    3. Jozef said that after HBA replaced the tents destroyed by theJanuary 2023 bomb cyclone, additional rain storms in late February 2023 destroyed the new tents

      Climate change is both a multiplying factor for why families migrate as well a a direct reason why migrating itself is so difficult

    4. migrants to cross dangerous terrain by foot, making them vulnerable to the adverseeffects of climate change along the journey to the United States-Mexico border

      Vicious cycle

    5. will further endanger asylumseekers and refugees, including those displaced in the context of climate change, by making themineligible for protection based solely on their manner of entry.

      Talked about this in class

    6. asylum in 2015 after the government illegally appropriated their tribal lands,leaving them vulnerable to homelessness and gang violence

      This is persecuation along the lines of a group so it makes them count as refugees

    7. Several asylum seekers interviewed by the research teamreported that organized criminal groups had taken advantage of precarious conditions resulting fromclimate change to exploit their communities, including

      Sort of like what the taliban is doing, you have to bend a knee to power but also the hand that feeds you

    8. The family fled after gang members killed the woman’s brother and uncle andkidnapped her husband.

      This feels like maybe it could apply also maybe a particular social group could be those affected by a climate crisis

    9. He toldthe research team that he had applied for government aid to rebuild his house, but that hisapplication was denied. “They left me with practically nothing,” he said.

      But because the gov. is saying a blanket no its not persecution?

    10. A Mexican woman fleeing an abusive partner reported that her riverside community wasflooded by heavy rains in 2022, forcing her to close her travel agency business and impeding herability to support her children. The woman noted that there were more storms that forced theclosure of local businesses in 2022 than ever before

      This unfortunately defo does not count

    11. threats by gang members who killed her son reportedthat floods from heavy rains over the past two years destroyed her home and heavily damagedthe family’s chicken farm, leaving them without an income.

      Could this not qualify as a refugee status because of persecution

    12. intersecting threats push people to seek safety across international borders.

      Climate can create internal displacement which eventually spills over into international displacement

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      • striking first line, and very good hook
      • I mean the obvious question is who the fuck is this boy and why is he being kept in just an obviously inhumane place?
      • For some reason its really portrayed as idyllic
      • he has no dialogue
      • yikes bro, he was like raping kids or some shit?

    Annotators

    1. ips. However, the administration was ultimately unsuccessful in preving the development of a policy regime based firmly in legal advocacy. Leglessons, strategies, and best practices from the early successes and failures ofHaitian advocates were passed to Central American advo

      Surely in part this is just a backlash of having tried to swing the pendulum so far in the other direction

    2. 85 found that "hostile statapplicants were 3491.4 percent more likely to obtain refugee status than wereapplicants from non-hostil

      Still using refugees and asylum seekers as political tools

    3. outh Florida. The program gave thegreat leeway to detain Haitians and quickly deny their asylum claims befreturning them to Ha

      Again, very Ad Hoc at a time where there was enough demand for a systematic procedure

    4. Nixon, and Carter used their executive authority to parole additional peobeyond that cap.18 As these actions became increasingly frequent, key memberCongress grew frustrated with what they viewed as an executive bypasslegislative authority over immigration admissions.19 To restore congressiooversight, a legislative revision appear

      Ad Hoc behaivor mentioned in class

    5. d States took afairly unilateral approach to refugee policy. The United States admitted peoplebased on its own refugee definition that paid homage to, but was much moreideologically restrictive than, the definition in the UN Refugee Convention. Mea

      Because the ratification was still mainky for europeans and the demand for refuggee status or asylum was not great

    6. ism. Third, in the1980s the field of asylum cause law grew in response to the resistance of PresidentReagan's Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) to implementing the 1980Refugee A

      Reagans gonna fuck us up

    1. Afaf, a mother of eight children, four of whom were inthe United States, also prepared food that the resettlement agency purchasedfrom her for arriving families.

      Informal skills

    2. The womenshared tea during their breaks, and on Fridays when there was no class, theyheld get-togethers, preparing meals of yogurt and bread fatta or eggs and falafelto share alongside strong Arabic coffee and black tea. These were spaces tounwind and crack jokes while listening to the latest in Arabic pop music,

      First positive of this whole chapter?

    3. While the demands ofthe self-sufficiency imperative were met by their spouses, women, includingRima, were able to attend English class.

      The unequal opprotunities for men gives women a chance to bolster their human capital

    4. The thread went dead after that. “They just wanta handout,” Nader said, shrugging.

      Again, a new hostility of people who feel like they have succeeded and can't understand why other people haven't

    5. However,this wasn’t advertised or promised, and the agency policy was to end finan-cial assistance after the Welcome Money was depleted or shortly thereafter.

      This is kind of the work mom should do, also I wonder how this looks different now. To what extent do these NGOs have to work with the gov.

    6. Many new arrivals would not learn to identify with others who wereminoritized, nor would they identify their own position within the Americanracial hierarchy.

      Another way its hostile

    7. so long as [the vettingprocess] is fully implemented and not diluted, it will allow us to safely admit themost vulnerable refugees while protecting the American.

      It was never a partisan behavior

    Annotators