Took me a while to get this π€£π€£.
@racheledini
Lurcher mum+newly redundant lecturer in US literature.Writes on waste, gender, housework, appliances, ads, politics of nostalgia. Looking for new collaborators Books: http://tinyurl.com/3rf4fr & http://tinyurl.com/3er6t3h9 Founder http://literarywaste.com
Took me a while to get this π€£π€£.
We've screamed on behalf of our neighbors.
The people in Iran might not live next door, but they're just as human as we are. We must scream and show up for them too, in whatever ways we are able.
They have been given the same bottled lightning we all have access to and pointed at the most dehumanizing use cases to ever be invented. None of them are coding a Sistine Chapel, they are building a thinner edge for the wedge we keep pressing on the social contract.
Iβm not going to be hyped because the same urge that keeps me up late working on an arrangement or a songβs mix has been deformed into the practices of spreadsheet keepers with automated interns
If it wasn't for state sponsored art, we wouldn't have Velasquez's Dwarves. I'd say that's a good deal. Meanwhile the market gives us Jeff Koons
I regularly see people wondering how it's possible that there are so many musicians and writers and film makers and artists from a tiny nation like Iceland.
And the answer is really simple: State funding for art education and artists. I literally get a salary from the government to write books.
ending her career lying about an orwell quote while the entire room is getting news notifications about how sheβs been fired and clearly doesnβt know it, perfect
βThereβs Always a Tweetβ is having a career year.
When we talk about Baby Boomers not getting off the stage: In 1997, the US president was born in 1946.
In 2007, the US president was born in 1946.
In 2017, the US president was born in 1946.
And next year in 2027? The US president will have been born in 1946.
Thread.
Back in the Iraq war, a running joke was the confusion that pro-war advocates could not distinguish between Shia and Sunnis, which seems like a degree of unbelievable sophistication now.
βThe children are always ours, every single one of them, all over the globe; and I am beginning to suspect that whoever is incapable of recognizing this may be incapable of morality.β
James Baldwin
I do struggle to understand Shabana Mahmood: if this was what she came into politics to do, why was it the Labour Party that attracted her? Throughout most of the last 20 years, the Conservatives would've been a much more obvious fit.
If it's not, why's she doing it so zealously?
Thanks Iβm sure that as historians of colonization and empire @sandraduffy.bsky.social and I have not read Hannah Arendt, nor do we have the capacity to understand complexity while also thinking violent US imperial action is never a good idea
What would do without men to explain things to us
To be fair (and I am in the UK) it wasnβt immediately clear what he was referring to.
It seems that some people are shocked and amazed that someone might feel a bit of solidarity instead of βf#ck it, I got mine, pull up the ladderβ, which is clearly how the Braverman sort operate
Kind of incredible to see this covered in the Guardian.
In 2026, colleges must teach students that this is not the end of the world. We must teach hope. Current undergraduates can barely remember a time before the threats of climate change and authoritarianism loomed to catastrophic scale. Since 2010, the future depicted in TV, books, and games has been dystopian or apocalyptic, so for our current students the end of the world feels more familiar and realistic than a future with hope. Now we are asking them to choose majors and life paths when the desirability, indeed the very existence, of whole sectors of employment are in question, due to the overwhelming promises of LLMs and machine learning. As young people hear daily that vocation after vocation may vanish into automationβs maw, and that democracy, liberty, land, sea, and sky are all in jeopardy, despair is growing. Despair is very emotionally tempting. It means freedom from the responsibility to shape the future. This is a terrifying turning point, but many generations before us have faced such turning points, and met them. We can offer our students perspective. Only a few dozen institutions on Earth are more than 900 years old, and the vast majority are universities. The university system is not a house of straw to buckle in this storm: We are the rocks that have sheltered the knowledge, hope, and truth through tumults which have toppled kingdoms while classrooms endured. We can endure this, and be a guiding light through it, but only by recentering, by teaching citizens, not workers; power, not PowerPoint; aspiration, not apocalypse. Despair is how we lose. The classroom is where we battle it. All other battles flow from here. Ada Palmer is an associate professor of history at the University of Chicago.
This, from Ada Palmer as part of The Chronicle's survey of 11 scholars on the future of higher ed, is what I needed to end the week.
At least 40 students killed so far at a school in Minab according to AlJazeera
Iβm not convinced that its covid policies are what landed them the victory, mainly given that much of the public seems to have forgotten about it in line with the media narrative that itβs over, but the fact that the Greens are the only party to have such policies is important,&shouldnβt be ignored.
It's a hopeful moment, but we need to brace ourselves, writes Owen Jones. βοΈ
From the 'Project Fear' Scots are so familiar with, to the brutal demonisation of Jeremy Corbyn, modern history shows us the tactics the establishment will use against Zack Polanski and the Greens
At this point you have to start wondering if cabinet ministers are spread betting on precisely how many council seats Labour is going to lose in May.
Because that would be the sanest explanation for:
Zack Polanski, "Keir Starmer is never going to appease the right by slowly moving to the right"
"They just get worse and they drag the government with them"
"I wouldn't be bothered except they're the government of this country and they're dragging us all down with them"
ππππβTo put it another way, Reform and Conservative seem to have decided they don't want to bother with British Muslims. They cannot be surprised when they decide they don't wish to bother with them.β
So the womenβs hockey team got fresh pasta at a swanky restaurant in Milan with Stanley Tucci and the menβs team got cold McDonalds in a room blaring Toby Keith where the President didnβt even eat with them. Yβall idk if youβve noticed but the patriarchy sucks FOR YOU.
My first instinct when I read this was to ask my husband if the @greenparty.org.uk in Denton got 1.7 billion votes. In case you wanted to know whatβs dominated my day. π
I tried so hard
And got so far
But in the end
No one fucking likes me
I joined Reform
To deport you all
But in the end
No one fucking likes me
It's actually really impressive how well @zackpolanski.bsky.social handled the assertion that the greens are playing into "Sectarian Politics". Like, just plainly saying, "no I don't think it's bad that we campaign to different demographics in different ways."
YES YES YES.
Gorton and Denton was 127th on the list of Green Party target seats.
To win by such a margin there suggests there is much bigger potential for Green gains in May's local elections than most people expect
bylinetimes.com/2026/02/27/h...