The government has officially shut down. The Democrats are using what little leverage they have to try to save extremely popular health care policies, keep premiums from spiking, and to convince their constituents they have a little fight left in them. The GOP is refusing to negotiate on health care or anything else until a short spending bill is approved. It’s a battle over one of the most important and expensive aspects of American life, but like everything in politics, it’s also a battle over messaging—which is especially complicated in an era of algorithms, deep-fakes, siloed news universes, and a newsfeed that scrolls so rapidly, even something as vital as whether the government is on or off may not consume our attention for more than about five minutes. In this environment, it’s become challenging for Americans to focus on something as personal and critical as their own health. I can barely maintain my focus through a prostate exam without being distracted by incoming news notifications. And those news notifications are coming faster than ever, because the messaging wars, they have begun. NPR: Trump administration uses taxpayer dollars to blame Democrats for government shutdown. “The Trump administration is blaming Democrats for the government shutdown in internal federal agency communications as well as public agency websites, in what experts say could be a violation of federal ethics laws.” (At this point, I’d usually insert a humorous remark to provide some levity to a serious issue. But I can’t really come up with anything funnier than the phrase, federal ethics laws.) 2Are You a Top or a Bot?“Over the past three years, babies have been conceived — and at least 20 of them have been born — through clinical trials that involve automation with little to no human intervention. The same algorithmic computer-vision software that helps autonomous vehicles spot objects on the road and finds signs of breast cancer in a mammogram can instantaneously detect the most robust swimmer among hundreds of thousands of flailing, corkscrewing sperm — each one a fraction of the width of a hair strand. It’s a capability that far exceeds any trained embryologist’s eye. A robotic arm can collect that sperm and mix the chemicals required for an egg to stay viable. And it can delicately and reproducibly fertilize an egg, initiating the moment of conception.” WaPo (Gift Article): Robots are learning to make human babies. Twenty have already been born. (When I tried using this technology, the robot said it wasn’t really in the mood.) 3Looney Platoons“There is a certain kind of Army officer who, after the excitement of company command, finds his career stalled, and who perhaps leaves the service as a major in the National Guard filled with bitterness and resentment. He may then dream of one day being in a position to make all the superior officers who failed to appreciate his leadership qualities, his insight, his sheer fitness stand to attention and hear him lay down the law about what it is to be an officer, and threaten to fire those who do not meet *his* standards. In this respect, and this respect only, on that stage Pete Hegseth was living the dream. In all other respects, however, he was ridiculous.” Eliot A. Cohen in The Atlantic: Pete Hegseth Is Living the Dream. 4But Wait, There’s Moore“One might assume that Mary Tyler Moore would have wanted The Hat from the opening titles of her 1970s hit series, “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” In what may be the most famous freeze frame in television history, Ms. Moore’s character, a Midwestern sunburst named Mary Richards, removes her tufted tam-o’-shanter and, right in the thick of bustling Minneapolis foot traffic, tosses it skyward — as purely ebullient an image as Hollywood has ever produced. The moment has been aped by “Scrubs” and “The Simpsons,” and immortalized in bronze at the site of the throw. In an opening title sequence that was forever being tweaked throughout the show’s seven seasons, The Hat was a constant. So: How did she manage to keep it?” NYT (Gift Article): She Turned the World On With Her Smile. But Where Will the Hat Land? 5Extra, ExtraIt’s Mourning in America: “The merging of state power and economic power around one man who accepts that power as his due would not be possible without the algorithmic grift that has so all-consumingly captured our attention. The internet and the people who, for all intents and purposes, now own it have excelled at making Trump good at authoritarianism. They commodified information. They quelled regulation. They escaped blame for degrading collective action while raking in profits for spectacles of violence that degradation predictably produces. Now, via their president, they are using it to crush the First Amendment, to supercharge the Second Amendment, to stand up bot armies and real armed militias to defend their ownership of your civil liberties.” Tressie McMillan Cottom in the NYT (Gift Article) with a really good essay that ties together the administration’s authoritarian leanings, the consolidation of media ownership, and the attack on free speech. Mourn, or Else. |