From "Professors Are Being Watched: 'We’ve Never Seen This Much Surveillance'/Scrutiny of university classrooms is being formalized, with new laws requiring professors to post syllabuses and tip lines for students to complain" (NYT).
February 9, 2026
"Benjamin Robinson, an Indiana University professor, is one of those under the new microscope. In his class on the history of German thought..."
From "Professors Are Being Watched: 'We’ve Never Seen This Much Surveillance'/Scrutiny of university classrooms is being formalized, with new laws requiring professors to post syllabuses and tip lines for students to complain" (NYT).
"If you use chopsticks to pick up apple slices, begin the day with hot water and goji berries before meandering down to a nearby park for a dose of t’ai chi..."
From "I taught America how to be Chinese, says 23-year-old TikTok star/Gen Z is mastering chopsticks and t’ai chi, thanks to Sherry Zhu from New Jersey" (London Times).
A woman holding a baby is trending on X.
If that's true, it should also be true that men who observe that woman also experience rewiring. They see her as the beautiful ideal and long to center their life on a woman like that. If men don't respond like that, it is no wonder that women have put effort into resisting that and warning other women to resist.We all laugh, but what’s happening here is holy.
— Josh Wood (@J_K_Wood) February 8, 2026
An instinct no ideology can suppress forever. Holding a baby rewires everything: your politics, your priorities, your purpose.
We’ve spent decades teaching women to resist this. Imagine a world where we stopped. pic.twitter.com/Kevz1N7hy4
"I’m not good at socialization and so I don’t like to attend parties or give speeches, but sometimes I have to do that. The rest of the year I’m at home, just working. I’m kind of a workaholic."

February 8, 2026
Aging is sad in a new way now.
Translation: "Today, Lindsey Vonn is competing in her fifth Olympic Games. 📷 Olympic profile photo Turin 2006 (21 years old) 📷 Olympic profile photo Milan-Cortina 2026 (41 years old)"Hoy, Lindsey Vonn compite en sus quintos JJOO.
— David Orenes (@david_lrl) February 8, 2026
📷 Foto ficha olímpica Turín 2006 (21 años)
📷 Foto ficha olímpica Milán-Cortina 2026 (41 años) pic.twitter.com/jQotPOJrsa
BREAKING: WATCH:
— 𝐀𝐋𝐏𝐇𝐀 ® (@Alpha7021) February 8, 2026
Lindsey Vonn’s Olympic downhill run ended in disaster as she crashed early in the race, crushing her chances of winning a medal.
The dramatic moment was captured on video. pic.twitter.com/v9wShvl0jh
"Who wants to sit squeezed up to a big group of hairy men on a bachelor party?"
She's quoted in "Tensions boil over as tourists swamp Budapest’s historic bath houses/Bathing culture is at the heart of the city but its popularity with foreigners is pricing out locals, and political rows are delaying desperately needed renovations" (London Times).
"I was thrilled by its truthfulness. It stuck with me for the rest of my life. And I’d still swear by that. I felt, 'This is true. Everything else is fake. This is really what’s going on.'"
Unlike many of his characters, Shawn speaks slowly and with many pauses in the service of sentences that ultimately emerge perfectly formed. He is also polite and courtly and at great pains not to offend, so much so that one fears inadvertently violating whatever code of etiquette is obviously almost sacred to him. So private that he asked me not to reveal what he ate throughout our meetings, he nonetheless has written a play whose broad outlines, and even some poignant details, are flagrantly autobiographical....
The new play is "Moth Days." There's also a new production of his older play "The Fever." And you don't have to tell me, Althouse, you should go to New York and see both plays. I haven't traveled in years.
ADDED: The full title of the play is "What We Did Before Our Moth Days." According to the linked article, "Moth Days" are "those fluttery, flyaway moments before death, as one of the characters imagines them." Poetically, "moth" calls to mind mother... and also that Yeats line, "And when white moths were on the wing/And moth-like stars were flickering out...."
February 7, 2026
"Is it inappropriate for a mother to suggest two naked women carrying a surfboard for my 15 yr old sons wallpaper?"
"The reaction from the student body points to a larger issue: many people my age don’t want to take the easiest path but..."
"Get outta here."
ADDED: That video made me think of Meade's video of Hulsey during the Wisconsin protests. Hulsey, who was our assemblyman, had just appeared at a Planned Parenthood rally in front of the Wisconsin Capitol. It was March 25, 2011, and Meade calls out to him and tried to talk with him. As you'll see, Hulsey refuses to speak to Meade on the ground that he's "a right winger":A Dane County (WI) judge granted a temporary restraining order for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Brett Hulsey against State Sen. Cory Tomczyk (R-Mosinee) after the Republican started a physical altercation last month.
— Heartland Signal (@HeartlandSignal) February 5, 2026
Here's Hulsey's video of Tomczyk shoving him. pic.twitter.com/pqiIAfMPCj
"Well, look, Laura, you know, it was a meme that was posted by a staffer at the President's Truth Social account."
I used to think there was no way Trump was coming up with all his posts by himself, but the "Art of the Surge" documentary proves IT'S ALL HIM. He literally controls everything to the last detail 😂
— George (@BehizyTweets) October 30, 2024
He really is just built different.
Also, those are some great typing skills… pic.twitter.com/KwG5PKOOE0
"How can official orthodoxies persist for so long even when few people believe them?"
Public orthodoxies that diverge from private opinion may be surprisingly stable, but they can also prove remarkably unstable, because they depend on private thoughts to stay private, giving doubters the illusion that they are lone deviants rather than members of a silent majority....
Why is this surprising? It's the familiar story of "The Emperor's New Clothes," which everyone has always easily understood.
Starting around 2015, an orthodoxy on transgender issues crystallized, seemingly out of nowhere....
Once you've said "2015," you've got your answer staring you in the face! Why don't you see it? That was the year gay people won their great victory, a right to marry, in Obergefell v. Hodges. McArdle has "an orthodoxy... crystalliz[ing]" — as if a mysterious disembodied force emerged out of nothing — ex nihilo!
But real human beings were involved and their incentive to acquire a new cause is obvious. The activists had won, but they still needed to work, they still needed contributions, they still needed to push conventional people to move forward into challenging new territory. They couldn't just allow people to become decently accepting and empathetic to the gay people who, after all, are human beings who sometimes love each other and want a home and a family. Remember that moment?
That made too much sense. Ordinary people relaxed. Got comfortable.
By the time I went to the Ivy League swimming championships in 2022 to cover the controversy over a trans swimmer, people I talked to evinced a wariness that seemed more appropriate to a Cold War spy novel than to citizens of a free republic....
What happened?




