
June 20, 2025
The first sunrise of summer.

Naked as a clam.
"I know of one landscaper that lost the whole crew he had, and he is just totally out of business, all of a sudden."
"We want diversity of opinion. We don't want diversity of facts. And how do we train and teach our kids to distinguish between those things?"
"That, I think, is one of the big tasks of social media. By the way, it will require some government, I believe, some government regulatory constraints around some of these business models in a way that's consistent with the First Amendment, but that also says, look, there is a difference between these platforms letting all voices be heard versus a business model that elevates the most hateful voices or the most polarizing voices or the most dangerous, in the sense of inciting violence...."
Said Barack Obama, in a conversation with a historian a few days ago. Video at the link.
So it seems he thinks it's "the big task of social media" to teach children to distinguish between fact and opinion. But what does it mean to say "We don't want diversity of facts"? Does it mean you don't want differences of opinion about what the facts are?It must, because facts are facts. There is no diversity of facts. Whatever is true is true, even if not one human being knows the truth. The facts are out there, to be found, and you can think you've found the facts and be wrong. There's a sense in which to say "We don't want diversity of facts" is to say we want to be able to be able to cling to mistaken findings of fact and even to silence those who want to continue to search for the truth.
I'm irritated by how casually Obama dropped in "By the way, it will require some government." Perhaps he knew his audience at the event was eager to hear about a role for government. But he did not say that government should enforce an official version of the facts — e.g., the covid vaccine is safe and effective, the 2020 election was fair and square. Instead of content-based regulation of speech, he's talking about the manner of the speech. Is it "hateful," "polarizing," or "dangerous"? He adds the phrase "in the sense of inciting violence" to gesture at some concern for the First Amendment.
Obama's speech is incredibly convoluted and mushy. That sentence that begins "By the way" — what is he proposing? Government control of the social media algorithm to suppress the voices it deems polarizing? Yeah, I think we know what that means: Suppress my political opponents, like you did before Elon Musk bought Twitter. Can we agree about that fact or is that an opinion?
I'm giving this post my old "alternative facts" tag. Remember "alternative facts"?
Joe Biden — who declared Juneteenth a federal holiday — celebrates Juneteenth.
June 19, 2025
"Some people, including those self-identified liberals worried about going too far, will see reducing the number of people who choose to transition as a good thing..."
Writes M. Gessen, in "The Supreme Court Fails to See Transgender Teens" (NYT)(free-access link).
"As Kavanaugh continues, my mind starts to wander to 'The Simpsons,' with its Springfield Nuclear Power Plant and several episodes depicting..."
Writes Mark Walsh, in "Watching environmental law get eclipsed by Skrmetti" (SCOTUSblog).
"She is desperate for the book to not be a downer, to be a jolt instead. 'The pity fucking kills me,' she said. 'It kills my strength.'"
From "E. Jean Carroll’s Uneasy Peace/In the year and a half since defeating Trump for the second time, she’s written a secret book — and learned to shoot" (NY Magazine).
"It felt like the New York Times didn’t understand New York City. It was this strangely conservative law-and-order, traditionalist view..."
Said Bill de Blasio, quoted in "Bill de Blasio on Andrew Cuomo and That Nasty Times Op-Ed/The former mayor has a few things to get off his chest" (NY Magazine).
"Flavour of gin and tonic could be impacted by climate change, study finds."
[Juniper] berries have their own regional “terroir” just like wine, depending on rainfall and sunshine, according to the findings, which have been published in the Journal of the Institute of Brewing....
“For a multibillion-pound industry, which is increasingly focused on consistency and quality for its discerning consumers, this represents a risk.”
"New information revealed in court sheds light on the connection between three hazmat scenes in the Madison area this week."
From "Prosecutor: Multiple hazmat scenes linked to elaborate scheme to poison man's former love interests with cyanide" (WKOW).
JD Vance — signing onto Bluesky — starts a conversation about the Supreme Court's upholding of a state law banning transgender drugs and surgery for minors.
The one with the blue check is the real one, and maybe those others are marked clearly enough. The third account on that list, if you click through, says, in small print "(parody account lol)."
"Interestingly, I think there is an argument to bring back the MRS degree."
My latest: I went inside Turning Point USA's conference for conservative young women
— Madeline Peltz (@peltzmadeline) June 18, 2025
To get a sense of what I saw, watch this video of Charlie Kirk telling a 14-year-old in braces that she should only go to college to get an "MRS degree"
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