Archive for 2021

#JOURNALISM:

OPEN THREAD: The day is my enemy, the night my friend.

RETURN OF THE PRIMITIVE: Burdened By Books.

Though I had read about our new age of orality, my students made it existential. The absence of punctuation and attrition of meaning, the spinning of word salads and splintering of sentences in their papers read like transcripts from their online lives. . . .

It was not just, say, the weirdness of Jean-Paul Sartre’s Nausea, the thickness of Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, or the otherness of Camus’s The Stranger. Instead, their difficulty seems to reside in the act of spending time alone with an open book in their hands.

Faced by this difficulty, students told me that they listen to audio recordings of the book as they read. The sound of the words, it seems, helps them grasp the sense of the words.

Well, that’s how it works when you can’t really read. I have some discussion of how this has happened in my The Social Media Upheaval.

Related: The beginning of silent reading changed Westerners’ interior life.

FLASHBACK: Joan Didion on Self-Respect. “In brief, people with self-respect exhibit a certain toughness, a kind of moral nerve; they display what was once called character, a quality which, although approved in the abstract, sometimes loses ground to other, more instantly negotiable virtues. . . . Self-respect is something that our grandparents, whether or not they had it, knew all about.”

THE LAST DAYS OF CNN.

HEROES AMONG US:  I didn’t know about the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission until very recently when I ran across its web site.  But it’s the sort of thing I can’t help but love.  Andrew Carnegie established it in 1904 to honor “individuals in the United States and Canada who risk their lives to an extraordinary degree saving or attempting to save the lives of others.”

“We live in a heroic age,” Carnegie wrote in the Commission’s founding document.  “Not seldom are we thrilled by deeds of heroism where men or women are injured or lose their lives in attempting to preserve or rescue their fellows.”

There is a “Search Heroes” function on the web site that allows visitors to search for past Carnegie Hero Fund honorees.  Hoping to find a relative, I searched “Heriot.”  Alas, no dice.  So I searched my mother’s maiden name, which is also uncommon–Vannah.  Bingo!  In 1913, someone named Bessie Vannah tried valiantly–though futilely–to try to save a boy who’d fallen through the ice.  She was 16 at the time.

I don’t recall my mother ever mentioning an Aunt Bessie, but the attempted rescue happened in the same rural county where my mother was born and raised.  I don’t think there are any unrelated Vannahs in Lincoln County, Maine–current population 35,237.  Or at least that’s what I’ve convinced myself.  But whether or not she was my lost long relative, Bessie was a heck of a girl. We have that on the authority of the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission, and they ought to know.

 

THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION HAS GONE FULL WOKE:  And the result is truly astonishing. Here is how it recommends that doctors speak:

 Table 5: Contrasting Conventional (Well-intentioned) Phrasing with Equity-focused Language that Acknowledges Root Causes of Inequities

Conventional

Revision

Native Americans have the highest mortality rates in the United States.

Dispossessed by the government of their land and culture, Native Americans have the highest mortality rates in the United States.

Low-income people have the highest level of coronary artery disease in the United States.

People underpaid and forced into poverty as a result of banking policies, real estate developers gentrifying neighborhoods, and corporations weakening the power of labor movements, among others, have the highest level of coronary artery disease in the United States.

Factors such as our race, ethnicity or socioeconomic status should not play a role in our health.

Social injustices including racism or class exploitation, e.g., social exclusion and marginalization, should be confronted directly, so that they do not influence health outcomes.

For too many, prospects for good health are limited by where people live, how much money they make, or discrimination they face.

Decisions by landowners and large corporations, increasingly centralizing political and financial power wielded by a few, limit prospects for good health and well-being for many groups.

Check out the full report:  Advancing Health Equity:  A Guide to Language, Narrative and Concepts.

While you’re at it, check this one out too:  Organizational Strategic Plan to Embed Racial Justice and Advance Health Equity.

These folks have seriously lost their minds.

BURIED LEDE: NBC NEWS SHOCKED THAT AN NBC PRODUCT HAS GONE VIRAL. NBC News Calls ‘Let’s Go, Brandon’ A ‘Right-Wing Slur.’  “On October 2, an NBC sports reporter interviewing NASCAR driver Brandon Brown at Talladega Superspeedway in Alabama after Brown scored his first career NASCAR Xfinity Series win stated in a video that the crowd was chanting ‘Let’s go, Brandon!’ when in reality they were chanting ‘F*** Joe Biden,’ The Daily Wire reported.”

Oh, how NBC sports reporter Kelli Stavast must be hated at the office these days.