Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…
Attack of the 50 ft. Woman (1958) gameraboy2.tumblr.com/post/655313682…

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More from @doctorow

29 Jun
Today's Twitter threads (a Twitter thread).

Inside: SCOTUS to wrongfully accused terrorists: "drop dead"; Intuit sabotages the Child Tax Credit; and more!

Archived at: pluralistic.net/2021/06/29/thr…

#Pluralistic

1/
SCOTUS to wrongfully accused terrorists: "drop dead": Kavanaugh finds new ways to be wrong.



2/
Intuit sabotages the Child Tax Credit: Bad web-design is a choice.



3/
Read 20 tweets
29 Jun
The Child Tax Credit is a seriously good piece of policy, in which America's poorest families are eligible for $2-3k/year in subsidies, a move projected to cut American child poverty in half.

There's one problem: the IRS has no idea how to reach America's poorest families.

1/ A screenshot of freefilefillableforms.com, a very bad and in
Many of the people eligible for CTC don't file tax returns and even if they did, they'd have no contact with the IRS, because the tax-prep monopoly killed all attempts to create a "free file" system where the IRS sends you a prefilled return with the info they already have.

2/
When I say "sabotaged," I'm not speaking hyperbolically. The tax-prep industry, led by Intuit, led the fight for 20 years, with their cultlike leader Brad Smith at the forefront of a bribery and intimidation campaign.

propublica.org/article/inside…

3/
Read 22 tweets
28 Jun
When people call the US Supreme Court "corporate-friendly," it's often hard to know what that means in concrete terms. But here's an example of what it means when the highest court in the land is in the tank for big business.

1/ EFF's generic 'privacy' image: a padlock on a stylized, hexa
Transunion is a giant credit reporting bureau. These companies have their origin in a company called "Retail Credit" (now Equifax). RC paid people to spy on their neighbors and kept secret files on who was a "race mixer," a homosexual, or a political radical.

2/
These files were sold to employers, financial institutions and landlords to help them discriminate against people for their political, sexual or racial views.

jacobinmag.com/2017/09/equifa…

3/
Read 16 tweets
28 Jun
Today's Twitter threads (a Twitter thread).

Inside: Podcasting "Qualia"; Lazy Congress only schedules 9 days' work this summer; and more!

Archived at: pluralistic.net/2021/06/28/dub…

#Pluralistic

1/
Podcasting "Qualia": My column on quant-bias, antitrust, drug policy and epidemiology.



2/
Lazy Congress only schedules 9 days' work this summer: We're not paying you to party on donors' yachts.



3/
Read 20 tweets
28 Jun
Say what you will about Congressional partisan divisions, there's one area of unity: the need for self-care.

That's why the House voted to give itself only *9 days* of work between Jul 2 and Sept 19 (the Senate's workaholics will put in 11 days' work out of 75 summer days).

1/ A tropical beach scene; the white sand bears the shadows of
I get it. It's been a tough 18 months. Who ISN'T tired?

But Congress ALREADY works a three-day week (the remaining two days are spent "dialing for dollars," begging rich people for money in exchange for making policy that benefits the wealthy).

2/
But Congress has work to do - work like passing the PRO Act, which will help everyday workers win some of the labor rights that Congress takes for granted, like paid vacations, health benefits, and a decent pension.

3/
Read 14 tweets
28 Jun
This week on my podcast, I read "Qualia," my May, 2021 @locusmag column about quantitative bias, epidemiology, antitrust and drug policy. It's a timely piece, given the six historic antitrust laws that passed the House Judiciary Committee last week:

doctorow.medium.com/moral-hazard-a…

1/ A powdery residue on a lab-slide.   Image: OpenStax Chemistr
The pandemic delivered some hard lessons about quantitative bias - that's when you pay attention to the parts of a problem that you can do math on, not because they're the most important, but because you know how to do math.

2/
The most obvious lesson comes from the failure of exposure notification apps, which were supposed to take the place of "shoe-leather" contact tracing, wherein a public health workers establish personal rapport with infected people to help identify others who might be at risk.

3/
Read 42 tweets

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