"And for the first time in his career, Breyer is enjoying the prestige of court seniority. Ginsburg's death left him as the most senior justice on the court, following Chief Justice John Roberts."
Arguably what was meant is that Breyer is now the senior justice of the liberal bloc. But the reference to CJ Roberts seems to obviate that possibility. washingtonexaminer.com/news/breyer-ma…
"And two different provisions — Section 4 and Section 2 — should have forced the court to stop these states."
How do you even turn Section 5 into "Section 4"? And not once, but multiple times. This op-ed has been up since Thursday, too, and no one has corrected it. You expect this kind of error from a college student, not their professor. nbcnews.com/think/opinion/…
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The fundamental incoherence of French's argument, however, is truly revealed in this passage: "A wiser response to problematic elements of what is being labeled critical race theory would be twofold: propose better curriculums and enforce existing civil rights laws."
First, there is no logical reason that an alternative curriculum to CRT would be "better." Or that one is necessary. Removing CRT from the existing curriculum would, from the perspective of its opponents, would alone make it better. Which would satisfy French's first proposal.
It's hard to believe the footage that makes up "Summer of Soul (. . . or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised") sat untouched for a half-century. But it did. Better late than never. It's a remarkable find and finally getting the due it deserves. Definitely worth seeing.
The music alone makes it worth the price of admission: Nina Simone, the Staple Singers, Sly and the Family Stone, David Ruffin, the Fifth Dimension, Mahalia Jackson, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Hugh Masekela, the Edwin Hawkins Singers, Stevie Wonder, et al.
The interviews with attendees of the Harlem Cultural Festival concerts (most of whom obviously were children in 1969) are very good and give a sense of what it was like to be there. My favorite part was the reaction of surviving artists watching the footage for the first time.
I almost sort of didn't hate "The Force Awakens" this time. But instead of being annoyed at what a derivative ripoff of "Star Wars" it is, I was annoyed by the dumb story choices and all the ways you can now see in hindsight the ball would be dropped in the sequels.
Just to give an example of the ball dropping: in TFA, Rey is summoned by Anakin and Luke's lightsaber. Then at the end of "Rise of Skywalker" comes that infamous punchline, "Rey Skywalker." Now, the lightsaber chose Rey. "It calls to you," Maz Kanata says in TFA.
Rey, therefore, has earned the right to call herself "Skywalker." The Force has chosen her to inherit the Skywalker legacy. Yet Abrams is such a poor storyteller that it never occurs to him to connect the two things. And that's why the sequel trilogy is so bad.
"His 50%-42% job approval rating is the fourth-lowest out of the last 14 presidents at about five months in office in polls by ABC and the Post and Gallup previously . . . It's an unusually low rating in a time of strong economic growth." abcnews.go.com/Politics/vacci…
Biden has consistently strong ratings on handling the pandemic, around 2 to 1 approval. But as in other polls, he's double digits underwater on crime and immigration. So what happens to his overall approval next year when COVID isn't nearly as important? abcnews.go.com/Politics/vacci…
Was awakened more than once this morning to very loud tapping and rapping sounds coming from outside my window. TAP TAP TAP RAPRAPRAPRAP TAP TAP RAPRAP TAP RAPRAPRAP. Went to investigate. Not one, but two woodpeckers were hammering away at the wooden molding under the roof.
I'm not sure what possessed them start attacking the house now. My best guess is that they are trying to carpenter bee larvae. But why now? The carpenter bees have been trying to make nests under the roof forever. Did the woodpeckers just notice or something?
I mean, this was LOUD. Which made it obnoxious. Especially at 7:30 in the morning on a Sunday. I like woodpeckers, but not quite as much now.
Was flipping through the cable guide and stumbled across it on one of the PBS channels. It’s the one where the Japanese student is murdered upstairs while Morse is having dinner at an Oxford college.
Didn’t think they still showed it on TV, just on BritBox.