What if I told you this speech was not, in fact, praising Jefferson Davis but condemning the culture that held this "cadaverous figure" up as some kind of hero?
On Tuesday, I told my students that one benefit of studying history is that you can not just understand the historical analogies that fill our public discourse but you can also determine who's butchering the comparisons.
I mean ... Nope. Jesus Christ, no. No? Completely wrong.
We already had "medical Jim Crow" in this country and it looked nothing like this and, no, this is not remotely like segregation, and Jesus Tapdancing Christ, please read a book by someone who's never been on Tucker Carlson's show.
(whispers into the void) please stop telling undergrads who are applying to grad school to email prospective advisers and ask for a Zoom meeting before they've even applied, please, I'm begging you, this helps no one in the process
Look, I get the instinct behind it, but I must've gotten close to a hundred emails last fall -- one Monday in October, I got four -- with a few dozen asking for Zoom chats (several straight up asking *when* we would chat) and ... I just can't do it. Wish I could, but I can't.
Even if I could do these calls, they're not as important as the people pushing them believe.
We make admits as a field (20th c US), so I'm one of 9-12 profs making the decision. Even if I have my heart set on someone, I'm one voice on the jury.
Away from home this morning, so just frantically refreshing Twitter for updates on USWNT vs Netherlands
Twitter thinks the Dutch team is flopping for fouls, it seems. Fun to read about.
I tried to find updates on the game on the radio but WFAN is discussing how one of the co-hosts is gassy from lobster bisque he ate last night, thanks for the sports news
It was the police officers who testified about the assault on the Capitol who linked the atrocities to the Republican Party, @SenJohnKennedy, and you’d know that if you gave a single damn about them.