Black employee awarded $130 million for racist treatment at Tesla. If the allegations are true they seem bad, but the fact that this can be considered anywhere near proportional is a sign of how we've lost our minds. Of course they go woke in response. wsj.com/articles/tesla…
Telsa attorney says that "there was no evidence that a Tesla employee harassed Mr. Diaz." Any jury that would award $130 million for "racism" obviously can't be trusted to adjudicate claims of racism fairly. What a depressing story, amazing anyone can build anything.
“Elon has not called me, sent me a letter, a text, sky writing, or sent up one of them spaceships to say I’m sorry." Poor guy. I hope that $130 million for hearing some hurtful words is enough to console him. thedailybeast.com/ex-tesla-worke…
Funny how liberals are so against racism when it seems like more open racism would do a lot to close the racial wealth gap. This guy made the country more equal.
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Contributions by Apple employees to Republicans and Democrats. Ratio D:R was 2:1 in 1998, 7:1 in 2012, 5:1 in 2014, and 13:1 in 2020. Smart people became repulsed by GOP when they started going with Bush, Palin, Trump. Why not try being smart?
When Romney was leading the GOP, the country wasn't nearly as woke or left wing on any dimension. By Republicans going out of their way to signal how much they hate intelligence and competence, they've driven elites to the left.
I think what's going on at the top matters a lot more than people think. Many people never think about politics except for presidential elections and feelings on the current admin. You can trace major changes to individual candidates like Obama and Trump.
This is excellent. Liberals have this idea that a lot of Americans are just scared and hateful and want to harm innocent people to compensate for their own mental issues. That's not a good model of domestic politics, but does explain foreign policy. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
"Few American leaders... and few American families, except for those whose loved ones deployed over and over to fight a battle their leaders knew they could not win, were concerned about the fate of Afghanistan until Biden injured their pride by withdrawing."
"There was little public anguish... over the Trump administration quietly increasing civilian casualties more than 300 percent...But when Americans suffered the sting of defeat in a war they had not spent five minutes thinking about... only then, did Afghan lives start to matter"
“Jeanette Jennings threw her famous daughter a ‘Farewell to Penis’ party. Over a million viewers looked in on guests feasting on meatballs and miniature wieners in the Jennings’ Mediterranean-style Florida home. Family and friends cheered as Jazz sliced into a penis-shaped cake”
“Many American gender surgeons augment the tissue for constructing neovaginas with borrowed stomach lining and even a swatch of bowel.”
Pinker on why we should want to be rational, and how humans can seem relatively sane in their personal lives but still hold fundamentally irrational social and political beliefs.
On channeling people's desire for community towards something more constructive. "There was a time, there still exist these things called service organizations... they are deeply square and uncool, which is a shame because they have been kind of mobilized to do good work."
I'm the NYT today on the real lessons of Afghanistan. The generals and think tankers who supported the war are representative of a much larger problem. nytimes.com/2021/09/20/opi…
The last US-backed president of Afghanistan wrote a book called “Fixing Failed States.” In the war, those with the most subject matter expertise tended to be most wrong. This is a lot more common than you think. The answer isn’t populism, it’s better incentives and institutions.
"the divisions we create between fields are, in a sense, artificial...Academia is in some ways nearly ideally suited to produce the wrong kinds of expertise. Scholarly recognition is based on high degrees of specialization..and the approval of colleagues through peer review."
Just now reading No Good Men Among the Living by Anand Gopal. You know about American incompetence in Afghanistan, but Gopal is unique in showing how the occupation looked on the ground, and destroys the narrative of a well-meaning America just being too ambitious. Thread.
In one Afghan district, there was a dispute over which side was the legitimate government. Both sides were accused of being Taliban by their enemies. What did the US do? It went and killed both sides, tortured the survivors, and then awarded medals to the troops involved.
A warlord built a business empire off the occupation, selling the US land he stole from locals, getting the US to take out his rivals by accusing them of being Taliban. The US military dropped fliers that said Afghans who cooperated could “Get Wealth and Power Beyond Your Dreams"