I wrote a long critique of Gizmodo and The Markup's piece about predictive policing, which I thought exemplified many of the worst, most paternalistic trends in how liberals approach crime and policing
(For paid subscribers, but with a partial preview)
2/ The authors argue that the main problem with PredPol, the predictive policing algorithm they're criticizing, is that black vs. white and rich vs. poor people *report* crimes at different rates. That can lead to the illusion of discrepancies. This is a very strange claim:
3/ Yes, there's some data suggesting discrepancies in the rates at which people report crime. But there's also data showing that the disparities in *actually experiencing* crime tend to be more than an order of magnitude larger. Gizmodo and The Markup ignore this entirely.
4/ Gizmodo and the Markup also treat police patrols as inherently harmful to neighborhoods where they occur, and only quote sources that agree. But this is an overwhelmingly unpopular view among black and Latino folks -- 80%+ of them *don't* want fewer cops in their area.
5/ Articles like this to be almost going out of their way to obscure the actual preferences of actual real-life human beings in high-crime areas. I think it has to do with journalists' and editors' and academics' social networks.
6/ The sentence "We did not try to determine how accurately PredPol predicted crime patterns" -- an explicit lack of curiosity about a question that could undercut this entire article -- occurs about 4,000 words in, near the end.
This is poor reporting on an important subject.
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1/ Blocked so can't reply directly but it was a specific choice on the part of the activist groups to pathologize the idea that people have an original biological sex, to treat this as some sort of forbidden knowledge that can't be uttered aloud. This was always an insane...
2/ ...decision because people understand what sex is and what the answers to questions like Hawley's are. Activists -- not, by any means, all or even most trans people -- have ignored, like, a decade's worth of feedback on their chosen framing. It failed completely. This is...
3/ ...partly a class thing. The people who believe the weirdest versions of Butlerian gender theory and its offshoots tend to be highly educated and enmeshed in progressive circles. The activist/consultant class. If you talk to just normal trans people, they themselves have...
Lot going on in the world so it's mportant to stay updated about BlueSky:
Someone replies to the CEO demanding for the 500000th time I be banned (HIPPO), CEO makes the grave error of responding jokingly instead of with the seriousness the situation warrants, it doesn't go well
2/ These people have created a world in which they relentlessly harass and dox and death-threat anyone they dislike enough while simultaneously convincing themselves that all the stuff they do to other people is being done to them. It's truly an asylum
3/ The folks running Bluesky appear to have had enough. They've been getting screamed at, nonstop, by some of the angriest and most unhappy people on the internet for almost a year and it has to just get brain-breaking
1/ After Jordan Neely randomly punched a 67-year-old woman in the face, which led to one of his three dozen or so arrests, several for assault, he spent 15 months in jail, max. Then The Helpers arrived(!), leading to "a carefully planned strategy between the city and his lawyers to allow him to get treatment and stay out of prison."
2/ The traumatized, violent, deeply mentally ill guy got to do basically an honor-code type of deal where he sorta pinky-swore to stay in treatment. But 13 days later he just walked out (because of course he did!).
3/ Then outreach workers saw him on the subway. They approached him and he started pissing in front of them. They called the cops, who didn't bother to check if he had a warrant out -- they just shooed him off the train. Three weeks later he was killed.
[con't] There's a consistent error American liberals make, which is that it will be ~obvious~ to persuadable American voters that Trump is beyond the pale, that he is steamrolling important norms. Voters don't see it that way! They see both sides endlessly screaming.
[con't] Persuadable voter is going to land on something like "Maybe Trump made some cuts he shouldn't have, but weren't the Dems also bad on covid? And what about that weird gender stuff?" You gotta meet voters where they're at not pretend there's *nothing* to Jennings' argument
3/ Gordon Guyatt and Romina Brignardello-Petersen emailed the authors of all five systematic reviews McMaster worked on w/SEGM and proposed inserting language about bans being "unconscionable." As Guyatt admitted to me, this is very unusual language for a systematic review.
"No one can invest significantly in the U.S. if they have no idea what the policy is going to be from day to day" is a concept that understandable by a bright 6-year-old. There's really *no one* left in Trump's orbit with *any* power to deter him from this garbage?
2/ None of this is even internally consistent. He will reward other countries just for *calling* us, regardless of what was said or how productive the conversation was? The man has no idea how to negotiate.
3/
1. announce tariffs, wiping out trillions
2. temporarily *partially* suspend *some* of them because some countries... called
3. retain huge tariffs on largest producer in world
4. *all of this is* re-re-reversible at *any* point, for *any* reason, if DJT feels like it