"In itself the outcome would seem to vindicate a fundamental American principle, that no citizen is beyond the reach of justice. Yet over the long run this prosecution will probably do more to weaken than affirm the rule of law. 🧵
2/
"Legal experts have cited numerous avenues for credible appeal, and any appeal will not be resolved until long after the November election. That will make it all the easier for Mr Trump’s supporters to embrace his arguments that he is the victim of a biased judge and jury.
3/
"This verdict is particularly vulnerable to appeal because of the lack of clear precedent for the charges the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, chose to bring.
4/
"Falsifying business expenses is a misdemeanour under New York law, but by arguing that that crime was committed in order to commit or conceal another one, Mr Bragg was able to charge Mr Trump with felonies.
5/
"Prosecutors argued, and Judge Juan Merchan agreed, that jurors did not even have to agree on precisely what other law Mr Trump violated, resulting in a vagueness that is sure to be one of the grounds for appeal.
6/
"Mr Bragg, a Democrat, was elected to his post after boasting that he was most qualified to prosecute Mr Trump, giving the former president further grist to say he is the victim of political persecution by allies of his opponent, President Joe Biden.
7/
"That this verdict is particularly vulnerable to Mr Trump’s claims that the system of justice is being 'weaponised' against him may seem a perverse reason to criticise it.
8/
"No political figure should be able to hold the law hostage, extorting immunity from prosecution in exchange for not degrading the system of justice in the eyes of followers.
9/
"But prosecutors exercise wide discretion in choosing what cases to bring, for good reason. They are supposed to consider not only the likelihood of conviction but also the seriousness of the crime and the public interest at stake.
10/
"Mr Bragg’s predecessor, as well as Mr Biden’s DOJ, considered bringing versions of these charges and elected not to. Compared with the other cases pending against Mr Trump, this one always seemed too much of a stretch to command widespread public legitimacy...
11/
"Further, this prosecution has done more to help than hurt Mr Trump’s chances of winning back the White House, and, as the insurrection of January 6th 2021 ought to have made clear, that is a greater hazard to the rule of law than any fraudulent book-keeping.
12/
"He was waning as a political force before Mr Bragg charged him in April 2023. The indictment put Mr Trump back in the spotlight. Mr Trump rebounded among Republicans in the polls and began his march to the nomination.
13/
"His proud defiance of the prosecution has contributed to his image of strength. Mr Biden’s lacklustre campaign has struggled to take advantage of Mr Trump’s legal woes without implicitly lending credence to suspicions that they are political.
14/
"Maybe this conviction, as some polling suggests, will cause independent-minded voters to abandon Mr Trump. If not, then paying hush money to Ms Daniels may now help elect Mr Trump a second time."
DEVASTATING review of 𝘊𝘳𝘪𝘵𝘪𝘤𝘢𝘭 𝘈𝘯𝘤𝘪𝘦𝘯𝘵 𝘞𝘰𝘳𝘭𝘥 𝘚𝘵𝘶𝘥𝘪𝘦𝘴:
"The authors of the volume...appear not to be ‘scholars,’ but rather ideologues and political activists, interested in changing political reality rather than in studying the ancient world. ..."
🧵
2/
"Several months ago, when I was walking along Hills Road in Cambridge on a Sunday afternoon, I saw something unheard-of in Poland. Two students were standing on the pavement, holding up a poster of Lenin and distributing leaflets encouraging people to ‘join the Communists’.
3/
"For a while I wondered whether I should ask these nice-looking young people whether they knew what the Kronstad Rebellion or Cheka were. After all, they were most likely students of one of the most prestigious universities in the world.
Were I most deeply disagree with @Tyler_A_Harper is that I think wokeness in the Humanities is largely endogenous. It arose organically out of the pursuit of "the next new theory." The professional life and death of Humanists depends on their ability to find a new theory. ...
@Tyler_A_Harper 3/
I've watched this dynamic for over 40 years now. My dad was an academic. He embraced Deconstruction in the '70s. No admin made him do it. He found the theory truly compelling but also the theory set him apart, made him avant-garde, helped him in his competition w/ his peers.
"Thumbing through the literature of contemporary critical social science, one cannot avoid being struck by the astonishing powers that are attributed to 'neoliberalism.' Appalled by the lack of leg-room in economy class airline seats? Apparently neoliberalism is to blame. ... 🧵
2/
"It is difficult to find any feature of modern life that has not been blamed on neoliberalism. Neoliberalism is everywhere, and yet strangely, nowhere. Unlike most intellectual movements, which are openly endorsed, the neoliberal revolution has been perpetrated by stealth.
3/
"Neoliberalism has infiltrated every aspect of society, structuring our consciousness so deeply that most of us fail to realize that we are being held prisoner by these ideas.
It looks a great deal like what would ordinarily be described as a conspiracy theory.
The dereliction of duty of public K-12 schools counts as systemic racism if anything does.
In contrast, Defense Dept "schools had the highest outcomes in the country for Black and Hispanic students, whose 8th-grade reading scores outpaced nat'l averages for white students." 🧵
2/
Oregon leads the nation in degrading K-12 and abandoning kids:
"By eliminating the standardized test, OR ... has given up on bringing all its students, and particularly those from marginalized communities, up to basic educational standards."
California is vying to be the most destructive state for K-12 math education. Led by phonies like Stanford's @joboaler, the state has set fire to math education. Given CA's influence, expect other state to follow suite.
"The antisemitism of my classmates did not develop in a vacuum. It is the result of obfuscations by our professors, many of whom have portrayed Hamas as merely a 'resistance group,' as well as the refusal of our universities to denounce the terror. 🧵
2/
"As a Jew and university student in Washington, D.C., I watched as thousands marched in support of the 'martyred militants' of Hamas, an organization whose charter explicitly calls for the genocide of Jewry. Dispersed among the crowds were many of my classmates.
3/
"One post stated that it 'rejects the distinction' between civilians and soldiers of the Jewish state. The 'decolonial' impetus for the incursion wasn't meant to remain 'an abstract academic theory to be discussed and debated [but] a tangible, material event,' i.e., a pogrom.
FULL video and transcript of Prof. @RickfordRussell's remarks. Many in my replies are justifying his words as reasonable and empathetic:
"What has Hamas done? Hamas has shifted the balance of power. Hamas has punctured the illusion of invincibility, that's what they've done. 🧵
@RickfordRussell 2/
"You don't have to be a Hamas supporter to recognize that. Hamas has changed the terms of debate. Israeli officials are right. Nothing will be the same again. Nothing will be the same again.
Hamas has challenged the monopoly of violence.
@RickfordRussell 3/
"And in those first few hours, even as horrific acts were being carried out, many of which we would not learn about until later, there were many Gazans of goodwill, many Palestinians of conscience, who abhor violence, as do you, as do I, who abhor the targeting of civilians,