Trust Twitter For News? Yeah Right.

A new report on the consumption of Digital News from the Reuter’s Institute of Journalism, just announced at the Gen News Summit in Paris, reveals that while more of us than ever get our news via social media, we don’t trust social networks themselves as a source of news.

The first news of the death of Soprano’s actor James Gandolfini may have reached you via Twitter, but you probably went to the New York Times or, dare we say, Fast Company to read about it. The Reuters Institute for Journalism’s latest report on Digital news reveals that while most people now discover news via social media, they don’t trust social media itself as a news source and want their news verified by traditional news brands like broadcasters and newspapers.

Many of the results from the Reuters Institute for Journalism’s latest report on Digital news–the doubling of the consumption of news on tablets in the last 10 months or the fact that 33 percent of readers track news on two devices–seem rather obvious. A more surprising finding was that the death of the traditional news brand has been greatly exaggerated. Reuters surveyed 11,000 people of all ages in 8 countries, including over 2,000 in the U.S.

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via Fast Company http://www.fastcolabs.com/3008881/tracking/trust-twitter-for-news-yeah-right

Republican Harvard Economist Writes Terrible Defense of the One Percent

Gregory Mankiw plays a small but important role in the political ecology: an accomplished Harvard professor who validates Republican economic policies. It’s almost impossible to find empirical support for debt-financed tax cuts, but when George W. Bush proposed them, Mankiw and his Harvard pedigree were there to reassure that they

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By taking in Snowden, Ecuador would defy US again

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — President Rafael Correa of Ecuador embraces his role as a thorn in Washington’s side, railing against U.S. imperialism in speeches and giving WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange refuge in his nation’s embassy in London….

via AP Top Headlines At 8:45 a.m. EDT http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/L/LT_NSA_SURVEILLANCE_LATIN_AMERICA?SITE=FLROC&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

‘Dumb’ Dominates Cannes Lion Hunt


Small-budget marketers from small countries stood tall at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

Pereira & O’Dell scored its third Grand Prix in the film category when that jury, in an unusual move, awarded two Grands Prix, one to the Toshiba laptop campaign and one to the single-film “Dumb Ways to Die,” the entry Cannes juries just couldn’t get enough of last week. “Dumb Ways to Die” is an Australian train-safety-themed music video that went viral and inspired karaoke-style parodies; was sold on iTunes; and featured various digital components, including a mobile game.

The festival has only awarded two film Grands Prix once before, in 2008 to Cadbury Dairy Milk’s “Gorilla” spot by Fallon, London, and the “Believe” video-game campaign for Xbox 360/Halo 3 by T.A.G/McCann Worldgroup, San Francisco.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

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Serena Williams Apologizes Again, Still Suggests Reporter Might Be to Blame

After Rolling Stone quoted Serena Williams saying the Steubenville victim was partially at fault for her rape, the tennis star issued a weak non-apology, vaguely suggesting that she was misquoted. At a Sunday afternoon press conference on the eve of Wimbledon, Williams issued a clearer apology for her rape comments, and expressed remorse for possibly insulting rival Maria Sharapova, though she went on to complain that the reporter was unfairly “eavesdropping” on her conversation.

In the more gossipy of the two controversies to emerge from the article, Williams said on the phone, “She begins every interview with ‘I’m so happy. I’m so lucky’ – it’s so boring … She’s still not going to be invited to the cool parties. And, hey, if she wants to be with the guy with a black heart, go for it.” Writer Stephen Rodrick makes an “educated guess” that she’s talking about Sharapova, who’s dating her ex Grigor Dimitrov. Apparently Sharapova made the same assumption, because she said on Saturday, “If she wants to talk about something personal, maybe she should talk about her relationship, and her boyfriend that was married, and is getting a divorce and has kids.”

Williams never admitted that she was talking about Sharapova, but said she sought out her competitor on Thursday and tried to make amends. “I said: ‘Look, I want to personally apologize to you if you are offended by being brought into my situation. I want to take this moment to just pour myself, be open, say I’m very sorry for this whole situation’.” She went on to note that she’s “used to dealing with professional reporters.” Williams continued:

“I’m used to dealing with these people not writing or commenting on a private conversation that I may have or kind of listening in or eavesdropping and then reporting on it. You guys have completely spoiled me. With that being said, I’ve been in the business for a little over 200 years, so I should definitely, definitely know better.”

As for the Steubenville victim, Williams said she’s talked with the girl and her mother. “We came to a wonderful understanding, and we’re constantly in contact,” said Williams. She added, “I apologize for everything that was said in that article,” but didn’t delve into precisely how her thoughts on rape have changed. “I feel like, you know, you say things without having all the information,” she explained. “It’s really important before you make certain comments to have a full list, have all the information, all the facts.”

Read more posts by Margaret Hartmann

Filed Under:
the sports section
,serena williams
,steubenville
,maria sharapova

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/06/serena-williams-is-sorry-still-blames-reporter.html

Is Rand Paul’s Love of Ayn Rand a ‘Conspiracy’?

My item on Rand Paul the other day, predictably, went over quite badly in the libertarian community. The Insomniac Libertarian, in an item wonderfully headlined “Obama Quisling Jonathan Chait Smears Rand Paul,” complains that my Paul piece “never discloses that [my] wife is an Obama campaign operative.” A brief annotated response:

1. I question the relevance of the charge, since Rand Paul is not running against Obama.

2. In point of fact, my wife is not an Obama campaign operative and has never worked for Obama’s campaign, or his administration, or volunteered for his campaign, or any campaign, and does not work in politics at all.

3. I question the headline labeling me an “Obama quisling,” a construction that implies that I have betrayed Obama, which seems to be the opposite of the Insomniac Libertarian’s meaning.

4. For reasons implied by points one through three, I urge the Insomniac Libertarian to familiarize himself with some of the science linking sleep deprivation to impaired brain function.

A more substantive, though still puzzling, retort comes from the Atlantic’s Conor Friedersdorf, a frequent bête noire of mine on subjects relating to Ayn Rand and Ron or Rand Paul. Friedersdorf raises two objections to my piece, which traced Rand Paul’s odd admission that he is “not a firm believer in democracy” to his advocacy of Randian thought. Friedersdorf first charges that the intellectual connection between Paul and Rand is sheer paranoia:

Chait takes the quote and turns it into a conspiracy … As I read this, I couldn’t help but think of Chait as a left-leaning analog to the character in Bob Dylan’s “Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues.” Those Objectivists were coming around/They were in the air / They were on the Ground/ They wouldn’t give me no peace. For two thousand years, critics of unmediated democracy have warned about the masses abusing individuals and minorities. The American system was built from the very beginning to check democratic excesses.

But if Rand Paul distrusts democracy he must’ve gotten it from Ayn Rand. 

A conspiracy? Am I imagining that Rand Paul has been deeply influenced by Ayn Rand? Paul himself has discussed the deep influence her work had on his own thinking. In college he wrote a series of letters and columns either quoting Rand or knocking off her theories. He used a congressional hearing to describe one of her novels at tedious length. How is this a conspiracy?

Friedersdorf proceeds to argue that Rand is not really very militant anyway:

It’s also interesting that Chait regards Rand’s formulation as “militant.” Let’s look at it again. “I do not believe that a majority can vote a man’s life, or property, or freedom away from him.” Does Chait believe that a democratic majority should be able to vote a man’s life or freedom away? …

In the political press, it happens again and again: libertarian leaning folks are portrayed as if they’re radical, extremist ideologues, even when they’re expressing ideas that are widely held by Americans across the political spectrum.

Well, here we come to a deeper disagreement about Ayn Rand. My view of her work is pretty well summarized in a review-essay I wrote in 2009, tying together two new biographies of Rand with some of the Randian strains that were gaining new currency in the GOP. My agenda here is not remotely hidden, but maybe I need to put more cards on the table. I’ve described her worldview as inverted Marxism — a conception of politics as a fundamental struggle between a producer class and a parasite class.

What I really mean is, I find Rand evil. Friedersdorf’s view is certainly far more nuanced and considerably more positive than mine. He’s a nice, intelligent person and a good writer, but we’re not going to agree on this.

Friedersdorf waves away Rand’s (and Rand Paul’s) distrust of democracy as the same fears everybody has about democracy. Well, no. Lots of us consider democracy imperfect or vulnerable, but most of us are very firm believers in democracy. Rand viewed the average person with undisguised contempt, and her theories pointed clearly in the direction of cruelty in the pursuit of its fanatical analysis. A seminal scene in Atlas Shrugged described the ideological errors of a series of characters leading up to their violent deaths, epitomizing the fanatical class warfare hatred it’s embodied and which inspired Whitaker Chambers to observe, “From almost any page of Atlas Shrugged, a voice can be heard, from painful necessity, commanding: ‘To the gas chambers — go!’”

Randism has never been tried as the governing philosophy of a country, so it remains conjecture that her theories would inevitably lead to repression if put into practice at a national level. But we do have a record of the extreme repression with which she ran her own cult, which at its height was a kind of totalitarian ministate. You can read her biographies, or at least my review, to get a sense of the mind-blowing repression, abuse, and corruption with which she terrorized her followers.

But the upshot is that I strongly dispute Friedersdorf’s premise that Rand’s theories are a variant of democracy, any more than Marx’s are. In fact, I find the existence of powerful elected officials who praise her theories every bit as disturbing to contemplate as elected officials who praise Marxism. Even if you take care to note some doctrinal differences with Rand, in my view we are talking about a demented, hateful cult leader and intellectual fraud. People who think she had a lot of really good ideas should not be anywhere near power.

Read more posts by Jonathan Chait

Filed Under:
the national interest
,politics
,rand paul
,ayn rand
,chaitfeuds
,conor friedersdorf

via Daily Intelligencer http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2013/06/rand-pauls-love-of-ayn-rand-a-conspiracy.html

‘World War Z’ could rise from the dead

The big-budget Brad Pitt film once appeared doomed by troubles such as an ending that had to be re-shot. But it yet may turn into a respectable effort.

In the new zombie epic “World War Z,” Brad Pitt jets around the world seeking an elusive solution to an intractable problem.

    

via L.A. Times – Entertainment News http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-fi-ct-world-war-z-20130620,0,2437516.story?track=rss&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+latimes%2Fentertainment+%28Entertainment+News%29

The Tedium Of Remote-Control War

Elijah Solomon Hurwitz talks with drone pilots about the monotony of their work:

Though strikes on suspected terrorists and the resultingcivilian casualties get the headlines, the lion’s share of remote piloting consists of quieter, more shadowy work: hour after hour of ISR—intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance. Sitting in ergonomic chairs in ground control stations—essentially souped-up shipping containers—RPA operators coordinate with ground intel to identify human targets, then track them with high-powered zoom lenses and sophisticated sensors. (A nine-camera sensor nicknamed Gorgon Stare is capable of streaming full video with enough resolution to discern facial expressions.)

“It might be little things like a group of kids throwing rocks at goats, or at each other, or an old man startled by a barking dog,” says Mike. “You get a sense of daily life. I’ve been on the same shift for a month and you learn the patterns. Like, I’ll know at 5 a.m. this guy is gonna go outside and take a shit. I’ve seen a lot of dudes take shits.”

Sascha-Dominik Bachmann considers the moral aspects of drone warfare:

Keith Shurtleff, the US Army Chaplain and military ethics teacher, aptly summarized this concern “that as war becomes safer and easier, as soldiers are removed from the horrors of war and see the enemy not as humans but as blips on a screen, there is very real danger of losing the deterrent that such horrors provide.”

via The Dish http://dish.andrewsullivan.com/2013/06/20/the-tedium-of-remote-control-war/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+andrewsullivan%2FrApM+%28The+Dish%29

WikiLeaks says Michael Hastings contacted it just before his death…

WikiLeaks says Michael Hastings contacted it just before his death…

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This Is Your Brain on Dots

Sorry, Folks, Playing Dots Won’t Make You Smarter

    

via The Daily Beast – Latest Articles http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/06/20/sorry-folks-playing-dots-won-t-make-you-smarter.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thedailybeast%2Farticles+%28The+Daily+Beast+-+Latest+Articles%29