An America yearning for the sacred in civic life
https://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/the-monitors-view/2025/1216/An-America-yearning-for-the-sacred-in-civic-life?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Commentary @commentary-csmonitor
An America yearning for the sacred in civic life
At the state level, many elected officials speak openly about how they rely on ethics and faith to navigate partisan challenges. They might be shaping a “better way” for voters to relate to each other.the Monitor's Editorial Board (The Christian Science Monitor)
I can't stop thinking about the Shushwap woman on CBC today who mentioned her disability.
Paraphrasing, she said: "After I got COVID, I developed dysautonomia. For me that meant fainting and fatigue. I had to adjust how I do art as a result, and pace myself."
and then the interview rolled on, and there was no pushback, no doubt, no hitch - not even in other people who were also listening. That's not based on their body language - based on their word, because I asked.
is ... is this it?
Do we convince people Long COVID is real by just... naming it by the clusters? Autoimmunity, dysautonomia, etc.? Is it just the big bad C word?!
(1/7) I suppose #Fediverse isn't the place people are discussing #RobReiner. But after 36 hours of deliberating whether to say anything, I feel compelled. This thread will be long,but I start w/ most important part:
It's an “open secret” in the #FOSS community that in March 2017 my brother murdered our mother. About 3k ppl/year in USA have this experience, so it's a statistical reality that someone else in FOSS experienced similar. If so, you're welcome in my PMs to discuss if you need support…
Trump’s cruel response to Reiner shows us-versus-them presidency
When word came of Rob Reiner’s senseless death, America fell into familiar rites of mourning and remembrance. A waterfall of tributes poured in from the twinBYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
‘Het College voor de Rechten van de Mens is op zoek naar een senior beleidsadviseur die het team AI & Mensenrechten komt versterken.’
werkenvoornederland.nl/vacatur…
De Rijksoverheid zoekt: Senior Beleidsadviseur AI & Mensenrechten
Senior Beleidsadviseur AI & Mensenrechten in Utrecht voor 32-36 uur bij College voor de Rechten van de MensWerken voor Nederland
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actie.degoedezaak.org/petition…
Stop de Amerikaanse overname DigiD!
Onze privé-gegevens zijn bij overname door een Amerikaans bedrijf niet veilig! Dit lijkt ons niet de veilige manier nu president Trump in Amerika aan het roer staat.DeGoedeZaak
Unfinished business will drive the Mideast agenda in 2026
Following another year of pivotal developments and transformational change, the Middle East could be poised to turn the page on many of its long-runningBYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
US Capitol unveils statue of teen civil rights icon Barbara Rose Johns, taking Robert E. Lee's spot
https://apnews.com/article/barbara-rose-johns-statue-capitol-7601aed0b9b6a6ab1f307b1ccccd289f?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into U.S. News @u-s-news-AssociatedPress
MARCH 2025
83% of USAID is cut back. The demise is more than a funding crisis. It is a savage attack on human rights, family planning, and reproductive care. Many organisations say women and girls will be disproportionately affected. Hundreds of thousands of people will go on to die from disease, starvation, and suffer a lack of access to maternal care, and gender based violence. In the UK, Starmer slashes £6bill in overseas aid in a move widely seen to appease Trump
DePaul is thinking of closing its library. Why not? I mean, a university doesn't need a library. It does need an associate vice president for Academic and Library Affairs however.
depauliaonline.com/80758/news/…
DePaul lays off over 100 staff members amid budget cuts - The DePaulia
Joining universities nationwide, DePaul makes sweeping budget cuts amid enrollment decline and federal uncertainty.LiLi Jarvenpa (The DePaulia)
I suspect that current unemployment numbers are missing something. The numbers don't seem to reflect the reality I'm seeing on here or on LinkedIn. The number of people looking is higher than I've seen in my career, but the official numbers aren't that bad (4.6% in the US). So let's run a little unscientific experiment.
If you work in tech, or something broadly tech-adjacent, please vote and boost for reach.
- Unemployed (11%, 1 vote)
- Underemployed (11%, 1 vote)
- Employed (77%, 7 votes)
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As you interpret poll results, or for anyone else interested, here is how that official rate is calculated bls.gov/cps/cps_htgm.htm This is US info, but other countries are similar to allow international comparisons.
TLDR, it is a survey done every month that asks a representative sample of people if they are working and if they have looked for work in the past month. Unemployed = not working + looking for work. Unemployment benefits play NO ROLE in the rate. 1/2
4.6% is actually a highish rate. 3% is considered normal/ healthy due to friction. So we are about 50% above normal, and the tech sector is being affected much more than it has been in the recent past.
People in tech and government often get laid off w substantial severance, and may take time off w/o looking for work and don’t show up in the rate.
A couple reasons why, looking mostly at the tech sector, the vibes might be telling you the rate seems low. 2/2
Not looking good for those of us wanting better...
7 out of 8 of those I work with, including me, are actively interviewing and looking elsewhere. Only one so far has landed a new position. I'm waiting to hear back from my interview early this week. We're all in this together and helping each other network.
Wipe RAM. Daar had ik niet eerder over gelezen. En ik was vergeten dat RAM geheugen niet meteen alle data verliest.
github.com/memtest86plus/memte…
gitlab.tails.boum.org/tails/bl…
Snap Up Apple's MagSafe Charger for Just $30 Right Now
https://www.cnet.com/deals/apple-magsafe-charger-amazon-deal/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Apple's latest! @apple-s-latest-cnet
Snap Up Apple's MagSafe Charger for Just $30 Right Now
Amazon slashed $10 off the price of this Apple fast charge MagSafe charger.Sneha Iyer (CNET)
It's been a rough year for all of us in many ways, but I accomplished everything I desired most and I'm thrilled and proud of my successes. There's also another dimension of this year that was important, which is the difference we made in one another's lives.
And I know I made a positive impact in the lives of other people, too, and offered a hand when I could.
Life can be difficult at times. It's good to count being there for one another as successes, too.
Good morning from Wollongong, everybody.
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Subjacent Banana
in reply to datum (n=1) • • •The label Long Covid has always been bad. I ranted about it years ago.
But what do I know. I'm just a Semanticist.💀
But yes, being specific about what your condition is -
dysautonomia" - much better and more persuasive than the hand-waver category Long Covid.
NilaJones
in reply to Subjacent Banana • • •The difficulty is that covid causes SO MANY longterm issues. If I were to list the ones I've been diagnosed with... I probably have more than 50 different new medical conditions, now
And even that doesn't really work as a description, because it elides the -commonality of experience- that I have with people who also have 50 new medical issues, some of which overlap with mine and some of which don't
It's like the difference between saying I'm a white person, and saying I have ancestors from Germany, Austria, France, and England... And originally from Africa, like everybody
I expect you linguists have a word for this?
Subjacent Banana
in reply to NilaJones • • •It's funny you picked "white" because that's exactly where the danger of these large-scale vague socially loaded categories go.
Words denote categories. It's a bucket we put a bunch of things we take to be similar in.
But you can start lobbing stuff into the bucket from all over, and pretty quick the bucket gets weird.
It's easy to discredit a bucket that's full of 5 billion apparently contradictory things.
wrt to "Long Covid" - there is no such thing as a unified set of "things" that can be called "Long Covid." Nobody - probably no two people - have the same post-infection impact.
So you can discredit it very very very quickly. And people get confused very very quickly.
And that's beside the fact that it uses a quality adjective ("Long") which is just a huge mistake. Implies "Short" Covid and "No Covid" right there in the phrase.
The medical literature prefers "Post-Infection Sequelae" as in "This shit happened after infection".
NilaJones
in reply to Subjacent Banana • • •So basically you are saying that long covid is like cancer
And then you are trying to tell me which terms are used in the medical literature. Or more specifically, that only one term is used. Lol.
datum (n=1)
in reply to NilaJones • • •Ok; then maybe
cancer :: pancreatic cancer = LC :: SARS2-sequela dysautonomia?
I still feel like this is leaning towards "name symptoms first, local clusters second, and instigating infection / etiology only third as offhandedly as possible"
I feel like nobody is going to argue with:
the way that people push back on
NilaJones
in reply to datum (n=1) • • •Yes, for dysautonomia specifically, this works pretty well
The difficulty is when you get to the other 2 most common symptoms:
Patient: I have sky high cholesterol that doesn't respond to the typical dietary changes, medication, and exercise
Ordinary PCP doc: Patient is obviously non-compliant and lying about it
Long covid expert doc: This is typical of the vascular damage caused by covid
And:
Pt: I need two weeks to recover from taking a shower, or making a 10 minute phone call, such as to schedule a medical appointment. I need over a month to recover from the appointment itself
PCP: Refer to counseling for anxiety, prescribe psych meds. Tell patient we all get tired sometimes
LC doc: Tell patient what PEM is, referred to occupational therapist with special interest and training in MECFS pacing
Kathmandu
in reply to NilaJones • • •I think there may be a difference here, between talking with regular people and talking with doctors.
With regular people, naming the symptoms avoids the political pushback against "long covid". And it sounds legitimately medical, so they go 'Oh, okay".
But doctors are trained to disbelieve long covid, ME/CFS, PEM, and intractable cholesterol / other issues.
What works with regular people may not help with doctors.
datum (n=1)
in reply to Kathmandu • • •oh my goodness
Me: "I'll just use medical terms with HCWs so that we can shortcut htings"
Reality:
So maybe I've been taking a completely wrong tack!
I hate this. There are real problems in the world to solve. Having to waste time and energy on artificial "problems" like this sucks. As someone hinted in a post elsewhere in the thread, it's a broad problem pattern which covers climate change and other subjects too. We societally don't need to have all these problems! We could just face them, and have a good chance of handling the easier ones, and a better chance of the hard ones! So frustrating.
gypsyvegan
in reply to datum (n=1) • • •After 30+ years of "mystery" complex chronic illness, I can anecdotally confirm that my likelihood of being disbelieved and dismissed by medical professionals increases in direct proportion to how much medical and/or scientific terminology I use. Still.
The variable isn't the language -- it's the provider. I had to learn a long time ago to treat it like dating: I consciously use phraseology, language, and detailed accounts that I know will elicit flags, and the colors of those flags tells me whether there will be a second date.
This recent article is the one I wish I'd had when I was a thirteen-year-old and had to start developing these strategies from scratch:
whn.global/the-long-covid-stra…
The Long Covid Strategy Guide for Talking to Doctors - WHN
WHN