Sub/Title - a movie dialogue game

Aug. 13th, 2025 08:50 pm
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by Brandon Blatcher

Sub/Title - a movie dialogue game [via mefi projects]

Have a good ear for dialogue? Match the subtitle to the correct movie. Use a series of clues if you get stuck. You've got five lives; can you make it through five levels? An endlessly replayable casual game.

multifandom icons.

Aug. 13th, 2025 11:14 pm
wickedgame: (Ivan & Patrick | Elite)
[personal profile] wickedgame posting in [community profile] fandom_icons
 Fandoms: Beauty & The Beast, Chicago Fire, Country Comfort, Daredevil: Born Again, Dead Boy Detectives, DOC - Nelle Tue Mani, Good Trouble, Gotham Knights, Hawkeye, How To Get Away With Murder, Kevin Can F*** Himself, Nancy Drew, The Sandman, SkyMed, Warrior Nun, XO, Kitty, Young Royals

nancydrew-1x04a.png gothamknights-1x10harper.png hawkeye-1x01.png
rest HERE[community profile] mundodefieras 
 
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by chavenet

Successful leaders understand the lessons of Odysseus. Their power to unleash prosperity is tied to their ability to precommit the state to a given course of action, no matter the sirens that lie ahead—and their ability to credibly commit to policies that will predictably lead to real-world change. Dictators, powerful as they may seem, are weak because of their inability to engage in either precommitment or credible commitment. As we'll soon see, this is a key reason why lurching toward authoritarianism is so devastating for good governance. from Jerome Powell and the Authoritarian Sirens of Odysseus [The Garden of Forking Paths]
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

A reader writes:

I’m a senior engineer working for a major multinational company. We have ongoing problems with filling more senior engineering roles. We have far more vacancies than applicants. My line manager has been suggesting I apply for promotion for several years, so I have agreed to start the process to move up to the “lead engineer” grade. Now I want to drop out as I really dislike the process.

To be considered for promotion I need to:
1) Complete a guided assessment demonstrating “how I exemplify company values” (my answers are currently at 14 pages)
2) Get written testimonials from 8-10 colleagues and customers (!) with positive comments and saying they think I’m ready for promotion
3) Do a 10-minute presentation to a promotion panel followed by a interview where I have to “really sell myself”

In the main advice offered for the process, they say they are not looking for “nuts and bolts” answers, they are looking for people “to really shine.”

I don’t want to engage with this process any further. I think it’s totally cringe. I am very uncomfortable with the idea of the selling myself to the required level or asking people to provide feedback filled with praise.

This isn’t imposter syndrome. I am literally already doing the lead engineer role on several projects. I am confident I can do the role.

I think blowing your own trumpet is vulgar. I think that hyping yourself up is vulgar. I think nagging people to provide positive feedback is vulgar. I am not happy about conducting myself in this manner.

While I understand that all jobs do contain a certain amount of corporate BS, this is an optional process which makes me really uncomfortable.

Should I tell the bosses the real reason why I’m dropping out of the process or should I just make vague excuses about this not being the right time?

Tell them.

It’s ridiculous that they have senior vacancies sitting open and they’re making people who are already known quantities jump through these hoops.

To be clear, I don’t agree that blowing your own horn is always inherently vulgar. There are ways to do it that are, for sure — anything overly sales or smarmy sets alarm bells off for me — but “blowing your own horn” can also include just talking about your approach to work and what you’ve achieved. It’s normal to need to do some of that when you want to move up at work (whether internally or in an outside company). But the specifics of what they’re asking for are excessive. 8-10 written testimonials? Asking customers to write letters saying you’re ready for promotion? (How would customers even know? They don’t know what various levels in your company look like.)

Most importantly, your company already knows you and your work, far more intimately than they’d ever know the work of an outside candidate. (Although for the record, this would be too much to ask of an outside candidate, as well.) They can just look at your work and accomplishments and talk to your manager and your colleagues. Choosing to instead ask all of this from you comes across as making you jump through hoops for the sake of jumping through hoops — and that would be a bad idea under any circumstances, but it’s particularly ridiculous when they can’t fill the senior roles they want you to do this for.

So yes, tell your bosses. Say it’s an enormous amount of work and hyping yourself up when they already know you and your work, and while you’d be happy to be considered for promotion — particularly since you know they need the role filled — you’re turned off by the process and will be opting out.

The post should I tell my boss I’m dropping out of the promotion process because their expectations are ridiculous? appeared first on Ask a Manager.

The Journey, by Joyce Carol Thomas

Aug. 13th, 2025 10:36 am
rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


This is one of the most unusual books I've ever read. And if you've been reading my reviews for a while, you know what a strong statement that is. Here's the buries-the-lede back cover:

The town's teenagers are dying. One by one they are mysteriously disappearing but Meggie Alexander refuses to wait in fear. She and her boyfriend Matthew decide to get to the bottom of all the strange goings-on. And they discover a horrible secret.

Now someone is stalking them - but who? There's only one thing that can save Meggie now - the stories a tarantula told her as a baby.


Bet you weren't expecting that, huh?

This was a Scholastic novel from 1988. I'd seen other Thomas novels in that period but never read them, because they all looked like depressing historicals about the black experience - the one I recall seeing specifically was Touched by Fire. I sure never saw this one. I found it in the used children's section of The Last Bookstore in downtown LA.

Any description of this book won't truly convey the experience of reading it, but I'll give it a shot. It starts with a prologue in omniscient POV, largely from the POV of a talking tarantula visiting Meggie soon after she's born, chatting and spinning webs that tell stories to her:

"I get so sick and tired of common folk trying to put their nobody feet on my queenly head. Me? I was present in the first world. Furthermore," the spider boasted, squinting her crooked eyes, "I come from a looooong line of royalty and famous people. Millions of years ago I saw the first rainbow. I ruled as the Egyptian historical arachnid. I'm somebody."

As I transcribe that, it occurs to me that she shares some DNA with The Last Unicorn's butterfly.

The prologue ends when Meggie's mother spots the spider and tries to kill her, believing her daughter is in danger. Chapter one opens when Meggie is fifteen. Briefly, it feels like a YA novel about being black and young in (then)-modern America, and it kind of is that, except for the very heightened writing style, including the dialogue. Thomas is a poet and not trying to write in a naturalistic manner. It's often gorgeous:

She ended [the sermon] with these resounding words falling quiet as small sprinklings of nutmeg whispering into a bowl of whipping cream.

The milieu Meggie lives in is lived-in and sharply and beautifully drawn, skipping from a barbershop where customers complain about women preaching to a quick sketch of a neighborhood woman trying to make her poor house beautiful and not noticing that its real beauty lies in her children to Meggie's exquisitely evoked joy in running. And then Meggie finds the HEADLESS CORPSE of one of her classmates! We check in on a trio of terrible neighbors plotting to do something evil to the town's teenagers! The local spiders are concerned!

This book has the prose one would expect to find in a novel written by a poet about being a black teenager in America, except it's also about headless corpses and spider guardians. It is a trip and a half.

Read more... )

I am so glad that Thomas wrote this amazingly weird novel, and that someone at the bookshop bought it, and that I just happened to come in while it was on the shelf. It's like Adrian Tchaikovsky collaborated with Angela Johnson and Lois Duncan. There has never been anything like it, and there never will be again. Someone ought to reprint it.

Where the fuck is my life going?

Aug. 13th, 2025 01:04 pm
cesperanza: (Default)
[personal profile] cesperanza
I am still here! <3. I'm just so seriously middle-aged, I've got everything on the boil rn. But I'm here if anyone needs me and still contributing to fandom in all the ways I can. You can also reach me at all the places you've always reached me--or other me, or any of the mes you may need.

Things I have enjoyed/am enjoying lately include:

* Killing Eve - I know, I'm super late to Killing Eve, but my sister loves loves loves it and so she asked me to watch it and so I'm watching. First two seasons obviously the best IMO, but she's asked me to see it through so I'm seeing it through.

* Strange New Worlds - its like 100% actual Star Trek! Also it's so fannish - like, look, there are episodes where I can tell the entire reason for the plot is to make sense of one weird moment in ST; TOS and you know what: I RESPECT YOU!! I SALUTE YOU!! YES, GO AHEAD AND FIX THAT ONE MINOR PLOT POINT in TOS, I AM YOUR AUDIENCE, I TOTALLY SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE, GET DOWN WITH YOUR BAD SELF. Also, honestly, I will never be tired of Pike cooking, which is a bizarre characterization that I didn't see coming and which nobody I'm trying to pimp to this show ever believes until they see it. Also I would die for Number 1 and La'an. Also Pike cooks with cast iron and open flame in a spaceship. Really: I salute you, show. I am glad you are back! (Especially since no more Disco.)

* Bridgerton/Queen Charlotte - late to QC also, after watching Bridgerton, and thought it was actually really a notch above Bridgerton. (Which I did enjoy - I mean, I respect their commitment to the pleasure principle.) Glad to be caught up there.

* House - yes, yes, I know, I'm really kicking it like it's 2004 around here, but Tiberius, now a teen, had seen bits of it on the interwebs and was like, "Mom, do you know anything about this show House?" and I was like YESSSSS. YESSS I DOOOOO, and your aunt made a great vid of it! Whereupon I showed him astolat's "Bukowski" and we settled in for a watch/rewatch: we like to have a show we're watching together. He's into Trek also so we watched Discovery and Lower Decks and we'll watch SNW as a family now its back, but there's a lot of House to go through and that's a nice option too.

(Side note to those of you who don't have teens: what I did not expect is that Gen Z basically is getting culture in bursts of 10 seconds or less. He's seen literally BITS of House. He will tell me "I know that song--or well, I know 7 seconds of that song." Remember how there would be kids who wouldn't read a novel, they'd just watch the movie? My students now are like--THAT MOVIE IS TWO WHOLE HOURS? I seriously fear for the future, it makes previous claims of attention span deterioriation look PREPOSTEROUS. Holy shit. I swear, I spend so much energy trying not to be too judgy! But I am very judgy! Then again: this moment, this decade, really provokes judginess!! )

(Additional side note: Tiberius is super eye rolly because since middle school all the girls he knows are like "Wow, your mom is SO COOL," --because of course I am! I am really fucking cool, plus I helped to found the AO3 and all of that, so I am a high school rock star, and Tiberius is like, "please God save me from this hell" lol. Cause honestly there really is nothing worse than having a cool mom, I do get that, but I tell him he'll appreciate it later, when I'm dead.)
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

A reader writes:

I have a job that relies heavily on admin support. I have had the same assistant for a few years now. She’s great, works hard, and is pleasant to work with. I try to be a good boss.

However, I think she lies to me occasionally, almost always about reasons to take days off. For example, she had a migraine on her birthday recently. I don’t care if she wants to take her birthday off, and I’m not in charge of her sick days / vacation days / etc. (that is managed by HR). I have to approve days off, but I have never said no or pushed back at all.

What I think are the occasional lies erode my trust a little bit, and trust is important to what we do. I have no particular desire to confront her but having noticed this pattern. Do you think that I should? I do not feel like I have an obligation to my partners to do so, for example. I do not think she’s stealing time or anything like that. But it feels like a bit of a fly in the ointment of an otherwise very solid working relationship.

I answer this question — and three others — over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here.

Other questions I’m answering there today include:

  • Our leadership meetings are obsessed with talking about drinking
  • Should I apologize for my fly being down?
  • Should I reply to “thanks!” emails?

The post I think my assistant lies about her days off appeared first on Ask a Manager.

Worldcon 2025

Aug. 13th, 2025 09:18 am
beatrice_otter: Me in red--face not shown (Default)
[personal profile] beatrice_otter
I will be at Worldcon this week, starting on Thursday. If any of you are going to be there and want to meet up, please DM me and let me know!

permacomputing.net

Aug. 13th, 2025 03:00 pm
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by postcommunism

In a time where computing epitomizes industrial waste and exploitation, permacomputing encourages a more sustainable approach, maximizing hardware lifespans, minimizing energy use and focussing [sic] on the use of already available computational resources.

The principles of permacomputing are:
  • Hope for the Best, Prepare for the Worst
  • Care for All Hardware — Especially the Chips
  • Observe First
  • Not Doing
  • Expose the Seams
  • Consider Carefully the Interaction Between Simplicity, Complexity and Scale
  • Keep It Flexible
  • Build on Solid Ground
  • (Almost) Everything has a place
  • Integrate Biological and Renewable Resources
Properties of permacomputing systems The principles concretely manifest themselves in various forms so as to highlight the following properties:
  • accessible: well documented and adaptable to an individual's needs.
  • compatible: works on a variety of architectures.
  • efficient: uses as little resources (power, memory, etc) as possible (minimization).
  • flexible: modular, portable, adapts to various use-cases.
  • resilient: repairable, offline-first, low-maintenance, designed for disassembly, planned for longevity, maximized lifespan, descent-friendly or designed for descent
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

A reader writes:

I hired someone who presented themselves as a senior-level configurations specialist with over seven years of experience. They interviewed well and said all the right technical answers that convinced me they already knew how to operate the system and would just need to pick up the configuration.

A week before they started, I found an identical application with the same name and contact info, but for a different department — with a completely different resume and job history overlapping the one that had applied for my role. I thought this was very weird, but I decided to give this person a shot, thinking maybe they were a person of many talents. Their LinkedIn profile matched the resume shared with me, so I didn’t question it too much.

Since they started, I progressively gave feedback and suggestions to their work, offered many times to provide any support they needed, gave them a summary of the expectations and job description again after they committed a significant error, and finally gave them an informal coaching document per the guidance of HR. There was no improvement in the three weeks following the coaching document.

Fast forward to terminating this person at the end of their informal trial period. It got to this point after:

• They removed a data entry rule that led to over 100 employees getting shortchanged by a day’s worth of pay (this data entry rule is a basic and common installation a junior-level person could grasp). This mistake still rears its ugly head to this day with a different ripple effect from implementing later enhancements even though we have already corrected the issue.

• It took two to three times longer to design a configuration that is very basic. Even though I checked in on their progress once a week, reviewed their work, and gave feedback based on real-life examples of where their draft design is likely to not work as intended, they didn’t make any changes and tried to pass off their unchanged draft as if they did something.

• The workload that I used to do that was now the new hire’s scope of work barely moved (to their credit, they completed one assignment), so it felt like it more work to manage this person and the existing workload that they were supposed to work on.

• A peer confided in me that they were on a Zoom call with the new hire and could clearly overhear the new hire talking to an unknown person about what to do about a troubleshooting item in our systems.

• Every time I asked this person if they needed anything to help them complete the assignments, any questions, etc, they always said, “I’m good.” They would take more than 24 hours to get back to people about status updates for troubleshooting items (too busy googling for the answers?).

This person, predictably, did not take the news of termination well and used the opportunity to list out all the grievances they had about me even though they had never communicated any of it to me or my manager. I was convinced that I had failed as a new supervisor because I didn’t know any of these grievances that I could take action on.

Several months later, out of morbid curiosity, I looked at their LinkedIn profile, wondering if they had found work similar to the job we hired them for. Turns out they’re now presenting as a senior-level person with 7+ years of Site Reliability Engineering, which is wildly different from the past two resumes they have previously applied with at our company.

Now I’m just more paranoid about screening whatever applicants come by my desk to make sure I’m not hiring an imposter.

I wrote back and asked, “Did you ask them about the second application at all (and if so, what did they say)? And when you interviewed them for the job you hired them for, was the interview in-person or virtual, and did you do any skills testing as part of that process?”

I never asked them about the second application, because at that point I was already onboarding them. This was my first hire and I decided that since I already committed to hiring them, I should give them a chance.

When I interviewed them, it was virtual and the only “skills testing” we could do was asking them questions about what they had done in the past and to explain in detail how they build solutions. We can’t give access to our test sites to non-employees. This person used all the right technical keywords that someone experienced in a specific HR system would know.

Nowadays, a lot of resumes I see have very similar verbiage like this ex-new hire so I don’t know what to trust anymore.

Before you throw up your hands and conclude you can’t trust anything you see from candidates, there’s a lot you can do to ensure that a person actually has the skills they say they have.

First and foremost, you have to test people’s skills and see them in action doing the work they say they can do. Otherwise, it’s entirely too easy for someone to bluff their way through an interview — which happens a ton, because people have an overly-inflated idea of their own skills or they don’t know what they don’t know and so they wrongly estimate how easy it will be to figure things out on the job. Combine that with someone who talks a good game, and you can easily end up with a terrible hire if you don’t bother to verify what they’re claiming. Less commonly, it can even happen for nefarious reasons, like you’ve been targeted by a sketchy company that hires people to interview and then sends someone else to do the job (see this example!).

Seeing people demonstrate their skills is always important, but it’s especially essential when you’re only interviewing virtually. In fact, if at all possible, I’d recommend you do your final interviews in-person because it will help weed out deliberate scams like the letter I linked to … but if you can’t do that, there’s still plenty you can do virtually. You don’t need to have someone go in-person to a test site. You can ask them to whiteboard problems right there in the interview and show their process. Have them share their screen. Pose work questions and ask them to talk you through their answer. Make sure you’re not just asking people to solve a problem, but to explain to you in their own words how they got there, and then ask follow-up questions to probe for real understanding.

If someone’s behavior seems suspicious during an interview — like if they seem to be reading answers off their screen, or they keep having “connection issues” and then magically have the answer as soon as the connection is reestablished — don’t be afraid to address it in the moment. There’s no reason you can’t say, “It looks like you might be reading from notes. Can I ask that you put those away so we can have a less scripted conversation?” or “I’d like you to talk through your work as you’re doing it, so if you’re having connection issues, let’s reschedule for a time when that won’t be the case” or so forth. You don’t want your mindset to be, “This seems suspicious but there’s nothing I can do about it.”

In fact, if anything seems weird when you’re hiring, ask about it! I can kind of see why you didn’t ask about the totally different resume, since people tailor their resumes to the job they’re applying for. There’s no requirement to include everything you’ve ever done, and so your resume for job 1 might highlight A, B, and C while your resume for job 2 highlights D, E, and F … but it really depends on exactly what the differences between the two resumes were. If the work reported on the one resume would have been hard/impossible to be doing at the same time as the work reported on the other resume, that’s not a situation where you want to just figure, “Well, I’m already onboarding them so I should give them a chance.” Instead, that’s a situation where you should talk to them and say, “This didn’t line up with the work we talked about, so I want to ask you about it.” Listen with an open mind — it’s possible there’s an explanation that will make sense — but have the conversation; don’t just ignore it.

You should also always check references before you hire anyone, to confirm that what they’ve told you about their experience and accomplishments is actually their work experience and accomplishments.

And then once someone is on the job, if you see problems right away, address it very assertively. If their skillset appears to be wildly different from what you thought when you hired them, don’t let that drag out for months. If it’s clear that they can’t do the job, have a very direct conversation about the mismatch and bring things to a resolution quickly rather than waiting for the end of a probation period. (To be fair, I’m not sure how long you did let it play out, and it’s possible that it wasn’t long at all.)

If you do enough hiring, you’re going to occasionally make a bad hire. Hiring isn’t a perfect science and managers aren’t infallible. But there’s a lot you can do to weed out actual fraud in the hiring process.

The post I hired someone who wasn’t who he said he was appeared first on Ask a Manager.

Only Murders in the Building S5 Promo

Aug. 13th, 2025 04:47 pm
feurioo: (Default)
[personal profile] feurioo posting in [community profile] tv_talk
Premiere: September 9

After [season 4 spoiler] dies under suspicious circumstances, Charles, Oliver, and Mabel refuse to believe it was an accident. The trio uncovers a dangerous web of secrets connecting powerful billionaires and old-school mobsters.

Interior Chinatown, by Charles Yu

Aug. 13th, 2025 07:49 am
runpunkrun: Dana Scully reading Jose Chung's 'From Outer Space' in the style of a poster you'd find in your school library, text: Read. (reading)
[personal profile] runpunkrun
What if your life was a TV show? Would you be the star or a background character?

Willis Wu lives and works in Chinatown and dreams of being Kung Fu Guy, just like his father before him, but Will's role in life—or in the script—is more Generic Asian Man Number Three. Then he falls for Attractive Lady Cop and has to make a choice between a family life in the suburbs or the job he's always wanted.

This is one of those stories that's more about an idea than a character, and more a thesis than a story. The idea is interesting and the thesis is credible—and completely spelled out for you in a courtroom scene at the end in case you somehow missed it—but the characters have the stock feel of a parable and gave me little reason to care about their struggles as they toil in a system that's been stacked against them for centuries.

The system is racist as shit and Yu supports this with real world examples but doesn't do much to personalize it for his characters. He does dramatize it, literally, as parts are in script format, but even much of that is intentionally clichéd, and despite some early ??? as I wondered what the fuck was going on, I didn't find this challenging or exciting, but I think it did what it meant to.

Contains: cops; racism (including stereotypes and slurs); elder care; poverty; generational trauma; pomo; second person perspective.

media update

Aug. 13th, 2025 09:49 am
omens: otters hugging (otterhugs)
[personal profile] omens
I didn't finish Blue Beetle! I was enjoying it, too. Gotta do that tonight!


Books:

A Sweet Sting of Salt by Rose Sutherland. I liked this book a lot! It's a queer selkie story set in historical Nova Scotia, where the author is from. The characters are great - all of them are well done. I didn't expect it to have as much tension as it had! It was often a battle to make myself pick up the scawwy book (there is a jealous husband - which, not usually into infidelity, but can it be called infidelity when you kidnapped your wife? I guess the tension ends up being the same) LOLed when I saw in the afterword she thanked Les Mis tumblr. :D What a world we live in :D I look fwd to whatever else she might do!


Games: still zoning out to word trails (via netflix, so no ads) at least once a day, free of Stardew again because it crashed and I didn't open it back up


Writing and other wips: actually wrote a bit this last week! Mostly timeline sorting as a distraction from all the shit I'm supposed to be cleaning before my uncle arrives (tomorrow! ahhhhhhh), but looks like around 1400 words. Nice!! Was very cool to feel like my wip wasn't dead for a little while. I'll be too distracted the next week and a half, but maybe??? I have a little hope again lol.


Oh, right!! I also watched this compilation of mummy joe's kid vampir series! I used to watch it on instagram and hadn't seen the end.. I love it so much! It's a very funny tale of a kid vampire & his dad, a boy raised by frogs, a child entrepreneur and her assistant, a superbaby and a mad scientist, and how they all come together :D with songs!



Is Pepsi "Neptune Nut" penis Pepsi?

Aug. 13th, 2025 10:33 am
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by JHarris

CodeParade, the person who made hyperbolic plane exploration game Hyperbolica, and four-dimensional mini golf game 4D Golf (previously) has turned their attention to a much more linear topic... trying to compose long palindromes (video, 10 minutes).
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by kliuless

Possibility of a US Dual State? [33m] - "Aziz Huq is a Professor of US and comparative constitutional law at the University of Chicago School of Law. He wrote an article for The Atlantic entitled 'America is watching the rise of a Dual State.'"

For most people, the courts will continue to operate as usual—until they don't.
I don't think that The Dual State[1] was a book that people knew about until this year. It was a book that was out of print until 2007 when a really marvelous scholar at the London School of Economics, a German man called Jens Meierhenrich, persuaded Oxford University Press to republish it with a long and terrific introduction that he wrote.[2] I think that there are people who picked up and read The Dual State in part as a way of thinking through an earlier generation's set of problems with the rule of law. In particular, the kind of policies that emerged in the wake of 9/11. So, I was a lawyer for detainees after 9/11 in legal actions that were brought against the government. I knew of the book, The Dual State, and knew a little bit about it while I was in practice because it bore upon the kind of tactics that one saw back in the 2000s and 2010s. But I don't think I seriously thought about the book until the beginning of this year when many of the tactics that I think one fairly saw being used by the Trump administration reminded me of things that Fraenkel alluded to in The Dual State. So I think that my piece and a piece by a Princeton political scientist called Kim Lane Scheppele[3,4,5] at the beginning of March were the first public writings that circled back to Fraenkel's Dual State. I don't think that anything that has happened since March however undercuts the sense that this is a resonant text. And I would just add one more reason why the text has resonance today, which is it's not clear to me how many have actually read the book as opposed to learned about Fraenkel's life.[6,7] I think the example of a man who chooses – just focusing for a moment on 1933 -- chooses at the moment where political competition in Germany is being shut down. Not only communists who are immediately arrested, but most members of the left-of-center Socialist Party with which Fraenkel was associated and also Christian Democrats were being shunted off either into house arrest or into prison. At that moment in time, Fraenkel, notwithstanding the fact that he's pretty well off in the beginning of the '30s and certainly he could have left -- indeed, his law partner, a man called Franz Neumann,[8] leaves and takes up residence at the London School of Economics. He chooses to stay, and he indeed has to litigate his right to stay as a veteran notwithstanding the fact that he's Jewish. And as a Jew and as a socialist he remains in Berlin, he remains in the belly of the beast. I don't mean to be too dramatic, but that doesn't strike me as being inaccurate. He remains in the belly of the beast right until the very last moment that he can, striving as far as we can tell, to save people. To, as you said, pull people back from the maw of the Prerogative State, to at least put them in a position where they had some legal structure, some sense of rights and expectations that might be respected. There's something enormously admirable about a person who makes those choices and who quietly and with enormous dignity goes about defending humane values. So I think that yes, absolutely, The Dual State provides an enormously valuable and interesting lens for thinking about what's happening to the law at the moment. But I also think that Fraenkel's own personal example is really powerful. And it's certainly powerful for me as a lawyer, but I think it's powerful for people more generally.
Cruelty and Loyalty - "Governing through cruelty and loyalty reverses the basic premise of the rule of law, which is that people should be able to live without fear or favor. In a democratic and constitutional government, people are supposed to be treated with equal respect and with guaranteed rights under a government that is not permitted to entrench itself in power. But when generating fear through cruelty and demanding favor through loyalty become the central organizing principles of government, then rights fray, checks on government fail, the entrenchment of a particular leader begins, and autocracy is on the march."
Ernst Fraenkel, a Jewish lawyer writing from inside Nazi Germany in the late 1930s, described what he saw as a legal practitioner. For most Germans, life went on as usual. Laws were enforced as written; the courts operated predictably. He called this the Normative State. But there was another parallel state operating at the same time into which people could be cast when the government had decided to target them. This was the Prerogative State, in which arbitrariness reigned and all safeguards of law disappeared. This Dual State relied on the surface appearance of normality from the Normative State to whitewash the use of emergency powers, enabling acts, special decrees and discriminatory laws that created a Prerogative State where cruelty was the order of the day. Hitler's government counted on the appearance of the Normative State to avert people's eyes from the Prerogative State. Fraenkel's description of the Dual State should warn us that we cannot be complacent because the United States just had a free and fair election followed by a peaceful transfer of power or because the Democratic Party now acts like they can will normality into existence by enacting their half of normal politics. Even the most terrible dictatorships that history has produced found ways to make life seem normal for most people, as long as they demobilized politically and didn't challenge the dictator's hold on power. To understand what kind of government we have, we need to look at how that government treats those whom the leader believes are his enemies as well as those who are on the margins of society.
Robert H. Jackson Lecture | Kim Lane Scheppele - "I teach a course on the rule of law and the opening reading that I make all of my students read every year is Robert Jackson's opening statement as the Nuremberg prosecutor. If you're going to read something while you're here, Chautauqua is famous for sitting under the trees and reading, read Jackson's opening statement.[9,10] Not only is it beautiful prose, but it lays out the evidence against the high-level Nazi leaders and it lays out the case for the rule of law. And I really urge you to read it. It's the thing I think that has inspired a lot of the work that I've done. And so what I'm going to do is to pivot around Robert Jackson's experience at Nuremberg because today when the fate of American democracy is in the balance, I think Jackson's experience at Nuremberg has something to teach us. And so let me just foreshadow what I'm going to do. I want to convince you today of two things. One was that the Nuremberg trial and Jackson's participation in it had a major effect on him and through him had a major effect on US constitutional law particularly on the doctrine of separation of powers."[11] How to Lose a Democracy: What America Can Learn from the Rest of the World - "Professor Scheppele is one of the foremost experts on how legal and constitutional instruments can be used to destroy democracy. In her talk, Professor Scheppele highlights the strategies autocrats use, and the ten steps countries can take towards an autocracy. She gives examples from Hungary, Poland, Russia, and elsewhere, but she also highlights our present situation in the US."

A new threat looms large

Aug. 13th, 2025 07:39 am
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by chavenet

Believing that the people they speak to on Grindr and other queer dating apps are also part of the LGBTQ+ community, closeted folk in India often open up about their sexuality to those that they match with. But it can be turned against them in a flash – finding themselves facing assault, harassment, violence, blackmail and extortion, with scammers weaponising the threat of outing them to families and friends. from As Grindr scams in India rise, its LGBTQ+ community fights back [Huck] Content warning: This story contains account of violence and abuse that some readers may find upsetting. Resources for support are listed at the bottom of the article.
Page generated Aug. 23rd, 2025 08:45 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios