Friday, June 6, 2025

Trump and Musk’s Unlikely Alliance Breaks Down in Rapid and Public Fashion; The New York Times, June 5, 2025

Tyler Pager and  , The New York Times; Trump and Musk’s Unlikely Alliance Breaks Down in Rapid and Public Fashion


[Kip Currier: In the words of fictional billionaire Logan Roy from TV's Succession, these "are not serious people." As George Dillard wrote in a 2024 "We Are Not Serious People" piece for Medium:

"There were a lot of memorable lines in Succession, but Logan’s line is the one I often find myself repeating in my head, because there are not a lot of serious people left in America anymore." 

https://worldhistory.medium.com/we-are-not-serious-people-00ca768240e3

These are not individuals of good character or emotional intelligence whom reasonable, thinking, morally-grounded people with sound judgment would want leading them, working for them, or in a relationship with any family member they care about.

Even more, Trump and Musk et al are not people you want with access to the nuclear codes or in charge of spacecraft and satellites your country depends upon. They care nothing about the well-being of anyone other than themselves and perhaps a tiny handful of people in their immediate oligarchic circles. They are rich in assets and bankrupt in any semblance of decency or dignity.

And yet...here we are. Remember this at election time in 2026 and 2028.]


[Excerpt]

"The sparring swiftly devolved into threats on their respective social media platforms, as Mr. Trump threatened to cut the billions in dollars in federal government contracts with Mr. Musk’s companies. For his part, Mr. Musk unleashed a tirade of attacks on the man he had once lavishly praised. He suggested it might be time to create a new political party, claimed there were references to Mr. Trump in government documents about the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and indicated his support for a post calling for the president’s impeachment."

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Selfishness Is Not a Virtue; The New York Times, June 5, 2025

 , The New York Times; Selfishness Is Not a Virtue

"Too many Christians are transforming Christianity into a vertical faith, one that focuses on your personal relationship with God at the expense of the horizontal relationship you have with your neighbors...

Consider also the evangelical turn against empathy. There are now Christian writers and theologians who are mounting a frontal attack against the very value that allows us to understand our neighbors, that places us in their shoes and asks what we would want and need if we were in their place.

But Christianity is a cross-shaped faith. The vertical relationship creates horizontal obligations. While Christians can certainly differ, for example, on the best way to provide health care to our nation’s most vulnerable citizens, it’s hard to see how we can disagree on the need to care for the poor.

Put another way, when the sick and lame approached Jesus, he did not say, “Depart from me, for thou shalt die anyway.” He healed the sick and fed the hungry and told his followers to do the same.

Or, as the Book of James declares, “If a brother or sister is without clothes and lacks daily food and one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace, stay warm, and be well fed,’ but you don’t give them what the body needs, what good is it?”

Again, these passages do not dictate any particular policy, but they do tell us that we must try to meet the physical needs of the poor — here, on this earth — even if our souls are far more durable than our bodies."

Dustin Lance Black, Sean Penn Hit Back as Navy Ship Is Stripped of Harvey Milk’s Name: “These Guys Are Idiots” (Exclusive); The Hollywood Reporter, June 4, 2025

BY SETH ABRAMOVITCH , The Hollywood Reporter; Dustin Lance Black, Sean Penn Hit Back as Navy Ship Is Stripped of Harvey Milk’s Name: “These Guys Are Idiots” (Exclusive)

"Dustin Lance Black and Sean Penn, who won Academy Awards for writing and starring in the 2008 Harvey Milk biopic Milk, are speaking out on orders from U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to remove the name of the gay rights activist and late San Francisco Supervisor from a Navy ship.

“This is yet another move to distract and to fuel the culture wars that create division,” Black, 50, says in a phone call with The Hollywood Reporter. “It’s meant to get us to react in ways that are self-centered so that we are further distanced from our brothers and sisters in equally important civil rights fights in this country. It’s divide and conquer.”...

“These guys are idiots,” Black responds. “Pete Hegseth does not seem like a smart man, a wise man, a knowledgeable man. He seems small and petty. I would love to introduce him to some LGBTQ folks who are warriors who have had to be warriors our entire life just to live our lives openly as who we are.”...

“Harvey Milk is an icon, a civil rights icon, and for good reason,” Black continues. “That’s not going to change. Renaming a ship isn’t going to change that. If people are pissed off, good, be pissed off — but take the appropriate action. Do what Harvey Milk had said we need to do, and it’s about bringing back together the coalition of the ‘us’-es that helps move the pendulum of progress forward. Stop the infighting and lock arms again. That’s what Harvey would say.”"

Government AI copyright plan suffers fourth House of Lords defeat; BBC, June 2, 2025

 Zoe Kleinman , BBC; Government AI copyright plan suffers fourth House of Lords defeat

"The argument is over how best to balance the demands of two huge industries: the tech and creative sectors. 

More specifically, it's about the fairest way to allow AI developers access to creative content in order to make better AI tools - without undermining the livelihoods of the people who make that content in the first place.

What's sparked it is the Data (Use and Access) Bill.

This proposed legislation was broadly expected to finish its long journey through parliament this week and sail off into the law books. 

Instead, it is currently stuck in limbo, ping-ponging between the House of Lords and the House of Commons.

A government consultation proposes AI developers should have access to all content unless its individual owners choose to opt out. 

But 242 members of the House of Lords disagree with the bill in its current form.

They think AI firms should be forced to disclose which copyrighted material they use to train their tools, with a view to licensing it."

Eminem Hits Meta With A Copyright Lawsuit After It Allegedly Misappropriated Hundreds Of His Songs; ABOVE THE LAW, June 4, 2025

  Chris Williams , ABOVE THE LAW; Eminem Hits Meta With A Copyright Lawsuit After It Allegedly Misappropriated Hundreds Of His Songs

"Don’t. Mess. With. Eminem. And if the events are as cut and dried as the complaint makes it seem, Meta is getting off easy with the $109M price tag. Meta of all companies should know that the only thing that can get away with brazenly stealing the work of wealthy hard-working artists without facing legal consequences is AI-scrapping software."

Hegseth stripping Harvey Milk's name off Navy ship is weak and insecure | Opinion; USA Today, June 4, 2025

Rex Huppke, USA TODAY ; Hegseth stripping Harvey Milk's name off Navy ship is weak and insecure | Opinion

"Hegseth's plan to scrub Harvey Milk's name from a ship is peak insecurity

The “warrior ethos,” Secretary Hegseth? Are you an insecure 12-year-old?

Nothing says indomitable warrior quite like, “I’m afraid of this boat’s name.”

A true warrior would be familiar with American history and would know that Milk served as a U.S. Navy operations officer on rescue submarines during the Korean War, then went on to become the first openly gay man elected to public office in California. He was serving on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors when he and the city’s mayor were assassinated in 1978.

Milk served in the Korean War and earned his place in history

A true warrior would recognize that U.S. service members throughout history have proudly served, fought and died for the rights of all Americans to speak and live freely.

A true warrior would be appalled to read the statement Milk’s nephew Stuart Milk, who chairs the Harvey Milk Foundation, had to release in response to Hegseth’s pathetic renaming plan, saying of the slain activist: “His legacy has stood as a proud and bright light for the men and women who serve in our nation's military – including those who have served on the USNS Harvey Milk – and a reminder that no barriers of race, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, religion, or physical infirmity will restrain their human spirit.

Hegseth apparently sees US Navy ship names as 'woke'

The New York Times reported that there are other ships named after civil rights leaders that might be renamed under Hegseth’s feeble leadership. The names include Thurgood Marshall, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Harriet Tubman and Cesar Chavez.

Make no mistake that behind these decisions is an administration limply fighting back against any incursion on the power of straight, White men, wholly unaware that people with real power don’t need to exert their will on others...

Hegseth and others in the Trump administration don't know true strength

But that’s not strength. It’s not a “warrior ethos.” Heck, it’s not even an ethos. It’s just a bunch of unconfident losers trying to push others down to make themselves feel tall.

If Harvey Milk’s name is scrubbed from a Navy ship, it won’t alter his legacy. His name, decades upon decades from now, will still echo in the pages of history, the hearts of students of civil rights and the mind of any soldier with a true warrior ethos.

Pete Hegseth's name, on the other hand, will prompt only one response: “Who’s that? Never heard of him.”"

Navy set to rename ship honoring Harvey Milk amid DEI purge; Politico, June 3, 2025

 GISELLE RUHIYYIH EWING and PAUL MCLEARY, Politico;  Navy set to rename ship honoring Harvey Milk amid DEI purge

"Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is set to rename a naval vessel named after gay rights activist Harvey Milk, with several other ships honoring civil rights activists and women also potentially being rechristened.

The move targeting the ship named after the gay rights icon comes as LGBTQ+ communities kick off pride month celebrations across the country. The step furthers Hegseth’s agenda to stomp out DEI initiatives at the Pentagon, which has included removing books from service academies and scrubbing some mentions of women and people of color in the armed services from DOD websites."

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

They Are All Warriors, Too.; Ethics, Info, Tech: Contested Voices, Values, Spaces, June 4, 2025

Kip Currier, Ethics, Info, Tech: Contested Voices, Values, Spaces; They Are All Warriors, Too.

Late yesterday afternoon I saw the following Guardian article: Hegseth orders US navy to strip Harvey Milk name from ship amid Pride month. That generated two reactions:

Oh, no...Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth couldn't have done such a mean-spirited, petty thing, right?...

And, oh, yeah...this is exactly the kind of thing Hegseth would do. Especially with Pride Month just underway.

What was the Pentagon explanation for why this was done? The article says that "The renaming is being done to ensure “alignment with president and SECDEF objectives and SECNAV priorities of reestablishing the warrior culture”, referring to Donald Trump, Hegseth and Phelan, according to the memorandum."

It goes on to note that not just the USNS Harvey Milk but more than half a dozen naval ships named for civil rights pioneers will be stripped of their names and renamed:

"Documents reviewed by CBS showed that vessels on the US navy’s “recommended list” include USNS Thurgood Marshall, USNS Ruth Bader Ginsburg, USNS Harriet Tubman, USNS Dolores Huerta, USNS Lucy Stone, USNS Cesar Chavez and USNS Medgar Evers." 

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jun/03/harvey-milk-ship-name-hegseth


A few points in rebuttal to Hegseth and those who support this decision:

The timing of this action is clearly not an accident. It was unveiled at the beginning of June's Pride Month, the month-long recognition of LGBTQ+ people and their long-waged civil rights efforts to be legally recognized and included in all aspects of societal life, like other Americans.

At the same time as Hegseth's announcement, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced on June 3 that the Trump Administration would not be recognizing Pride Month. Leavitt added that “I can tell you this president is very proud to be a president for all Americans, regardless of race, religion or creed.” Leavitt's words on behalf of Trump may sound good to some, but there's really no substantive meaning or truth behind the platitude. To the contrary, the actions of the Trump administration indicate that Trump is in fact not a "president for all Americans." As just one example among many, recall that this is the president who decided via a "Prioritizing Military Excellence and Readiness" executive order on January 27, 2025 that transgender persons will no longer be permitted to serve in the U.S. military, a decision that was upheld by a majority of the U.S. Supreme Court on May 6. How is that decision playing out in our society? The Advocate reported on June 3 that Cadets who met all Air Force Academy graduation standards denied commissions because they're transgender. Consider the fundamental unfairness of this new reality for persons who have committed themselves to serving this country. Keep in mind as well that all branches of the U.S. military have been unable to meet their recruiting goals in recent years, except for the U.S. Marines and Space Force. Transgender persons, like these Air Force Academy graduates, are ready, willing, and more than able to serve. Yet, they are being ushered out of all military branches under this president.

It's important to note that among the naval ships set to be renamed, three of the people for whom those ships were named are veterans: Harvey Milk (U.S. Navy), Cesar Chavez (U.S. Navy), and Medgar Evers (U.S. Army). Milk served for four years and was forced out of the Navy in 1955, with an "other than honorable" discharge because he was openly homosexual. Evers served for three years, from 1943-1946, in a segregated army unit during World War II. Chavez served two years in the Navy, from 1946-1948, and was placed in a unit for persons of foreign descent. We can easily imagine if we were to place ourselves in the shoes of these three veterans how the experience of being categorized and set apart from other people in ways that discriminate them from one another might affect us and impel us to work for inclusion and equal treatment, which all three of these men would later do. Moreover, all three of these veterans enlisted of their own free will and were part of a military warrior culture that was ready to fight for freedom and protect democracy.

The other civil rights activists and notable historical figures for whom the naval ships were named, such as Underground Railroad leader Harriet Tubman and suffragist and slavery abolitionist Lucy Stone, did not serve in the U.S. military. However, each of these individuals in their own way represents the spirit of a warrior. Each person confronted significant obstacles and discriminatory treatment, both as individuals and members of groups that suffered from systemic unfairness and disadvantage. Yet, they all found the courage and strength within themselves to fight back against unjustness to help our country become "a more perfect union". 

America is an exceptional nation that has been a beacon for the ideals of democracy for nearly 250 years. Yet, the patchwork of American history is also made up of time periods in which those ideals were not realized and groups experienced discrimination, ostracism, and injustice. One of the ways we can work toward becoming a more perfect union is by acknowledging that past and the inherent value of individuals and the various communities within which they are situated. Honoring the societal achievements of individuals from groups that have experienced intolerance and unjust actions by naming military ships after them is a way to promote "representation" of these groups; groups who are all too often unseen and unrecognized. It's a way of saying "we see you", "we know you are here", "we value you". Hegseth's stripping the names of civil rights contributors from these ships is an effort to send the opposite messages; namely, "we don't see you or welcome you", "you don't exist and we don't want you here", "you are of no importance and do not matter". Mt. Lebanon, a suburb of Pittsburgh, counters the negative messaging of people like Hegseth by providing free LGBTQ+ ally signs that people can display in their yards. One of the designs says: We see you. We love you. We stand with you. Another design simply says Lebo [the township's nickname] sees you!

Returning to the topic of the timing of this development, the cruelty and spitefulness of Hegseth stripping these naval ships of their names, and doing it during Pride Month, is indeed the point. The announcement was made at this time to try to make people feel bad who believe in the morality and legitimacy of recognizing people and communities that have experienced discrimination. Hegseth's actions are both a tacit and implicit message to members of the communities from which these honorees came that "you don't matter", "you aren't part of this America anymore", "we who are in power can literally erase you from history and existence at any time". It's also part and parcel of the "culture and history wars" that the Trump administration is waging against libraries, museums, and the arts, as Margaret Sullivan identifies in her June 2, 2025 Guardian piece "Parks, libraries, museums: Here's why Trump is attacking America's best-loved institutions". As Sullivan observes, drawing from the work of 20th century authoritarianism expert Hannah Arendt (author of a series of articles in 1963 on the "Banality of Evil"):

Take away natural beauty, free access to books and support for the arts, and you end up with a less enlightened, more ignorant and less engaged public. That's a public much more easily manipulated. 

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jun/02/national-parks-libraries-museums-trump

Here's the thing about Hegseth's erasure of the names on those naval ships, though: each one of the people for whom those naval ships was named experienced years and years of being erased, of being segregated, of being "othered". But they still manifested a warrior ethos and pressed on. They never gave up. They persevered. And they made progress and advances for themselves and others who like them were experiencing unfair treatment and inequality. Despite the Pete Hegseths of the world then and the Pete Hegseths of the world now. I picture each one of them (and Dolores Huerta as of this writing is still alive and with us at the age of 95), shrugging their shoulders, saying something like "consider the source" in reacting to Hegseth's actions, and getting back in the game to fight for social justice and human dignity for disadvantaged people as well as everyone.

Finally, it's vital for us to put Hegseth's behavior in perspective: his time as Secretary of Defense will one day end. His edicts and pronouncements that attempt to make lasting policy relating to the worth of others won't last forever. As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., said "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice." And a less well-known observation made by Dr. King in 1956 is good for us to always keep at hand:

"Change does not roll in on the wheels of inevitability, but comes through continuous struggle. And so we must straighten our backs and work for our freedom."

https://www.si.edu/spotlight/mlk?page=4&iframe=true 

Hegseth's actions can be undone. And no matter what Pete Hegseth does to the names of human rights pioneers on a ship, the legacies of those honorees are still intact and unbroken. Those honorees held on to an intrinsic sense of their own value and goodness in spite of the adversities they faced. Hegseth cannot strip them of that. And here in the present, he can't strip that same sense of value and goodness from any person who finds themselves in a group that Hegseth and his ilk demean and devalue.

Ultimately, Hegseth doesn't get to define for all of us who a warrior is. Yes, as the head of the Defense Department for this short period of time as a public servant he can talk about "warrior culture" and institute policy changes. But he can't really define what a warrior is unless we cede that ground to him. Indeed, there are countless ways to be a warrior in this world and still maintain a sense of decency, compassion, and respect for the dignity of all human beings.

Each of us can define for ourselves what it means to be a warrior. And we can thank and say the names of the warriors -- those who are are veterans and those who have served in other ways -- who have fought and sacrificed for all of us (in alphabetical order below), while keeping their memories alive and ensuring that others can learn about them and be inspired to become warriors for good, too.


Cesar Chavez (1927-1993)

Medgar Evers (1925-1963)

Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933-2020)

Dolores Huerta (1930- )

Thurgood Marshall (1908-1993)

Harvey Milk (1930-1978)

Lucy Stone (1818-1893)

Harriet Tubman (1822-1913)


Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Artificial Intelligence—Promises and Perils for Humans’ Rights; Harvard Law School Human Rights Program, June 10, 2025 10:30 AM EDT

Harvard Law School Human Rights Program; Artificial Intelligence—Promises and Perils for Humans’ Rights

"In recent years, rapid advances in Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology, significantly accelerated by the development and deployment of deep learning and Large Language Models, have taken center stage in policy discussions and public consciousness. Amidst a public both intrigued and apprehensive about AI’s transformative potential across workplaces, families, and even broader political, economic, and geopolitical structures, a crucial conversation is emerging around its ethical, legal, and policy dimensions.

This webinar will convene a panel of prominent experts from diverse fields to delve into the critical implications of AI for humans and their rights. The discussion will broadly address the anticipated human rights harms stemming from AI’s increasing integration into society and explore potential responses to these challenges. A key focus will be on the role of international law and human rights law in addressing these harms, considering whether this legal framework can offer the appropriate tools for effective intervention."

5 ethical questions about artificial intelligence; Britannica Money, May 2025

 Written byFact-checked byBritannica Money; 5 ethical questions about artificial intelligence

"Are you wondering about the ethical implications of artificial intelligence? You’re not alone. AI is an innovative, powerful tool that many fear could produce significant consequences—some positive, some negative, and some downright dangerous.

Ethical concerns about an emerging technology aren’t new, but with the rise of generative AI and rapidly increasing user adoption, the conversation is taking on new urgency. Is AI fair? Does it protect our privacy? Who is accountable when AI makes a mistake—and is AI the ultimate job killer? Enterprises, individuals, and regulators are grappling with these important questions.


Let’s explore the major ethical concerns surrounding artificial intelligence and how AI designers can potentially address these problems."

Emerging Issues in the Use of Generative AI: Ethics, Sanctions, and Beyond; The Federalist Society, June 3, 2025 12 PM EDT

The Federalist Society; Emerging Issues in the Use of Generative AI: Ethics, Sanctions, and Beyond

"The idea of Artificial Intelligence has long presented potential challenges in the legal realm, and as AI tools become more broadly available and widely used, those potential hurdles are becoming ever more salient for lawyers in their day-to-day operations. Questions abound, from what potential risks of bias and error may exist in using an AI tool, to the challenges related to professional responsibility as traditionally understood, to the risks large language learning models pose to client confidentiality. Some contend that AI is a must-use, as it opens the door to faster, more efficient legal research that could equip lawyers to serve their clients more effectively. Others reject the use of AI, arguing that the risks of use and the work required to check the output it gives exceed its potential benefit.

Join us for a FedSoc Forum exploring the ethical and legal implications of artificial intelligence in the practice of law.

Featuring: 

  • Laurin H. Mills, Member, Werther & Mills, LLC
  • Philip A. Sechler, Senior Counsel, Alliance Defending Freedom
  • Prof. Eugene Volokh, Gary T. Schwartz Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus, UCLA School of Law; Thomas M. Siebel Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
  • (Moderator) Hon. Brantley Starr, District Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas"

Philosophers On The Science & Ethics of Resurrecting Extinct Species; Daily Nous, June 2, 2025

, Daily Nous; Philosophers On The Science & Ethics of Resurrecting Extinct Species

"“The Return of the Dire Wolf” announced Time magazine—not quite correctly, it turns out—in its article on the creation of three creatures genetically engineered into existence by the firm Colossal Biosciences.

Still, the biotechnology that led to the creation of those wolves is impressive. It opens a lot of possibilities, and of course raises a lot of questions, both about our understanding of what this technology actually does and our sense of how it should (and shouldn’t) be used. Those questions are taken up by several philosophers in this edition of Philosophers On."

Indonesia’s stunning microlibraries draw young readers – in pictures; The Guardian, June 2, 2025

 Photos by Muhammad Fadli and others, text by Joan Aurelia, The Guardian; Indonesia’s stunning microlibraries draw young readers – in pictures

"There is an ambitious effort under way in Indonesia to build a network of microlibraries across the country."

Monday, June 2, 2025

Mike Kelley vs. Trump: The Photo That Could Spark a Presidential Copyright War; Fstoppers, June 1, 2025

 , Fstoppers; Mike Kelley vs. Trump: The Photo That Could Spark a Presidential Copyright War

"Your Thoughts?

What do you think will happen to this case when it is filed? Obviously something like this will take years to make its way through the courts, and perhaps Trump will not even be president by the time it makes it to the Federal 9th Circuit Court of Appeals where it will most likely reside. Do you think Mike has a strong enough case for Willful Infringement under statutory infringement or because this is a meme that perhaps originated somewhere else on the internet, could it be viewed as unwilling? Do you think Trump would ever succeed at claiming his posts on Truth Social fall under official acts of a sitting president?"

Parks, libraries, museums: here’s why Trump is attacking America’s best-loved institutions; The Guardian, June 2, 2025

 , The Guardian; Parks, libraries, museums: here’s why Trump is attacking America’s best-loved institutions

"Why would any politician – especially one as hungry for adulation as Donald Trump – go after such cherished parts of America?

It seems counterintuitive, but this is all a part of a broad plan that the great 20th century political thinker Hannah Arendt would have understood all too well.

Take away natural beauty, free access to books and support for the arts, and you end up with a less enlightened, more ignorant and less engaged public. That’s a public much more easily manipulated.

“A people that can no longer believe in anything cannot make up its mind,” said Arendt, a student of authoritarianism, in 1973. Eventually, such a public “is deprived … of its ability to think and judge”, and with people like that, “you can then do what you please”.

That’s what Trump and company are counting on."

USC launches $12 million Institute on Ethics & Trust in Computing; USC, May 29, 2025

 Will Kwong , USC Today; USC launches $12 million Institute on Ethics & Trust in Computing

"USC is launching the Institute on Ethics & Trust in Computing, where experts will offer ethical guidance and resources to students and researchers on the development and applications of artificial intelligence and other technologies that are now commonplace across business and finance, health care, national security and science.

The new institute is supported by $12 million in funding by the Lord Foundation of California."

Ernst posts snarky reply after telling town hall ‘we all are going to die’; The Washington Post, June 1, 2025

 , The Washington Post; Ernst posts snarky reply after telling town hall ‘we all are going to die’

"While outrage at Ernst’s glib comment was immediate, on Saturday, the senator doubled down with a sarcastic response shared on Instagram.

“I made an incorrect assumption that everyone in the auditorium understood that, yes, we are all going to perish from this earth,” she said in a video filmed in what appeared to be a cemetery. “So I apologize, and I’m really, really glad that I did not have to bring up the subject of the tooth fairy as well.”"

The U.S.-Canada Border Runs Through This Library. That’s Now a Problem.; The New York Times, May 30, 2025

, The New York Times ; The U.S.-Canada Border Runs Through This Library. That’s Now a Problem.

"“I think there’s a sentiment of this little library being bullied by this powerful administration, and that helped encourage people to contribute,” said Steve Timmins, a Canadian visiting the library. “In light of what’s going on, it’s an important symbol of the friendship that cannot be taken away.”"

The Associated Press earns SPJ Ethics in Journalism Award for ‘ethical courage’ to resist government interference; Society of Professional Journalists, April 17, 2025

 Press Release, Society of Professional Journalists; The Associated Press earns SPJ Ethics in Journalism Award for ‘ethical courage’ to resist government interference

"The Society of Professional Journalists is bestowing its Ethics in Journalism Award on The Associated Press for refusing to allow the White House to dictate its coverage while continuing to produce accurate and ethical reporting of the Trump administration, despite being denied access to presidential events.

The 28-year-old award honors journalists and news organizations that perform in an outstanding ethical manner, demonstrating the ideals of the SPJ Code of Ethics.

The Trump administration first banned two AP reporters from White House events in February because the AP did not update its guidance to abide by President Trump’s executive order changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. Trump wanted the AP, a global, nonpartisan news agency whose AP Stylebook is widely used in the industry, to use his preferred term. While not calling the body of water the Gulf of America, AP’s guidance is to acknowledge the new name Trump has chosen.

In response, the AP sued three Trump administration officials. Over the past two months, AP has been barred from the White House press pool and other official events.  

“In the face of direct political pressure, The Associated Press held the line for ethical journalism,” said Emily Bloch, SPJ national president. “Rather than compromise its editorial independence by backing down, AP stayed true to its principles and continued serving the public with unbiased reporting. That is the very definition of ethical courage.”

AP White House reporters continued to RSVP to presidential events and showed up, only to be turned away, according to The Washington Post. AP relied on pool reports and video transcripts to continue its coverage of the Trump administration. It also has flown in correspondents based in other countries who were allowed to cover certain presidential events as members of foreign press pools.

U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden last week ruled in favor of the AP, saying that the Trump administration cannot retaliate against a news organization based on its viewpoint. Despite the order, an AP reporter was barred from an Oval Office news conference on Monday, the day the order was to take effect.

AP earned the award because it continues to be steadfast in its refusal to be controlled by the government and for standing on its principles and well-known reputation for high ethical standards, which are consistent with the SPJ Code of Ethics."

Where is the moral courage in the decision to eliminate DEI at UMich?; The Michigan Daily, April 10, 2025

 Kevin Cokley, Ph.D., is the University Diversity and Social Transformation Professor of Psychology and Associate Chair for Diversity Initiatives at the University of Michigan, The Michigan Daily; Where is the moral courage in the decision to eliminate DEI at UMich?

"There appears to have been no resistance by the administration to the factually inaccurate criticisms of DEI by the regents, resulting in a pivot on the University’s supposed core values. Perhaps my understanding of values differs from the administration’s. Values are what people or institutions believe are fundamentally right or wrong and what are most important in life. Institutional core values are not supposed to be easily changeable, and if University leadership is so quick to abandon its core values of DEI, one may wonder if they were ever really core values to begin with.

I’m reminded of the proverb, “When the going gets tough, the tough get going.” This proverb means that in difficult times, individuals with strong character are even more determined to succeed. As the University and higher education at large are being threatened with, what are likely, unconstitutional executive orders, it is more important than ever to have leaders who defend the University’s core values rather than acquiesce...

Martin Luther King Jr. once addressed the moral courage that one needs to stand up for what is right. He said, “Cowardice asks the question — is it safe? Expediency asks the question — is it politic? Vanity asks the question — is it popular? But conscience asks the question — is it right? There comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular, but one must take it because one’s conscience tells one that it is right.”"

Movers & Shakers 2025; Library Journal, 2025

 Library Journal; Movers & Shakers 2025

"A lot has happened in the library world since LJ opened up Movers nominations last fall, and the landscape looks decidedly different. But just as pandemic challenges drove new, creative processes, we think the 50 Movers profiled here demonstrate the strong work and resilience of libraries, now and to come."

This independent library champions banned books by Black women; Scripps News, May 29, 2025

Excruciating reason Utah lawyer presented FAKE case in court after idiotic blunder; Daily Mail, May 31, 2025

JOE HUTCHISON FOR DAILYMAIL.COMExcruciating reason Utah lawyer presented FAKE case in court after idiotic blunder

"The case referenced, according to documents, was 'Royer v. Nelson' which did not exist in any legal database and was found to be made up by ChatGPT.

Opposing counsel said that the only way they would find any mention of the case was by using the AI

They even went as far as to ask the AI if the case was real, noting in a filing that it then apologized and said it was a mistake.

Bednar's attorney, Matthew Barneck, said that the research was done by a clerk and Bednar took all responsibility for failing to review the cases.

He told The Salt Lake Tribune: 'That was his mistake. He owned up to it and authorized me to say that and fell on the sword."

Sunday, June 1, 2025

I crisscrossed America to talk to people whose views I disagreed with. I now have one certainty; The Guardian, June 1, 2025

Anand Pandian, The Guardian; I crisscrossed America to talk to people whose views I disagreed with. I now have one certainty

"I recount those travels and their lessons in my new book, Something Between Us: The Everyday Walls of American Life, and How to Take Them Down. In it I argue that, in the US, we are at crossroads, poised between a politics of suspicion and retreat, and another founded on more expansive relationships of mutual aid and collective solidarity...

All of us have much to lose in the erosion of neighborly concern, the impetus to look out for others we don’t know that well. Neighborliness is a powerful image of collective belonging, especially in a world where relationships span the globe and the consequences of how we live extend to many distant and unseen places.

In saying this, I don’t mean to idealize American neighbors and neighborhoods. Contemporary patterns of isolation draw on deep histories of racial segregation and systemic neglect in the United States, lines that have long been drawn between lives that matter and lives that don’t. At the same time, neighborliness has also long been practiced as a more expansive form of conviviality, equipping people to live with the reality of social difference and disagreement...

It may be daunting, the idea of making a common life – in public space, in the pursuit of wellbeing on an imperiled earth, even in the unpredictable span of a conversation – with others unlike ourselves. But we need to find our way back to the communion we may share with those beyond our bounds.

We need to rekindle that open spirit of kinship once again."