From “Who Gets What?” to “Who Are We?”
The culture wars revolve around highly charged, deeply personal issues that are exceedingly difficult to compromise upon.
A collection of 161 posts
The culture wars revolve around highly charged, deeply personal issues that are exceedingly difficult to compromise upon.
There’s no such thing as too many Jews among the “faces of power.”
We are a generation of smart, strong, caring, conscientious men, full of kinetic energy that I now see dispersed through alcoholism, drug abuse, depression, anxiety, violence, and death.
The Dead are Arising offers similarly interesting insights into Malcolm X’s adolescence and adult life.
The revival of racial identity to tackle social injustice reawakens an ancient beast.
A great writer shows us how to think rather than telling us what to think.
Medical transition, such as the kind I went through, can enhance an illusion that helps some gender dysphoric individuals navigate the world with more comfort.
I'm still not immune to violent political fantasies, especially when I become angry at scenes of Left-wing protests in Portland, Seattle, and other cities.
The University of Washington, like most schools, tracks the performance of student groups as part of its effort to enhance diversity and reduce inequality.
What our society is really suffering from is myside bias: People evaluate evidence, generate evidence, and test hypotheses in a manner biased toward their own prior beliefs, opinions, and attitudes.
But the real scandal—not discussed much in the media—wasn’t Krug’s decade of duplicity.
The activists seeking to eliminate TJ’s meritocratic admissions systems attribute this latter result to systemic racism.
Our profession functions well because constructive criticism, the need for empirical data, and a willingness to change have hitherto been so deeply entrenched.
Some nonbinary people will say that they don’t like labels such as “gay” or “lesbian” because they are binary terms; attraction to a man or a woman, even in the context of being gay, is still considered attraction to a binary gender.
And it turns out that she was, because despite the best efforts of her critics, she hasn’t yet been truly cancelled.