Timothy Burke
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timothyburke.bsky.social
Timothy Burke
@timothyburke.bsky.social

Professor of History at Swarthmore College. Writes at timothyburke.substack.com, continuing from his old blog Easily Distracted. Remembers when there was no Internet, and stays up late because someone is wrong on it.

Political science 50%
Sociology 17%

Virtual reality is a fascinating counterpart to talk of AI inevitability. By my count, there have been four major episodes of hype about VR-inevitability all the way back to the 1990s and they all failed because people don't really want VR as it is imagined, not because the tech was inadequate.
The Metaverse was that rare public event that absolutely everyone knew was a bad idea. At no point in its existence did anyone want it to exist or think that it could work.

I thought that was an especially wonderful angle of approach here--I've been desperate for students to say exactly this about pervasive surveillance since it started to spread in the 2010s.

Reposted by Timothy Burke

The Metaverse was that rare public event that absolutely everyone knew was a bad idea. At no point in its existence did anyone want it to exist or think that it could work.

Reposted by Meredith Farkas

I'm really happy to see this level of smart attention to surveillance practices on college campuses by students.

"Both sides are equal"-ism now the defining trait of the legacy media, driven entirely by a depraved unwillingness to judge actual facts in a proportionate way.
Column: For nearly 20 years, Americans’ anger toward the federal government has steadily intensified.

Now, that anger is reaching record levels — driven almost entirely by the party of whoever occupies the Oval Office.
Column | Anger is a defining character trait for both parties, new study shows
An updated Pew study shows that, with the change in administrations and party power in Congress, Democrats are now at record levels of anger toward government.
wapo.st

Reposted by Timothy Burke

Column: For nearly 20 years, Americans’ anger toward the federal government has steadily intensified.

Now, that anger is reaching record levels — driven almost entirely by the party of whoever occupies the Oval Office.
Column | Anger is a defining character trait for both parties, new study shows
An updated Pew study shows that, with the change in administrations and party power in Congress, Democrats are now at record levels of anger toward government.
wapo.st

Reposted by Timothy Burke

Esénia Bañuelos, the President of Bryn Mawr College’s Self Government Association, has written a powerful letter about the current climate on campus:

“This Is Bryn Mawr College”
This is Bryn Mawr College
Student journalism has long carried a heavy burden in representing the emotional and physical impacts that these violations against students have created. In a recent article for the Bi-College News, ...
bicollegenews.com

Reposted by Timothy Burke

The worst literary game ideas, brought to life thanks to nano banana: Strunk and White as a dating simulator, Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery as an FPS, Ethan Frome as a racing game, The Yellow Wallpaper as a match-3 mobile room decoration game.

Right! 100 this. This is what drives the impulse to find "voices" that are by the fact of absence from archives presumed to be intrinsically more truthful and untainted by power, when all speech acts are interpretation and all of them involve power.

But I do get the point that Carolyn Steedman and others have made that for historians, archives (particular and various) have a kind of epistemological status that makes partial, incomplete, silenced etc. archives into a problem to be solved rather than just something that is just inevitable.

Honestly, if the various cases in front of the Supreme Court go their way, the next step is revocation of citizenship from people who do the same--regardless of the length of time that person has held citizenship or the history of their family's presence in the country.
The US State Department is instructing its staff to deny visas to those engaged in activities like combatting misinformation, disinformation or false narratives, fact-checking, content moderation, compliance, and trust and safety.

www.npr.org/2025/12/04/n...
State Department to deny visas to fact checkers and others, citing 'censorship'
The order is focused on applicants for H-1B visas, which are frequently used by tech companies and is part of a campaign by the Trump administration against online content moderation.
www.npr.org

Is it controversial? I mean, I'm not sure who talks about "the archive" as a concept who is unclear that they're actually talking about many particular archives.

Somebody needs to do a little film about ridiculous awards that egomaniac authoritarians have been given by various ass-kissers and sycophants.

I mean, at this point, Hollywood is like Samuel Ratchett/Lanfranco Cassetti in Murder on the Orient Express--*everybody* is killing it.

Right. But they might not be able to do theatrical releases if the theatre chains themselves keep making their situation even worse. They've got to make a lot of changes in order to make going to the movies seems like a special, premium experience--big screens aren't good enough.

I get the angst in the industry about Netflix and WB. But there's two weights on the other side: 1) Better Netflix than Ellison/Paramount and 2) the big movie theater chains are doing a great job of destroying themselves already without any impact from the merger.
The US State Department is instructing its staff to deny visas to those engaged in activities like combatting misinformation, disinformation or false narratives, fact-checking, content moderation, compliance, and trust and safety.

www.npr.org/2025/12/04/n...
State Department to deny visas to fact checkers and others, citing 'censorship'
The order is focused on applicants for H-1B visas, which are frequently used by tech companies and is part of a campaign by the Trump administration against online content moderation.
www.npr.org

Meritocracy, amirite?
this shit is just beyond parody, man

I...I'm not even sure this is a dad joke. It's like a baby genre of its own.

This is awesome in an innocent way and yet also pretty close to cooking porn. Hooray for Norway, either way.
I would like to be an ambassador and have this gentleman cook for me. 🍽️
After some savory grilled cheese, Chef Eilif is here with something #sweet. Check out how to make #homemade Norwegian #CinnamonBuns – with some American icing. Don’t forget to follow us and Chief Eilif (@chefeilif) on Instagram for more delicious stories! tinyurl.com/44e4h75r

This time, though, if they affirm the Administration's legal representation, they're saying the President can decide to void all jurisprudence on his own accord, without prior findings by the Court, because Trump's people are saying he can just decide the 14th means what he thinks it means.

When think about the practice of rulers in antiquity taking small amounts of poison to immunize themselves from poison (think the Man in Black in Princess Bride taking iocane powder), I think "That's the best demonstration of inescapable sociality I've ever heard of".
I would like to be an ambassador and have this gentleman cook for me. 🍽️
After some savory grilled cheese, Chef Eilif is here with something #sweet. Check out how to make #homemade Norwegian #CinnamonBuns – with some American icing. Don’t forget to follow us and Chief Eilif (@chefeilif) on Instagram for more delicious stories! tinyurl.com/44e4h75r

The most astonishing aspect of the Supreme Court majority's complete abdication of their authority is that there is a reasonable chance that they would allow the POTUS to decide by himself to reinterpret the 14th Amendment and void all the jurisprudence in between.

Well, that moment is certainly going to be instructive for people curious about the difference between contingency and structure.

I'm not sure that any of us have been able to fully process people who had some measure of power (Republicans in Congress, the Supreme Court, university presidents, high-powered lawyers, various CEOs) so casually surrendering it in ways that may not be easily reversible.

Regardless of what the Supreme Court rules on any of the zillion or so challenges to blatantly illegal or unconstitutional actions, they've already fucked up just by allowing some of these challenges at all given the incredibly shitty legal reasoning coming out of the Administration.
this shit is just beyond parody, man

As a companion exercise, I'd love to see political leaders and pundits ambushed with the questions from the revised citizenship test.

Little-known fact, the Latin motto of the Speaker of the House is "Non multas nuntios secutus sum". It's long been a treasured part of the post, to not follow any of the news and to have no opinions on the laws of the United States.
RAJU: If defenseless survivors were killed, would that constitute a violation of the laws of war?

MIKE JOHNSON: I'm not going to prejudge any of that. I was pretty busy yesterday. I didn't follow a lot of the news.