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Sol Werthan

@solwerthan

Pushing buttons and pulling levers to publish the Slate homepage

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Latest posts by Sol Werthan @solwerthan

Last month, University of Wisconsin-Madison Chancellor Jennifer Mnookin approved a proposal to establish a College of Computing and Artificial Intelligence funded by private corporations and philanthropy.
Mnookin said the move was a response to the inevitable creep of artificial intelligence into all disciplines of academia. Rather than reject AI, she envisioned a university that capitalized on this change by making artificial intelligence a "hub" connecting the humanities to computer science.

Last month, University of Wisconsin-Madison Chancellor Jennifer Mnookin approved a proposal to establish a College of Computing and Artificial Intelligence funded by private corporations and philanthropy. Mnookin said the move was a response to the inevitable creep of artificial intelligence into all disciplines of academia. Rather than reject AI, she envisioned a university that capitalized on this change by making artificial intelligence a "hub" connecting the humanities to computer science.

On the first day of my economics elective this spring, my professor said we would be expected to use NotebookLM to pass his class. He had lengthened the coding assignments so that they would be doable only with the help of AI. The reading assignments were longer, too: ten 40-page papers per week, which he asked us to feed into AI for a summary rather than read ourselves. When it came to lectures, he told us to simply upload the slides to AI and ask it to teach us whatever he failed to explain properly in class.

On the first day of my economics elective this spring, my professor said we would be expected to use NotebookLM to pass his class. He had lengthened the coding assignments so that they would be doable only with the help of AI. The reading assignments were longer, too: ten 40-page papers per week, which he asked us to feed into AI for a summary rather than read ourselves. When it came to lectures, he told us to simply upload the slides to AI and ask it to teach us whatever he failed to explain properly in class.

BLEAK. Bleak. I’d been paying attention to Columbia selling out its governance to the Trump admin, not so much its stance on AI.
www.columbiaspectator.com/opinion/2026...

22.02.2026 16:04 πŸ‘ 592 πŸ” 190 πŸ’¬ 37 πŸ“Œ 90

β€œResistance is futile,” a thing famously said by history’s good guys

04.03.2026 03:06 πŸ‘ 1125 πŸ” 200 πŸ’¬ 18 πŸ“Œ 5

I can't get over this number: in 2007, there were 360,000 newspaper jobs. Now, there are 80,000. "My local paper sucked!" Sure. What sucks even more? The void. "I get all my news from the Guardian!" No, the Guardian doesn't report on your town council, your school board, local cops.

22.02.2026 16:26 πŸ‘ 7372 πŸ” 1901 πŸ’¬ 165 πŸ“Œ 204
Preview
Opinion | What Exactly Is a β€˜Concentration Camp’?

Great and informative interview of @andreapitzer.bsky.social by @jamellebouie.net.

The term "concentration camp" has become calcified into a single referent, but as Andrea makes clear, it is more useful to think of it as a process, and its history begins well before Nazi Germany.

21.02.2026 22:40 πŸ‘ 186 πŸ” 69 πŸ’¬ 2 πŸ“Œ 3

The conclusions about student cognition aren’t the interesting part for me so much as the money being spent on youth surveillance that isn’t leading to better learning outcomes. Teachers are being laid off, schools & libraries are closing, books are being banned.

22.02.2026 00:46 πŸ‘ 252 πŸ” 101 πŸ’¬ 3 πŸ“Œ 1

Judge Goodwin: "An anonymous government is no government at all. It cannot be held accountable. A masked agent freely uses force without justifying his actions, and the public cannot name him to challenge his conduct. A regime of secret policing has no place in our society."

21.02.2026 02:24 πŸ‘ 7898 πŸ” 2831 πŸ’¬ 73 πŸ“Œ 62

This is one of the many many ways that β€œlegal” is becoming β€œillegal”

19.02.2026 16:10 πŸ‘ 153 πŸ” 56 πŸ’¬ 2 πŸ“Œ 1

This reminds me of the personal papers we have from an alum who attended high school, prom, & was valedictorian at Manzanar, a concentration camp for Japanese and Japanese-American people. We use these in teaching constantly and we always have to add context so students understand the implications.

18.02.2026 04:32 πŸ‘ 20 πŸ” 8 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

Every time the government deregulates a public health feature - such as today's news about clean air rules - just remember that this is meant to add to your plate, as an individual. It's no longer the government's problem, it's yours. This is a risk transfer. It it reduces your ability to resist.

16.02.2026 15:36 πŸ‘ 66 πŸ” 29 πŸ’¬ 2 πŸ“Œ 0

what this story demonstrates is that even someone "just" using LLMs like ChatGPT for writing/research etc is still vulnerable to being sucked into a whirlpool of dangerous lies and delusions.
So, once again, WHY are schools and universities telling students, staff and faculty to use this?

16.02.2026 17:09 πŸ‘ 227 πŸ” 82 πŸ’¬ 6 πŸ“Œ 1

Probably the most embarrassing cultural trait inculcated in Tech is the feigned lack of understanding of potential harms of technology because understanding them would require being morally responsible for them and would thus deflate the hype make-believe buy-in among the developers of said tech.

14.02.2026 00:51 πŸ‘ 139 πŸ” 41 πŸ’¬ 7 πŸ“Œ 0

β€œThe suppression of gender studies is not only an attempt to suppress a critical analytical tool, but also knowledge itself.”

13.02.2026 21:52 πŸ‘ 143 πŸ” 40 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0
On Nov. 16, a mental health counselor recorded in Kamilla’s medical records that her mother reported the girl had lost her appetite after being β€œserved food that contained worms.”

A week later, the couple said, children were told to gather in the gym for what they believed would be a Thanksgiving celebration. Excitement spread as families saw tables set with turkey, sandwiches, pastries and pies, they said. The children waited expectantly. But when a parent asked when the celebration would begin, Oksana said, staff told them the holiday meal was for employees, not detainees.

The children, she said, watched despondently as the feast was packed away.

On Nov. 16, a mental health counselor recorded in Kamilla’s medical records that her mother reported the girl had lost her appetite after being β€œserved food that contained worms.” A week later, the couple said, children were told to gather in the gym for what they believed would be a Thanksgiving celebration. Excitement spread as families saw tables set with turkey, sandwiches, pastries and pies, they said. The children waited expectantly. But when a parent asked when the celebration would begin, Oksana said, staff told them the holiday meal was for employees, not detainees. The children, she said, watched despondently as the feast was packed away.

On Thanksgiving, the immigrant children held at the Dilley detention center gathered in the gym for what they thought was a holiday feast.

The kids salivated over a spread of turkey, sandwiches, pastries and pies, a family told me.

But the food wasn’t for detainees β€” it was for the staff.

13.02.2026 19:40 πŸ‘ 10916 πŸ” 5564 πŸ’¬ 875 πŸ“Œ 2400

β€œmy β€˜we’re not out scouring the streets to disappear people or deny people their civil rights or due process’ shirt is raising a lot of questions that are answered by the shirt”

12.02.2026 14:44 πŸ‘ 6239 πŸ” 1064 πŸ’¬ 135 πŸ“Œ 16

I really do think this is an excellent metaphor for the moment.

09.02.2026 05:09 πŸ‘ 1812 πŸ” 416 πŸ’¬ 14 πŸ“Œ 4

the Barbara Kruger mural the chase is happening in front of reads:

"WHO IS BEYOND THE LAW? WHO IS BOUGHT AND SOLD? WHO IS FREE TO CHOOSE? WHO DOES THE TIME? WHO FOLLOWS ORDERS? WHO SALUTES LONGEST? WHO PRAYS LOUDEST? WHO DIES FIRST? WHO LAUGHS LAST?"

05.02.2026 16:51 πŸ‘ 836 πŸ” 246 πŸ’¬ 11 πŸ“Œ 3

I will die on the hill that not everything should have to exist for profit margins and that public interest and profit are often deeply misaligned.

04.02.2026 14:03 πŸ‘ 165 πŸ” 35 πŸ’¬ 5 πŸ“Œ 1

Devastating news. Fobazi waa a brilliant light and powerful voice in LIS. Rest in power.

05.02.2026 02:30 πŸ‘ 39 πŸ” 10 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 0

I think it's best for everyone to understand that the unified class project of billionaires right now is to do to white collar workers what globalization and neoliberalism did to blue collar workers.

04.02.2026 19:41 πŸ‘ 12947 πŸ” 3432 πŸ’¬ 235 πŸ“Œ 242

bezos and the post is yet another reminder that it's impossible to have billions of dollars and operate in the public interest at the same time. nobody with that kind of money got it by looking out for other people or putting the common good first. that's why it's so antithetical to journalism

04.02.2026 15:07 πŸ‘ 708 πŸ” 144 πŸ’¬ 7 πŸ“Œ 4

always bears repeating that this is NOT a financial decision. jeff bezos is worth over 250 billion dollars. he can afford to lose many millions and never even notice it. this is, at its core, a political and personal decision by bezos to destroy the post

04.02.2026 15:04 πŸ‘ 8524 πŸ” 2443 πŸ’¬ 172 πŸ“Œ 88
Pinned
lizzie johnson
@lizziejohnsonnn
Β·
Aug 19, 2021
Almost three years ago, my editor called me early one November morning. A wildfire had sparked near a town called Paradise, he said. Could I go? (1/13)
0:02 / 0:10
lizzie johnson
@lizziejohnsonnn
Β·
47m
I was just laid off by The Washington Post in the middle of a warzone. I have no words. I'm devastated.
Quote
lizzie johnson
@lizziejohnsonnn
Β·
Jan 25
Waking up without power, heat, or running water. (Again.) 

But the work here in Kyiv continues. Warming up in the car, writing in pencil β€” pen ink freezes β€” by headlamp.

Pinned lizzie johnson @lizziejohnsonnn Β· Aug 19, 2021 Almost three years ago, my editor called me early one November morning. A wildfire had sparked near a town called Paradise, he said. Could I go? (1/13) 0:02 / 0:10 lizzie johnson @lizziejohnsonnn Β· 47m I was just laid off by The Washington Post in the middle of a warzone. I have no words. I'm devastated. Quote lizzie johnson @lizziejohnsonnn Β· Jan 25 Waking up without power, heat, or running water. (Again.) But the work here in Kyiv continues. Warming up in the car, writing in pencil β€” pen ink freezes β€” by headlamp.

A publisher who lays off a reporter whose pen is freezing because she's covering a frigid war zone while dodging missiles is not an editor you want to work for, in a more perfect world

04.02.2026 17:07 πŸ‘ 22059 πŸ” 6934 πŸ’¬ 540 πŸ“Œ 414

i feel like we've had a good enough sample size for like two decades on whether or not body cameras on cops do anything whatsoever to stop them from killing people. the guy that murdered renee good was filming it on his phone for fun!

04.02.2026 12:58 πŸ‘ 3386 πŸ” 622 πŸ’¬ 12 πŸ“Œ 3
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Thousands of union members staged a nonviolent march today. iCE gassed the crowd of nurses and teaches. The neighborhood is in a cloud. Flash bangs are being fired.

01.02.2026 02:31 πŸ‘ 2270 πŸ” 880 πŸ’¬ 31 πŸ“Œ 33

β€œThere’s no single answer that will solve all our future problems. There’s no magic bullet. Instead there are thousands of answersβ€”at least. You can be one of them if you choose to be.”

― Octavia E. Butler, A Few Rules for Predicting the Future: An Essay

31.01.2026 19:57 πŸ‘ 2451 πŸ” 1001 πŸ’¬ 12 πŸ“Œ 1
denshoproject on Instagram: "Today, on Fred Korematsu Day, we honor the man whose refusal to comply with the mass removal and confinement of Japanese Americans …" Today, on Fred Korematsu Day, we honor the man whose refusal to comply with the mass removal and confinement of Japanese Americans during World War II became one of the most significant challenges to government authority in U.S. history. In an era shaped by wartime fear and racism, Korematsu took a stand against state power and raised enduring questions about constitutional rights, due process, and the responsibilities of citizenship.At just 23 years old, Korematsu resisted the EO9066 exclusion orders that targeted Japanese Americans solely because of their ancestry. His arrest and subsequent Supreme Court case exposed how official narratives can be used to justify the suspension of civil liberties during moments of national crisis. Although his conviction was initially upheld, Korematsu’s persistence and the eventual overturning of his conviction decades later demonstrate that justice can be achieved through resilience and dedication to democratic principles.Korematsu continued to speak out long after his case, drawing connections between the incarceration of Japanese Americans and later civil rights violations, including the detention of Muslim Americans after 9/11. He understood that the consequences of unchecked authority are not confined to a single moment in history, and that protecting democracy requires accountability, public awareness, and an accurate historical record.Densho preserves stories like Korematsu’s so that the lessons of our past remain visible and accessible for thoughtful examination, education, and public understanding. By documenting firsthand experiences and preserving evidence of injustice, we help ensure that history cannot be erased or rewritten to obscure harm. Korematsu’s life reminds us that history is not just something to remember, it is something to learn from.

Thinking of my Japanese American elders today, their resistance, their bravery in the face of state violence.

β€œWere you afraid of being arrested?”
Fred Korematsu: β€œNo, I wasn’t because I didn’t feel that I did anything wrong. If anybody did wrong, it was the law.” www.instagram.com/reel/DUJAjhC...

30.01.2026 20:25 πŸ‘ 883 πŸ” 225 πŸ’¬ 7 πŸ“Œ 4

In an era of rapid media outlet ownership changes, consolidations, & shutdowns, and subsequent journalist layoffs and transition to freelance/pitch work for multiple outlets and/or self-published work, it will be easier than ever to arrest known journalists if they don't have a W-2 job.

30.01.2026 16:24 πŸ‘ 76 πŸ” 19 πŸ’¬ 1 πŸ“Œ 1
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brass solidarity band performing β€œstand by me” in the streets of whittier next to alex pretti’s memorial. the crowd started chanting β€œthe people united will never be defeated” so they incorporated it into the song. i love minneapolis

27.01.2026 00:22 πŸ‘ 23475 πŸ” 7825 πŸ’¬ 331 πŸ“Œ 883

"To hope is to give yourself to the future - and that commitment to the future is what makes the present inhabitable."

-- @rebeccasolnit.bsky.social

25.01.2026 18:48 πŸ‘ 91 πŸ” 27 πŸ’¬ 0 πŸ“Œ 0

i think this attitude β€” that all opposition is illegitimate and nothing we do can be questionedβ€” is probably pervasive in the white house and helps explain why they keep making terrible political choices

25.01.2026 15:02 πŸ‘ 15210 πŸ” 2978 πŸ’¬ 318 πŸ“Œ 114