#MusicWomenWednesday #L7 #punkmetal #feminism #americansociety
https://l7band.bandcamp.com/track/american-society-remastered

American Society (Remastered), by L7
from the album Smell the Magic (Remastered)
#MusicWomenWednesday #L7 #punkmetal #feminism #americansociety
https://l7band.bandcamp.com/track/american-society-remastered

from the album Smell the Magic (Remastered)
Opinion – In 230 Executive Orders, Trump Has Reshaped America – The New York Times
Opinion
Drafting A New America
Photographs and Text
by Taryn Simon
In his first year back in office, Mr. Trump put his signature on more presidential directives than he did in his entire first term. On the first day of his second term, at the Capitol and before a crowd of cheering supporters, he set the agenda for his incoming administration, issuing executive orders, proclamations and memorandums that mirrored the talking points of his campaign: identifying government waste, ending D.E.I. programs and birthright citizenship, restoring TikTok, pardoning Jan. 6 protesters and defending the American flag.
These orders are at the center of Mr. Trump’s presidency. He often gives his own custom pens to people who witness him signing the documents. On Inauguration Day in 2025, he spontaneously threw pens to his audience.
After turning a spotlight on the 2024 election, the photographer Taryn Simon has trained her focus on the significant details and intended outcomes of the documents that bear Mr. Trump’s name.
“Executive orders are a privileged override switch accelerating change without any legislative intervention,” she said. “One by one, in a carousel of documents, a nation is pointed in a new direction.”
Executive Order 14347
Restoring the United States
Department of War
George Washington established the Department of War in 1789. It was renamed the Department of Defense in 1949 following a reorganization by President Harry S. Truman.
Almost two months after Mr. Trump returned to office, Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, conducted a poll on X to gauge public support for changing the name back to the Department of War. The Department of War received more votes.
At the signing by Mr. Trump, Mr. Hegseth said, “This name change is not just about renaming. It’s about restoring. Words matter.”
While waiting for approval from Congress for the change, the gift shop at the Pentagon is already selling merchandise with Department of War branding, including a glass tumbler.
Editor’s Note: Read online is best, a long but valuable listing with images. These are the non-Congress, non-approved by anyone, changes Trump has made so far. Altered the fabric of American society, and Democracy, and weakened both. –DrWeb
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Opinion | In 230 Executive Orders, Trump Has Reshaped America – The New York Times
#230EOs #America #AmericanSociety #Culture #democracy #EOs #ExecutiveOrders #Laws #Opinion #Since2025 #society #TheNewYorkTimesWhy Did People Vote For Trump? (Politics Documentary) | Real Stories

What Killed The American Middle Class? (Financial Crash Documentary)

Unfortunate woman reveals the funny reason she can't have monogrammed clothing
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.upworthy.com/funny-initials-ex1

When We Devalue Art (Books!) We Devalue the Future – Literary Hub
When We Devalue Art (Books!) We Devalue the Future
Maris Kreizman on the Dangers of the AI Content Churn
By Maris Kreizman, November 6, 2025
Maris Kreizman
Maris Kreizman hosted the literary podcast, The Maris Review, for four years. Her essays and criticism have appeared in the New York Times, New York Magazine, The Atlantic, Vanity Fair, Esquire, The New Republic, and more. Her essay collection, I Want to Burn This Place Down, is forthcoming from Ecco/HarperCollins.
When you’ve spent your whole adult life working in and around book publishing you get used to hearing that people don’t read anymore and that the industry is on its last legs. There is always a crisis. In August it was reported that reading for pleasure has declined by 40 percent over the last 20 years. But pleasure reading has been on a decline for ages: the Victrola, then the talkies, then TV and Nintendo and the internet, have all cut into our reading time. Yet still, people continue to read.
Which is why I felt a different kind of existential dread for the industry last week when I came across a Slate article entitled “The Case for Whole Books” by Dan Sinykin and Joanna Winant. As a childless person who doesn’t teach I’ve been happily unaware that, due to standardized testing requirements that favor close reads of excerpts over whole books, there’s an entire generation of students who have very little contextual framework for the literature they’re being taught in school. Last year I wrote about the way that the tech industry has been trying to transform books into easily uploadable Blinkist-style digests, but I don’t think I understood that children are also being fed less than enriching knowledge pellets.
In that same week a piece for The Baffler by Noah McCormack called “We Used to Read Things in This Country” contained a passage that stopped me in my tracks: “It is AI that has given the American ruling class the final impetus to more or less abolish education. As primary and secondary schools prepare to push AI on students, higher-education funding is basically being eliminated.”
Maybe this is another form of catastrophizing. People are still buying books, young and older readers alike. Certainly there are some high schools that are still assigning and engaging with The Great Gatsby in full. But with the rise of Big Tech and AI I don’t think it’s a stretch to say that our values as a society appear to be changing for the worse.
We have more content than ever, but fewer opportunities for art and artists to thrive.
When I was in college in the late 1990s I was told time and time again that employers of all sorts love a job candidate with a degree in the humanities because a liberal arts education fosters critical thinking skills, the ability to learn. Not everyone has to be a lifelong reader of books, certainly, but studying them, I thought, set people up to be strong communicators and critical thinkers. It’s devastating to look at the job market and see the denigration of so many qualities that I always thought were non-negotiable: reading and writing skills, human interaction, and creativity overall.
At the risk of moving into old man yelling at cloud territory, I grew up with a subscription to Entertainment Weekly. I took it as a given that its subjects—books and music and film and theater and yes, even TV—enrich our lives. In fact, I wrote a book about the interconnection between high and low(er) forms of popular culture and how we’re all better for it. Now Entertainment Weekly exists as a scaled-down website, and media spaces for cultural criticism continue to dwindle.
Editor’s Note: Referred by Library Link of the Day
http://www.tk421.net/librarylink/ (archive, rss, subscribe options)
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Literary Hub » When We Devalue Art (Books!) We Devalue the Future
#ai #americanSociety #bigTech #books #contentChurn #devalueArt #devalueBooks #future #literaryHub #marisKreizman #society #theFuture #weUsedToRead
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Fascinating story of #TheHardHatRiots in #NYC in 1970 - an event that I have no memory of - but which perfectly illustrates that division and violence is not new to #AmericanSociety. We've been through this before!
An episode of #AmericanExperience on #PBS
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt38494726/reference/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk
Hard Hat Riot: On May 8, 1970, "the Hard Hat Riot" erupted in lower Manhattan. At midday, construction workers, including those building the World Trade Center, violently clashed with students demonstrating against the Vietnam War.
Egos in An Uncivil War #ShemekiaCopeland #Blues #FolkBlues #FolkMusic #America #AmericanPolitics #AmericanSociety #SocialMedia #Society #Music #TheBlues #Corporate_SocialMedia #BluesMusic #SingleLifeASongOrPoem
#HashTagGames
Explore Dennis Joiner’s The Turn and Let the Playing Field Level the Playing Field—insights into America’s social and political landscape.
👉 https://www.djoinerbooks.com/
#TheTurn #LetThePlayingFieldLevel #SocialChange #PoliticalInsight #DennisJoiner #AmericanSociety