Michael O'Malley

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historian at GMU, musical hack, Philly guy. Author of multiple books, most recently The Color of Family: History, Race and the Politics of Ancestry(U Chicago 2024). https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/C/bo236256485.html

Also Keeping Watch: A History of American Time (1990)
Face Value: The Entwined Histories of Money and Race in America (2012)
The Beat Cop: Chicago's Chief O'Neill and the Creation of Irish Music (2022)

Trump and Musk are planning a big inspection of Ft. Knox. They will find that there is little or no gold there They will probably work with Fox to hype this news and treat it as crisis and use it to make cuts. Don't be fooled by the hype: gold in Ft Knox has not mattered one bit since at least 1972, that is, for more than fifty years. This is theater by malign actors, trying to undermine the republic for their own ends.
https://michaelomalley.info/uncate.../fort-knox-and-theater/
Fort Knox and Phony Crisis | Mike O’Malley

This passage from the book, Bullshit Jobs, is worth a read.

Dylan Roof killed 9 Black people with the motivation to incite a race war—NOT charged with terrorism.

Luigi Mangione killed 1 CEO with the motivation to rebuke healthcare injustice—charged with terrorism.

Class warfare is when wealthy CEOs are a protected class but working Black people are not.

Giving up on Mastodon--it just doesn't work for building any kind of online community. Trying BlueSky, which has the same problems as Twitter and will likely end up the same way.
I doubt anyone will see this, but I'm looking for historical accounts of medieval vernacular music--not church music, but the music ordinary people played and listened to. I'm especially interested in tempo--was steady, unvarying tempo expected before the invention of the clock?
I want Mastodon to work but its really hard to build any sort of community here. Posts just vanish. Clickbait is bad, but community is good. I won't leave Mastodon but it's not as effective as I'd hoped it would be. Testing BluSky

These same records of individualism served to track people and assign them a race. A record of stable individual identity also served to create racial identities stable across space and time.

We often see “individualism” described as the alternative to racism, but the stories told here show individualism and modern, scientific racism strolling hand in hand through county courts, state capitals, and federal record offices.

Genealogical records create individuals, and genealogical records produced by governments mark the rise of “individualism.” Individualism is an idea about what people are and how they relate to each other: documents of identity are the tools and machinery that make the idea function.

Over the 19th century, governments began building paper records of identity and claiming authority over who was who.

One of the many horrifying things about this election is the return of eugenics, especially in the language of JD Vance, his patron Peter Thiel, and Elon Musk, all obsessed with birth rates and racial decline.

My book charts the history and origin of eugenical thinking, using family history as a lens.

My forthcoming book The Color of Family was selected as November "must-read book" by the Next Big Ideas Book Club.

https://nextbigideaclub.com/magazine/next-big-idea-clubs-november-2024-must-read-books/51785/

The Next Big Idea Club’s November 2024 Must-Read Books

These titles make up our sixth group of nominees for Season 25 of the Next Big Idea Club.

Next Big Idea Club