Russian natives climb to top of the Empire State Building with pro-peace banner and get engaged!

Dear Commons Community,

A couple wearing black climbed to the top of the Empire State Building’s transmitter, and by the time they climbed back down, they were engaged.

Angela Nikolau, 33, and Ivan Beerkus, 32, originally from Russia, held a pro-peace banner at the very top of the spire and shared some kisses just after noon yesterday.

It read, “When the power of love beats the love of power, the world knows peace.”

Their banner is a take on a quote frequently attributed to guitarist Jimi Hendrix but actually spoken by 19th-century British politician William Gladstone.

Police took some time to attempt to talk them down, but they apparently had a mission.

After spending some time at the top, the couple started climbing down a short time later.

As the couple came down from the 1,454 feet spire of Empire State Building, Beerkus proposed to Nikolau, pulling out a ring. After saying, ‘Yes,’ Nikolau admired her new engagement ring and wore it as she climbed down.

Police officers who climbed up the spire met the two and placed them into custody just before 1 p.m.

We see everything in New York. 

Congratulations to them and glad no one was hurt!

Tony

 

Comments from Fatemeh Shamshirgaran, Ph.D. on my book, “Online Education:  Foundations, Planning and Pedagogy”

Dear Commons Community,

Over the years, I have received comments from individuals who have read my scholarly publications.  Rarely do I post about them here on my blog.  But I received the following this morning from a Fatemeh Shamshirgaran, who posted her comments on a Linkedin site. She referenced my book, Online Education:  Foundations, Planning and Pedagogy, 2nd Edition.  I hope you do not mind my reposting her comments.

Thank you, Fatemeh!

Tony

——————————————————–

Fatemeh Shamshirgaran, Ph.D.

• 1st

Educational Improvement & Teacher Development Consultant | Instructional Leadership | AI in Teaching | Curriculum & Content Analysis | MENA Education

4h •

 

چند سال پیش فرصت ترجمه یکی از کتاب‌های ارزشمند حوزه آموزش و یادگیری را داشتم؛ تجربه‌ای که فقط یک کار ترجمه نبود، بلکه بخشی از مسیر یادگیری حرفه‌ای من شد.

هنوز هم بعد از گذشت چند سال، بسیاری از ایده‌های این کتاب در کار من با معلمان، طراحی یادگیری و توسعه آموزشی حضور دارند.

خوشحالم که همچنان نوشته‌ها و دیدگاه‌های Anthony Piccianoبرایم الهام‌بخش است.

A few years ago, I had the opportunity to translate a valuable book in the field of education and learning. It was more than a translation project; it became part of my own professional learning journey.

Even after several years, many of the ideas from this book still influence my work in teacher development, learning design, and educational improvement.

I am still inspired by the work and insights of Anthony Picciano and grateful for the opportunity to learn through this experience.
#Education
#Learning
#TeacherDevelopment
#LearningDesign

John F. Kennedy (The Young Lion) and Dwight D. Eisenhower (The North Star)

Dear Commons Community,

This was sent to me by my colleague, Gary Miller, formerly at Penn State.

On May 8, 1965, more than a year after Kennedy’s death, Dwight D. Eisenhower did something that revealed just how deeply the loss still weighed on him. Despite his own failing health and doctors’ warnings—he was 74 and recovering from his third heart attack—Eisenhower traveled to the Kennedy Library groundbreaking ceremony in Boston.

Standing beside Jacqueline Kennedy, he told the assembled crowd something that made even hardened reporters weep:

“President Kennedy possessed the greatest campaign weapon any man could have—he had Jacqueline Kennedy by his side, but more than that, he possessed a quality I grew to admire deeply in our many conversations—the courage to admit when he didn’t know something and the wisdom to seek counsel.”

What made the moment even more powerful was Eisenhower’s revelation that he had kept every letter Kennedy had ever written him, bound carefully in a private collection he called “Letters from a Young Lion.” That day, he donated them to the future Kennedy Library, saying he wanted history to know their friendship had been real—that politics hadn’t divided them where it mattered most.

Jackie Kennedy squeezed Eisenhower’s hand and whispered something those nearby heard: “He called you his North Star, General. He never stopped seeking your guidance.” Eisenhower’s voice broke as he replied, “And I never stopped believing in him.”

Here were two people from different worlds—the widowed First Lady and the retired Republican general—united in grief and mutual respect. They showed us that the bonds forged in service to country transcend everything else.

This is the America worth fighting for—the one where we see each other’s humanity first.

It is also an America we can truly love as we get ready to celebrate our 250th Anniversary!

Tony

The Manhattan Institute – The Think Tank Fueling Trump’s War on Higher Education

Dear Commons Community,

The Chronicle of Higher Education has an article this morning describing the Manhattan Institute and how it has influenced higher education policy.  It currently is a main mover in developing Trump’s conservative agenda on colleges and universities. I have followed the Manhattan Institute for decades and have known several of its members, it is totally right-of-center in its focus and has increased its influence at many levels.  Below is an excerpt from The Chronicle article. 

Well worth a read.

Tony

———————————————————-

In the spring of 2023, The Wall Street Journal published an opinion essay by John D. Sailer, who was then a fellow at the National Association of Scholars. Based on documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, Sailer detailed how a search committee from the Texas Tech University biology department had vetted candidates for a faculty position. One was dinged for advocating a race-neutral approach to teaching; another was praised for reciting a “land acknowledgement” before their job interview. What Sailer found confirmed what he and other critics of diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts had long suspected, Sailer wrote: Diversity statements function as ideological litmus tests.

“DEI connotes a set of highly contestable social and political views,” wrote Sailer. “Requiring faculty to catalog their commitment to those views necessarily blackballs anybody who dissents from an orthodoxy that has nothing to do with scientific competence.”

The next day, Texas Tech announced that it would stop using diversity statements in faculty hiring. A short time later the Republican governor, Greg Abbott, sent a letter to the state’s public colleges condemning any hiring practices that consider candidates for reasons other than merit.

For Sailer, the Texas Tech investigation was a turning point in his career. “Moving on to Manhattan Institute was kind of a logical next step,” he said.

The Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank founded in the late ’70s to improve “great American cities,” has emerged in recent years as a formidable influence on higher education. The think tank has crafted model legislation to remake colleges and universities as race-blind institutions, fueled the campaign to oust Claudine Gay as president of Harvard, and turned City Journal, its quarterly magazine, into a platform for attacking diversity programs, grade inflation, and university presidents’ capitulation to the demands of left-leaning students and faculty. It has found in Trump administration officials and red-state lawmakers a battalion of allies who share the view that higher education has strayed from its truth-focused mission.

In the months leading up to Trump’s second inauguration, Christopher F. Rufo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, met with members of the administration to plan how the government could rein in DEI by threatening federal funding. On his second day in office, Trump signed two executive orders banning DEI-related contracts and spending across the government.

In July 2025, the institute published the “Manhattan Statement on Higher Education,” which advocates a “contract” between the Trump administration and the sector that demands colleges “cease their direct participation in social and political activism.” The contract would also require colleges seeking federal funding to eliminate DEI programs, uphold “civil discourse” by punishing protesters, and publish student-admissions data.

Linda McMahon, secretary of the U.S. Department of Education, praised the Manhattan Statement on social media, congratulating Rufo and the Manhattan Institute “for envisioning a compelling road map to restore integrity and rigor to the American academy!”

“Clearly, we have the ears of some important people who are involved in making decisions about higher education,” Sailer, now director of higher-education policy at the institute, said. His approach to influencing policy through investigations has created a distinct brand of think-tank activism. “Legitimate scoops move the needle more than anything,” he said.

The higher-education team comprises just six people. Fellows and researchers pursue their own investigations, often spurred by tips from professors or their own curiosity. Sailer alone has filed hundreds of records requests to colleges and organizations across the country. Earlier this month, he posted voice recordings of the director of the American Association of University Professors’ Center for the Defense of Academic Freedom describing his goal of “undermining and discrediting the legitimacy” of conservative-backed civic centers. Sailer obtained the audio through a records request targeting the emails of the center’s fellows.

“We do not just want to produce white papers,” Sailer said. “When we can get an institution to reverse course on a policy that we think is really bad and that we’ve exposed, that’s a good day.”

Over the last two months, Sailer and his colleagues have set their sights on sinking the candidacy of Stuart R. Bell as the next president of the University of Florida. Florida is ground zero for what the Manhattan Institute calls the “reform movement”: an effort to move colleges away from racial and social-justice activism and toward a race-blind vision of higher education. Under its Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, state lawmakers made the dismantling of diversity programs a major policy goal in the state.

To the institute, Bell’s nomination is doubly offensive because it was only a year ago that Rufo led a campaign to torpedo the candidacy of Santa J. Ono, the University of Michigan’s former president, to lead Florida. Atop Rufo’s bill of indictment: Ono’s diversity policies.

As president of the University of Alabama, Bell supported a DEI plan to increase Black and Latino enrollment, recruit a diverse faculty, and reckon with the university’s violent racist past. Sailer was one of the first conservatives to publicly oppose Bell’s candidacy. In social-media posts and commentary in the Wall Street Journal, Manhattan Institute activists argued that Bell’s efforts at Alabama led to discrimination against white people, violated state law over building renaming, and pushed an “ideology” onto the campus that everyone must work to undo racism.

We do not just want to produce white papers. When we can get an institution to reverse course on a policy that we think is really bad and that we’ve exposed, that’s a good day.

“Higher-education reform is not a one-time event. It is a long-term project that requires consistent leadership,” Sailer said. “And so the University [of Florida] is saying that our choice for president has previously embraced something that is antithetical to higher education — that should be disqualifying.”

Governor DeSantis has endorsed Bell, and Florida’s Board of Trustees sent his nomination to the state board earlier this month. A July 1 Board of Governors meeting will confirm whether the scrappy think tank will again be successful in leading the charge to topple a presidential candidate at one of the nation’s leading public research universities.

The Manhattan Institute was founded in 1978 as the International Center for Economic Policy Studies, before later changing its name. In the first issue of its The Manhattan Report newsletter, the institute’s scholars wrote about topics such as rent delinquency in New York City and why “urban decay feeds off public assistance.”

In the ’80s during the Reagan administration, it quickly found its niche arguing against welfare programs. In 1984, Charles Murray, then a senior fellow at the institute, published Losing Ground: American Social Policy, 1950-1980. Murray argued that Black and poor families’ dependency on welfare was connected to “crime, illegitimacy, school dropout, and non-work,” and that such aid programs should be stopped.

Democrats described Murray’s assertions as “anti-family,” and scholars questioned its validity. The New York Times editorial page dubbed Losing Ground the “budget-cutters’ bible,” writing in 1985 that Murray’s “proposition may be as deeply flawed as it is startling, unlikely to survive scrutiny.”

But in 1996, Congress passed a welfare-reform act, making federal assistance temporary, rather than long term. “It turns out that ideas have consequences in an even more profound sense than Murray’s splendid book imagined,” Myron Magnet, then City Journal’s editor, wrote in 2005 in an article titled “Ending Welfare as We Knew It.”

For much of the Manhattan Institute’s history, its focus on education primarily revolved around secondary school — pushing school-voucher programs, “test-based” accountability, and charter schools. While the institute has long been critical of certain aspects of higher education, including the City University of New York’s diversity efforts, its white papers and commentary gained traction as the sector became more polarized over race and diversity after the murder of George Floyd in 2020.

“Higher ed is an important part of economic flourishing and of people bettering themselves,” said Ilya Shapiro, a senior fellow and director of constitutional studies at the institute. “The crisis in higher ed has been thrust to the forefront of our national political debates.”

In 2021, Sailer was a debate coach at The King’s College, a now-closed Christian liberal-arts institution in New York City. (The conservative provocateur Dinesh D’Souza is a former president.)

That year, Sailer’s debate team attended the United States Universities Debate Championship, which was held over Zoom due to the pandemic. The tournament plunged into controversy when the Morehouse College debate team withdrew, alleging that other participants had engaged in racist mockery.

Tournament organizers released a statement taking “full responsibility for the anti-Blackness and racism that transpired.” The remainder of the debates were canceled. Instead, organizers hosted a forum on anti-Blackness.

“There was no discussion about the merits of these claims. There was just kind of the assertion that this was in fact the case,” Sailer recalled. “Anyone who disagreed was sort of presumed to be racist.”

Sailer believes a similar dynamic was pervasive at colleges in those years. “Something was culminating in higher education that was antithetical to the idea that what we should be doing here is putting ideas to the test, following ideas to their conclusion, and debating them,” he said. “It became very clear to me that there was a broken epistemology that had taken hold in some pockets of our institutions that just does not match those foundational principles of intellectual life.” Alarm at the deterioration of academic life, Sailer said, is “definitely a part of why I decided to move into higher-ed policy.”

In the years following 2020, college leaders spoke explicitly, some for the first time, about racial and social injustice. Colleges built and expanded their DEI offices and, in some instances, implemented diversity plans with the goal of reflecting the racial demographics of their states.

“I see that as an inevitable and proper thing,” Sailer said about the goal of a racially diverse campus. But the way colleges pursued that goal, he argued, created an “infrastructure” that has mandated faculty and students to place social justice at the center of curriculum, hiring, and university operations.

Rufo, a former documentary filmmaker who joined the Manhattan Institute in 2019, has blamed diversity efforts in Hollywood for a lack of opportunities for straight white men. Shapiro had been hired as a faculty member at Georgetown University’s law school but never actually started in the position. He was investigated by the university over a social-media post in which he stated his displeasure at the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court, calling her a “lesser Black woman” in comparison to his preferred pick, the federal judge Sri Srinivasan. Though Shapiro was reinstated by Georgetown after a monthslong investigation, he instead resigned from the university and joined the Manhattan Institute in 2022.

“We seek out policy entrepreneurs and activists who are rigorous, intellectually independent, and focused on achieving real-world results,” Jesse Arm, the institute’s vice president for external affairs, said in an email to The Chronicle. “Whether identifying problems or advancing solutions, our objective is the same as it has always been: to generate ideas that improve American life and help institutions perform at their highest level.”

Compared to other influential conservative think tanks, the Manhattan Institute is operating with a fraction of the staff and funding. In 2024, the Heritage Foundation, the think tank behind Project 2025, had a budget of $134 million and more than 500 people on its staff, according to a recent tax filing. The Manhattan Institute, by comparison, brought in $25 million and employed 103 staffers.

The institute’s growing clout in higher education coincided with the rise of Florida’s Governor DeSantis, who famously vowed that his state is where “woke goes to die.” In 2021, DeSantis announced the Stop the Wrongs to Our Kids and Employees Act, known as STOP W.O.K.E. The legislation restricted what professors can teach or say about race in the classroom.

The announcement included a testimonial from Rufo: “Governor Ron DeSantis is not only protecting all of the employees and students in the State of Florida. He is providing a model for every state in the United States of America. Critical Race Theory is wrong; it offers nothing to improve the lives of anyone of any racial background.” A federal judge blocked the act from being enforced in 2022, saying that the legislation bans professors from expressing disfavored viewpoints.

In the following years, Manhattan Institute scholars deepened their relationships with the DeSantis administration and their influence in the state. DeSantis appointed Rufo to the board of the New College of Florida (he stepped down in 2025). Shapiro now serves on the board of Florida Polytechnic University.

“It’s not like we decided all of a sudden we’re going to focus on Florida higher ed,” said Shapiro. “But that’s where opportunities presented themselves, and that’s where lawmakers were amenable to hearing from us.”

In 2023, Shapiro and Rufo together drafted model legislation for state lawmakers that would abolish DEI offices, eliminate DEI positions, and end mandatory diversity training and the use of diversity statements. The legislation also sought to ban any effort to promote as the “official position” of the university concepts including “unconscious or implicit bias,” “intersectionality,” “transgender ideology,” “antiracism,” “systemic oppression,” or any “related formulation” of such topics.

“The purpose of this policy document is to ensure that public universities succeed in their mission to promote the search for truth and knowledge while maintaining academic freedom and integrity, without being transformed into factories of ideological conformity,” the model legislation read. “To this end, the DEI bureaucracies within public universities must be dismantled.”

The model legislation faced immediate criticism from proponents of diversity efforts, who argued that it was too broad and a transparent act of viewpoint discrimination.

“This just seems like they’re banning concepts that they do not like,” said Francisca D. Fajana, senior counsel at LatinoJustice, a civil-rights organization that defends federal funding for Hispanic-serving institutions, which the Manhattan Institute has campaigned against. “What is wrong with intersectionality? Why is that a DEI concept that should be unlawful? There are viewpoints that they disagree with, and so they want states that are aligned with their worldview to ban those viewpoints.”

In the 2023 legislative cycle, a dozen states introduced legislation with near-identical language to the Manhattan Institute’s model legislation. Over the next three years, Republicans introduced over 150 anti-DEI bills that restricted or banned colleges and universities from operating DEI offices, employing DEI officers, and using public funding for diversity-related programs, among other restrictions — 32 bills have been signed into law, according to a Chronicle tracker.

Lawmakers have also passed laws in Alabama, Mississippi, Kentucky, West Virginia, and Florida over the last two years that restrict how faculty teach about “divisive concepts” and ban “race and gender ideology.” The legislation has resulted in extensive course reviews across numerous colleges.

In several states, faculty members have described a “chilling effect” and alleged censorship as colleges rush to implement new guidance and policies in response to the laws. At Texas Tech University, a new policy bans graduate students from writing their theses or dissertations on sexual orientation or gender identity, despite no state law requiring the university to do so.

In its 2023 model legislation, the Manhattan Institute wrote that it should not be construed to affect “academic course instruction, research and creative works by the institution’s students, faculty, or other research personnel.” In the Manhattan Institute’s 2026 model legislation to “Reform Faculty Accountability in Higher Education,” the think tank calls for state lawmakers to expand oversight into public colleges and the “creation of core curricula.”

As Sailer put it, “This is going to be where a lot of the future battles over the shape of higher education are going to be.”

 

US Supreme Court handed down major rulings yesterday!

Alito blasts latest SCOTUS ballot ruling as invitation to ‘voter fraud’ risks

Dear Commons Community,

The US  Supreme Court issued several major rulings yesterday, delivering significant decisions regarding digital privacy, presidential authority, and state election laws. 

Key Decisions Handed Down:

  • Geofence Warrants (Chatrie v. United States): In a 6-3 decision, the Court ruled that police acquisition of cellphone location history from third-party tech companies (such as Google) constitutes a “search” under the Fourth Amendment. The Court sent the case back to the lower courts to determine if the specific warrant used to convict a Virginia man was “reasonable”.
  • Presidential Firing Power: The Court overturned a nearly century-old precedent (Humphrey’s Executor) to expand the president’s power over independent federal agencies, ruling that the president has the authority to remove officials in such agencies (including a Democratic appointee to the FTC).
  • Federal Reserve Governance: In a separate case, the Court rejected President Trump’s attempt to immediately fire Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook, citing the need to protect the central bank’s independence. 
  • Mail-In Ballots: The Court upheld state laws that allow mail-in ballots to arrive and be counted after Election Day, provided they are postmarked on or before Election Day, dealing a setback to President Trump’s challenges against mail-in voting.
  • E. Jean Carroll Case:  The Court rejected President Trump’s effort to circumvent a lower court’s verdict in 2023, ordering him to compensate E. Jean Carroll for defamation following her allegations of sexual abuse. It stems from a federal lawsuit filed by Carroll in New York City, which alleged that the president assaulted her in a dressing room of a department store in 1996. The allegations related to defamation hinge on statements made by President Trump during his first term in office, swatting Carroll’s sexual abuse claims as a “con job” and “hoax.

A busy day in the Court!

Tony

Nassau County announces $1M drone first responder program.

Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder explaining how the drone emergency response program will work.

Dear Commons Community,

 Nassau County on Long Island, NY  is stepping up its drone program to speed up emergency responses.  Yesterday, a new $1 million drone first responder program was announced in Nassau County.

In many cases, officers can immediately dispatch the drone when an emergency 911 call comes in, and it can get to the scene before police arrive.  As reported by ABC News.

“We’re advancing to better protect the people in Nassau County,” said Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder.

Police are taking to the skies with advanced technology to safeguard residents.

“These drones will be patrolling, and they will also be responding,” said Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman.

The fleet of drones is housed in climate-controlled pods at permanent docking stations. They will be automatically launched from eight locations in the county.

The unmanned aerial vehicles are equipped with cameras, thermal imaging, and can travel up to 40 miles an hour.

To show how quickly these drones can respond to a scene, one was deployed from the Nassau County Police Training and Intelligence Center and was sent to Eisenhower Park. The trip took under a minute.

“That’s about a five-to-seven-minute car ride, depending on when you’re leaving here,” Ryder said. “In 30 seconds, that drone can be over that area in Eisenhower Park, feeding back intel, critical intel, to the intelligence center and to the responding vehicle.”

Once over the designated area, the drones send real-time information to the Nassau Police Intelligence Center, and directly to the patrol cars of the first responders.

Ryder says this will cut down on response time, which is critical.

“If I can slow down, if I can get information faster to my cops that are responding, they’re going to have a better way to attack and handle that problem,” he said.

The commissioner told Eyewitness News that the drones will not be patrolling your backyards but focus on areas of concern like large gatherings or areas where police are dispatched.

“He comes over and basically pushes the button, it rises up, and it goes to the geocode location that we’ve already sent to it,” Ryder said.

“It costs a million dollars, but here’s the good news: it’s not going to cost the taxpayers a nickel,” Blakeman said. “We are using our asset forfeiture funds to pay for that.”

Sounds like a good idea.  A number of other police departments around the country have already instituted similar drone first responder programs.

Tony

Wall Street Journal Editorial Board: Will Trump Ever Learn!

 

Dear Commons Community,

Yesterday, the editorial board of The Wall Street Journal asked damning questions of President Trump. This weekend’s escalating tit-for-tat strikes between the U.S. and Iran, which threaten the already fragile agreement to halt hostilities, prompted a scathing rebuke of Trump.

The board, which has been a persistent thorn in Trump’s side throughout his second term, questioned the value of the U.S. memorandum of understanding with Iran, writing:

“The best selling point for President Trump’s memorandum of understanding with Iran was that at least it opened the Strait of Hormuz. Well, now the regime is trying to nullify those terms by using force against commercial vessels, Gulf states and U.S. bases. All of this violates the deal and calls into question why Mr. Trump signed it.”

The editorial then flipped one of Trump’s own recent criticisms back on him.

After Trump complained on Saturday following Iranian attacks that it was “very possible” Iran’s leaders “will never learn,” the editorial board asked: “Or is it U.S. decision makers who never learn?”

The editorial also slammed Vice President JD Vance for appearing to portray Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps leadership as “transformed” and ready to “turn over a new leaf,” calling those currently in power in Tehran “the same terrorist regime, and this is the Battle of Hormuz that Mr. Trump thought he had ducked.”

Tony

 

Maureen Dowd on America’s Aspiration to Fairness

Dear Commons Community,

In her New York Times column yesterday, Maureen Dowd questioned whether the foundational American aspiration to fairness is eroding, replaced by partisan vitriol, self-serving leadership, and reckless technological advancements. Reflecting on her own family and a sense of inclusivity in the American dream, she sees a present-day America where equity is overshadowed by malice and anxiety. Below is an excerpt.

Tony

——————————————-

“Because of my parents, I always thought of fairness as an American trait, as well. My dad was an Irish immigrant and my mom’s parents were Irish immigrants, and they built their working-class dream life here. America was fair to them, and they wanted to be fair to everyone else.

My family believed in government, for all its flaws, as a protector of the people. My first cousin Peggy Dowd was the secretary for F.D.R.’s aide Tommy Corcoran, a primary strategist of the New Deal. After 10 years of working together, they married and started a family. The social safety net created jobs for millions of people and helped pull the country out of the Great Depression. People treated public goods as public goods instead of moneymaking opportunities for the well-connected few.

For decades, until President Trump, the government was trusted to protect food, water, the climate and the disadvantaged. It wasn’t about which party you were in. President Richard Nixon signed the National Environmental Policy Act and the Endangered Species Act into law. George H.W. Bush shepherded the Americans With Disabilities Act.

Of course, we have, at times, fallen spectacularly short of that ideal in our nation’s history, including the original sin of slavery, the Alien and Sedition Acts, segregation and the internment of Japanese American citizens during World War II. But I always thought that most Americans sought to be fair. The country was founded on that aspirational goal: All men are created equal.

Yet lately, so much seems unfair.

The fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.

The Trump family’s kleptocracy and blatant grifting, reported so brilliantly by The Times’s Eric Lipton and a team of reporters in a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation.

The racism and antisemitism that has reared up in raw and ugly ways.

Jeff Bezos’ decimation of a legendary newspaper, The Washington Post, aiming to please a thin-skinned president, and David Ellison’s decimation of a legendary news division at CBS, aiming to please a corrupt F.C.C. chair who’s kissing the ring of a thin-skinned president who yearns to be king.

Trump and his congressional cronies cutting critical safety net programs and handing out big tax breaks to billionaire buddies. The gutting of the landmark Voting Rights Act and the wrongheaded view of the conservative Supreme Court majority that racism is over in America.

The obscene pay of C.E.O.s, growing 20 times as fast as workers’ pay last year, and the obscene wealth in the tech world, with money cascading into the hands of greedy billionaires who lack empathy or even noblesse oblige. “The über-rich,” Rahm Emanuel told me, disgustedly. “I call it the ‘3-2-1.’ They’re going for the third house, the second wife and the first plane. They’re in a hermetically sealed world.”

Trump taking the country to war with Iran, in part at the urging of his pal Bibi — without any sensible plan, debate, sanction from Congress or consideration as to how this might hurt Americans already struggling to make ends meet.

Trump gleefully tearing up large chunks of the White House and my hometown, trying to install a solipsistic arch, an exclusive golf course, a gargantuan ballroom and a garden of heroes — all to his Versailles-on-acid specifications. He desecrated the Kennedy Center, slapping his name on it and meddling with its artistic content, until a judge ordered his name stripped off. The president is ripping apart the scenes of my happiest childhood memories — the modest but beautiful White House, Jackie Kennedy’s gardens, the golf course at Hains Point where I used to go with my older brother.

The stunning failure of the hacks in government and the lords of the cloud to figure out how to safely regulate A.I. and create a kill switch to save humanity, even as A.I. leaps forward into superintelligence, and sooner than we may think, consciousness.

I try to infuse my life with my parents’ sense of fairness. And I continue to believe — or hope — that most Americans are fair, despite the unholy din of social media malice and Trump nastiness, and despite all that’s stacked against us. It’s unfair to even have to wonder: Are Americans still fair?”

 

Remembering the 70th anniversary of the first AI workshop – Dartmouth’s AI Summer Research Project!

Dear Commons Community,

It has been 70 years since the Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Artificial Intelligence—a workshop widely recognized as a foundational event in the field of artificial intelligence (AI)—and AI is now in the headlines everyday for many reasons.  Here is an excerpt from an article that appeared in Science on Friday commemorating the Dartmouth Project, written by Kate Crawford, a professor of science and technology studies and communication at the Annenberg School, University of Southern California.

THE ORIGINS OF “ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE”

Anniversaries in the history of science are strange devices. They flatten contingent events into origin myths and give a foundational weight to a single moment that the participants themselves rarely felt at the time. The birthplace of AI can plausibly be located in many moments before the 1956 Dartmouth meeting and many later ones: in Warren McCulloch and Walter Pitts’s neural calculus of 1943, in Norbert Wiener’s wartime fire-control work, in Alan Turing’s 1950 imitation game, in the Macy meetings, or in the Semi-Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE), the continental air-defense network that in 1958 was the largest real-time computer system ever built.

Still, the Dartmouth Project remains the canonical example. In their grant application for the meeting, John McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Nathaniel Rochester, and Claude Shannon proposed that in 2 months, 10 men could study artificial intelligence and show that “every aspect of learning or any other feature of intelligence can in principle be so precisely described that a machine can be made to simulate it”. That is not what happened.

By the end of summer, the group had neither a shared agenda nor any notable newly completed projects. But it did produce a name. The phrase “artificial intelligence” was coined by McCarthy in part to define their project against Wiener’s “cybernetics.” It described a narrower, engineering-focused field that need not engage with cybernetics’ wider questions about how minds, bodies, and societies actually work, or Wiener’s moral concerns that automation would displace human labor and drive catastrophic wars.

NEITHER ARTIFICIAL NOR INTELLIGENT

The phrase “artificial intelligence” has arguably done as much work as any individual technical result. But it obscures what the systems are made of and overstates what they do. As I argued in my 2021 book, Atlas of AI, AI is neither “artificial” nor “intelligent.” Rather than algorithms in the “cloud,” it is highly material and increasingly resource-hungry, made from rare earth minerals and copper, water and fossil fuels, human labor and data, as well as industrial and political power.

Even greater confusion is caused by the word “intelligence.” The men of Dartmouth worked within a cognitivist tradition in which thinking meant theorem proving, chess, and optimization functions. In this worldview, intelligence is the work of mathematical calculations done at a desk. Outside that frame lies everything else that is embodied, relational, and contextual: the care work of a parent, the skill of a chef balancing flavors in a meal, the way a teacher reads a classroom. The messy work of ethical decision-making, politics, and culture is entirely absent.

FROM OPEN TO CLOSED WORLDS

Intelligence, and how we define it, has always been political. It matters as much what is included as what is left out. Hubert Dreyfus saw this in 1965 and argued that the embodied, situated, ambiguity-tolerant character of human cognition could not be captured by symbol-manipulation rules. Joseph Weizenbaum described it a decade later in his book Computer Power and Human Reason, where he saw the great trap of building chatbots that people all too easily assume are intelligent. His indictment of the field he helped build has been largely ignored by AI labs.

It did not have to be this way. There was a diverse intellectual scene addressing these issues in the 1940s and 1950s, reflected in the 10 meetings of the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation. Ultimately named the Conferences on Cybernetics, they included the founding AI figures of Wiener, McCulloch, Pitts, von Neumann, and Shannon but also anthropologists Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson, psychiatrist Lawrence Kubie, and linguist Roman Jakobson. They asked wider questions about the relationship between humans and machines: how communication shapes societies, what automation would do to workers and to human dignity, and how scientific knowledge might be safeguarded against capture by the military.

By the mid-1960s, most of this wider interdisciplinary work had been pruned in the Cold War institutional sorting that historian of science Paul Edwards documented in his 1996 book, The Closed World. The narrow technical vision was easier to fund in a Cold War environment because it promised bounded military deliverables: machine translation for signals intelligence, object detection for missile guidance and satellite imagery, facial recognition for surveillance. Seventy years on, those three remain among the top applications where AI has been successfully engineered.

AI INFRASTRUCTURE AND THE STATE

The historical intertwining of AI and the state continues today, despite the libertarian rhetoric of the tech sector. The four largest US technology firms are deeply embedded in the infrastructural systems of government. The Stargate Project, for example, was announced in President Trump’s first week in office in 2025, as a $500 billion joint venture of OpenAI, Oracle, SoftBank, and the Emirati sovereign wealth fund MGX. By July, data center construction was authorized on Interior, Energy, and Defense Department lands, and four Department of Energy sites were designated for public-private development. Projects whose federal subsidy fell below half of total cost were exempted from review under the National Environmental Policy Act, and the Department of Commerce was authorized to offer loans, grants, tax breaks, and long-term purchase contracts. This model has a closer kinship to Los Alamos than to the garage-startup folklore of Silicon Valley.

Frontier AI is among the most concentrated industries in the world. Two private companies—OpenAI and Anthropic—dominate, representing a staggering combined private valuation of >$1.6 trillion. Meanwhile, Nvidia supplies roughly 90% of AI data center chips and stands as the most valuable company in human history, hovering near a $5 trillion market capitalization after adding >$4 trillion dollars in value in just 3 years. Analysts describe a self-reinforcing loop in which Nvidia allocates scarce chips preferentially to the firms making the largest forward commitments, and the sector operates within a circular web of investments.

Historically, other concentrated industries, such as railroads, oil, and telephony, raised deep concerns among regulators and the public, be it for price-fixing power over consumers, the capture of legislatures, or private fortunes warping democratic politics. This resulted in antitrust suits and regulation in the past, but we are in a different time. The scale of AI’s physical footprint is harder still to grasp. What is underway is plausibly the largest collective infrastructure project in human history. The daily thermal output of the Stratos Project, according to physicist Rob Davies, could be equivalent to 23 atomic bombs. Meta is funding seven natural-gas plants for 7-gigawatt facilities in Louisiana. SoftBank is targeting $500 billion for a 10-gigawatt data center in Ohio, which Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has called “the largest construction project in the country”. A single gigawatt of capacity can power roughly 750,000 homes at any given moment.

DARTMOUTH’S BROADER LEGACIES

The artificial intelligence systems we have today are drastically different from what was imagined at Dartmouth in 1956, but symmetries remain. A small handful of men, mostly trained in the same disciplines at the same institutions, are again declaring that “intelligence” is what their machines do and that the world will be transformed for the better by what they build.

The Dartmouth group conceded after the meeting that there was hubris in trying to solve “intelligence” in 2 months. Today, some AI leaders claim not only that AI will become superintelligent but also that it will somehow solve the social and environmental harms it causes at an uncertain point in the future. In the meantime, our communities, institutions, and governments struggle to adapt in the face of dramatic power concentration, growing carbon emissions from data centers, and an integration with state violence that Weizenbaum and Wiener most feared.

After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Wiener refused further work for the military. He could find, as he wrote, “no way to publish without letting my inventions go to the wrong hands. If the Dartmouth anniversary is to be useful, it should compel a moment of ethical reckoning in the field.

AI is now capable of great harm on the battlefield, in the environment, to the value of human labor, and in democratic life. Alongside real engineering progress, the field has fallen far behind in confronting the wider consequences of its own experiments. Unless that disparity is addressed, the next major AI anniversary may be far from celebratory.

Tony

Unity Environmental University Sells Its Campus and Goes Online/Remote!

Dear Commons Community,

Last week, Unity Environmental University, a college known historically for its residential liberal-arts education shed its longtime campus for good.

The institution hasn’t closed. In fact, it’s enrolling more students than ever before. But Unity Environmental University, formerly Unity College, no longer enrolls any undergraduates at its home base in rural Maine. Unity has offloaded the real estate, at a price of $6 million. The sale, to a buyer who plans to use the 225 acres for summer-camp programming and outdoor experiences, caps off a yearslong pivot in which the institution has completely remade itself.  As reported by The Chronicle of Higher Education.

In 2016, the institution enrolled some 700 students in hands-on programs in wildlife conservation, zookeeping, and land management. Over the following few years, a reform-minded president with a business background pushed Unity to embrace online education, promising similar career opportunities with flexible learning at a far lower price.

After experiencing a steep decline in in-person enrollment during the pandemic, Unity now counts more than 7,000 students in its ranks, the vast majority of whom are remote. It echoes the famous transformation of Southern New Hampshire University, a private institution that became a distance-education giant within a decade. (A small amount of in-person instruction will continue at Unity’s rented Pineland Farms campus, a little over an hour from the town of Unity, where the original campus was located.)

Unity may be the rare success story in a long line of cautionary tales for rural small colleges that have struggled to adapt to the modern era.

But its transition hasn’t been without pain or controversy. Many alumni and former employees lament that, in their eyes, the university has strayed far from its mission of educating future stewards of the environment.

In a message to the Unity community, Melik Peter Khoury, the university’s president since 2016, seemed to anticipate pushback.

“The decision to move away from the traditional semester model and ultimately sell the Unity property was among the most difficult in our institution’s history,” Khoury wrote. “It was not made lightly, and it was not made without a deep appreciation for what this place meant to so many people.”

Shortly before news of the sale was announced, Khoury published a lengthy screed on Substack, titled “The Lie at the Center of Higher Education: What Thirty Years Inside the Academy Forced Me to Admit.”

In that piece, and in a conversation with The Chronicle shortly after, Khoury reflected on what he sees as the flawed social contracts between colleges, their employees, and their students. He argued that higher education serves its work force’s interests — particularly the faculty — above students’ needs and is too resistant to change.

“I am not disappointed in the students,” Khoury wrote. “I am not disappointed in the people doing the work. I am disappointed in an industry that had every chance to learn from the institutions proving a better way was possible and chose instead to look past them. So I am going to say it plainly, on the record, with my name on it and my job still attached.”

The changes that Khoury and his board have installed at Unity could give someone whiplash. The college laid off about 30 percent of its staff while facing a revenue shortfall during the Covid pandemic. But as the online component has thrived, the university has frozen its tuition costs for distance students, reorganized its academic schedule, and installed a $50,000 salary floor for full-time employees in Maine.

Khoury told The Chronicle that Unity’s approach is a departure from what he sees as pointless attempts to emulate selective four-year residential colleges.

“It’s like me saying, ‘I want to dunk like Michael Jordan,’” Khoury said. “If I’m lucky, I’ll dribble. If I’m lucky, I’ll do a layup. But I don’t have that athletic power. We have to change, and schools that do that don’t get much coverage. Open-access institutions constantly get vilified.”

‘No One’s Coming to Save Us’

If Unity’s model became the blueprint for other similar institutions, Khoury said, then more students would get access to education. Not every student needs the “American rumspringa,” he remarked. (Unity partners with the University of Southern Maine at Gorham to offer housing for Pineland students who want it).

“You have to look at some of the amenities of education that have nothing to do with teaching as luxuries,” Khoury said. “That’s why at Unity we try very hard to separate our audiences, so that the students who want that experience pay a little bit differently than the students who don’t, instead of this idea that there’s only one approach.”

But some alums are ill at ease with this dramatic transition, which they believe wasn’t the right response to a declining number of traditional-age undergraduates in the region. It’s not hard to see the parallels with another quirky New England institution, Hampshire College, which will close after the fall semester. Attempts to save the Massachusetts college haven’t panned out.

Steph Barrett, a Maine resident who graduated from Unity College in 1995 with a degree in outdoor-recreation leadership, said she didn’t think she would have succeeded at the contemporary Unity Environmental University, with its remote curriculum. As a nontraditional student, starting college at 21, Barrett said Unity had a personal touch and “counterculture influence” that helped her stay engaged.

“You could do things at Unity that you really couldn’t do at any other school,” Barrett said, like electrofishing or pulling cubs out of dens in the spring and weighing them.

Justin Preisendorfer, a Unity alum who works for the U.S. Forest Service, sees value in the new use for the campus property. But he says the local community has suffered from the loss of the main campus, which closed in 2020.

“I ran the college’s climbing wall for a number of years, and it was always open to the public, not just students,” Preisendorfer said. “We had families that would come, we’d have teenage kids who were looking for something to do on a Friday night. … That involvement with the community was central.”

Unity still touts experiential learning as a distinguishing factor of its education; many alumni go on to careers in natural resources and conservation. An alum and former employee who asked to speak on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution emphasized that while there is a place for online education, it would be hard to apply that knowledge without being outside.

There are also implications for fund raising. The current administration has alienated its older graduates, the former employee said, and recent or future students won’t have ties to a physical campus.

“No one’s coming to save us,” she said. “No one’s going to care about the governance or the takeover of a small environmental college that nobody really cared about.”

Asked to comment on the campus sale and the controversy surrounding it, Khoury said he understood why some people would be emotional, but that the transaction reflected the reality for higher education today. Eventually, he wrote, tuition-driven institutions without large endowments would have to choose between preserving a mission and preserving a space.

Khoury defended the decision as aligning with Unity’s mission, not selling it out.

“An institution that cannot pay its bills cannot educate anyone,” he wrote. “Protecting the mission sometimes means letting go of the very things people associate with it.”

Ain’t that the truth!

Tony