Five Quick Bites 

* Interesting. Get ready for hybrid thinking. Click here.

* Interesting. Days passing too quickly? Here’s how to slow down time… maybe.

* Fun and Interesting. German trains will soon feature “smooch cabins.” Click here.

* Fun. My new social media crush, Elle Cordova, raps on the person ahead of her at Starbucks ordering coffee. Click here.

* Fun and Interesting. Trying to stay linguistically young. Click here.

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The Hemingway Stories 

A new collection selected and introduced by Tobias Wolff
Published March 2, 2021
320 pages

There’s a reason why so many writers of Hemingway’s generation are no longer read much, but he still is.

One of my most esteemed colleagues tells me that Hemingway’s work bores him. He’s also despised by some for being a misogynist – in his life and in his fiction. His literary style is sometimes mocked for its simplicity and run-on sentences. And yet, there is no doubt that Hemingway was perhaps the most important literary stylist of the second half of the 20th century.

I keep those thoughts in mind every time I pick up one of his books, usually to read it for the second or third time. And each time I do, I am enthralled by the stories themselves and humbled by what seem to me to be his impeccable sentences. (That is a distinction some poets-turned-fiction-writers have claimed. Hemingway’s poetry was not very good.)

This collection, which was put together by Tobias Wolff to showcase the stories featured in the six-part PBS documentary about Hemingway, includes many of my favorites (Out of SeasonIndian CampThe End of SomethingBig Two-Hearted RiverThe KillersThe Short Happy Life of Francis MacomberHills of White Elephants, and The Snows of Kilimanjaro), as well as additional stories that demonstrate Hemingway’s talent and range. As a bonus, each one is accompanied by insights from other important writers.

Here’s the thing. We all have authors that we admire and others that we consume like candy. And then we have a handful of authors that give us something more. Authors that, every time and however many times you go back to them, you can feel the pieces of your heart and bone that life has broken being put back together. Restoring you, page by page, to the way they were when you were at the height of your ambition and potential – young, brave, indefatigable, and undefeatable.

Hemingway has that effect on me.

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1964: The Beatles Playing Live in Washington, DC 

It was Feb. 11, 1964. At the height of Beatlemania, the Fab Four played live. They are playing with nothing but microphones and speakers – with none of the sophisticated computerized equipment that bands have available now. This is the full show, sourced from the master tapes.

If you weren’t around or listening to music in 1964, and/or have never understood The Beatles’ popularity at the time, watching it may give you a sense of the excitement they generated.

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Moon Shadow 

Researchers on board the International Space Station captured this view of the moon’s shadow over parts of North America during the solar eclipse on April 8.

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If I Were President, I Would Not Sign This Treaty
I’m Hoping Biden Won’t Either 

WHO headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland 

I haven’t commented on this story, although I’ve been following it for more than a year. The proposition seemed so outlandish, I couldn’t believe it would succeed.

But here we are.

Members of the World Health Organization are being called to sign a treaty later this month that would make the WHO the central authority to create social, medical, and personal protocols that they would all follow in future pandemics.

The idea seems reasonable. Since pandemics are usually worldwide, the goal of the treaty would be to enhance “the capacity of countries to prevent, prepare for, and respond to pandemic emergencies.”

This would be done by requiring its 194 member nations “to share data and laboratory samples from emerging outbreaks quickly, safely, and transparently… [and] support more equitable and timely access to, and delivery of, vaccines, diagnostic tests, and treatments and other mitigation measures.”

My concern is twofold.

First, there is the natural propensity of all bureaucracies to grow. And the only way for them to grow is by issuing more rules and requirements that may or may not be necessary.

Second, the protocols already acknowledged in the treaty documents could include all of those that were recommended by the WHO – and then mandated by the CDC and NIH – during the COVID-19 pandemic.

That constitutes a big rule book. From masks and vaccine cards and quarantines to travel restrictions and the use of public and private spaces. (Like how many people you can invite to dinner.)

Not to mention what medical procedures and products will be allowed to be used to treat pandemic-related illnesses, and how public institutions should account for public health data (e.g., death and injury reports).

Opponents of the treaty are concerned that it would give the WHO too much authority in deciding which medical and social rules and requirements its members should institute. Supporters of the treaty say such worries are unmerited. The way the document is written, they say, the WHO would not have the power to mandate protocols or punish the countries that wanted to opt out of them.

For the past year, the Biden administration has taken a favorable view of the treaty, although it has disputed some of the considerations about how exactly it will be organized and how much of the cost of running it the US will have to pay. But recently, a bunch of Republicans and a couple dozen State Attorneys General have come out against it.

They seem to share my concern – and it is a serious one: Even if the US is not bound to follow the WHO’s recommendations, it is very possible that, as signatories of the treaty, the CDC and NIH will adhere to them, just as they did during the COVID-19 pandemic.

That could mean that every year or two, US citizens would find themselves being forced to wear masks, to be quarantined in their homes, to keep their kids at home rather than sending them to school, and generally making all the mistakes they did in 2020 and 2021 – resulting in billions of dollars of wasted funding, the decimation of many small businesses, and serious negative responses to the vaccines (including death).

Recently, there has been some pushback from Congress and State AGs. You can learn more about it here and here and here.

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Antisemitism vs. Free Speech and Peaceful Assembly: 
How US Universities Mishandled the Recent “Occupations” 

Columbia University students participating in an ongoing pro-Palestinian encampment on their campus, April 25, 2024 

Although the worst of it is at least temporarily over, I have been deeply disturbed by the student protests and occupations that spread across university campuses in April.

I don’t see them, as some do, as simply demonstrations in support of the people of Palestine. And despite having the support of some Jews (including a few friends of mine), I believe they are rooted in antisemitism. Deeply ingrained, institutional, and nearly worldwide antisemitism.

It is not about Israel’s bombing of Palestine. Remember, the protests began on October 8, the day after more than a thousand Jewish civilians were brutally raped, beheaded, and otherwise murdered. Remember, too, that at that time and since that time, the polls that were taken indicated that at least 70% of Palestinians supported the invasion and slaughter.

The history of the Arab-Jewish conflict is older than Palestine itself. (The first clear historical reference to the area as “Palestine” dates to the 5th century BCE.) And although there were periods when Arabs and Jews lived together in relative peace, the relationship primarily consisted of Arabs attacking the Jews and attempting to drive them off the land and/or kill them.

Since 1948 and the establishment of Israel as a sovereign state, the animosity of Arabs towards Jews has only gotten worse. It is a history of unilateral attempts by Arab countries or Arab terrorist groups to destroy Israel and kill its citizens, followed by Israeli agreements to various Arab demands, followed immediately by more anti-Israel aggression.

And yet, judging from the recent protests, it looks like a large percentage of the brightest and most privileged college students in America don’t know anything about that. But it’s worse than ignorance. It’s that they have somehow been taught to believe in a version of this conflict that is fundamentally and provably false.

Just recently, a friend of mine, who says that he “identifies very strongly as a Jew,” told me that he had recently “discovered” that the Israelis were “colonialists and occupiers of Palestine.”

I addressed that claim, among others, in my first Special Issue on this conflict, and I will come back to it in a future issue. What scares me is how so many people, Jews and Christians alike, believe it.

The “Evil Empire” Story 

Recently, I watched a documentary that gave me some insight into how the occupation lie came into being.

From the age of five or six, Palestinian children are taught, at home and in school, that Israel is an evil empire that has occupied Palestine (which they claim was originally Arab) and has since done everything possible to keep the Palestinians in Gaza poor.

This despite the fact that there are two million Arabs living peacefully and prosperously in Israel. And that, until the current war began, approximately 200,000 Arabs would commute daily to Israel to work at jobs for which they could be paid multiples of what they would be paid in Palestine.

The lie goes back to 2005. In exchange for a Palestinian commitment to a permanent peace, Israel agreed to forcibly remove more than 10,000 Jews that had been living in Palestine for decades or even centuries. They even removed Jewish graves.

With Palestine finally “Jew Free,” Hamas, which had been voted into leadership, began indoctrinating Arab children and their parents to not only see Israel as an oppressor, but to hate all Jews and see “intifada” as the noble purpose of Islam.

They have been telling that lie for almost 20 years – more than enough time to indoctrinate an entire generation.

So, it is not surprising that there were no protests by “peaceful” Palestinians against Hamas after the October 7 slaughter. On the contrary, there were jubilant celebrations all over Gaza and in many Arab countries all over the world.

Think about it. Twenty years of indoctrination. With zero freedom to question or disagree. It’s not easy to persuade people to believe what is demonstrably false. It can be done, but it takes time. And the younger you begin, the better it works.

Then it hit me: This could also explain why, on October 8, when hundreds of dead Jewish bodies were still on the ground, thousands of university students all over the US (in Europe, too) were out there marching and chanting in support of the slaughter that had occurred the day before. It happened because, during the 20 years that Hamas and Hezbollah and other Arab terrorist groups were spreading the lies about Israel, hundreds of professors at American colleges and universities were doing the same thing.

When you think of it that way, it’s no wonder that the student protests and occupations were so quick and so widespread. Our prestigious universities had prepared their students for it for decades.

We Have Met the Enemy… and It Is Us

There is another issue that has emerged in recent weeks. The allegation that many, if not most, of the protesters were not students of the colleges where they were demonstrating. And many were not students at all.

For example, at the University of Texas at Austin, 45 of the 79 people arrested on campus weren’t associated with the school. Of the 282 people arrested by the NYPD when it broke up encampments at Columbia University and City College of New York, just over half were students, and the rest were not.

But this is secondary. The main question is why our university leaders were so tolerant of these blatantly antisemitic and indisputably illegal occupations of university property for so long.

I think one reason is that many of them are people of my generation that had protested the Vietnam War. They may have felt hypocritical in acting against students that were doing much the same thing as they did.

Another reason is surely that they have been at the heart of an academic culture that has been anti-Zionist for several decades. To stay employed and feel okay about the universities they were working for, even the Jewish professors and administrators have had to convince themselves that being anti-Israel was not antisemitic.

But the third and most concerning reason is that they see these student occupations and protests in terms of free speech. And they believe, correctly in my view, that free speech is a fundamental principle in preserving freedom and democracy in America and everywhere else.

And they are not the only ones. Many pro-Israel Libertarians, like me, are struggling with what seems to be a moral conflict between free speech and antisemitism. We believe that political speech – even when it is clearly hateful, as the pro-Palestinian chants clearly are – should still be allowed. Because the moment you try to regulate hate by criminalizing it, you open the door to fascism, which is the opposite of freedom and democracy.

First, You Define the Offense. Then You Criminalize It. 

This is why I’m troubled by the recent Congressional resolution to define “antisemitism.” On the face of it, it seems entirely unobjectionable. It is simply defining the term by providing examples of it, all of which seem antisemitic to me.

But the problem with definitions like this is that they can be used by the government to carry out repression of any sort of speech they object to. Once the definition of hate is codified in law, the legal assault on free speech begins. And this kills public statements of opinion that have a right to be heard.

A fellow book club friend of mine, exasperated by the coddling of the campus protesters, recently sent an email in which he noted that the protests are no longer anti-Israel, but pro-Hamas. And the slogans they are chanting are not about what to do with Palestine, but that Israel, as a country, should be obliterated and even, in some cases, that Jews should be wiped from the face of the Earth. He was outraged that, now that the protests have shown themselves to be not just antisemitic but genocidal, the students haven’t been arrested and put in jail.

He is correct about what is happening. Antisemitism is alive and strong in the US. It is not official. Nor is it expressed in polite company. But there has always been an undercurrent of antisemitism among Christians, and even atheists, that is real and potentially dangerous.

It is showing itself now in the response to the anti-Palestinian (now pro-Hamas) protests and occupations.

The demonstrators see them as legitimate anti-war protests equivalent to those that we Baby Boomers participated in during the late 60s and early 70s. And there are similarities. But having been an anti-war protester, I can say that the similarities are not positive or worthy of self-righteous pride, as so many of my peers feel they are. The protests against the Vietnam War were, like the pro-Palestinian protests, a movement against something that was going on halfway around the world. We saw the North Vietnamese much like the pro-Palestinian protesters today see the Palestinians – as defenseless, poor people that simply wanted to try out an economic and political ideology that we had been told, by many of our college professors, was just.

But the fact was that 90% of us knew nothing about the theory of Communism, much less the history of it in practice. We knew even less about what was going on in Vietnam or in the backrooms of Congress, the White House, and the various war departments.

This, as you can see here, is true for many of the anti-Israel protesters today.

Our ignorance back then did not mean we were wrong about the cause: getting out of Vietnam. Anyone who has studied the war understands why we never should have been there in the first place and were, in any case, doomed to lose.

I do believe that Israel is fully justified in its war against Hamas and its soon-to-be war against Hezbollah and other anti-Israel, antisemitic terrorist groups. But that is not an argument I want to make here.

Let’s assume that Israel’s position is unjust or, at least, ill-conceived and destined to fail, as it might be. That, again, has no bearing on the question of how universities should have handled the student protests and occupations.

As I said above, what university leaders did in allowing the occupations to flourish was wrongheaded from the start. Even if we gave them a pass for equating today’s protests and occupations to those against the Vietnam War. Even if we accept that they have unwittingly succumbed to the idea that being anti-Israel is not antisemitic. That still leaves their primary mistake in allowing the occupations to take place: They see them as legitimate expressions of free speech.

Free Speech: Is That the Issue?

Let’s talk about free speech.

In the US, free speech is guaranteed by our Constitution, because it is seen (rightly, I think) as one of the foundations of freedom and democracy.

There are a few categories of expression that are not protected by the First Amendment:

* Obscenity
* Fraud
* Child pornography
* Speech “integral” to illegal conduct
* Speech that causes imminent unlawful action
* Speech that violates intellectual property law
* Commercial speech (misleading advertising)
* Incitement to violence
* Defamation
* And in certain situations, threats and false statements of facts.

Hate speech is not an exemption, per the 1993 Supreme Court ruling in the case of Wisconsin v. Mitchell. It is allowed, again correctly in my opinion, because it can be so narrowly defined that it stifles the free expression of ideas. In other words, US citizens have the right to speak hatefully, and it is important for all of us to maintain this freedom.

But you don’t need hate-speech laws to prevent the sort of antisemitic, pro-Palestinian protests that have been going on all over the States.

The right to peaceful assembly is also guaranteed by the Constitution, but there are also limitations. The assemblers must have permission from the property owners. Which means “occupying” buildings and other spaces without permission is illegal.

The problem with what’s been happening on campuses is that some university faculty and administrators are viewing the protests as acts of free speech, which confuses the issue. Yes, people are allowed their antisemitic chants. But what they can’t do is occupy territory they do not themselves own or have permission to assemble on.

The universities should have recognized, the first time their campuses were “occupied,” that they were allowing for the possibility of significant and mass unlawfulness. They should have recognized the probability that the occupations would intimidate their Jewish students and the possibility that they would become violent.

They should have, therefore, closed the occupations on day one. Regardless of what sort of speech was being expressed.

Had they done that, they could have removed the protesters and, if they wanted, assigned them designated areas to demonstrate where they would not pose a threat.

That is what they should have done. And that is what they should do today. Protect free speech. Even hate speech. But prosecute the illegal occupations that are making it unsafe for Jewish students to attend class.

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Things I’ve Been Thinking About Lately 

Speechwriting (with a Little Help from My Friends) 

I’m a little nervous. I can’t deny it.

In July, I’m going to be in Tokyo for two days, lecturing to 2,000+ Japanese investors and businesspeople that, I’ve been told, have read some of my books and essays and want to hear what I have to say about several topics I’ve written about for many years: entrepreneurship, investing, business building, and “living rich.” Plus, I’ll be having informal discussions with a small group of attendees who’ve paid a whole lotta money to ask me more particular questions.

I’ve given dozens of presentations to large groups over the years, although never to a crowd that large. My M.O. is to tailor the title of my speech to the nature of the seminar or conference, jot down a few notes, and then talk extemporarily when I’m at the podium. So that doesn’t scare me.

And I feel very comfortable about the informal discussions because I see them as the sort of business meetings that I’ve headed up thousands of times in my career: We have a problem or challenge for which we need ideas, if not solutions. And I always have plenty of ideas.

I’ve made presentations all over the world, from England to Ireland to Germany and Australia. But I have a special feeling about the Japanese. I see them as representatives of a culture that is more advanced and sophisticated than others I’ve worked with. They have characteristics that are instrumental in achieving a level of wealth (and education and health) that inevitably surpasses that of the people of any country they happen to live in. (I’m currently writing a book about this. Working title: Wealth Culture.)

In other words, they have ingrained values that exhibit every important “secret” about building wealth and living well that I’ve learned and written about for the last 20 years. What can I tell them that they don’t already know?

I’ve reminded myself that when it comes to success and accomplishment, the most important secrets were discovered millennia ago. So, I don’t need to tell them something new. I just need to find a new way of explaining the age-old and universal truths.

One of the presentations I’ve decided on will be titled “The Seven Natural Laws of Wealth Building.”

The idea is that there are basic truths about building wealth that have parallels in natural science. I already know the seven “truths” I want to speak about. But I have so far only found four corresponding laws of nature (inertia, momentum, gravity, and entropy).

I’ve been asking scientifically minded friends for suggestions. And BB, an A-level copywriter and a published science fiction writer, sent me a link to Understanding Physics by Isaac Asimov. (“My favorite book on physics for the lay reader,” he said.) He also sent a piece on gravity that he wrote years ago.

I’m reading his gravity piece now, and I’m about to scan the book for other ideas. If you have any suggestions, please email them to me. Soon!

 

Just When We Thought We Understood the Overpopulation Problem… 

Back in the day, overpopulation was the worry. The way to save the world, we were told, was to have fewer babies.

That idea took root in the 1970s and picked up steam at the turn of the century – so much so that there has been a huge drop in birth rates worldwide. And that is a serious problem, according to the current crop of population scientists. A serious problem that is diminishing GDP output and putting enormous pressure on the world’s young workers to pay for the retirements of the Baby Boomers.

Between 2015 and 2020, US birth rates declined about 2% each year. Between 2019 and 2020, they decreased by 4%. And in 2023, according to the CDC, they dropped to their lowest levels in more than 40 years.

On the hopeful but unlikely “positive” side, since Biden took office the border police have allowed about 10 million undocumented aliens into the country. If they turn out to be productive, tax-paying workers, that could help close the birth-rate gap and improve the outlook for all Americans.

On the other hand, if too many of them end up on government assistance or working for US outposts of Mexican and Central American drug and human trafficking cartels, the social and economic future of the US will be… well, not so good.

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Brilliant. Scary. Crazy.

Meet Victoria Shi

She is a spokesperson for Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. But she’s not real. She’s AI-generated. In this clip, she introduces herself and explains how she was named, what her role is, and how future audiences can verify her identity.

What she doesn’t tell us is why she was created. And that, it seems to me, is obvious. What could be better in terms of presenting political positions, explaining them, and defending them than a being that is connected to AI? No mistakes. No misunderstandings. Everything programmed for maximum clarity and maximum rhetorical effect.

So, I believe there will be lots of “Victoria Shis” in all our lives in the future. The not-too-distant future. They will be speaking for governments – federal, state, and local. They will be representing non-profit groups and corporations, too. Eventually, they will be speaking for high profile individuals (e.g., movie stars, bestselling authors, and superstar athletes) that want a more “personal” connection to their fans.

We already know from dozens of experiments – not to mention billions of interactions with Siri and Alexa – that the general public will accept them. So there’s nothing to keep it from happening.

Welcome to a brave, new world!

Election Watch 

Do You Know Who Kristi Noem Is? 

She’s the good-looking governor of South Dakota, and has been a top contender for the Trump VP slot. And she’s just published a best-selling memoir – No Going Back: The Truth on What’s Wrong with Politics and How We Move America Forward.

I don’t read memoirs. But I do read reviews of memoirs. And I’m glad I read this one by Nellie Bowles in the May 3 issue of Free Press, because it contained this wonderful little vignette:

“In her memoir, [Noem] writes about her 14-month-old wirehaired pointer, Cricket.

“Cricket really annoyed her. She took Cricket out hunting, and Cricket was useless. ‘I hated that dog,’ she recalls. So when they got back from the not fun pheasant hunt, she took Cricket out back to a gravel pit and shot Cricket dead.

“Seemingly pleased with herself, she then went and found a particularly annoying goat, brought that one over to the gravel pit, and shot the goat dead too. She presents this as life on the farm.

“Now, I have family who farm, and honestly the main thing about their life is how much they love and care for animals. I swear to god they have ten stray cats they’re feeding, and if one of them bites it’s definitely your own fault.

“Farms are not special places where random wirehaired pointer puppy slaughter is approved. It’s not that squeamish city folk just don’t understand what it takes to maintain the heartland. The actual news from this is that ‘Trump insiders’ say Noem is definitely not the VP pick after this freaky little anecdote.”

What do you think?

Health Watch 

Guess What? The Sun IS Good for You – Even for Your Skin! 

Skin cancers are by far the most diagnosed cancers in the United States. And to prevent them, the public is constantly being told to avoid the sun.

I’ve written about this subject many times. In fact, about 20 years ago, a colleague and I – finding it impossible to believe that sunlight, which feels so good on the skin, can be deadly – investigated the scientific literature and published a report that, unfortunately, nobody paid attention to.

Now, decades later, an article by a doctor in Vigilant News corroborates many of the things we had discovered. A few examples:

* While the relatively benign skin cancers are caused by sun exposure, the ones responsible for most skin cancer deaths are due to a lack of sunlight.

* Sunlight is arguably the most important nutrient for the human body. Avoiding it doubles the rate of dying and significantly increases the risk of cancer.

You can read the entire Vigilant News article here.

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