225 stories
·
1 follower

PhD Timeline

2 Comments and 8 Shares
Rümeysa Öztürk was grabbed off the street in my town one month ago.
Read the whole story
wyeager
6 hours ago
reply
Thank you, Randall. The state of things is not sane and we all need to be speaking up. Bravo.
Blur Area
popular
6 hours ago
reply
Share this story
Delete
1 public comment
alt_text_bot
19 hours ago
reply
Rümeysa Öztürk was grabbed off the street in my town one month ago.
Tazio
13 hours ago
Boo hoo! A Hamas sympathizer has to leave the USA. I'm so sad.
rtreborb
12 hours ago
Oh how far xkcd has drifted...
mxm23
7 hours ago
Um due process? Um legally resident?

Say the Words: American Concentration Camp. “What is happening now is not...

1 Comment
Say the Words: American Concentration Camp. “What is happening now is not a deviation. It is an expansion. The tools were always there. The tools were always sharpened on Black bodies. They are merely being used more broadly now, and with less pretense.”
Read the whole story
wyeager
2 days ago
reply
Language is infrastructure! Concentration camp is accurate so don't call it a prison.
Blur Area
Share this story
Delete

What’s Going on at Volkswagen?

1 Comment

This is a really big deal, truly unprecedented in modern German history.

Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE), opens new tab plans to shut at least three factories in Germany, lay off tens of thousands of staff and shrink its remaining plants in Europe’s biggest economy as it plots a deeper-than-expected overhaul, the company’s works council head said on Monday.

Europe’s biggest carmaker has been negotiating for weeks with unions over plans to revamp its business and cut costs, including considering plant closures on home soil for the first time, in a blow to Germany’s industrial prowess.

Volkswagen reiterated on Monday that restructuring was needed and said it would make concrete proposals on Wednesday.

“Management is absolutely serious about all this. This is not sabre-rattling in the collective bargaining round,” Daniela Cavallo, Volkswagen’s works council head, told employees at the carmaker’s biggest plant, in Wolfsburg, threatening to break off talks.

“This is the plan of Germany’s largest industrial group to start the sell-off in its home country of Germany,” Cavallo added, not specifying which plants would be affected or how many of Volkswagen Group’s roughly 300,000 staff in Germany could be laid off.

The Times has more:

Volkswagen reported a 42 percent drop in quarterly profit on Wednesday, while emphasizing an “urgent need” to cut costs and gain efficiency in a challenging marketplace as it considers plant closures and layoffs in Germany.

The automaker’s negotiator pointed to the company’s weak earnings ahead of his meeting with union leaders, who warned of imminent strikes if a solution to cut costs and restructure the brand was not found.

The Volkswagen Group, which owns 10 brands, including Audi and Porsche, is Germany’s largest industrial employer, with 120,000 people working for its eponymous core brand. The country’s vision of itself as an economic powerhouse and automotive giant is also deeply intertwined with Volkswagen, and local economies across the country depend on the company and its well-paid workers.

Representatives from the automaker and IG Metall, the union representing most of its workers, convened for a second round of wage negotiations on Wednesday in a conference room in the Volkswagen Arena, the stadium of the company’s professional soccer team, VfL Wolfsburg.

Before the talks, Volkswagen reported that profit fell to 2.86 billion euros, or $3.1 billion, for the months of August to September, its lowest level in three years. The company is struggling against falling demand in China, the world’s largest car market, and high costs, especially in its homeland, Germany.

“The situation is getting worse,” Arne Meiswinkel, the chief of personnel at Volkswagen, who is leading negotiations for the company, told reporters before the negotiations began.

But union leaders insisted that a guarantee by the company that all 10 of its factories in Germany would remain open was a prerequisite for them to stay at the negotiating table. The union is prevented from staging any strikes until the end of November, but leaders said that they would begin preparing walkouts unless their demand was met.

This feels like American style unionbusting here, with threats to move production to Poland and other cheaper nations. I don’t know enough about Germany to really have much to offer, except to say that I can’t imagine this won’t play a major impact in German politics and I wonder what the government will do here.

The post What’s Going on at Volkswagen? appeared first on Lawyers, Guns & Money.

Read the whole story
wyeager
176 days ago
reply
They clear over $25k per employee in profit and that's not enough? WTF is wrong with capitalism.
Blur Area
Share this story
Delete

President Venn Diagram

2 Comments and 13 Shares
Hard to imagine political rhetoric more microtargeted at me than 'I love Venn diagrams. I really do, I love Venn diagrams. It's just something about those three circles.'
Read the whole story
popular
277 days ago
reply
wyeager
277 days ago
reply
Blur Area
Share this story
Delete
2 public comments
ChristianDiscer
276 days ago
reply
Mickey Mouse for president? This classic diagram looks more like Mickey, oh I'm sorry, Minnie Mouse!
SimonHova
277 days ago
reply
I love that this is a fact about our future president.
Greenlawn, NY
matthiasgoergens
276 days ago
It's possible, but seems unlikely. At least in the 2024 election.
steelhorse
276 days ago
You really think Randall is going to be our future president? Are yard signs available yet? I'll take twenty.
gordol
276 days ago
Let's make it happen!

Valkyries introduced as Golden State’s WNBA team

1 Comment
Cathy Engelbert standing between Joe Lacob and Peter Guber while all three hold WNBA balls.
D. Ross Cameron-USA TODAY Sports

We have a name! And a logo!

It’s been more than half a year since the WNBA announced that the Golden State Warriors ownership group would be granted an expansion team in San Francisco. And it’s been over a week since that expansion team, then unnamed, announced Ohemaa Nyanin as their inaugural GM.

And now, on the day that the 2024 WNBA season tips off — the final season before Golden State enters the fray — we know the name for the Bay Area’s WNBA squad.

On Tuesday morning, the team officially announced their name, logo, and color scheme. And so we welcome the newest member of Bay Area sports: the Golden State Valkyries.

Check it out:

The Valkyries went all-in on day one marketing, as they certainly should, even getting Kehlani to narrate their inspiring introductory video.

They also shared the ins and outs of the gorgeous, highly-detailed logo.

And they snapped a few pictures of Warriors players repping the gear of their sister team.

The Valkyries made the choice to start fresh with their own color scheme, rather than follow the Warriors’ color scheme. That’s a choice that some will certainly criticize, though I like it. There are obvious ties between the two organizations, from the city and arena they call home, to the ownership group, to the name — Dictionary.com defines “valkyrie” as “any of the beautiful maidens attendant upon Odin who bring the souls of slain warriors chosen by Odin or Tyr to Valhalla and there wait upon them” (emphasis mine) — and I like the WNBA squad getting a chance to brand independently with their own colors.

We’ll unfortunately have to wait to see those colors on the court, as the Valkyries won’t debut until the 2025 WNBA season. But hey, that’s only a year away now! And if you’re planning on following the Valkyries but are new to the WNBA, I strongly recommend following the league this year — it’s an absolute joy, and League Pass is incredibly affordable.

Read the whole story
wyeager
346 days ago
reply
WNBA league pass is a huge bargain. Support women's sports!
Blur Area
Share this story
Delete

“I maintain that the trash compactor onboard the Death Star in Star...

2 Comments
“I maintain that the trash compactor onboard the Death Star in Star Wars is implausible, unworkable, and, moreover, inefficient.”

💬 Join the discussion on kottke.org

Read the whole story
wyeager
351 days ago
reply
The author clearly isn't familiar with Nnedi Okorafor's short story, The Baptist, published in the collection From a Certain Point of View.
Blur Area
Share this story
Delete
1 public comment
deebee
351 days ago
reply
Especially since it’s established in Empire that they can just dump the trash, why mash it first
America City, America
Next Page of Stories