veganism.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
Veganism Social is a welcoming space on the internet for vegans to connect and engage with the broader decentralized social media community.

Administered by:

Server stats:

293
active users

#library

49 posts44 participants8 posts today

The 225-Year-Old Library Of Congress Remains A ‘Library For All’ — So Far – Honolulu Civil Beat

Beyond Hawaiʻi

The 225-Year-Old Library Of Congress Remains A ‘Library For All’ — So Far

Trump fired the head of the library in May saying she put inappropriate books in the library for children.

By Alex H. Poole / About 20 hours ago
Carla Hayden, the 14th librarian of Congress, who has held the position since 2016, received an unexpected email on May 8, 2025.

“Carla, on behalf of President Donald J. Trump, I am writing to inform you that your position as the Librarian of Congress is terminated effective immediately. Thank you for your service,” wrote Trent Morse, deputy director of presidential personnel at the White House.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt later explained that Hayden, who was the first woman, Black person and professionally trained librarian to oversee the Library of Congress, had done “quite concerning things,” on the job, including “putting inappropriate books in the library for children.”

Democratic politicians sharply criticized Hayden’s termination, saying the firing was unjust. It was actually about Trump punishing civil servants “who don’t bend to his every will,” New York Sen. Chuck Schumer said.

An information science scholar, I have written extensively about the history of libraries and archives, including the Library of Congress. To fully understand the role Hayden played for the past nine years, I think it is important to understand what the Library of Congress does, and the overlooked and underappreciated role it has played in American life.

The main reading room is seen at the Library of Congress on June 13, 2025, in Washington. (Kevin Carter / Getty Images /via Thae Conversation)

The Library Of Congress’ Work

The Library of Congress is an agency that was first established, by an act of Congress, in 1800. The act provided for “the purchase of such books as may be necessary for the use of Congress at the said city of Washington, and for fitting up a suitable apartment for containing them.” Its chief librarian is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.

The library has six buildings in Washington that hold a print and online collection of nearly 26 million books, as well as more than 136 million other items, including manuscripts, maps, sheet music and prints and photographs.

It also houses historic documents, like Thomas Jefferson’s rough draft of the Declaration of Independence and James Madison’s notes on the 1787 Constitutional Convention.

The library is the property of the American people. Anyone over the age of 16 with a government-issued photo identification can enter its buildings and read or view its materials on-site. The Library of Congress was partially designed as a research institution to suit the needs of members of Congress, and only Congress members can borrow items from the library and take them home.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The 225-Year-Old Library Of Congress Remains A ‘Library For All’ — So Far – Honolulu Civil Beat

#2025 #America #Books #CarlaHayden #Censorship #DonaldTrump #Hawaii #Health #History #HonoluluCivilBeat #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

Comic-Con: George Lucas In Hall H Debut, Talks With Guillermo del Toro About New Museum – Deadline

George Lucas and Guillermo del Toro at the Sneak Peek of the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art at the 2025 Comic-Con International: San Diego on July 27, 2025 in San Diego, California. Katie Flores / Deadline

By Anthony D’Alessandro. Editorial Director/Box Office Editor @AwardsTony

July 27, 2025 1:02pm, 6 Comments

It was arguably the first big Sunday AM panel post Covid at Comic-Con, as Star Wars creator George Lucas, 3x Oscar winner Guillermo del Toro and Oscar winning Death Becomes Her production designer Doug Chiang gathered to tease to a very packed Hall H, the new Lucas Museum of Narrative Art.

For Lucas, it was the first time he’s appeared onstage at San Diego Comic-Con.

The panel was narrated by Oscar nominee Queen Latifah.

“It’s a temple to the people’s art,” said Lucas about the Mobius-strip building designed by Ma Yansong which is opening next year near the USC campus in downtown Los Angeles.

“I refused to sell it,” says Lucas whose been collecting myriad comic books and thrifty pieces of art since his youth.

One of Lucas’ inspirations for opening the museum stemmed from the filmmaker needing a place to display his 40,000 pieces of art. But also, it’s about creating an epicenter that pays respect to the myth-telling pop art which has informed our culture.

“(Art) is more about a connection and emotional connection with the work, not how much it cost or what celebrity did it. I don’t think it’s anything anyone will tell you. If you have emotional connection, it’s art. If you don’t, just move onto the next painting,” Lucas added.

del Toro, who is a board member at the new museum, says that after surviving the L.A. fires earlier this year, he’s looking to the new museum as a place to house his own personal collection of art.

Chiang says the museum “is giving respect to an artform that hasn’t been honored before.” The designer credits comic books for setting him on course to a creative career. However, during his youth, comic books were never respected. He gave props to Lucas who told him that when creating any art, it requires a story behind it. Chiang worked in the art department on Star Wars: Episodes I-III and went on to be a production designer on current Disney Lucasfilm projects such as Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and Disney+ series The Mandalorian, Ahsoka and Skeleton Crew.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Comic-Con: George Lucas In Hall H Debut, Talks With Guillermo del Toro About New Museum

#2025 #America #Books #California #Deadline #Film #Films #GeorgeLucas #GuillermoDelToro #HallH #Libraries #Library #Movies #NewMuseum #Reading #SanDiego #SanDiegoComicCon #ScienceFiction #SDCC #StarWars #Technology #Television #UnitedStates

Bibliotheca Campi Stellaris SV 📚❇️

Anita Nieras (IPA : [anita ni.eras])

There are magic books among them, and some of them can come to life.
Most of them won't be dangerous.

#art #digitalart #illustration #girl #fairy #landscape #fantasy #library #bookstore #gameart #originalcharacter #OC #mastoart #創作 #イラスト #少女 #精霊 #図書館 #書店 #レトロゲーム #風景 #ファンタジー #オリジナル

Video : youtu.be/NQUR2s-9xQs

One concept that I love from the Library Economy Philosophy is the idea that “books are for use” and not for hoarding, which originates from the idea that knowledge and information should be accessible to everyone, not just those who can afford it.

When we apply this philosophy to our daily lives, it’s remarkable how easily the concept translates. For instance, consider the intentional communities like Twin Oaks in Virginia or The Farm in Tennessee, where members share resources, skills, and labor to create a thriving ecosystem. Or think about tool libraries, bike-sharing systems, or food cooperatives that promote sharing and reuse.

When we adopt this philosophy beyond books, it is clear that material equality should be our ultimate goal. Everyone should have the opportunity to eat before someone else can get seconds.

So, what can we do to start implementing this philosophy in our own lives?

The Damage of Two Trump Terms: A Deep Dive into America’s Democratic and Social Erosion – Perplexity

The Damage of Two Trump Terms: A Deep Dive into America’s Democratic and Social Erosion – via Perplexity

From executive missteps to democratic backsliding, a look at how Donald Trump’s time in office has altered America—twice.

Introduction

Donald Trump’s tenure as President—across two non-consecutive terms—has been one of the most polarizing and consequential in modern U.S. history. From controversial executive actions to attacks on democratic institutions, his presidencies have been marked by a blend of disruption, reversals, and, for many, profound harm. This post charts and lists the most significant errors and damages of Trump’s first term and then maps the expanded injuries to America’s democracy and people during his second term.

Part One: First Term (2017–2021) — Errors and Damaging Policies

Key Errors and Harmful Decisions:

  • Undermining Democratic Norms:
    • Attempted to pressure Ukraine for political favors, leading to impeachment for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
    • Persistent attempts to undermine faith in U.S. elections, especially mail-in voting12.
  • Obstruction and Abuse of Power:
    • Fired FBI Director James Comey to allegedly hinder Russia investigation.
    • Frequent use of government for personal enrichment; violated the Hatch Act with partisan activities1.
  • Foreign Policy Mistakes and Isolationism:
    • Withdrew from Iran nuclear deal, Paris Climate Agreement, Trans-Pacific Partnership, and abandoned the Syrian Kurds324.
    • Alienated U.S. allies, fostered instability, promoted “America First” at the expense of global cooperation.
  • Human Rights Assaults:
    • Family separation policy at the southern border and mass deportations.
    • Executive orders targeting refugees and immigrants, including the “Muslim ban”567.
  • Civil Rights Rollbacks:
    • Rolled back protections for LGBTQ+, racial minorities, and weakened enforcement of civil rights law7.
  • Pandemic Response Failures:
    • Gross mismanagement of the COVID-19 response—delayed testing, contradictory messaging, and lack of federal coordination8.
  • Environmental and Health Reversals:
    • Rolled back over 100 environmental regulations, withdrew from global environment treaties, and weakened climate change response.
  • Economic Setbacks:
    • Initiated chaotic trade wars (notably with China), resulting in volatile markets and increased consumer costs.
    • Largest peacetime deficit increases due to tax cuts for the wealthy and spending surges23.

First-Term Summary Chart Example:

CategoryKey Action/ErrorConsequenceDemocratic NormsUkraine scandal, impeachmentErosion of institutional trust, impeachmentHuman RightsFamily separation, travel bansWidespread condemnation, civil rights violationsEnvironmentWithdrawal from Paris AccordIncreased global isolation, environmental rollbackPandemic ResponseDelayed COVID-19 actionHigher infection/death rate, global embarrassmentEconomyTrade wars, deficit expansionMarket volatility, ballooning deficitJustice/System AbuseHatch Act violations, DOJ misuseBlurred legal/political boundaries

Part Two: Second Term (2025– ) — Expanded Damage to America, Its People, and Democracy – It’s Worse!

Escalating Authoritarianism and Harmful Actions:

  • Impunity for Insurrection:
    • Pardoned January 6 attackers, signaling tolerance for political violence910.
  • Attacks on Checks and Balances:
    • Sweeping firings of inspectors general, independent agency leaders, and career officials investigating Trump or his allies1011.
    • Purged civil servants, targeting disloyalty over expertise or merit.
  • Erosion of Civil Rights and Freedoms:
    • Issued executive orders rescinding DEI programs, LGBTQ+ protections, reproductive rights, and racial equity initiatives7.
    • Abolished or undermined federal data collection on marginalized groups, erasing accountability for discrimination.
  • Retaliation and Consolidation of Power:
    • Launched Justice Department investigations against critics, withdrawing security and targeting political opponents1011.
    • Weaponized federal agencies to punish opposing state governments, universities, and nonprofit organizations.
  • Undermining the Rule of Law:
    • Claimed presidential immunity to skirt legal accountability; moved to unilaterally direct federal funds and policy without Congressional authorization106.
  • Civic and Social Consequences:
    • Steep rise in fear and uncertainty for immigrants, LGBTQ+ Americans, racial minorities, and women due to regressive legal changes and administrative chaos.
    • Abruptly shut down crucial health and safety data programs affecting millions7.
  • Suppressing Dissent and Press Freedoms:
    • Cracked down on student protestors, threatened journalists, and manipulated federal communications oversight5.
  • Socioeconomic Impacts:
    • Cutbacks in Medicaid and social safety nets, disproportionately hurting the poor and underprivileged11.
    • Economic instability from erratic tariffs, worsening inequality, and reduced trust in governance.

Second-Term Summary List:

  • Mass pardons for political violence, erasing accountability and emboldening extremist groups
  • Expanding executive power while sidelining Congress and the judiciary
  • Direct interference in federal and independent agencies to protect allies and punish critics
  • Dismantling civil rights enforcement and erasing data on marginalized Americans
  • Retaliatory investigations targeting opposition, chilling dissent and free speech
  • Aggressive anti-immigrant drives, mass deportations, and family separations resumed
  • Economic and social policy favoring the wealthy; increasing burdens on working-class Americans and children
  • Heightened polarization, division, and distrust throughout American society

Takeaway

Donald Trump’s cumulative impact over two terms goes far beyond political disagreements—his policies, executive actions, and disregard for democratic norms have fundamentally altered the landscape of American governance, justice, and public life. The ongoing harm to U.S. democracy, civic freedoms, and vulnerable communities underscores an urgent need for accountability, vigilance, and renewal.

Actions: America has long been defined by its resiliency and its ability to self-correct. But with democracy itself under threat, the challenge now is for citizens and institutions to reckon with the fallout—and chart a path back toward accountability and progress.

Sources:

  1. https://www.citizensforethics.org/news/analysis/president-trumps-worst-offenses/
  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_presidency_of_Donald_Trump
  3. https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/11/14/trump-foreign-policy-first-term-errors-00189428
  4. https://www.cfr.org/timeline/trumps-foreign-policy-moments
  5. https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2025/04/president-trumps-first-100-days-attacks-on-human-rights/
  6. https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/11/06/us-second-trump-term-threat-rights-us-world
  7. https://civilrights.org/trump-rollbacks/
  8. https://www.brookings.edu/articles/trumps-failed-presidency/
  9. https://civilrights.org/blog/chaos-confusion-abuse-of-power-trumps-first-week-back-in-office/
  10. https://brightlinewatch.org/accelerated-transgressions-in-the-second-trump-presidency/
  11. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/15/opinion/trump-authoritarianism-republican-party-democracy.html
  12. http://cohen.house.gov/TrumpAdminTracker
  13. https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5271938-trump-michigan-mistakes/
  14. https://www.democracy2025.org
  15. https://www.epi.org/publication/ten-actions-that-hurt-workers-during-trumps-first-year/
  16. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-has-reshaped-these-3-major-things-in-his-first-100-days
  17. https://www.brookings.edu/articles/threats-to-us-democracy-dangerous-cracks-in-us-democracy-pillars/
  18. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/21/us/politics/trump-administration-missteps.html
  19. https://judicature.duke.edu/articles/the-future-of-the-u-s-presidency/
  20. https://newdemocratcoalition.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/100-days-100-disasters-new-dem-leadership-looks-back-on-the-first-chaotic-months-of-the-trump-administration

#2025 #America #Books #DonaldTrump #Health #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Opinion #Perplexity #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Technology #Trump #TrumpAdministration #TrumpFirstTerm #TrumpSecondTerm #UnitedStates

Bibliotheca Campi Stellaris 📚❇️

Anita Nieras (IPA : [anita ni.eras])

This is called the 'Library of the Starfield'.
It's the largest library in the country,
It is a place where there are many books from ancient times.

#art #digitalart #illustration #girl #fairy #landscape #fantasy #library #bookstore #gameart #originalcharacter #OC #mastoart #創作 #イラスト #少女 #精霊 #図書館 #書店 #ゲームキャラクター #風景 #ファンタジー #オリジナル

Video : youtu.be/NQUR2s-9xQs

Gibt es datensparsame Apps (bspw. via F-Droid), die für Buchscans taugen (Stichwort Scan-Zelt)? Ggf. sogar mit Buchfalzkorrektur? Ich bin an praktischen Erfahrungsberichten interessiert.

Are there privacy-friendly sharing apps (e.g. via F-Droid) that are suitable for book scans (keyword: scan tent)? Possibly even with book fold correction? I am interested in practical experience reports.

What is Congress’s Job? – GovTrack.us

Get Legislative Recap Updates In Your Inbox!

July 25, 2025 · by Amy West

If you’re over 50 or know someone who is, you may think Congress’s job is as described in the Schoolhouse Rock video “I’m Just a Bill’ from 1975. Except for the way it leaves out lobbying activity, it’s a pretty good description of how Congress is supposed to work. At least, it is if you assume that Congress’s primary job is to pass or repeal laws including laws to fund the government (aka appropriations).

House

In that vein, the House passing six bills by large bipartisan majorities looks like a successful week:

But they were scheduled to vote on 21 bipartisan bills and five Republican priority bills.

What happened?

The ongoing controversy over Jeffrey Epstein and whatever might be in Department of Justice files that includes President Trump is what happened.

Because a purported coverup of a fictional Epstein client list has considerable traction among Republican voters, many Republican members of Congress want to do the opposite of what President Trump wants: they want to force the release of additional information about him that the Department of Justice has. Democrats, sensing an opening to weaken the President have joined the fray and offered amendments of their own on the topic in committees.

Speaker Johnson, forced to choose between pleasing the President or allowing votes that would get support from his own party, decided to shut down the House early for its August recess.

The result? 15 bipartisan bills did not get a vote nor did the five bills ostensibly reflecting Republican priorities.

The evidence of the week suggests that the current leadership of the House believes that the House’s job, and the most important Republican priority, is to please the President. If that involves passing bills, great. But if not, well, then there’s not much point in being in session.

Senate

The Senate does not leave for its August Recess until next week. Next week, like this one, they’ll be working through nominees in need of confirmation. They may not leave at all. With public pressure from the President to stay and confirm nominees and Democrats so far not allowing time saving methods of confirmation, it’s possible the Senate will stay for part or all of August.

Is it likely? Your GovTracker thinks probably not. Democrats have provided some key support for Trump nominees – most recently Sen. Shaheen for Michael Waltz – and many members of both parties already had plans set for August (some personal, but many work related).

Programming note

Whether the Senate stays in session or not, we’ll start our August Recess posts next week. Thanks for all the great suggestions! We’ll do our best to address them. If we don’t get to all of them during August, we’ll hold on to your suggestions and write about them the next time Congress is at a full or partial standstill. Which, for your planning needs, may be in October when the government’s fiscal year ends and a government shutdown might happen.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: What is Congress’s Job? – GovTrack.us

#2025 #America #CongressJob #DonaldTrump #Health #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Politics #Resistance #Science #Technology #Trump #TrumpAdministration #USCongress #USHouse #USSenate

The Fight for Free Speech Goes Corporate – Columbia Journalism Review

AP Photos / Illustration by Katie Kosma

The Fight for Free Speech Goes Corporate

As Paramount prepares for a merger, the Freedom of the Press Foundation stands to challenge the company for capitulating to Trump. Will it work?

July 25, 2025, By Kyle Paoletta

Sign up for The Media Today, CJR’s daily newsletter.

Early this month, as soon as the news broke of Paramount’s decision to pay President Donald Trump’s foundation sixteen million dollars to settle a lawsuit against CBS News, the Freedom of the Press Foundation moved to take legal action. The FPF, as it’s known, tracks and resists government infringement on the news media. It’s also a Paramount shareholder, prepared to push for those interests with corporate muscle. Trump’s case, and the response of Paramount’s board, immediately set off alarm bells, as the company was in the midst of pursuing an eight-billion-dollar merger with Skydance, a Hollywood studio, that required approval from the Federal Communications Commission. “They’re essentially making a handshake deal with Donald Trump,” Seth Stern, the FPF’s advocacy director, told me. He and the FPF’s legal team believed that such a deal could be a violation of federal bribery laws. And, he noted, Shari Redstone, Paramount’s controlling shareholder, stands to make two billion dollars from the merger. “I would think that, regardless of what Shari has to offer the rest of the board,” Stern said, “the prospect of potential prosecution for bribery would be something they would think quite hard about.”

Now it’s clear that Paramount’s board has decided the risk of prosecution is well worth a multibillion-dollar payday. On Thursday, the FCC signed off on the Skydance merger, clearing a path for its completion. “Americans no longer trust the legacy national news media to report fully, accurately, and fairly. It is time for a change,” Brendan Carr, the chairman of the FCC, announced, praising the deal for its commitment to “unbiased journalism” and assurances that “discriminatory DEI policies” will end. But when I spoke to Brenna Frey, a lawyer for the FPF, in the wake of the settlement announcement, she was incensed. “This is an affront to the shareholders of Paramount, but it’s also an affront to CBS’s reporters and to the First Amendment,” she said. 

In Stern’s view, Paramount’s willingness to settle had been a calculated surrender. The premise of Trump’s lawsuit—that 60 Minutes’ editing of an interview with Kamala Harris last fall represented “fraudulent interference with an election”—was unlikely to hold up to legal scrutiny. “The lawsuit was laughable,” David Snyder, the executive director of the First Amendment Coalition, said. “What they were trying to attack here was CBS News’s choices about how they edited footage from an interview. That sort of editorial judgment is at the core of First Amendment protections, generally, but especially if it’s about public figures right in the middle of an election.”

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: The Fight for Free Speech Goes Corporate – Columbia Journalism Review

#2025 #America #Books #ColumbiaJournalismReview #DonaldTrump #FirstAmendment #FreeSpeech #History #Journalism #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Politics #Reading #Resistance #Science #Technology #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

Inside the Library of Congress’s Collection – Library of Congress

Photograph of digital display by Shawn Miller/Library of Congress.

Inside the Library of Congress’s Collection

The nation’s library is an ever-expanding temple of knowledge and creativity. Here are a few of its most incredible, unexpected, and otherwise historic jewels.

Written by Ron Cassie | Published on July 24, 2025

During the War of 1812, British troops famously torched the US Capitol, burning down the still-new home of the fledgling country’s legislative body. Also going up in flames? Roughly 3,000 books, largely about law, that made up the Library of Congress’s core collection.

Within a month, former President and noted bibliophile Thomas Jefferson offered his personal library as a replacement. His offer was warmly received by many in the House and Senate, but not by all. Massachusetts representative Cyrus King, an opposition Federalist, argued that Jefferson’s diverse holdings—which included works in Greek, Latin, French, Italian, Spanish, and Old English, as well as a translation of the Qur’an—would foster his “infidel philosophy” while being “in languages which many cannot read, and most ought not.”

The bill narrowly passed, along party lines, and Congress paid almost $24,000 for Jefferson’s 6,487 books. On May 8, 1815, as a final wagonload of books left Monticello, Jefferson wrote to Samuel Harrison Smith, who had helped facilitate the sale, that “an interesting treasure is added to . . . the depository of unquestionably the choicest collection of books in the U.S. and I hope it will not be without some general effect on the literature of our country.”

Jefferson eventually got his wish. Today, the Library of Congress is a national jewel. Its main building on Capitol Hill, opened in 1897 and later named for the Founding Father, is home to a domed Main Reading Room that endures as one of Washington’s most elegant spaces. Within the library’s collection of more than 178 million items, the world’s largest, are a number of incredible treasures—and across the following pages, we’ve highlighted some of our favorites.

More incredible still? Most of what the institution has to offer is accessible with a simple library card.

In many ways, the modern library is the brainchild of former Librarian of Congress Ainsworth Spofford, a visionary who lobbied Abraham Lincoln for the job and then stayed on through nine (!) Presidents. Spofford led construction of the Thomas Jefferson Building and a major expansion of the collection, working toward his broader goal of establishing a national library. He succeeded yet never lost sight of the institution’s original mission to serve legislators: For decades, the Jefferson Building and the Capitol were connected by an underground tunnel equipped with an electric book trolley and pneumatic message tubes. Lawmakers (or really, their staffers and pages) could send book requests to librarians via the tubes, and librarians could send books back via the trolley.

In the early 2000s, the book tunnel was demolished to make room for the underground Capitol Visitor Center. A separate, pedestrian-friendly tunnel now links the two buildings, where librarians can still be spotted wheeling book carts from time to time. That’s hardly the only way the library has evolved. Its physical collection is now housed in three Capitol Hill buildings and other facilities in Maryland and Virginia; its digital collection, begun in 1994, contains more than 900 million files; its collections of sounds, music, prints, moving images, and photographs date back more than 100 years and continue to grow alongside audiovisual media and communication.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Inside the Library of Congress’s Collection

#2025 #America #Books #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Monticello #Reading #Science #Technology #ThomasJefferson #ThomasJeffersonLibrary #UnitedStates

“I Don’t Think Librarians Can Save Us”: The Material Conditions of Information Literacy Instruction in the Misinformation Age | Willenborg | College & Research Libraries

Link courtesy of Library Link of the Day
http://www.tk421.net/librarylink/  (archive, rss, subscribe options)

Home > Vol 86, No 4 (2025) > Willenborg

“I Don’t Think Librarians Can Save Us”: The Material Conditions of Information Literacy Instruction in the Misinformation Age

By Amber Willenborg and Robert Detmering*

This national qualitative study investigates academic librarians’ instructional experiences, views, and challenges regarding the widespread problem of misinformation. Findings from phenomenological interviews reveal a tension between librarians’ professional, moral, and civic obligations to address misinformation and the actual material conditions of information literacy instruction, which influence and often constrain librarians’ pedagogical and institutional roles. The authors call for greater professional reflection on current information literacy models that focus on achieving ambitious educational goals, but which may be unsuitable for addressing the larger social and political crisis of misinformation.

Introduction

Donald Trump’s unlikely presidential victory in 2016 has become inextricably associated with growing public concern about the potentially negative impact of false and deceptive information on democratic society (Allcott & Gentzkow, 2017; Tenove, 2020). While media saturation and political distortion eventually rendered phrases such as “fake news” and “alternative facts” virtually meaningless, ongoing waves of COVID-19 skepticism, QAnon cultism, and 2020 election denialism suggest that various forms of misinformation and disinformation will continue to play a worrisome role in political discourse going forward. Misinformation—defined broadly to encompass disinformation and related concepts—is not a new problem for democracy; however, in today’s environment, online social networks facilitate the rapid and widespread circulation of misinformation into the larger media ecosystem, making verification exceedingly difficult and enabling interference in political campaigns and elections (Muhammed & Mathew, 2022; Tenove et al., 2018). Unsurprisingly, as long-time information literacy educators and advocates, many librarians feel professionally and morally obligated to address this crisis.

In recent years, innumerable scholarly works, think pieces, and statements from professional organizations have asserted that librarians have an especially important role to play in helping students and other library users evaluate information sources more effectively against the backdrop of civic discord and online propaganda (ALA, 2017; Batchelor, 2017; Cooke, 2017; Eva & Shea, 2018; Fister, 2021a; IFLA, 2018; Jaeger et al., 2021; Musgrove et al., 2018). Succinctly encapsulating what has become the consensus view, Beene and Greer (2021) state, “Librarians are uniquely poised to prepare learners for a lifetime of critical thinking, analytical reasoning, and information literacy” (p. 3). Based purely on the literature, the outpouring of classes, workshops, events, online guides, and other content focusing on fake news and related topics indicates that instruction librarians have largely accepted some measure of responsibility for combating misinformation as part of their efforts to advance information literacy on a broad scale (De Paor & Heravi, 2020; Revez & Corujo, 2021).

At the same time, while there appears to be general agreement that librarians should involve themselves in teaching students to identify misinformation, there is controversy surrounding the nature of that involvement. For example, librarians have been criticized for their apparent lack of engagement with research from other disciplines regarding the psychological and emotional dimensions of misinformation, specifically cognitive biases such as motivated reasoning, as well as imperfections in human memory, that can lead people to cling to false beliefs, even after they have been corrected (Sullivan 2019). Librarians have also been called out for their reliance on checklist heuristics that stress evaluating the superficial features of web sources in isolation, rather than thinking critically and holistically about sources in relation to one another (Beene & Greer, 2021; Faix & Fyn, 2020; Lor, 2018; Ziv & Bene, 2022). The popular “CRAAP Test” (Blakeslee, 2004) is perhaps the most notable—and now increasingly notorious—example of this problematic checklist approach. Additionally, to more fully understand how librarians and other educators are teaching students to evaluate information, several researchers have conducted content analyses of library and university websites (Bangani, 2021; Lim, 2020; Wineburg et al., 2020; Ziv & Bene, 2022). This body of scholarship consistently shows that such websites emphasize outdated, inadequate, and counterproductive evaluation guidance, as opposed to what Ziv and Bene (2022) refer to as “networked interventions,” (i.e., proven techniques such as lateral reading that focus on evaluation within the context of the larger web) (p. 917). Although providing a certain level of insight into the instructional approaches employed by librarians and offering fully justifiable critiques of those approaches as they appear online, these studies are necessarily limited by their dependence on websites, which, divorced from the context of lived experience, may ultimately tell us very little about how librarians actually teach their students about misinformation.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: “I Don’t Think Librarians Can Save Us”: The Material Conditions of Information Literacy Instruction in the Misinformation Age | Willenborg | College & Research Libraries

Hey, is there a thing that:
* scans printed paper to email;
* is accessible as a service to a somewhat infirm elderly correspondent living in a small midwestern US town?

I have a correspondent who needs a service that works kind of like a fax, though delivering to email. He has no internet at home.

His local library does offer scan to email, but only as a service for picking up scanned documents from a branch in their library system. I'm in a different country

#scan#email#fax

𝗛𝗲𝗹𝗹𝗼 𝗕𝗲𝗮𝘂𝘁𝗶𝗳𝘂𝗹 by: Ann Napolitano

William Waters grew up in a house silenced by tragedy, where his parents could hardly bear to look at him, much less love him—so when he meets the spirited and ambitious Julia Padavano, it’s as if the world has lit up around him.

But then darkness from William’s past surfaces and jeopardises their future...

bookblabla.com/book/hello-beau

#author #reading #library #books #drama
@bookstodon