Hello friends,
On Wednesday, I saw astronauts depart for the Moon. I hadn’t initially planned to watch: even though I was too little to see it in school, I’ll never forget the Challenger explosion. But as the countdown approached three minutes, I decided to join.
The chat streamed past—a torrent of emojis—all rockets and hearts and crying faces. I kept noticing all the people simply posting, “I was here.” And for a few minutes, that was the most striking thing. We all were there, together, millions of us, witnessing the launch.
I also congratulated my friends and celebrated the arrival of three brand new humans this week. I have a few exquisitely quiet moments focused on the perfect smoosh of their tiny faces and contemplating where they’ll be when they’re my age. When I think about them, or the zodiacal glow in a photo of Earth lit by moonlight, I feel a numinous awe.
For just a few fleeting moments, we are all here, together, billions of us, creating history.
This was Year 2, Week 14. Eliza, Oscar, and Surya, this one is for you.
Do not give up. A new analysis of 60 key higher ed lawsuits from Inside Higher Ed counts 50 as having a prevailing party, with plaintiffs winning in 33 of them. Now, even if that methodology was flawless (it’s not) and perfectly predicts final rulings (again, no) much less compliance, lawsuits are not sufficient. But they are necessary! It matters that San Jose State and the UC system are suing the Department of Education over the administration’s egregious case that having a transgender woman athlete on a university volleyball team violates Title IV. Other things matter just as much. Two weeks ago, I asked, “What censorship efforts can you refuse?” Boston University faculty are answering on their campus by picking a fight over their pride flags. I thought this essay on why fascists hate sociology was brilliantly done. AHA just published a new guide to defending faculty tenure and due process. Since I started writing this post, I’ve connected with a postdoc who has a site already built to advocate against the dissolution of the NSF SBE directorate. Is your state on her list? What else can you do to take action that means something to you?
I opened this newsletter with a dedication to the newborns who have entered my life. Every week I write, I worry that perhaps I’m tracking the wrong issues and focusing on the wrong fights. I feel that even more intensely now, knowing that we stand on the precipice of an energy crisis like the world has never seen. And then I think about how this is also the first time when solar and wind power, and the batteries we need to make them work, might plausibly scale to meet the need. Renewable power is just about to reach 50% of the world’s electricity capacity. Rooftop solar is now Puerto Rico’s second largest energy source. A new reality is being born.
When I think about the future, I want more for them than just safety for all our babies, I want them to experience magnificent, mind-bending awe. I want whales and spaceships and libraries that feel like magic and make us forget that we can’t live forever. I want things I don’t even know how to imagine yet. I love that such dreaming is our solemn responsibility too.
We’ll dream and fight for you, little ones.
Liz