#radical
Washington is being inundated with people who don’t want to see an election victory stolen by emboldened Radical Left Democrats. Our Country has had enough, they won’t take it anymore! We hear you (and love you) from the Oval Office. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!
-Some random staffer (possibly Dan Scavino), on behalf of President Donald J. Trump
Our Analysis
There is a 46% chance that Donald Trump wrote this tweet himself.
This is tweet number 2025 mentioning the Democrats from @realdonaldtrump – 1864 since inauguration.
This is tweet number 929 mentioning ‘Make America Great Again’ from @realdonaldtrump – 589 since inauguration.
Word probabilities: 53/46 (Trump/Staff)
Time probabilities: 0/99 (Trump/Staff)
Metadata probabilities: 67/32 (Trump/Staff)
Posted at: Tue Jan 5 17:05:56 2021 EST [Link]
Tweet Source: Twitter for iPhone
The most informative terms in this tweet were:
people (Trump, 2.6:1), want (Trump, 3.2:1), election (Trump, 6.6:1), victory (Trump, 4.2:1), left (Trump, 2.5:1), democrats (Trump, 4.0:1), country (Trump, 2.1:1), enough (Other, 1.2:1), take (Trump, 2.0:1), anymore (Trump, 1.8:1), ! (Trump, 1.3:1), hear (Other, 1.2:1), ( (Trump, 9.7:1), ) (Trump, 9.9:1), office (Other, 1.3:1), make (Other, 1.3:1), america (Other, 1.5:1), great (Trump, 1.4:1)
A computer sees the following emotions in this tweet (NRC):
{'anticipation’: 1, 'joy’: 2, 'positive’: 2, 'trust’: 1, 'anger’: 1, 'negative’: 1}
Grade level of this tweet (Flesch-Kincaid): 5.2
I am a woman.
I am not a feminine stereotype.
Men are not and can never be women.
We exist. We have lives independent of men’s fantasies of us.
I am an adult human female and #WomenWontBeErased
Apply today to be a part of Seeding Change’s National Fellowship Program for Asian American Organizing and Civic Engagement. Due February 15!
http://www.seeding-change.org/fellowship-2015announcement/
We are now accepting applications for the 2015 National Fellowship Program for Asian American Organizing and Civic Engagement. Applications are due online on February 15, 2015. Apply here.
The National Fellowship Program for Asian American Organizing and Civic Engagement is an intensive 10-week, full-time volunteer program that develops the leadership of a new generation of activists and organizers who are deeply invested in building the power of and improving the lives of working-class Asian immigrant communities. In its pilot year, the fellowship program brought together 17 fellows who spent their summers working with 7 organizations in 7 cities across the country.
The fellowship program will run from June to August 2015. Fellows will be placed with a community-based organization, where they will spend at least 10 weeks, working with the organization, immigrant leaders, and the local community. Check out the 2015 host sites.
Fellows will have the opportunity to develop their skills from grassroots fundraising, outreach and education, organizing, and language skills. Fellows will also deepen understanding of community organizing and civic engagement. At the beginning of the program, fellows will also participate in a week-long training and orientation in the San Francisco Bay Area.
For more information about the fellowship, visit: http://www.seeding-change.org/programs/fellowship/
There is no gainsaying the fact that this suggested program will strike most people as impossibly “radical” and “unrealistic”; any suggestion for changing the status quo, no matter how slight, can always be considered by someone as too radical, so that the only thoroughgoing escape from the charge of impracticality is never to advocate any change whatever in existing conditions. But to take this approach is to abandon human reason, and to drift in animal-or plant-like manner with the tide of events.
As Professor Philbrook pointed out in a brilliant article some years ago, we must frame our policy convictions on what we believe the best course to be and then try to convince others of this goal, and not include within our policy conclusions estimates of what other people may find acceptable.50 For someone must propagate the truth in society, as opposed to what is politically expedient.
If scholars and intellectuals fail to do so if they fail to expound their convictions of what they believe the correct course to be, they are abandoning truth, and therefore abandoning their very raison d’être, All hope of social progress would then be gone, for no new ideas would ever be advanced nor effort expended to convince others of their validity.